Blur were an English
alternative rock band. Formed in London in
1989 as
Seymour, the group consisted of singer
Damon Albarn, guitarist
Graham Coxon, bassist
Alex James and drummer
Dave Rowntree. Blur's debut album
Leisure (1991) incorporated the sounds
of
Madchester and
shoegazing. Following a stylistic
change—influenced by English guitar pop groups such as
The Kinks,
The Beatles
and
XTC—Blur released the
Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993),
Parklife (1994) and
The Great Escape (1995)
albums. As a result, the band helped to popularise the
Britpop genre and achieved mass popularity in the
UK, aided by a famous chart battle with rival band
Oasis dubbed "
The Battle of Britpop".
In recording their follow-up,
Blur (1997), the band underwent another
reinvention, influenced by the
lo-fi
style of American
indie rock bands such
as
Pavement. "
Song
2", one of the album's singles, brought Blur brief mainstream
success in the US. The last album featuring Blur's original lineup,
13 (1999) found the band
members experimenting with
electronic
music and
gospel music, as Albarn
wrote more personal lyrics. In May 2002, Coxon left Blur during the
recording of their seventh album
Think Tank (2003). Containing
electronic sounds and more minimal guitar work, the album was
marked by Albarn's growing interest in
hip
hop and
African music. After a
2003 tour without Coxon, Blur did no studio work or touring as a
band, as members engaged in other projects. Subsequently, Blur
reunited in 2009 with Coxon back in the fold. Following a series of
successful concerts, Blur members have stated that the group has no
immediate plans for the future.
History
Formation and Leisure: 1988–1991
Childhood friends Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon met Alex James when
they began studying at London's
Goldsmiths College
in 1988. Albarn was in a group named Circus, who were joined by
fellow Goldsmiths student, drummer Dave Rowntree that October.
Circus requested the services of Coxon after the departure of their
guitarist. That December Circus fired two members and James joined
as the group's bassist. This new group named themselves Seymour in
December 1988, inspired by
J.D.
Salinger's
Seymour: An Introduction.
Seymour performed live for the first time in summer 1989. In
November,
Food Records'
A&R man Andy Ross attended a Seymour performance
that convinced him to court the group for his label. The only
concern held by Ross and Food was that they disliked the band's
name. Food drew up a list of alternative names, from which the band
decided on "Blur". Food Records finally signed the newly christened
Blur in March 1990.
From March to July 1990, Blur toured the UK, opening for
The Cramps, and testing out new songs. In October
1990, after their tour was over, Blur released the "
She's So High" single, which
reached number 48 in the
UK
Singles Chart. The band had trouble creating a follow-up
single, but they made progress when paired with
producer Stephen
Street. The resulting single release, "
There's No Other Way", became a hit,
peaking at number eight. As a result of the single's success,
Blur became pop stars and were accepted into a clique of bands who
frequented The Syndrome club in London dubbed "
The Scene That Celebrates
Itself".
NME magazine wrote in
1991, "[Blur] are [the] acceptable pretty face of a whole clump of
bands that have emerged since the whole Manchester thing started to
run out of steam."
The band's third single, "
Bang",
performed relatively disappointingly, reaching only number 24.
Andy Ross and Food owner
David Balfe
were convinced Blur's best course of action was to continue drawing
influence from the
Madchester genre. Blur
attempted to expand their musical sound, but the recording of the
group's debut album was hindered by Albarn having to write his
lyrics in the studio. Although the resulting album
Leisure (1991) peaked at
number seven on the British album charts, it received mixed
reviews, and according to journalist
John Harris, "could not shake off the
odour of anti-climax".
