Blur “Blur” (1997) – got it
Blur’s self-titled album was a dramatic sea change for the band. After
three albums of perky, clean, cheeky Britpop, containing plenty of piano and
occasional brass bands; they suddenly emerged with this murky, often
downbeat, sparser, lo-fi rock album.
The band’s previous album “the Great Escape” had been relatively
successful commercially and critically (and it’s the first one really
got me into them). But, with the highly publicised ‘battle of Britpop’
between Blur and Oasis and the success of the latter’s “(What’s the
Story) Morning Glory” album Blur faced backlash, being seen as
inauthentic middle-class pop, next to ‘working class heroes’ Oasis.
Guitarist Graham Coxon was also feeling increasingly creatively restrained within the band, to the extent that he wrote a letter to
singer Damon Albarn urging that they make music that “scares people
again”. Albarn talked to producer Stephen Street about going for a
more stripped down sound and the band took a more collaborative
approach, jamming together instead of just working on Albarn's
compositions.
Right from the off it's a different sound. Opening track "Beetlebum"
starts with muted, struck guitar strings giving way into an almost
monotone fuzzy guitar line with Albarn's slow drawl creeping in over
top; the overall effect owing more to American indie rock than to the
British music hall. The second track, the imaginatively titled "Song
2" was something they'd thrown together with Coxon and drummer Dave
Rowntree playing drum kits at opposite ends of studio from each other
and Albarn riffing lyrics over the top. The short rocker ended up
becoming a hit for the band.
Most of the rest of the record continues with its scungey alt-rock vibe
on tracks like "Death of a party", "Movin' on", the Coxon penned and
sung "You're so great" and epic closer "Essex Dogs". Elsewhere,
tracks like "MOR" and "Chinese Bombs"
bring a rocking velocity to contrast the more lethargic numbers. "On
your own" flirts with electronic beats, and mixes that with guitar noises and singalong
choruses.
The album doesn't completely depart from previous offerings. As with the previous three albums there is an instrumental track, but instead of being a jaunty brass or
piano piece, it's the moody "Theme from Retro",
all organs and indistinct vocal samples. The song that bears the most
resemblance to their previous Britpop work (bouncy rhythm and string
backing) is, funnily enough, the track titled "Look Inside America".
It's funny in a way: Oasis spent so much time trying to be the Beatles
by copying that band's various sounds, whereas Blur ended up being more
like the Beatles through their constant reinvention and deconstruction
of their own sound.
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