|
| Background information |
| Origin |
Sheffield, England |
| Genre(s) |
Britpop, Indie rock |
| Years active |
1978– 2002 (on hiatus) |
| Label(s) |
Island Records |
| Website |
official
site |
| Members |
Jarvis
Cocker
Candida
Doyle
Mark Webber
Steve Mackey
Nick
Banks |
| Former members |
Tim
Allcard
Peter Boam
Peter Dalton
Magnus
Doyle
Wayne Furniss
Antony
Genn
Steven Havenhand
David Hinkler
Simon Hinkler
David Lockwood
Peter Mansell
Jamie Pinchbeck
Jimmy Sellers
Russell Senior
Mark Swift
Phillip Thompson
Gary Wilson |
Pulp are a rock band,
formed in Sheffield, England in 1978, by
then 15-year-old school boy Jarvis Cocker (vocals, guitar). They were
originally known as "Arabacus Pulp,"
but this was shortened a year later. The members of Pulp were all
schoolmates attending City High School in Sheffield
and supported fellow school band Crude in their first gigs. They cite
their influences as David Bowie, The
Cure, The Beatles and The
Kinks.
They are most famous in the UK, where their blend of disco-influenced
pop-rock coupled with the amusing down-to-earth kitchen-sink
lyrics of front-man Jarvis Cocker saw them become popular during the
mid 1990s. In 1996 they won the Mercury Prize. After
their last album We Love Life
(2001), the band entered into an extended hiatus, from which they have
yet to emerge.
|
Contents
- 1 History
- 1.1 (1978-1982)
Origins
- 1.2 (1983-1991)
Lack of success
- 1.3 (1992-1996)
Popular success
- 1.4 (1997-2002)
The price of fame
- 1.5 (2003-present)
On hiatus
- 2 Discography
- 2.1 Studio
albums
- 2.2 Compilations
- 2.3 UK
singles
- 3 References
- 4 Further
reading
- 5 External
links
|
History
(1978-1982) Origins
The first line-up was Cocker, David Lockwood, Mark Swift and Peter Dalton, though this soon
disintegrated into a fairly un-set membership of Cocker and whoever
else was around at the time. They played their first proper gig at Rotherham
Arts Centre in July 1980, and made a demo tape the following year which
they gave to the DJ John Peel. Amazingly they landed a Peel
Session, and the tracks they recorded were pretty much in the typical
Sheffield sound of the time (cf. Human League, Comsat
Angels) - based on electronic New
Wave.
Despite the exposure on national radio, success was not forthcoming, and most
of the then line-up left for university. A new set of musicians was
gathered: Simon Hinkler (who
later joined The Mission and produced All
About Eve), David Hinkler, Wayne Furniss, Peter Boam, Gary Wilson, and
Cocker's sister, Saskia. They managed to get enough
local backing to record a mini-album in late 1982 entitled It.
This largely consisted of jangly, happy-go-lucky, folkish, romantic pop
tunes, and was a change of direction from the Peel Sessions.
But fame was still not knocking, and Cocker was becoming
unhappy with his chosen musical direction. He was all set to throw the
towel in and go to university, when he decided to hold a practice with Russell
Senior (violin, guitar, vocals) and Magnus
Doyle (drums). The three of them established a new, more experimental,
artier, and noisier direction for Pulp, and were subsequently augmented
by Peter Mansell (bass) and Tim Allcard (keyboards, saxophone,
poetry).
(1983-1991) Lack of success
Pulp continued to seek commercial success, even to the point
of recording a single, Everybody's Problem c/w There Was (released in
September 1983 on Red Rhino records) in the style of the then prevalent
pop-group Wham!. Red Rhino's Tony Perrin,
later a manager of The Mission, convinced Jarvis Cocker that "you could
write commercial songs like Wham, Jarvis".
Having survived a number of ill-fated gigs, Allcard left to be
replaced on keyboards by Doyle's sister Candida.
