IdleRich
IdleRich
Surely not karma from that born again Christian. He did say something like that though.That was Glenn Hoddle.
Edit - wrong he said exactly that
Surely not karma from that born again Christian. He did say something like that though.That was Glenn Hoddle.
Is my memory playing tricks on me, or didn't the bloke from Kula Shaker get in trouble for saying disabled people were reaping bad karma from a previous life, and that he was pro-eugenics?
totally wrong, that was mixed_biscuitsThat was Glenn Hoddle.
yeah you're right there's loads of people who don't listen to that potatoey sort of music but there also were a fraction who did obviouslythis isn't true though is it? Let me put my middle eastern triumphalism aside for one minute but there are plenty of people in Britain with all too common lives who don't listen to the Editors or Oasis.
A lot of this seems to be the whole racist idea of Brits feeling marginalised in their own country because they are white/cis/het. But the working class does not see power in its alienation and its marginalisation from the political community, only the bourgeois and petit-bourgeois do. Mark was too conciliatory to the labour party, and the BBC which is why biscuits and the iq magical thinker were able to join in the hayday. All blame lies with craner and Luke in that respect, they didn't make k-punk totalitarian enough! and that is no joke!
i loved that mode of k punk's writing back in the day. i don't know what you'd call it. that was my way in. the first time i read the wire the first thing i read was an interview with tricky, which years later i realized was k punk. ended up being into all three of those things (k punk, wire, tricky). you're right to see that lineage there.exactly, that's my point.
We do the same for rnb, rap, hardcore acid techno, gabba etc.
I was criticising shaka and kpunks defence of Dido back in the day, which shaka's defence of this seem to imply.
Subvert's explanation is simple, but the best. people just like the guitar bands of their youth.
I refuse to believe that any Brit has ever liked or even listened to a nine inch nails song.
in the US i think coz the mentality is so individualized shit circumstances lead to people turning inwards in violent self-loathing like in NiN. in the UK it's projected outwards to the environment a bit more. uk lends itself to lads singing to soaring anthems hands over each others shoulders spilling lager down your mate's back coz you can't get away with much navel-gazing or chatting about it anyway, the space for emotional catharsis is needed. letting it in. letting it out.I dunno what my point is anymore, but uh... just wanna say that I don't hate Oasis, I just don't get the big deal for something that seems like a middle-of-the-road throwback with a modern makeover in the guitar sound.
Perhaps that's why no one wants to comment on that NIN track I posted as a comparison from something from an extremely popular album from the same year. I promise that people can admit it's something that actually deserves the tag "desperate" without getting mallgoth-industrial cooties.
in terms of thinking about oasis - at risk of stating the totally obvious - it's a multiplicity isn't it. there's a thousand angles to come at it from and you need to approach the same thing from all of them to get an idea of the many things that are going on. oasis is a huge mass phenomenon involving millions of people over a thirty year period. you can't separate the CDs from the audience really, it's all part of the same thing. but anyway. one thing that's going on within this is that it's absolutely totally obvious that oasis tunes find some kind of emotional resonance in loads of people. and did in 1995. that's a description not a defence
i loved that mode of k punk's writing back in the day. i don't know what you'd call it. that was my way in. the first time i read the wire the first thing i read was an interview with tricky, which years later i realized was k punk. ended up being into all three of those things (k punk, wire, tricky). you're right to see that lineage there.
yeah agree with you and version. it's part of the soup. these trails of the mid-20th century living on. the last gasp before those ideas wilted. the only people who have somehow preserved it as well. that's what the mediatized bit of the reunion reminds me of. something buried being dug up and reopened.could say the same for The Cranberries and the Corrs though.
I think Oasis's appeal precisely lies in the fact that they are a pastiche for people who can't or don't want to give up (by then exhausted) rock n roll rebellion.
That Mark Fisher bit is similar to the way I felt about Grunge here at the time - why are we moving backwards? This is 1991. The future is here!
I thought that some of the grunge stuff might as well have been country music, but with a different guitar sound and of course the quiet/loud aesthetic.
Unfortunately, I was also unfairly dismissive of MBV at the same time, but I finally started appreciating them after circling back and realizing they had more to offer sonically for my ears.
Was that sort of 60s revival in the 90s in rock music preceded by/induced somehow by rave music?
Or was it that generational thing people have talked about where the youngsters of the 60s were now in charge of labels/radio stations etc