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Common People: Pulp's 'rubbish' riff that became a Britpop anthem

Common People: Pulp's 'rubbish' riff that became a Britpop anthem

BBC News22-05-2025

Thirty years ago today Pulp let loose their biggest hit. In just five minutes and 51 seconds Common People shone a light on class, politics and Britain in the 90s. Three decades on the song remains as popular as ever, but how did a riff Jarvis Cocker's bandmates initially dismissed as "a bit rubbish" become one of the defining records of the Britpop era?Early 1995; John Major's Conservative government is faltering, Eric Cantona is serving an eight-month ban for kicking a supporter, rogue trader Nick Leeson has brought Britain's oldest bank to its knees and Britpop is booming.At the same time in the Town House recording studio in west London, the members of Pulp were scratching their heads at what to do with their latest song."It didn't really go anywhere, it felt a bit one dimensional," drummer Nick Banks told the BBC ahead of the song's 30th anniversary.The keyboard part at the centre of Common People had been written by frontman Cocker the previous year with little fanfare."It seemed kind of catchy, but I didn't think too much about it," the singer revealed in a 2004 BBC documentary."I didn't think 'wow, that's a masterpiece' I just thought it could come in handy for something."Bass player Steve Mackey - who died in 2023 - was a little more scathing: "It sounded pretty rubbish."Only keyboardist Candida Doyle saw its potential, remarking in the documentary how she thought it was "great straight away". "It must have been the simplicity of it, you could just tell it was a really powerful song," she said.
'It built like a runaway train'
However, when it came to rehearsing the song Banks said the band kept naturally speeding up, building to a final crescendo when they actually wanted to maintain a consistent rhythm.But, he said, when they managed to keep the tempo down "everyone was bored to tears" by the halfway point, and the track became "slow and ponderous".Making it faster didn't work either, he said, so the band decided to embrace the change of speed and set a "timed framework" that gathered momentum as it went on."It was my inaccurate time keeping that created a happy accident," Banks said."It built like a runaway train, and that was the mystery secret of the song."
But it is more than just the driving energy of Common People that has made it an enduring success.The lyrics and narrative also captured people's imagination.From the intrigue surrounding the mystery student who inspired the opening lines - "She came from Greece, she had a thirst for knowledge/She studied sculpture at St Martin's College" - to the acutely observational reflections on working-class life.Speaking in 2004, Cocker, who grew up in the Intake area of Sheffield before going to study film at St Martin's in 1988, said: "It was [written] not that long after I had moved down to London and so the sensibility is definitely that of somebody moving from up north to down south."You just see more of society, there's more extremes in London. For a start you see people with money."As to who was the muse of the piece, in 2015 the Athens Voice claimed they had identified her as Danae Stratou - the wife of the Greek finance minister, Yanis Varoufakis.In an interview with BBC World News Mr Varoufakis said: "Well, I wouldn't have known her back then."But I do know that she was the only Greek student of sculpture at St Martin's College at that time. And, from personal experience, she is a very fascinating person."
Despite the popularity of the song, Common People was beaten to number one by former Soldier Soldier actors Robson Green and Jerome Flynn and their rendition of Unchained Melody and White Cliffs of Dover.Recalling the moment the band learned their fate, Banks said they had been booked to take part in a live BBC Radio One chart rundown in Birmingham's Centenary Square.With the rain lashing down, the band sat waiting backstage as one by one the other acts left, until only they were left and just two names remained in contention."Robson and Jerome hadn't actually bothered to turn up, but we were announced number two," Banks said."We went out, Jarvis was wearing his usual quite stacked heels and promptly went arse over apex on the slippery flatbed lorry and ended up lying flat on his back miming along to Common People on the radio."Pop historian Jonathan Rice said the song was among an "eminent list" of hit singles that never reached number one."Strawberry Fields by The Beatles never made the top," he said."Vienna by Ultravox was kept off number one by Shaddupyaface by Joe Dolce."[But] these are songs that stood the test of time and are much more memorable than the songs that beat them to number one."As the author of The Guinness Book of British Hit Singles, Rice said Common People "defined a generation"."It was a song that just summed up the atmosphere at the time felt by younger generation. It reflected the class barriers in such a witty and clever way."
Prior to 1995, Pulp had failed to trouble the upper echelons of the charts, only reaching number 33 with their 1994 track Do You Remember The First Time?So why did Common People catch on in a way that previous Pulp material had failed to?Eric Clarke, a former Professor of Music at the University of Oxford, said it was in part the band's ability to reflect the mood of the country mixing "a genuine energetic, celebratory quality" with "anger and a sneering quality"."Common People is the most brilliant single from the 1990s"It was coming to the end of the Thatcher and Major period, people were sick to the back teeth of years of Tory government."There was a general upwelling of feeling that surely things could be different."It mixes thin, cheesy synth sounds with a really driving beat that seems to always be accelerating, the whole song is driving on to that incredible anthemic chorus at the end, which feels, to my ears, like an outpouring, a genuine release of frustration."
Nicola Dibben, now music professor at the University of Sheffield, was herself a student in the city in 1995."What's really striking and meaningful is how the song captures what it means to be poor," she said."Common People sends up class tourism. I love the anger and glee that Jarvis deals with through his acerbic witticisms."His confessional breathy lyrics, he's so close to the mic - you can hear the lip smacks - it draws you in to the story right from the start."
Perhaps the moment that cemented Common People's place in history was the band's last-minute headline appearance at Glastonbury.After Stone Roses guitarist John Squire broke his collar bone falling off a bike, the Sheffield band were drafted in to plug the hole.What followed was arguably one of Glastonbury's most famous headline shows.The moment was not lost on Cocker.Addressing the enormous crowd, he said: "If you want something to happen enough then it will actually happen. I believe that. That's why we are stood on this stage today."If a lanky git like me can do it, then so can you."Now, 30 years on, as the band prepare to tour again - their first since the death of bassist Mackey - Banks said he believed Common People was "still a song that gets you going"."To me it still sounds fresh, vibrant and immediate and a worthwhile social commentary," he said,Reflecting on the songs enduring success in 2004, Doyle said: "I remember at one point thinking I wish we could write a song that would be fantastic for ever and ever and ever - and then I thought 'oh, we have'."
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South Arcade: Y2K core is about nostalgia and escapism
South Arcade: Y2K core is about nostalgia and escapism