Britpop years: 1992–1995
After discovering they were £60,000 in debt, Blur toured the United
States in 1992 in an attempt to recoup their financial losses. The
group released the single "
Popscene" to
coincide with the start of the tour. Featuring "a rush of punk
guitars, '60s pop hooks, blaring British horns, controlled fury,
and postmodern humor", "Popscene" was a turning point for the band
musically. However, upon its release it only charted at
number 32. "We felt 'Popscene' was a big departure; a very,
very English record," Albarn told the
NME in 1993, "But
that annoyed a lot of people . . . We put ourselves out on a limb
to pursue this English ideal and no-one was interested." As a
result of the single's lacklustre performance, plans to release a
single named "Never Clever" were scrapped and work on Blur's second
album was pushed back.
During the two-month American tour, the band became increasingly
unhappy, often venting frustrations on each other, leading to
several physical confrontations. The band members were homesick;
Albarn said, "I just started to miss really simple things . . . I
missed everything about England so I started writing songs which
created an English atmosphere." Upon the group's return to the
United Kingdom, Blur (Albarn in particular) were upset by the
success rival group
Suede had achieved
while they were gone. After a poor performance at a 1992 gig that
featured a well-received performance by Suede on the same bill,
Blur were in danger of being dropped by Food. By that time, Blur
had undergone an ideological and image shift intended to celebrate
their British heritage in contrast to the popularity of American
grunge bands like
Nirvana. Although skeptical of Albarn's new
manifesto for the band, Balfe gave assent for the band's choice of
Andy Partridge of the band
XTC to produce their follow-up to
Leisure. The
sessions with Partridge proved unsatisfactory, and were abandoned
after only three songs, but a chance reunion with Stephen Street
resulted in him returning to produce the group.
The band completed their second album
Modern Life Is Rubbish in
December 1992, but Food Records said the album required more
potential hit singles and asked them to return to the studio for a
second time. The band complied and Albarn wrote "
For Tomorrow", which became the album's lead
single. "For Tomorrow" was a minor success, reaching number 28
on the charts.
Modern Life Is Rubbish was released in May
1993. The announcement of the album's release included a press
photo featuring the phrase "British Image 1" spraypainted behind
the band (who were dressed in a mixture of mod and skinhead attire)
and a pitbull. At the time, such imagery was viewed as
nationalistic and racially insensitive by the British music press;
to quiet concerns, Blur subsequently released the "British Image 2"
photo, which was "a camp restaging of a pre-war aristocratic tea
party".
Modern Life Is Rubbish peaked at number 15 on
the British charts, yet it did not make much of an impression in
the U.S.
The success of
Parklife (1994)
revived Blur's commercial fortunes. The album's first single, the
disco-influenced "
Girls &
Boys", found favour on
BBC Radio 1.
It peaked at number five on the UK singles chart and number four on
the US Modern Rock chart, where it remains the band's highest
charting single to date.
Parklife entered the British
charts at number one and stayed on the album charts for 90
weeks. Enthusiastically greeted by the music press—the
NME
called it "a Great Pop Record . . . bigger, bolder, narkier and
funnier [than
Modern Life is Rubbish]"—
Parklife
is regarded as one of Britpop's defining records. The album
generated further hit singles, including the
ballad "
To the End"
and the mod anthem "
Parklife". Blur
won four awards at the 1995
BRIT Awards,
including Best Band and Best Album for
Parklife. Coxon
later pointed to
Parklife as the moment when "[Blur] went
from being regarded as an alternative, left field arty band to this
amazing new pop sensation".
Blur began working on their fourth album
The Great Escape at the start
of 1995. Building upon the band's previous two albums, Albarn's
lyrics for the album consisted of several third-person narratives.
James reflected, "It was all more elaborate, more orchestral, more
theatrical, and the lyrics were even more twisted . . . It was all
dysfunctional, misfit characters fucking up." The release of the
album's lead single "
Country House"
played a part in Blur's public rivalry with Manchester band Oasis
termed "
The Battle of
Britpop". Partly due to increasing antagonisms between the
groups, Blur and Oasis ultimately decided to release their new
singles on the same day, an event the
NME called "The
British Heavyweight Championship". The debate over which band would
top the British singles chart became a media phenomenon, and Albarn
appeared on the News at Ten. At the end of the week, "Country
House" ultimately outsold Oasis' "
Roll With It" by 274,000 copies to
216,000, becoming Blur's first number one single.
