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COOL BRITANNIA REVISITED

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Noel Gallagher told me hoped

they’d become “a proper band, like

U2” and be able to tour America

(fat chance, with volatile brother

Liam), but when I came home and

tried to talk about Ocean Colour

Scene, Shed Seven, Cast, Boo

Radleys and even Suede, few

people wanted to know.

Black Grape were acceptable

because they were mad stoners

(I’d seen them in NY and can

confirm that, brilliant too) but you couldn’t

mention Ash in a pub conversation without

being laughed at by those who’d neither

seen nor heard them. The hype around

Britpop was so great it took good bands

down with it. Many groups stumbled on

– nice to hear the Gallaghers may have

buried their differences,

they must need the

money – but for every Blur

(who have a new album

The Magic Whip

out with

guitarist Graham Coxon

back on board) there were

a dozen like Gene, James,

Mansun (really good live)

and the Longpigs who

got no traction beyond a

homeland fanbase.

The smart ones – Radiohead, Ride, the

excellent Teenage Fanclub and World Party

(whose Karl Wallinger was one of the most

cynical and smart men I’d ever met) –

put distance between themselves and the

archetypal Britpop sound grounded in the

zone between Bowie, The Beatles, The

Kinks and The Who.

But -- if we don’t look back in anger, or

indifference – great pop came from that

scene which celebrated itself.

Above:

Pulp

Left:

Suede

Bottom Left:

Supergrass