BBC News

time42 minutes ago

  • BBC News

South Arcade: Y2K core is about nostalgia and escapism

Ask pop-punk band South Arcade about the inspiration for their breakout hit, Supermodels, and get ready to go on a starts at Shut Up and Drive by Rihanna, swerves into nu-metal band Korn's cover of Word Up and detours towards Genesis, by French dance act final destination is Just Dance - the popular video game series where players rack up points by mimicking routines from chart-topping hits."You know when you go to a gaming arcade and there's those dance mat machines?" asks singer Harmony."I was like: 'I want to write a song that could be on that'." South Arcade are riding the wave of Y2K core - a growing interest in the 90s and early 2000s four-piece's sound - upbeat, rocky guitar music - would have been right at home on MTV, or the soundtrack of a 90s slasher movie."It has that weird, nostalgic feel to it," says she and guitarist Harry were born at the start of the millennium, so admit their fondness for that time comes from older siblings and friends introducing them to the their lack of first-hand experience, the band have been described as "figureheads of a growing Y2K revival" by website MusicRadar."We can't accept that we missed it," says Harry, laughing. "So we have to bring it back single-handedly." South Arcade aren't exactly alone, though. Some of the bands that inspired their sound have also had a surge in the recent Download festival, nu-metal veterans Korn headlined, and further down the bill fellow noughties heroes Alien Ant Farm pulled in Park recently released their first new music since the death of original frontman Chester Bennington, and Limp Bizkit sold out arenas on a tour of the UK this says rap and dance music have dominated the mainstream landscape for the past 10 years, and believes more people his age are discovering what came before."Pre-2010 it was like a golden era of band music and guitar music," says Harry."It was just full of great bands and then it just shifted, the pendulum swung." Parts of South Arcade's rise have been far more 2025 than started to gain traction via TikTok.A spokesperson told Newsbeat that the Y2K hashtag has been used in four million posts on the app, with some of the most popular linked to noughties artists including Pitbull and Avril says South Arcade's videos began drawing an audience when they started uploading footage from their rehearsal something they've previously said was partly in response to accusations they were "industry plants" or "not a real band".They're also not immune from the modern-day pressures facing musicians, with the cost-of-living crisis still biting.A recent tour of America was "really expensive", they admit, and keeping stage shows fresh involves getting creative with ideas "in the cheapest way possible".But the band say it's been worth it and they've been seeing a mix of fans engaging with their music."It's really great because we see a bunch of comments on YouTube from people that were in that era," says Harmony, "and they can almost notice the references or pick it apart, but then there's these much younger kids hearing that sort of stuff for the first time. "It's really cool to sort of bring everyone together on it." The appeal to fans who spent their teens listening to the likes of Korn is probably obvious. But what is the attraction of Y2K for people who were in nappies during the heyday?"Everything's going towards like, minimalism of phones," says Harry. "But in that era, your room was full of stuff, like not just a neat room, it was full of posters and action figures."Now people would just say they scroll on TikTok, but back in the day you'd have had gaming consoles and games and stuff like that, CD players and loads of things that are off your Harmony, it's a feeling of escapism."I get loads of nostalgia videos coming up for things from my childhood, you'll see it and it'll make you feel a certain sort of weird, twinkly way," she says."And I think if we can capture that sort of feeling in music, when everyone's bedrooms were their personality, it wasn't just their Instagram feed."It was what the posters on their wall were, what characters they collected, things like that." Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays - or listen back here.

