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Britpop was a British alternative rock and cultural movement which gained popularity in Great Britain in the mid 1990s, characterised by the prominence of bands influenced by British guitar pop music of the 1960s and 1970s. Though these bands did not on the whole have a single unifying sound they were grouped together by the media first as a 'scene' and later as a national cultural movement. Blur and Oasis are generally considered the scene's most prominent acts; other major bands associated with Britpop at various stages included Suede, Pulp, Elastica, Ocean Colour Scene, Supergrass, and The Verve.

The movement developed as a reaction against various musical and cultural trends in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Acid house and the rise of Hip hop had led to an renewed interest in groove and rhythm-led songs in British indie music, leading to the Madchester sound. In the wake of this, the more "traditional" guitar music was sidelined. The shoegazing movement of the late 1980s/early 1990s also went against the trend by producing long, psychedelic, repetitive songs, strongly influenced by bands like The Jesus and Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine.

The key "anti-influence" on Britpop was grunge. In the wake of the American invasion led by bands like Nirvana, many bands such as Blur incorporated a patriotic rhetoric into their music, writing about uniquely British topics and concerns.

Roots and Influences

Britpop groups were strongly influenced by the British guitar music of the 1960s and 1970s, particularly the two Rock and Roll trends of the British Invasion: the "rocker" cornerstones like The Beatles and The Rolling Stones and their Mod contemporaries like The Who, The Kinks, and The Small Faces. Also quite influential were 1970s and 1980s glam artists such as David Bowie and T. Rex and punk rock artists including The Sex Pistols, The Clash, The Jam, and the Buzzcocks.

Indie acts from the 1980s and early 1990s, particularly as exemplified by the likes of The Smiths, The Jesus and Mary Chain, and James were the direct ancestors of the Britpop movement. The Madchester scene was another large influence. The movement was fronted by The Stone Roses, The Happy Mondays, and Inspiral Carpets (for whom Oasis' Noel Gallagher had worked as a roadie during the Madchester years). Perhaps an indirect influence were the C86 bands, who largely played poppy indie guitar music. Many bands that would later be grouped under the Britpop umbrella, such as Primal Scream, originally started off as C86 bands.

In spite of the professed disdain for both shoegazing and grunge among many at the time, some elements of both crept into the more enduring facets of Britpop. Noel Gallagher has since championed Ride (to the point of including Andy Bell in Oasis) while Martin Carr of the Boo Radleys has pointed out Dinosaur Jr's influence on their work.

Though the movement came to the fore around 1994, it is unclear where it actually began. Due to its influence on the later acts, The Stone Roses, released in 1989, is sometimes regarded as the first Britpop album. Noel Gallagher has put forward his belief the it was The La's self-titled debut The La's, released in 1990. Others claim Gallagher's own debut, Definitely Maybe (1994), Suede's debut album Suede, or Blur's breakthrough, Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), deserve this distinction for helping to kick-start the movement.

Journalist John Harris has suggested that Britpop began when Blur's single "Popscene" and Suede's "The Drowners" were released around the same time in the spring of 1992.

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( The origins of Britpop lie primarily in the indie scene of the early 1990s, and in particular around a group of bands feted by the music press and involved in a vibrant social scene focussed in the Camden area of London. Some of the most notable members of this scene (Blur, Lush, Suede) would go on to play a leading part in Britpop. Others (Kingmaker, Slowdive, Ride) would not.

It could be argued that the transition from the indie scene of the early nineties to Britpop was so gradual that it is difficult or even meaningless to attempt to identify a crossover point. An upturn in commercial ambition and success is probably the main ingredient that distinguished Britpop from what had gone before.

However, some bands also showed a descernable shift to adopting an overtly British and primarily working-class aesthetic. Whereas punk and US influences (eg The Pixies, The Velvet Underground) had dominated in the early 1990s, the two highest-profile indie bands just prior to Britpop (Blur and Suede) took pointedly British influences (The Kinks for Blur, David Bowie for Suede and The Smiths for both). Imagary associated with both bands was equally British and working class. Suede's lyrics and videos dealt with the seedier side of suburban and sink estate life. Blur (at the time of the Modern Life Is Rubbish LP) introduced perhaps the most critical element of the Britpop movement - a Mod-influenced 1960s view of English life, portrayed through a clear lyrical narrative, in stark contrast to the shoegazing and Madchester scenes that had gone before. Blur's promotion of Modern Life Is Rubbish also prefigured the rise in male working class values within the media, which would be very much part of the Britpop era, with the band in press photos straining to control a pitbull terrier, and the words "British image no 1" graffittied on a wall behind them.