The Great Escape was released in September 1995 to
rapturous reviews, and entered the UK charts at number one.
The
NME hailed it as "spectacularly accomplished,
sumptuous, heart-stopping and inspirational". However, opinion
quickly changed and Blur found themselves largely out of favour
with the media once again. Following the worldwide success of
Oasis'
Morning
Glory? (which went quadruple platinum in America), the
media quipped that "[Blur] wound up winning the battle but losing
the war." Blur became perceived as an "inauthentic middle class pop
band" in comparison to the "working class heroes" Oasis, which
Albarn said made him feel "stupid and confused". Bassist Alex James
later summarised, ""After being the People's Hero, Damon was the
People's Prick for a short period . . . basically, he was a loser –
very publicly."
Reinvention after Britpop: 1996–2000
An early 1996
Q magazine interview revealed that relations
between Blur members had become very strained; journalist Adrian
Deevoy wrote that he "[found] them on the verge of a nervous
breakup". Coxon, in particular, began to resent his band mates;
James for his playboy lifestyle, and Albarn for his control over
Blur's musical direction and public image. The guitarist struggled
with drinking problems and, in a rejection of the group's Britpop
aesthetic, made a point of listening to noisy American alternative
rock bands such as
Pavement. In
February 1996, when Coxon and James were absent for a lip-synced
Blur performance broadcast on Italian television, they were
replaced by a cardboard cutout and a roadie, respectively. Blur
biographer
Stuart Maconie later wrote
that, at the time, "Blur were sewn together very awkwardly".
Although he had previously dismissed it, Albarn grew to appreciate
Coxon's tastes in lo-fi and underground music, and recognised the
need to significantly change Blur's musical direction once again.
"I can sit at my piano and write brilliant observational pop songs
all day long but you've got to move on", he said. He subsequently
approached Street, and argued for a more stripped-down sound on the
band's next record. Coxon, recognising his own personal need to—as
Rowntree put it—"work this band", wrote a letter to Albarn,
describing his desire for their music "to scare people again".
After initial sessions in London, the band left to record the rest
of the album in Iceland, away from the Britpop scene.
The result was
Blur, the
band's fifth studio album, released in February 1997. Although the
music press predicted that the lo-fi sonic experimentation would
alienate Blur's teenage girl fan-base, they generally applauded the
effort. Pointing out lyrics such as "Look inside America/ She's
alright", and noting Albarn's "obligatory nod to
Beck, [and promotion of] the new Pavement album as if
paid to do so", reviewers felt the band had come to accept American
values during this time—an about-face of their attitude during the
Britpop years. Despite cries of "commercial suicide", the album and
its first single, "
Beetlebum", debuted at
number one in the UK. Although the album could not match the
sales of their previous albums in the UK,
Blur became the
band's most successful internationally. In the US, the record
received strong reviews as the album and the "
Song 2" single became a hit.
Blur reached
number 61 on the
Billboard
200 and was certified gold, while "Song 2" peaked at
number six on the
Modern Rock
chart. After "Song 2" was licensed for use in various
media—such as soundtracks, advertisements and television shows—it
became the most-recognisable Blur song in the US. After the success
of
Blur, the band embarked on a nine-month world
tour.
In February 1998, a few months after completing the tour, Blur
released
Bustin' +
Dronin' for the Japanese market. The album is a collection
of Blur songs
remixed by artists such as
Thurston Moore,
William Orbit and
Moby.
Among the tracks, the band were most impressed by Orbit's effort
and enlisted him to replace Street as producer for their next
album, citing a need to approach the recording process from a fresh
perspective. Recording sessions for the upcoming album began in
June 1998, and in August of that year, Coxon released his debut
solo album,
The Sky is Too
High on his own label,
Transcopic Records.