Following her first performance with the band, they were signed to a
label called Fire Records, and began to record
a number of singles that were later released as the compilation album Masters
of the Universe. These tracks were much darker in tone than
those on It, and often veered towards the likes of The
Fall.
These releases were followed by an album, Freaks
in 1987, recorded in one week due to pressure from the label. Its
release ended up being delayed for a year, and the record was not well
received. It is either loved or hated by fans, and might be considered
the antithesis of the happy and optimistic It.
It was during this mid-80s period that Cocker fell out of a
window while trying to impress a girl, and ended up in hospital,
temporarily wheelchair-bound. This gave Cocker ample time to consider
his direction, and when, later, Freaks failed to be
a success, Pulp folded, with Jarvis going off to London to study film.
The fold was short-lived however, and a new line-up,
consisting of Cocker, Senior, Candida Doyle, Nick Banks
(drums) and Steve Mackey (bass) emerged.
They recorded another album for Fire after a separate deal fell
through. This album, Separations, was
a progression of the style of Freaks, with Leonard
Cohen-esque ballads on side one and a more disco/Acid House
infused track-listing on side two. Like Freaks, its
release was delayed, to an extent lessening the potential impact.
In the meantime, however, in 1991, a 12" recording - "My
Legendary Girlfriend" became music periodical The NME's single of the
week, and it was that which heralded Pulp's first steps towards fame.
(1992-1996) Popular success
Frustrated that Separations still hadn't
been released, Pulp signed to Warp Records imprint Gift
Records in 1992. Fire attempted to capitalise on this by finally
releasing Separations. The three singles released
on Gift were later compiled on the album Intro
which was released when they were signed up by Island
Records.
Island Records then released the singles "Do You Remember the
First Time?" and "Lipgloss", to modest chart success. These were
followed by the Ed Buller produced album His
'n' Hers which reached No.9 in the UK charts
and was nominated for the Mercury Music Prize, and which was musically
similar to the band Suede.
This sudden increase in popularity was certainly helped by the
massive media interest in a new wave of Britpop ushered in by the likes of Suede and
Blur,
supporting the latter in a tour of the U.S. in 1994.
1995 saw the peak of Pulp's fame, with the release of their
No.2 UK
Hit single "Common People", their much loved
performance at the Glastonbury Festival (standing
in for the Stone Roses at the last minute) and
their Mercury award winning album Different
Class (the first album featuring Pulp fan-club
president Mark Webber, who became a
permanent member of the band on guitar and keyboards). This album, with
its disco-infused pop-rock, and the trademark sordid yet witty lyrics
about sexual encounters and working class life, is for most fans what
Pulp are about. The album also contained follow-up singles "Sorted
for E's & Wizz" (another UK #2 hit), "Disco 2000" (which peaked
at #7), and "Something Changed" (peaking at #10).
But domestic attention was not equalled in the rest of the
world, and if Pulp are known beyond the UK it is perhaps more likely
the result of Cocker's prank at the infamous 1996 BRIT
Awards, where he invaded the stage in protest during Michael
Jackson's performance (for which he spent the night in the cells
accused of assaulting the child performers, though he was released
without charge) [1]. This incident propelled Cocker
into great controversy in the UK and elsewhere, and the band's record
sales soared as a result. The Daily Mirror set up a "Justice for
Jarvis" campaign backing his actions and carried out a stunt at Pulp's Sheffield
Arena gig on February 29th, handing out free T-shirts with this logo
printed on.The March
2, 1996
edition of Melody Maker suggested Cocker should be
knighted.
(1997-2002) The price of fame
It was during this period of intense fame that long time
member and major innovator in the band's sound, Russell Senior, decided
to call it a day to spend time with his family (and out of the tabloid press).
Cocker was also having difficulty with the celebrity lifestyle,
battling cocaine addiction like many of his peers and a breakup of a
long-term relationship.
