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Post by webm@ster on May 6, 2003 20:42:54 GMT -5
If jumping up and down on an abandoned trailer in Morocco is what it takes for Blur front man Damon Albarn to find the right sound — so be it. One man's ranting antic is another's creative ritual, and this one turns up as the rhythmic squeaking on the track Gene by Gene from the band's just-released seventh album, Think Tank. But it's also understandable that after 14 years, guitarist Graham Coxon finally decided he'd had enough of Albarn's calisthenics, and left the band in September last year, soon after work on the record began. The real reasons are unclear, although the band claims Coxon didn't show for a recording session. He claims he was sacked. To most four-piece rock bands, losing the guitarist would be tragic, a career-ending divorce. For Blur it was just another challenge: how can a guitar-based rock band make a record without a guitarist?
No one ever accused Albarn of backing down from a challenge. He has always been ready to struggle to get his own way, starting with the public potshots he exchanged with Oasis in the mid-'90s, during the media-fueled battle — mods vs. rockers redux — for the Britpop crown. "It was definitely cathartic," says Albarn on Blur's rivalry with Oasis. "For us it was more of a diversion than an impetus. It has always seemed a ridiculous coupling." He has a point: where Oasis was lager louts, Blur was college boys. And these days, with the Gallagher brothers still playing to the Britpop nostalgia crowd — churning out new records stuck in Oasis' mid-'90s towering guitar rut — Blur has been quietly growing, developing its sound and self-confidence. And with Think Tank, the band has produced its most mature and accomplished album to date — with or without its resident guitar slinger.
Despite the new breakthrough, Albarn says, "I don't mind if I'm still called Britpop. We are British and we are popular. It's actually quite an apt description." The band had recently pursued side-projects, notably Albarn's virtual dub band Gorillaz, which sold 5 million albums and allowed him to collaborate with an international mix of musicians. Some influences naturally stuck. "You can't help but move on from whatever point you last made music," says Albarn. "It maybe came out more than it would have done if Graham hadn't been absent. I was left to do the guitars and the only experience I've had was in West Africa on Gorillaz."
source Time Mag
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Post by chocolate st*rfish on May 7, 2003 8:17:19 GMT -5
the Gallagher brothers still playing to the Britpop nostalgia crowd — churning out new records stuck in Oasis' mid-'90s towering guitar rut — Blur has been quietly growing, developing its sound and self-confidence. And with Think Tank, the band has produced its most mature and accomplished album to date — with or without its resident guitar slinger. guess, the reviewer didn't listen once to SOTSOG and HC in his entire life..
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NoelyG
Oasis Roadie
Posts: 434
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Post by NoelyG on May 8, 2003 16:51:18 GMT -5
Criticts never know what theyre on about. And i never understand them.
I read the review of be here now and it was rubbishing it all the way through and then gave it 8/10. It makes no sence.
They said Stop crying your heart out was just like dont look back in anger. They sound nothing like each other.
Theres no point comparing Oasis and Blur because they are completly different bands
You might aswell compare Oasis with Tatu
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Post by mape on May 8, 2003 20:01:47 GMT -5
for some reason every Oasis review since Be here now's release have been terrible. The critics always compare every new album to their old ones. They base their reviews on those comparisons and since they don't live up to morning glory or definatley maybe, they just go ahead and slag them off. They should realize that those two albums were unique and may never be equalled.
If instead, they compared the new Oasis albums to albums of today by other artists then they would realize how good they are. Oh well, no point listening to some critic anyway
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