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Brett Anderson of Suede on the iconic "Yanks Go Home" front cover of Select Magazine, April, 1993, hearalding the end of grunge and the birth of Britpop
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Brett Anderson of Suede on the iconic "Yanks Go Home" front cover of Select Magazine, April, 1993, hearalding the end of grunge and the birth of Britpop

The term "Britpop" had been used in the late 1980s (in Sounds magazine by journalist, Goldblade frontman and TV pundit John Robb referring to bands such as The La's, Stone Roses, Inspiral Carpets and The Bridewell Taxis). "Britpop" arose around the same time as the term "Britart" (which referred to the work of British modern artists such as Damien Hirst). However, it would not be until 1994 when the term entered the popular consciousness, being used extensively by NME, Melody Maker, Select, and Q magazine. The word subsequently entered the mainstream media. Its influence was recognised by an article in The Guardian in which the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary declared "Britpop" as the new word which best exemplified 1995[[Citing sources citation needed]]. "Britpop" was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 1997.[http://www.worldwidewords.org/articles/collinslist.htm]

In April 1993, Select magazine helped spark the upswing in British pride by featuring Suede's lead singer Brett Anderson on the cover with a Union Jack in the background and the phrase "Yanks go home!" on the cover. The issue included features on Suede, The Auteurs, Denim, Saint Etienne and Pulp. In the following three years (19931995) other Britpop acts dominated the music weeklies - Mansun, Elastica, Echobelly, Sleeper, Supergrass, Primal Scream, The Auteurs, The Boo Radleys, Pulp, Cast (a band formed by John Power, former bassist for The La's), The Bluetones, Black Grape, Torrindale, Space and The Divine Comedy. Some of them were new, others such as the Boo Radleys and Dodgy already established acts who benefited from association with the movement.

After this, the first stirrings of recognition by the music press came in the form of what the NME had dubbed the New Wave of New Wave (or 'NWONW'), though this was initially applied to the more punk-derivative acts such as Elastica, S*M*A*S*H and These Animal Men. Though the latter two band quickly disappeared from the limelight altogether, the music press was initially hesitant to recognise what it regarded as lesser acts; in the first instance Oasis, Shed Seven and Whiteout, and continued to champion the more brash and punky groups. However, the release of new material by both The Charlatans and Inspiral Carpets that year (having returned to form following poorly-received "post-baggy" records) saw the more melodic acts gain prominence. Other baggy acts to slip back into mainstream acceptance during this period included Ocean Colour Scene and Shaun Ryder's post-Happy Mondays outfit Black Grape.

Fans of Britpop are divided over which album truly kick-started the movement. Oasis' breakthrough debut Definitely Maybe (1994), Blur's bombastic third album Parklife (1994) and Suede's self-titled debut Suede (1993) are all contenders. These albums defined the movement and paved the way for many other acts. Pulp's His 'n' Hers (1994) also coincided with this trio of landmark albums but they would not achieve true mainstream success until 1995's Different Class. Britpop hysteria then rapidly gained media and fan attention in Britain, Western Europe and some parts of the North America.

The movement was as much about British pride, media hype and imagery as it was about the particular style of music. Suede (known in America as "London Suede") was the first of the new crop of guitar-oriented bands to be completely embraced by the UK music media as Britain's answer to Seattle's grunge sound. Their self-titled first album was released in March 1993, and became the fastest-selling debut album in the history of the UK. This title was later claimed by Oasis with Definitely Maybe.

Oasis on the cover of the Roll With It single
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Oasis on the cover of the Roll With It single

In 1995 the Britpop movement reached its zenith. The famous "Battle Of The Bands" found Blur and Oasis as prime contenders for the title "Kings of Britpop". Spurred on by the media, the Battle" was headed by two groups - Oasis' brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher representing the North of England, and from Blur, Damon Albarn and Alex James representing the South.Live Forever: The Rise and Fall of Brit Pop. Passion Pictures, 2004. This "Battle" was epitomised when, after some back-handed marketing, Oasis' Single "Roll With It" and Blur's "Country House" were released the same day. The event caught the public's imagination and gained mass media attention - even featuring on the BBC News. While this battle raged on Pulp took the number two spot with their most recognisable single "Common People" and Suede with their "Trash" and "Beautiful Ones".

Blur's Country House single cover
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Blur's Country House single cover

In the end, Blur won the battle of the bands, selling 274,000 copies to Oasis' 216,000 - the songs charting at number one and number two respectively. However, in the long-run, Oasis' album (What's the Story) Morning Glory won the popular vote over Blur’s The Great Escape, outselling it by a factor of 4 or more. In the UK, (What's the Story) Morning Glory spent a total of three years on the charts, selling over eighteen million copies and becoming the second best selling British album of all time. Oasis' second album is considered by many to be the definitive Britpop album. In Britain and Ireland it became popular for a time when asked "What's the story?" (lit. "How are you?"), to answer with "Morning glory".