The fallout of all of this, and the ensuing depression induced
by finding the one thing he'd been after all his life (fame) and then
deciding that it wasn't really up to much, was the subject matter of
the follow-up album This Is Hardcore:
a trawl through the seedy world of Soho, which during its more navel-gazing,
depressed-singer-in-a-hotel-room moments stylistically approached Pink
Floyd's The Wall. Many of
the fans who had so enjoyed the happier, more amusing and light-hearted
approach of Different Class were somewhat turned
off by the darker tone of the new record. Pulp also collaborated with Patrick
Doyle on the song "Like A Friend" for the soundtrack to the movie Great Expectations.
Pulp then spent a few years "in the wilderness" before
reappearing in 2001 with a new album, We
Love Life. The extended period between the
release of This is Hardcore and We Love life is partly attributed to
having initially recorded the songs which comprise the album and being
dissatisfied with the results. Subsequent interviews also suggested
interpersonal and artistic differences, including managing the fallout
of the Britpop/Different Class era. Legendary singer/songwriter Scott
Walker eventually agreed to produce the record and this symbolised a
new phase in Cocker and Pulp's development. The record was lighter in
tone to This is Hardcore and lyrically, songs reflected Cocker's recent
interest in nature and perhaps escape from urban lifestyle e.g.
"Trees", "Weeds" and "Sunrise".
Pulp subsequently undertook a tour of the National Parks in
the UK, even playing a show as far North as Elgin in Scotland. Richard
Hawley, the Sheffield based singer/songwriter was also present on
various dates on this tour.
In 2002 the band announced they were leaving their label,
Island. A greatest hits package was released: Hits
with one new track. It is unclear whether this was the band's decision
or released to satisfy contractual agreements. A music
festival: Auto was
organised (held at Rotherham's Magna centre) where they played their last gig
before embarking on a hiatus from the music
industry from which they are yet to emerge.
(2003-present) On hiatus
Cocker was involved in a number of one-offs and side projects,
including the group Relaxed Muscle with Richard
Hawley and the film Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire where he fronted
a group which included Steve Mackey and members of Radiohead. His first
solo album Jarvis, with
the participation of Mackey, was released to critical acclaim in
November 2006.
On the 11 September 2006 the band
re-released three of their albums (His 'n' Hers, Different
Class, and This Is Hardcore), each with a
bonus disc of B-sides, demos and rarities. On 23 October 2006 a 2CD set
compiling all of Pulp's John Peel Sessions from 1982 to 2001 was
released.
In a March 2007 interview with magazine The Trip Wire,
Cocker was sceptical about Pulp's future, saying he wasn't against it
completely, but couldn't see a point in reuniting the band at the
moment.
Discography
Studio albums
- 1. It
(1983) - Did Not Chart
- 2. Freaks
(1987) - Did Not Chart
- 3. Separations
(1991) - Did Not Chart
- 4. His 'n' Hers
(1994) - #9 UK
- 5. Different Class
(1995) - #1 UK
- 6. This
Is Hardcore (1998) - #1 UK, #114 US
- 7. We Love Life
(2001) - #6 UK
Compilations
- Intro -
non-album singles compilation (1993)
- Masters of the
Universe - non-album singles compilation (1994)
- Countdown 1992-1983
- compilation of tracks from Fire/Red Rhino era (1996) #10 UK
- Death Goes To The Disco (1998)
- Freshly Squeezed (Early Years) (1998)
- Pulped 1983-1992 - Four CD box-set,
featuring the first three albums, plus Masters of the Universe
(2000)
- Hits -
greatest hits compilation (2002) #71 UK
- The Peel Sessions
(2006) - Compilation of all the Peel sessions from Pulp
UK singles
- May 1983 "My Lighthouse" (remix)/"Looking For Life"
- September 1983 "Everybody's Problem"/"There Was"
- October 1985 "Little Girl (With Blue
Eyes)"/"Simultaneous"/"Blue Glow"/"The Will To Power"
- June 1986 "Dogs Are Everywhere"/"Mark Of The Devil"/"97
Lovers"/"Aborigine"/"Goodnight"
- January 1987 "They Suffocate At Night"/"Tunnel"
- May 1987 "Master of the Universe"/"Manon"/"Silence"
- March 1991 "My Legendary Girlfriend"/"Is This House?"/"This
House Is Condemned"
- August 1991 "Countdown"/"Death Goes To The
Disco"/"Countdown" (radio edit)
- June 1992 "O.U. (Gone, Gone)" (Radio Edit)/"O.U. (Gone,
Gone)" (12" Mix)/"Space"
- August 1992 "My Legendary Girlfriend" (live)/"Sickly
Grin"/"Back in L.A."
