I remember quite enjoying Live Forever when it was on tv, mainly because Jarvis Cocker and Noel Gallagher were quite entertaining. However in it's attempts to say something more profound about the whole social context of the mid-nineties the documentary was less successful, this is perhaps not surprising as, as others have said already, there was something very vacuous about Britpop; ultimately it was a creation of the media. I thought the cleverest bit of the documentary was when they showed the millenium dome with a soundtrack of Do You Know What I Mean? I thought it was quite perceptive to draw a link between the two. Both were fuelled by the same sense of bombast and self-importance which saw big self-regarding gestures override any sense of content or perspective.
Overall the documentary didn't reach this level of insight very often though and came across more as a collection of soundbites, a slightly more elevated version of all those I Love 1989 type of programmes. Still a moderately entertaining way to while away an hour and a half.
So, what do we think of "Britpop" now?
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Having only been about 7+ at the time and way before I got into "real" music, I sort of missed the whole thing. However, I am now quite getting into it, listening to bands like the Bluetones, Oasis, Blur, Echobelly and a lot of the stuff that led up to it, Stone Roses, Mondays and Black Grape. So er, at the moment I like it, if you'd asked me a couple of months ago (which presumably you did as this is an old topic), I'd have said I hate it.
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Re: So, what do we think of "Britpop" now?
It's still SHITE
Re: So, what do we think of "Britpop" now?
The usual tiresome snobbery on display, I see.