During this time the new electioneering saw the emergence of the young leader of the Labour Party - Tony Blair. Blair represented the new face of the dreams and wishes of the British counterculture and many acts like Oasis and Blur admired him. Noel Gallagher also appeared on several official meetings and expressed his support for Blair.

Along with Oasis, Blur, Pulp and Suede, 1995 saw critically and commercially acclaimed singles and albums released by other Britpop bands which, collectively, captured the essence of the attitude and the Cool Britannia movement. Such bands included Supergrass (I Should Coco), Cast (All Change) and Radiohead (The Bends). The "Cool Britannia" movement was also symbolised in by the outwardly happy, poppy sing-along summer anthems of such bands as Dodgy's "Staying Out for the Summer", Supergrass' "Alright", Sleeper's "Inbetweener", The Boo Radleys' "Wake Up Boo" and Echobelly's "Great Things". 1995 also saw The Verve release their second album, A Northern Soul. The album failed to make a commercial impact, despite strong critical acclaim and the band split, though Richard Ashcroft reformed it a few weeks later.

The British media went so far as the brand the movement the "Third British Invasion", because of it massive popularity at the time and because acts represented particular musical influence or movement in their music, which led to more or less media-generated conflicts between the bands, as was the case with previous bands and movements.

Though the fallout from 1995 continued well into the summer of 1996, thanks in part to new releases from the likes of Ocean Colour Scene (Moseley Shoals), Suede (Coming Up) and Dodgy (Free Peace Sweet) and to a legendary, record breaking two night show at Knebworth Park from Oasis. The 1996 Brit Awards were a celebration of britpop, with many of the nominees acknowledged as "britpop bands". The ceremony was also fuelled by the rivalry between Blur and Oasis. When Oasis defeated Blur to win the "Best British Album" Award, the Gallagher brothers taunted Blur by singing a drunken rendition of Blur's biggest hit "Parklife", with Liam Gallagher changing the lyrics to "Shite-Life". Oasis also won the "Best British Album" award for (What's the Story) Morning Glory and the "Best Video Award" for "Wonderwall". All three awards had been won by Blur the previous year. Meanwhile, Paul Weller won the "Best Male Artist" award (for the second year running) and Supergrass were acknowledged the "Best Breakthrough Act", which Oasis had won the year before. The ceremony was packed with britpop artists, but it was Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker who stole the show by invading the stage during a performance by Michael Jackson and flashing his rear. Cocker was arrested but released without charge.

Although the majority of the bands associated with Britpop were English, there were exceptions; Super Furry Animals, Catatonia, Gorky's Zygotic Mynci, Manic Street Preachers and Stereophonics were Welsh; The Gyres, The Supernaturals, Travis and Belle and Sebastian were Scottish and Ash were Northern Irish. This even led native media to call the rise of Welsh Bands "Cool Cymru" and "Cool Caledonia" - a pun to "Cool Britannia". In spite of accusations of Southeast bias (typified by Blur, Supergrass and the much-lamented Menswe@r), the movement and Britpop hysteria engulfed not just one province or city; it encompassed the entire region and established itself as a hegemonic and definitive British movement, both musically and spiritually.

The movement also exercised a brief period of cultural hegemony, with the 1996 film Trainspotting and its Britpop-centric soundtrack (featuring Blur, Elastica, Pulp and Sleeper), through to Ocean Colour Scene's music being used on Chris Evans' TFI Friday and the film Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Some considered TFI Friday to be part of the televisual arm of Britpop. Other examples are Shooting Stars (which utilised large "Mod" logos as part of the set and featured many prominent Britpop musicians as guests), The Girly Show, The Word, The Fast Show and Father Ted.

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Be Here Now is often highlighted as the beginning of the end for the movement
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Be Here Now is often highlighted as the beginning of the end for the movement

However, by late 1996, the movement and hysteria started to subside. This was due to high expectations not being met and artistic burnout caused by the drug-fuelled lifestyles of the bands. Bands like Blur, Oasis and Suede gained much media attention for their use of alcohol and/or drugs. In 1997, many releases would be ultimately disappointing, lacking the overall spirit and sound of the movement. The releases core initiators and leaders, Oasis and Blur, were key to the downturn in Britpop's fortunes. Oasis' third album Be Here Now, although attracting much hype and selling strongly, failed to stand the test of time and soon attracted strong criticism from critics, record-buyers and Noel Gallagher himself for its overproduced and bloated sound. Blur's self-titled fifth album was very well received by critics, partly because it showcased stylistic evolution for the band, unlike Oasis. However, their new sound was not immediately well received by fans. The band - under the guidance of guitarist Graham Coxon rather than vocalist Damon Albarn - moved away from their old sound and their music began to assimilate American lo-fi influences, particularly that of Pavement, with frontman Damon Albarn telling the NME that the album was "English slacker". It would take the release of Blur's second single, "Song 2", to win the record true commercial success and it soon shot back up the British charts.

