Pulp unveil James Murphy collaboration
Tom Jenkins | Monday 31 December, 2012 13:00
The great thing about the relatively recent spate of Britpop reformations is the realisation that many of these bands remain potent live – Blur and Pulp I can attest to personally, Suede too by all accounts. The threat of ‘new material’ is, as always, greeted with a chorus of hoorays and groans in equal measure and what little has surfaced has been predictably lacklustre – Blur’s rather spiritless Fool’s Day for example.
Pulp – ever the clever clogs and unashamedly danceable at their core – may have pulled off a masterstroke however, with this cleverly nurtured collaboration with James Murphy. This re-working of an old demo is classic Pulp with a hint of Blondie-esque disco. All other bands with ‘unfinished business’ take note: if you can’t train your podgy middle-aged fingers to make a record as gob-smackingly fresh and excellent as this then you really shouldn’t bother. Really.
Snipe Highlights
Some popular articles from past years
- Nice Interactive timeline lets you follow Londoners' historic fight against racism
- Silencing the Brick Lane curry touts could be fatal for the city's self-esteem
- Margaret Thatcher statue rejected by public
- Peter Bayley has worked for 50 years as a cinema projectionist in East Finchley
- Only 16 commuters touch in to Emirates Air Line, figures reveal
- 9 poems about London: one for each of your moods
- Random Interview: Eileen Conn, co-ordinator of Peckham Vision
- The five spookiest abandoned London hospitals
- Punk brewery just as sexist and homophobic as the industry they rail against
- Diary of the shy Londoner
© 2009-2024 Snipe London.