If you have a Record Token burning a hole in your pocket, the HMV sale includes several of my Albums/Reissues of the Year, needless to say, at much lower prices than I paid for them.
Only Artists: Marek Reichman meets Peter Saville
LP sleeve art lovers: worth half an hour of your listening time.
New Suede
“single” out now, album in January. Sounds good to me. Even, dare I say it, a bit goth?
Hell, a six piece Suede!
They’re cutting up my video screen just now. English Guitar based music at its best. A few duff albums but still a great live band.
SkyArts2, it’ll be around again, Dinna fret.
http://www.setlist.fm/setlist/suede/2013/la-cigale-paris-france-
Britpop: An Accidental Convergence Of Nostalgia
madfox on Britpop
AN ACCIDENTAL CONVERGENCE OF NOSTALGIA
How Suede, Blur, Oasis and Pulp came to define the UK’s youth-driven commercial music scene in the 1990s
“Britpop” is a term commonly used to group together up to a dozen musical acts which emerged in the UK in the early years of the 1990s and which would reach their creative and commercial peaks later that decade.
It’s tempting to regard these bands – chief among them Suede, Blur, Oasis and Pulp – as being part of some coherent movement. But this was not really the case: on closer inspection, there are significant differences in the musical and lyrical styles of each band, and in the social backgrounds, political interests and cultural fashions attached to them. Indeed, the key players could be seen to represent several of British popular music’s favourite genres from the past – 1960s beat, 1970s glam and pub rock, 1980s art-school pop – while a number of the also-rans dipped their toes in surf, folk rock and punk.
Britpop is a collection of divergent bands who just happened to become active or achieve recognition around the same time – when the extreme poles of grunge and rave » Continue Reading.