Grandmother, 86, who dumped her 37-year-old Egyptian toyboy after boasting about their wild romps vows to never have sex again
Grandmother, 86, who dumped her 37-year-old Egyptian toyboy after boasting about their wild romps vows to never have sex again

Daily Mail​

time43 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Grandmother, 86, who dumped her 37-year-old Egyptian toyboy after boasting about their wild romps vows to never have sex again

An 86-year-old grandmother who dumped her Egyptian toyboy lover less than half her age has vowed never to have sex again after their bitter split. Iris Jones defied critics and tied the knot with Mohamed Ibrahim, 37, in June 2020 -later boasting about their wild romps that left her 'saddle-sore'. The pair met on social media in 2019, and after getting married in Cairo, they spent almost two years apart before Mohamed was granted a visa which allowed him to move into Iris's bungalow in Weston-super-Mare. However, in 2023 Iris revealed she had split up with Mohamed and accused him of being a 'selfish money-grabber'. Bank statements show Iris transferred Mohamed thousands of pounds in loans, which she claims were not repaid- but he disputes. Iris, a former legal secretary, has now revealed her experience with the 37-year-old Egyptian has put her off relationships for good. She told The Mirror: 'The idea of sex now makes my stomach turn. I'm not interested in men at all, not in companionship with them and certainly not sex with them. 'My experience with Mohamed has put me off relationships for life. I wish I'd never met him.' The pair met on social media in 2019, and after getting married in Cairo, they spent almost two years apart before Mohamed was granted a visa to move to the UK Iris added: 'Mohamed was only with me for my money. I can see that now, and I look back and think, 'How could I have been so stupid?'.' She said decided to kick Mohamed out of her house after they started arguing about 'anything and everything'. Iris, who has two sons, Stephen, 59, and Darren, 58, said she also became fed up of 'having to clean up after him'. She revealed, however, that despite the acrimonious split, her and Mohamed are still married as she 'doesn't want to have to pay out for a divorce'. Iris first stunned audiences on This Morning in early 2020 when she detailed her first night of passion with Mohamed after she travelled to Egypt to meet him. She now, however, sees herself as an 'agony aunt' to other women who have had their hearts broken by much younger men. Writing on Facebook last year, Iris said 'A warning to all vulnerable women on-line, chatting to scammers and con-artists, thinking they are messaging genuine males on legitimate dating sites. 'Be aware that these criminals are only interested in getting their filthy paws on your money, and will sweet-talk you for weeks or even months in order to achieve their goal. 'I, myself have been targeted by four scammers in the last few months and regard myself now as a competent scam hunter!' It comes after she revealed the 'full story' of what happened with Mohamed on social media in September 2023. Iris said: 'On June 25, 2019, I received a message from Mohamed, and we became friends on messenger. 'He seemed a nice bloke and right from the start that he was forced into a marriage and that as a result four children were born. 'He was going through a divorce and felt that I was the person who could understand and that he could talk to. 'He sent me photos of himself and I told him:' You will soon find someone else, a good looking chap like yourself.' 'I told him about myself, an old biddy pushing 79 years with two grown up sons, older than him, both married and living not far from me. 'Our messages to one another continued and I began to realise he was getting to be more loving and on July 10 2019, he proposed marriage! 