Monday, November 16, 2009

A History Lesson for the Hipsters


There are many different types of albums out there in the world. "Well of course there are," you say. "Rock, Rap, Country, some kind of electronic music that will be out of date 3 months after it is released (don't worry though, it'll be retro 8 months after that and will be played at college parties for the next 12 years.) I'm talking about a specific type of album that some bands make. Not every band has this type of album, and not all of the bands that do have good ones. Some of them though...are the greatest albums ever made. I'm talking about the drug album. The one that was inspired by something that can only be legally obtained with a stolen prescription pad.
Recently I've rediscovered one of my favorite albums of this category, This is Hardcore by Pulp. For those of you that don't know, Pulp was huge in the UK during the Britpop scene and had very brief success here in the U.S. (however, as of late hipsters across the country have embraced Jarvis Cocker and his solo work. Good for you hipster-douche. Much cooler than back in '98 when you were embracing Marilyn Manson t-shirts and Korn CD's.)
The album came out in 1998 and is to me the last Britpop album. While it was given good reviews by the critics and went to number 1 in the U.K. it didn't do much here...which is a shame because it is great from start to finish.
Why do I call it a "drug album"? Well, the first track is over 5 min long, the first single off the album is over 6 min long, 90% of the songs make a drug reference, and one track that is over 8 minutes long spends 5 minutes and 30 seconds building up to less than 2 minutes of music. While I've never had the pleasure of a cocaine-fueled psychotic episode, I completely plan on this album blaring if I do. In short, this album is incredible.
I love the different layers of guitar, the bass, and the orchestra that keeps popping up in songs throughout the album (another sign of a drug album). There is also something about the drums on the album that sound incredible to me. Especially on the track Sylvia. There is just a really cool groove throughout the album. And of course you can't ignore the incredible voice of Jarvis Cocker. Narrating the story of his life going out of control, he sounds like David Bowie on one track and Leonard Cohen the on the next. It's a pop album that you can dance and pump your fist to, but at the same time, it's dark as shit.
Have you ever had a party at your house where at the end of the night you've had way too much fun, you're way too drunk, way too tired, and you just want to tell everyone to get the hell out of your house? That's This is Hardcore.
Favorite Tracks
The Fear
TV Movie
A Little Soul
Sylvia

4 comments:

  1. yo dude ain't there a hilarious pic of a porn dude in a robe in the liner notes? could've sworn there was. can't seem to find it.

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  2. Yeah. That was actually the pic I planned on putting up but couldn't find it.

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  3. billy g swanson's grandsonNovember 26, 2009 at 11:40 AM

    I wanna be hip....buying the album...thanks for the write up!

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  4. i believe you may have put "this is hardcore" on a mix you made me '98, an act which in fact makes *you* hardcore.

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