BLUR: MODERN LIFE IS RUBBISH (1993)
1) For Tomorrow; 2) Advert; 3)
Colin Zeal; 4) Pressure On Julian; 5) Star Shaped; 6) Blue Jeans; 7) Chemical
World; 8) Sunday Sunday; 9) Oily Water; 10) Miss America; 11) Villa Rosie; 12)
Coping; 13) Turn It Up; 14) Resigned; 15*) Young And Lovely; 16*) Popscene.
"He's a twentieth century boy / With his
hands on the rails / Trying not to be sick again / And holding on for
tomorrow". Compare this with Ray Davies' "I'm a twentieth century
man, but I don't want to be here", and this makes it obvious what the big
difference is between the Kinks and Blur — Ray Davies, sick of today, stares
back into the past, whereas Damon Albarn, perhaps equally sick, is still
determined to peek ahead into the future. Without this difference, Blur would
never have become superstars in the 1990s: «anglophiles» they may be all right,
yet their love-and-hate story with
England is that of today and tomorrow, not today and yesterday.
Modern
Life Is Rubbish came to be
seen as the «true beginning» of Blur and one of the first proper «Britpop»
records, although I sure as heck wish they'd at least called it «neo-Britpop»
or something, because what are we going to do with the Kinks and the Small
Faces otherwise? As far as the term itself is concerned, the key change would
be seen as lyrical: Albarn borrows the patented Ray Davies trademark of writing
small character portraits and impressions of everyday life in contemporary
Great Britain, «localizing» his visions of boy-girl and protagonist-environment
relationships and, paradoxically, making it easier to empathize for anyone,
British or non-British. But there are changes in the music, too, since the
album only preserves a few scattered traces of the Madchester / baggy /
shoegazing style of Leisure — as a
rule, though, the band returns to a much more conventional pop-rock sound:
traditional structures with improved production, so that the music can now
appeal to their contemporaries and their parents alike.
The decision to «go quintessentially British»
was brilliant: suddenly it became obvious that Blur had both the songwriting
talent and a way to use it for some
meaningful purpose. This is what makes ʽFor Tomorrowʼ one of the greatest songs
of the decade — the combination of an unforgettable melodic hook, a certain
nonchalant British cool, and a message with which so many people could
identify: "...says modern life is rubbish, I'm holding on for
tomorrow". Rummaging around in my mind right now, I cannot come up with
any immediate examples of songs that would strike such a fine balance between
present-day disillusionment and latter-day optimism. And that la-la-la chorus —
simplistic as hell, but so invigorating, doesn't it actually make you want to
get off your ass and go do something?
The only problem of Modern Life is that, at this stage, Blur are only beginning to get
into that image, and they wouldn't really start to feel completely at home with
it until the next album. To put it bluntly, Modern Life is just too damn long:
even without any bonus tracks, it runs close to an hour, when records like
these should not ever run over 45 minutes. I am almost certain that even some major
fans might feel the same way — the difference being in what to cut out to reduce
the factor of occasional boredom. Personally, I would suggest ripping out the
three-song streak of ʽOily Waterʼ, ʽMiss Americaʼ, and ʽVilla Rosieʼ if we had
to go that way — but perhaps even better still would be to simply reduce some
of the songs' running lengths. (One trace of their shoegaze legacy is that they
still preserve these lengthy, tedious, «atmospheric» instrumental passages —
ʽOily Waterʼ and ʽResignedʼ are the major culprits).
Once you have mentally condensed the record
into less of a sprawl and more of a focused, economically painted landscape,
the result commands total respect. The loud rockers with distorted guitars
carry vicious fun — ʽAdvertʼ with its snappy "say something, say something
else!" chorus (be sure to match the context and listen to it on headphones
in the middle of an underground station, with a bunch of idiotic adverts
staring you in the face from the other end of the platform); ʽChemical Worldʼ,
its ironically swirling harsh riff, and anthemic chorus about "putting the
holes in" that you gleefully sing along without the least understarding of
what it is supposed to mean; ʽCopingʼ commits a little copyright crime by
stealing the major hook from Argent's ʽHold Your Head Upʼ, but does that in
good spirit — the hook was rather stern and gloomy for Argent's positive
message, and here Blur are using that riff for their psychotic purposes rather than
cheer you up, so it's okay. Besides, who in 1993 remembered anything about
Argent anyway?
Elsewhere, they go for direct imitations of the
old Kinks/Small Faces style — ʽSunday Sundayʼ is essentially Ray Davies with
crunchier guitars (but the same brass section), and the tender balladeering
style of ʽBlue Jeansʼ, while melodically different from the usual Kinks
patterns, still seems to hearken back to Ray's «child-like» musings. But just
because Albarn and Coxon are both naturals, these songs never turn into copycat
exercises: it's not as if Coxon spent hours and hours trying to decode the
style of Dave Davies, and it's not as if Albarn mutated his voice to shift from
his own natural pitch to Ray's much higher one. Maybe Ray Davies could have
written the lyrics to ʽColin Zealʼ, which, after all, simply expands on the
subject of ʽA Well Respected Manʼ (I am not so sure about the line "He's a
modern retard, he's terminal lard", though), but he would have been more
condescending and maybe even merciful to his assassinated character than these
young whippersnappers. Fresh blood, you know.
Some of the expanded editions of the album add
ʽPopsceneʼ as a bonus track — the band's single from March 1992 that basically
announced the arrival of the «new Blur», but flopped and only came to be seen
as historically significant in retrospect. I must say, though, that I have
never understood what was the big deal with that song, other than it being fast
and furious and a little teasing, but the chorus ("hey, hey, come out
tonight, popscene, all right") is just plain stupid. In fact, I'd say
there is nothing like that song on the album proper (even its tight rockers
like ʽAdvertʼ and ʽCopingʼ make more sense), and all the better for it, so
there.
Ultimately, the record certainly deserves a thumbs up,
but they are still educating themselves, and there is too much of an
inspirational gap between ʽFor Tomorrowʼ and the rest of these songs to make it
feel as smoothly accomplished as some of its follow-ups. A «stylistic leap»,
yes, but not nearly as much a «quantum leap in quality» in between the
underrated Leisure and Modern Life Is Rubbish as people often
make it out to be, I'd say. Still, the title alone is priceless, isn't it? Such
a great discovery for all ages, and yet, seemingly, only been used once so far.
I guess if the year 1993 had a legal representative, it'd probably sue Blur for
libel.
My biggest problem with this album is that while it is enjoyable to listen, I can't remember any individual songs, except for ""For Tomorrow". They are not singalong songs, nor are the hooks easily memorable.
ReplyDeleteThat may be why its successor Parklife was still a major step forward: memorable songs, hooky and choruses that stay in memory (Girls who are boys who like girls... Parklife!).
No problem with the thumbs up though.
>Some of the expanded editions of the album add ʽPopsceneʼ as a bonus track
ReplyDeleteI'd only ever known the American CD version, so this was a surprise. Looked the album up on Discogs and jeez there have to be three or four different cuts of it!