'He'd never seen what I looked like and my first reaction was 'You are bloody mad!' 'But the love bombing continued and in November 2019 I flew to Cairo and met him. In early 2020, Iris raised eyebrows when she appeared with Holly and Phil on This Morning – reducing them to hysterics – as she opened up about their first night of passion 'I had taken several thousand pounds with me, and I paid all his debts as he had ben borrowing on his credit card. 'We had a wonderful time and I stayed for a month. We tried to get married, but we didn't have the correct documents.' Iris then went on to describe how an official at the British Embassy in Cairo, called john Neil, warned her: 'Don't give him any money.' Sadly, Iris failed to listen to his advice and wrote how the next time she went to visit Mohammed she took £15,000 and handed it to him. By this time Covid had hit and attempts to get married were thwarted by the pandemic but on her third trip in 2020 they did tie the knot. Iris said: 'I had £40,000 in my bank account and I handed over my bank card to Mohamed every day and we were drawing 1000 Egyptian pounds daily. 'This was to pay for living expenses, eating out, a honeymoon in Sharm-El-Shiek and generally enjoying the high life.' After three months in Egypt Irish returned to the UK and as she left Cairo, she wrote how Mohammed had told her: 'Check your bank account when you get back to Heathrow. 'I think you will have about nine grand in there.' Furious Iris stormed: 'He was absolutely correct. £9,000 left of the £40,000. Mohamed has never had a job and has never had any money. 'I used to say to people that we shared expenses, but my money paid for everything.' Iris added how even when back in the UK, Mohammed would ask for money, and she sent him another £14,000. In November 2021, Mohammed obtained a spousal visa and was able to travel to the UK where he was allowed to stay for two years, pending a review in two months' time. To satisfy the Home Office, Iris paid money into his account so that it wouldn't look as if he was 'sponging off state'. But even after getting a job at a local supermarket, Irish wrote how he would still 'keep asking for many' so much so that she gave him another £26,000. Iris said: 'I told him: 'no more money. If I dropped dead tomorrow, I wouldn't have enough to bury me.' She went on: 'He did say at that stage that he needed another £40,000. Well, you will have to whistle for it because I haven't got it.' Iris added the relationship then started to deteriorate, with numerous rows, especially after Mohamed learned he would not be inheriting her seaside bungalow. Mohamed offered to give Iris the names of women who were 'coming onto him' if she changed her will and tellingly on her post she wrote: 'This occurred to me that maybe that's why he married me.' Iris ended her lengthy post by saying: 'There is much more I can say at this juncture, but it could involve legal issues. 'From Mohamed's behaviour, I learned that he was displaying many of the traits of narcissism. 'I researched the condition thoroughly, as I wanted to save my marriage, but Mohamed wouldn't listen. 'He was always right, I was always wrong. On June 13 of this year, after another vitriolic row, I told him to go. 'It was one of the hardest decisions I have ever had to make, as my love for Mohamed was genuine but it was no good pretending that things would improve. 'I let my head rule my heart. There is so much more I could say at this point but that will be for another post.'

Where are Michael Jackson's giant HIStory statues 30 years later?
Where are Michael Jackson's giant HIStory statues 30 years later?

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Where are Michael Jackson's giant HIStory statues 30 years later?