1997 saw The Verve finally gain commercial recognition with Urban Hymns
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1997 saw The Verve finally gain commercial recognition with Urban Hymns

However, whilst established acts struggled, attention began to turn to the likes of Radiohead and The Verve, who had previously overlooked by media attention, which had previously centred on Pulp, Suede, Blur and Oasis, though Radiohead had found commercial success their 1993 single "Creep" and commercial and critical success with 1995s The Bends. These two bands - in particular Radiohead - showed considerably more esoteric influences from the 1960s and 1970s, not as common amongst the earlier Britpop acts. When the movement showed signs of fading, Radiohead and the Verve released their respective 1997 landmark efforts OK Computer and Urban Hymns, both of which were and remain widely acclaimed.

Albums like Pulp's This Is Hardcore saw bands moving away from the "Britpop" sound
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Albums like Pulp's This Is Hardcore saw bands moving away from the "Britpop" sound

As the movement began to slow down, many acts began to falter. Though some acts found success with more challenging records - such as Pulp's This Is Hardcore, Supergrass' In It for the Money and Cornershop's When I Was Born for the 7th Time - many acts found the pressure too great and split, or simply faded from the limelight. Elastica fell victim to drug abuse and did not follow up 1995's self titled debut until 1999. Menswear also failed to follow up their debut, Nuisance, and split. Others, such as Cast, Ocean Colour Scene and Shed Seven continued to release records well into the new millennium, but with rapidly diminishing commercial success. Similarly, many of the newer acts the record industry rushed to sign during the heyday of Britpop simply did not prove to be chart worthy.

As the decade drew to a close, the movement fell apart. Blur continued to move away from the movement with their subsequent releases, parting company with long-time producer Stephen Street and guitarist Graham Coxon in the process. A couple of years after Coxon left he realigned with Street to record his most successful solo records. Oasis remained popular amongst their fan base, but entered a period of inactivity following Be Here Now. Whilst recording the follow-up in 1999, they suffered the loss of founding members Bonehead and Guigsy in 1999. In 2004 longtime drummer and member Alan White left, leaving only the Gallagher brothers as original members from the Britpop era. Suede released two more albums in 1999 and 2002, before eventually calling it quits in 2003. Pulp failed to follow up 1998's This Is Hardcore until 2001 with We Love Life after which they entered an extended hiatus from which they have yet to emerge. Radiohead, never the band most strongly associated with the movement, radically changed their sound with subsequent records and abandoned all semblance of the Britpop style. The Verve, after losing key guitarist Nick McCabe, also split, although their frontman Richard Ashcroft subsequently forged a successful solo career. Despite the "fall" of Britpop a few established acts like Oasis, Radiohead, Blur and Supergrass continued to make music and still are enjoying relative popularity among fans and critics.

The period was adequately summed up by the demise of Creation Records, arguably the driving force for much of the hype and hyperbole of the era, in 1999. Following the bubble created by Oasis which kept the label afloat, it entered a hubristic period which saw the commercially and critically unsuccessful signings of white Rastafarian Mishka and an ageing Kevin Rowland to the label.

( Aside from the movement's contribution to culture in general during and after the period, early line-ups of current bands in the ascendant such as The Libertines, Kaiser Chiefs (as Parva) and Hard-Fi (as Contempo), all formed during the late 1990s and early 2000s. This can be seen as a continuation of the evolution of new bands and scenes from old, and the rapid turnover of 'genres', in the British music scene, as the Third Wave Of Britpop. Other acts like Coldplay, Travis, The Quennells, Athlete, Muse and Kasabian have shown Britpop influences in their work.

See also

References

Footnotes

External links

Alternative rock
Alternative metal - Britpop - C86 - College rock - Dream pop - Gothic rock - Grebo - Grunge - Indie pop/Indie rock - Industrial rock - Lo-fi - Madchester - Math rock - Noise pop - Paisley Underground - Post-punk revival - Post-rock - Riot Grrrl - Sadcore - Shoegazing - Space rock - Twee pop
Other topics
Bands - College radio - History - Indie (music) - Lollapalooza

 


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