Coxon in 2009
Released in March 1999, Blur's sixth studio album
13 saw them drift still farther away
from their Britpop-era attitude and sound. Orbit's production style
allowed for more jamming, and incorporated a "variety of emotions,
atmospheres, words and sounds" into the mix.
13 was
creatively dominated by Coxon, who "was simply allowed to do
whatever he chose, unedited", by Orbit. Albarn's lyrics—more
heart-felt, personal and intimate than on previous occasions—were
reflective of his break-up with
Elastica
frontwoman
Justine Frischmann,
his partner of eight years. The album received generally favourable
reviews from the press. While
Q called it "a dense,
fascinating, idiosyncratic and accomplished
art
rock album", the
NME felt it was inconsistent and "(at
least) a quarter-of-an-hour too long".
13 debuted at the
top of the UK charts, staying at that position for two weeks. The
album's lead single, the gospel-based "
Tender", opened at the second spot on the
charts. After "
Coffee & TV", the
first Blur single to feature Coxon on lead vocals, managed to only
reach number 11 in the UK, manager Chris Morrison demanded a
chart re-run because of what he deemed was a sales
miscalculation.
In July 1999, in celebration of their tenth anniversary, Blur
released a
22-CD limited
edition box-set of their singles. The accompanying tour in
December saw Blur play the A-sides of the 22 singles (in their
chronological order of release) at every show. In October 2000, the
group released the best-of album
Blur: The Best of, which debuted at
number three in the UK. Dismissed by the band as "the first record
we have seen as product", the tracklisting and release dates of
Blur: The Best of were determined on the basis of market
research and focus groups conducted by Blur's record label, EMI. By
this time, the group had largely disowned the upbeat pop singles
from the Britpop era, and favoured the more arty, experimental work
on
Blur and
13. In an otherwise highly
enthusiastic review of the best-of for the
NME,
Steve Sutherland criticised the band's
"sheer disregard" for their earlier work; "Just because these songs
embarrassed them once they started listening to broadsheet critics
and retreated wounded from the big-sales battle with Oasis doesn't
mean that we're morons to love them."
Coxon's departure, Think Tank, hiatus and reunion:
2001–present
After
13 and the subsequent tour in 1999, the band entered
into a hiatus, during which bandmembers pursued other projects.
Graham Coxon recorded a string of solo albums, while Damon Albarn
created the cartoon band
Gorillaz with
Jamie Hewlett. Alex James worked with
Fat Les and co-wrote several songs with
Sophie Ellis-Bextor and
Marianne Faithfull.
Early in
2002, Blur temporarily broke its hiatus to record a song that would
be played for the European Space Agency
's Mars Lander, however, the plan fell through when
the lander was lost. Recording for Blur's next album got under way
in Marrakesh
, Morocco
in
mid-2002. Tensions surfaced, however, when Coxon began to
appear emotionally and creatively distant to his band mates,
reportedly failing to attend recording sessions. Two of the main
causes for this has been cited as the choice of
dance DJ
Fatboy Slim as the album's producer and
also Coxon's alleged alcohol problems. After several weeks of
uncertainty, Coxon confirmed that he had been asked to leave the
band for reasons connected with his "attitude." His last
contribution to the band was a guitar line on the final track of
Think Tank, "Battery in Your Leg" which Albarn said was
the only song he ever wrote about the band. Before the album was
released, Blur released a new single, "Don't Bomb When You're The
Bomb" as a very limited
white label
release. A largely electronic song, sporting a chorus consisting of
"Don't bomb when you're the bomb-ba-bomb-bomb-bomb", the single and
the band's startling reinvention was a shock to Blur fans, who were
expecting a return to the catchy
pop tunes
of the band's early career. Albarn, however, attempted to assuage
fans' fears by explaining the impetus behind the song and providing
reassurances that the band's new album would be a return to their
roots.