- October 1992 "Babies"/"Styloroc (Nights of
Suburbia)"/"Sheffield - Sex City"
- February 1993 "Razzmatazz"/"Stacks"/ "Inside
Susan" /"59 Lyndhurst Grove"
- November 1993 "Lipgloss"/"You're a
Nightmare"/"Deep Fried in Kelvin" #50
- April 1994 "Do You Remember the
First Time"/"Street Lites" #33
- June 1994 "The Sisters EP" (Babies/Your Sister's
Clothes/Seconds/His 'n' Hers) #19
- ???? 1995 "Common People" (Motiv8 Mix/Vocoda
Mix/Ansafone) White Label (Uncharted)
- June 1995 "Common People"/"Underwear" #2
- October 1995 "Mis-Shapes"/"Sorted
for E's & Wizz" #2
- December 1995 "Disco 2000" #7
- April 1996 "Something Changed"/"Mile End" #10
- November 1997 "Help the Aged"/"Tomorrow
Never Lies"/"Laughing Boy" #8
- March 1998 "This Is Hardcore" #12
- March 1998 "Like a Friend" (U.S. release only)
- June 1998 "A Little Soul"/"Cocaine Socialism" #22
- September 1998 "Party Hard" #29
- October 2001 "Sunrise"/"The Trees" #23
- April 2002 "Bad Cover Version" #27
References
-
SputnikMusic morrisey. "Pulp reviews, music, news".
Retrieved on January 31, 2007.
-
Anthony. "Everybody's Problem". Retrieved on
January
31, 2007.
-
Intro.de: Newsticker 07.03.07 'No Deaths that I know of'
Retrieved 19 March 2007.
Further reading
- Mark Sturdy, Truth & Beauty: The Story of
Pulp (Omnibus Press, 2003) - comprehensive biography
External links
| Pulp |
| Jarvis Cocker | Candida
Doyle | Mark Webber
| Steve Mackey | Nick Banks |
Tim Allcard | Peter
Boam | Peter Dalton | Magnus Doyle | Wayne Furniss | Antony
Genn | Stephen Havenhand | David Hinkler | Simon Hinkler
David Lockwood | Peter Mansell | Jamie
Pinchbeck | Jimmy Sellers | Russell Senior | Mark Swift
| Phillip Thompson | Gary Wilson |
| Albums |
| It
| Freaks |
Separations | His
'n' Hers | Different
Class | This
Is Hardcore | We
Love Life |
| Compilation
albums |
| Intro
| Masters of the
Universe | Countdown
1992-1983 | Hits
| The Peel Sessions |
| Singles |
"My Lighthouse" | "Everybody's Problem" | "Little
Girl (With Blue Eyes)" | "Dogs Are Everywhere" | "They
Suffocate At Night"
"Master of
the Universe" | "My Legendary
Girlfriend" | "Countdown" | "O.U. (Gone,
Gone)" | "My Legendary
Girlfriend" (live)
"Babies"
| "Razzmatazz" | "Lipgloss"
| "Do You Remember The
First Time" | "The Sisters EP" | "Common
People"
"Mis-Shapes"/"Sorted
for E's & Wizz" | "Disco 2000" | "Something
Changed" | "Help The Aged" | "This Is Hardcore"
"Like
a Friend" | "A Little Soul" | "Party Hard" | "Sunrise / The
Trees" | "Bad Cover Version" |
| Related
articles |
| Fire
Records | Island Records | Relaxed
Muscle | Richard Hawley | Venini |