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When a cultural movement gathers momentum, sometimes it is hard to stop. But all it takes is a once-in-a-generation musician to provide some difference.
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Louder on MSN"It felt like a revolution could happen." Pulp's Jarvis Cocker on the '90s indie-rock explosion, and why he hates the word BritpopPulp frontman Jarvis Cocker has revealed that he hates the term Britpop, a genre with which his band has been associated for ...
The Britpop 'Big Four' were a titan force - but as Suede had a seemingly more refined taste, they were seen as outliers. Were they too smart for the movement?
Yet Jarvis Cocker – more than Oasis on their high-profile global cash-in or Blur on their 10-year reunion cycle – hits the O2 ...
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Daily Star on MSNPulp can finally bring Britpop back after it ran out of gas and they had 'fatigue'Pulp's Jarvis Cocker got demoralized with Britpop in the 1990s after hoping for a revolution. They knew it was time to make a ...
If there are casual Pulp fans, they don’t make themselves known. The ambitious Britpop-and-then-some band emerged in the late ...
Britpop bands like Oasis and Blur were bigger than the 90s movement, but others also had hits yet remain relatively unknown ...
From surprise guests to hilarious AI interactions, Robbie's Co-op Live show had it all, proving once again that he's the King ...
Britpop had peaked. Even my parents knew about Liam and Damon's slanging matches, having seen them on the Nine O'Clock News. At its height, between 1994-1996, you couldn't walk into Woolworths ...
“It’s something abstract and symbolic, but there’s some lineage of the British eccentric,” Cook says of “Britpop.” “I was kind of unsure because there’s a lot of things that I have ...
Yet Britpop’s swaggering sense of national self-belief feels like a distant memory. By Alex Marshall Reporting from London, where he’s been having his own summer of Britpop In 1994 ...
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