Think Tank, released in
May 2003, was filled with atmospheric, brooding
electronic sounds, featuring simpler
guitar lines played by Albarn, and largely
relying on other instruments to replace Coxon. Coxon's absence also
meant that
Think Tank was almost entirely written by
Albarn. Its sound was seen as a testament to Albarn's increasing
interest in
African music,
Middle Eastern music and electronic
music, and to his complete control over the group's creative
direction. For the following tour the band hired
Simon Tong, former guitarist and keyboardist of
The Verve, who also played with Albarn in
his Gorillaz project. While
Think Tank was received well
by critics and fans, a minority of critics didn't warm to it.
However,
Think Tank was yet another UK number one and
managed Blur's highest US position of number 56. The album was
also nominated for best album at the 2004
BRIT Awards. The band supported the album with a
tour and three singles: "
Out of
Time", "
Crazy Beat" and "
Good Song".
In early 2004, the band announced, through XFM news, that they
would be recording an EP, and there were also rumours that Coxon
would return to Blur. Both of the rumours proved untrue. There were
also some aborted recordings done in 2005. After Coxon
significantly thawed about rejoining the band, James announced in
April and August 2007 that the band will reunite and will likely be
recording a new album in October. In early October 2007, band
members all met for "an enjoyable lunch", but at the time had no
intentions of Blur work in the near future.
November 2008, Albarn revealed that he and Coxon had patched up
their differences. Albarn added that Blur, including Coxon, would
reunite in 2009, and are "going to rehearse and see if we're into
it".
In
December 2008, Albarn and Coxon stated that Blur would reunite for
a concert at Hyde
Park
on 3 July 2009, but after tickets for the concert
sold out within 2 minutes of release, Blur announced an additional
performance at Hyde Park on the 2 July 2009. A series of
June preview shows were also announced, ending at Manchester
Evening News arena on the 26th. All the shows were well received;
The Guardian s music critic
Alexis Petridis gave their performance at
Goldsmiths college five stars out of five, and wrote that "Blur's
music seems to have potentiated by the passing of years . . . they
sound both more frenetic and punky and more nuanced and exploratory
than they did at the height of their fame".
Blur headlined the
Glastonbury
Festival
on 28 June, where they played for the first time
since their headline slot in 1998. Reviews of the
Glastonbury performance were enthusiastic,
The Guardian
called them "the best Glastonbury headliners in an age". The band
also headlined at other summer festivals, including
Oxegen 2009 in Ireland, and the Scottish outdoor
show of
T in the Park. Their T in the
Park headline slot was put in jeopardy after Graham Coxon was
admitted to hospital with food poisoning. Ultimately, the band did
play, albeit an hour and a half after they were scheduled to
appear. As stated by Damon Albarn during the performance, and
covered by the press, this would be their final performance. Alex
James also stated that the band currently had no plans to continue
their reunion. Albarn followed up these comments in July 2009 by
stating that the band's summer dates were all the band would be
doing together, and the reunion was over. In September 2009, Coxon
stated that Blur have no immediate plans for either entering the
studio or playing more shows.
On November 29, it was announced that a feature length documentary
of the band's reunion entitled "No Distance Left To Run" is to be
released on January 19th 2010. The film will also feature
previously unseen archive footage of the band as well as interviews
with the band members. The film will be directed by Dylan Southern
and Will Lovelace and will be a Pulse Films production.
Discography
Awards
- 1994: Q Awards – Best Album
(Parklife)
- 1994: Smash Hits Awards – Best
Alternative Band, Best Album (Parklife)
- 1995: Brit Awards – Best Band, Best
Album (Parklife), Best Single ("Parklife")
- 1995: NME Awards – Best Band, Best
Live Act, Best Album (Parklife)
- 1995: Q Awards – Best Album (The Great Escape)
- 1996: Ivor Novello Awards –
Best Songwriters (shared with Noel
Gallagher)
- 1999: Q Awards – Best Act in the World Today
- 2000: NME Awards – Best Band, Best Single ("Tender")
- 2003: Q Awards – Best Album (Think Tank)
- 2003: South Bank Show Awards –
Best Album (Think Tank)
- 2009: MOJO Awards – Inspiration
Award
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External links