In June 1995, a giant statue of Michael Jackson provided a surreal sight in the heart of London when it was floated on a barge down the River 32ft (10m) pop colossus was just one of 10 that appeared around the world to promote the superstar's album HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book fibreglass titans then followed Jackson on his global years later - and 16 years after his death - the King of Pop continues to attract controversy, but some of the statues still stand defiantly in unexpected corners of the world. How the King of Pop became fibreglass Jackson's double album was a mix of his greatest hits alongside 15 new tracks including Earth Song, which would spend six weeks at the top of the UK America, sculptor Diana Walczak consulted with the pop star to create a clay sculpture that was digitally scanned for the album artist Stephen Pyle, who had built sets for worldwide productions of The Phantom of the Opera, was asked by a Sony employee called Robbie Williams (not that one) to make 10 huge statues based on this album cover. He hired sculptor Derek Howarth to craft the statue in polystyrene sections, which Mr Pyle used to make moulds and fibreglass was assembled in Chris and Liz Clark's workshop at Elstree Studios in Hertfordshire, where they were painted to look like team worked without access to Ms Walczak's prototype, which led to them looking slightly Pyle says: "Making 10 statues in four months was quite the challenge, but thanks to Derek, Chris, Liz and the rest of my workshop team at the time, we became quite the efficient factory for Michael Jackson monoliths!"The fates of some of the statues is uncertain, and they may have been locked in storage or destroyed. But others have remained on show in some unlikely locations. A McDonald's in the Netherlands For many years, a King of Pop monument towered over a McDonald's car park in the village of Best in the owner Peter Van Gelder bought the statue from Sony at a 1996 charity gala for the Ronald McDonald Children's Fund."The restaurant had just opened and didn't yet have the big yellow M," he says. "It was my intention to put it down as an eye-catcher."Jackson fans began flocking to the spot, taking photos and playing his music. Crowds became so frequent that Peter had to fence off the statue to stop people climbing on year on Jackson's birthday, and on the day he died, it became a shrine, with fans gathering to play music, hang pictures and leave flowers. Things changed in 2019 after HBO's Leaving Neverland documentary levelled new allegations of child sexual abuse against Jackson. "In the Netherlands there was not such a strong reaction and my intention was to just leave the statue there," explained he said pressure from the fast food chain's US headquarters led to its removal and storage in a "secret location".McDonald's tells the BBC: "In 2019, following the documentary, it was decided to remove the statue."We felt and feel it is important for all guests to feel comfortable when visiting one of our restaurants."Peter hopes to donate the statue to a fan club, but due to its size a building permit is required. "Many have approached me but still no-one has been able to get a permit," he says."The years have passed since his death and I've noticed that the interest in the statue is decreasing... So the Michael Jackson statue lies resting under a tarp in an insignificant shed." A nightclub in Austria The courtyard of an abandoned club in a small town 18 miles (30km) west of Vienna is not the place you'd expect to find a towering effigy of the King of Franz Josef Zika won the statue in 1998 at a radio charity auction in aid of the Red Cross, and spent 150,000 Austrian Schillings (£9,300).He recalls: "The big problem was when I went home and had to tell my uncle, who was the family boss, and he said, 'You're crazy!'"Visitors to The Baby'O in Judenau-Baumgarten may have been surprised to find Michael Jackson in the smoking area, but Franz saw it as a great way to promote his club."There were also many bars next to the statue, so there was a party around Jackson," he says. Last year the club was forced to close after a new residential building was built Franz wants to find somebody to open a small cafe or pizzeria at the venue, but needs to get rid of the pop monolith said: "I've been trying to sell it for two years. I would be happy if I get €25,000 (£21,000) for it."I've had some interest from Sweden and some in Hungary, but the problem is people don't have enough money."What if he can't find a buyer? "We don't know. Maybe I'll send it to Mars. Elon will do this for me!" he laughs. A Swiss fairground For more than 50 years, an annual fairground event called Luna Park has taken place in Lausanne, is among these blinking lights and brightly coloured rides that another Jackson statue can be has been given slight refurbishment, with gold paint added to his faux military tell the BBC they bought it 2008 from a man who had purchased it from Sony years statue has not been displayed for a few years, but they do not say why - however they stress it is not for sale. A miniature town in South Africa When Jackson brought his HIStory tour to South Africa, he had one of the 10 statues with Miniland, which opened in Johannesburg in the 1970s to showcase the country in miniature, is now abandoned. Attractions have been removed and the miniature train no longer runs, but a repainted MJ monolith still stands, visible in Google Earth satellite Heather Mason of visited the park in recalls: "It was quite strange to see a giant blue Michael Jackson statue in the middle of Miniland, where the general theme is for things to be smaller than life, not larger than life. "But I certainly appreciated it! The MJ statue was the best photo op in the park." An Italian amusement park A fresh coat of paint and new pair of sunglasses have not made this fibreglass figure too June 2019, Europark Idroscalo Milano unveiled the "restored" statue after a Jackson-themed flash announcer told the gathered crowd: "This statue is dedicated to all of you, who keep on loving him through the years."The dramatic reveal came just months after the Leaving Neverland documentary.A park spokesperson tells the BBC the statue was purchased at the end of the tour but remained abandoned for many years before ending up in the said the titan had its face covered for a while following allegations of child abuse because park owners at the time "did not want to show that MJ welcomed children at the park, so it was transformed almost into a robot".Despite the work to restore and repaint the statue, the park's owners have now put the refurbished statue up for sale.

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