Yahoo! Services

Account Options

New User? Sign Up Sign In Help

Yahoo! Search

Artist Main
Biography
Downloads
Music Videos
Photos
Albums
Lyrics
Similar Artist
News
Reviews
Interviews
Fan Sites
VISIT:
Official Artist Site 


    Oasis
    Interviews
Oasis
Rating affects your music played in LAUNCHcast and Music Videos.
Your Artist Rating:
Why Rate?

Britpop, Schmitpop! In America, It's Spelled O-A-S-I-S.

10/31/1997 3:00 AM, Yahoo! Music
Bill Holdship


Britpop,
Schmitpop! In America, It's Spelled O-A-S-I-S. Exclusive myLAUNCH
Feature By Bill HoldshipPhoto of Oasis
Since the Beatles-led British Invasion of '64, limeys have made a
habit of taking American rock and pop, improving on the formula, and
then throwing it back in our faces.
There's something you have to understand about rock criticism, particularly modern rock criticism: A lot of writers will support what basically amounts to mythology and even lies because they have a vested interest in doing so. Y'see, if everything really does suck and if there really is nothing new under the sun, then these hacks would have no reason to exist. Therefore, they will buy into lies and falsehoods simply to maintain some sort of meaning in their vacuous, media-controlled lives. They will try to convince you that U2 are as important in their own way as Bob Dylan and the Beatles (well, actually Bono himself tried to convince us of that one), or that U2 ever really mattered at all. They'll try to convince you that Bruce Springsteen, Patti Smith and those always-politically-correct guys in R.E.M. deserve to be right behind Mother Theresa, Lady Di and Danny Goldberg on that list of those who will eventually attain Sainthood or at least consideration should the Papal throne suddenly become vacant. They'll even try to convince you that Courtney Love is no longer a pig. OK, sorry, then. A disgusting pig. And they'll come up with meaningless terms like "Britpop" and "No Depression" to make you think something exciting is actually going on--or, as Austin Powers might say, "Groovy, baby! Yeah! Yeah!"

Audio Icon "Wonderwall"
Audio Icon "The Universal"
Audio Icon "Disco 2000"
Anyone who remembers "Grunge" and can distinguish the difference between Kurt Cobain's Monkee-isms and Eddie Vedder's (in the eloquent words of Mr. Johnny Rotten) "Joe Cocker with different backing tracks"-isms already knows that these meaningless rock-critic terms are nothing new. Yet another theory has it that rock critics will naturally gravitate towards something that appears to be new and/or hip, even if they don't like it in reality; this is called the herd approach; actually, more than one rock critic party line possibly started because some insensitive clod made a future rock critic feel less than cool on some elementary school playground once upon a time. Thus, you end up with terms like "punk" (which has now changed definitions so many times in the last three decades to now render it totally meaningless) and "No Depression," which nobody can really define but many--especially the hipper in the room--will tell you has a lot to do with Gram Parsons. Oh, yeah, and maybe the Replacements, too. The irony is that I was once told by the founding co-editor of No Depression, the very magazine that turned "No Depression" into a nationally-recognized name, that the only thing all these bands have in common is a love for Lynyrd Skynyrd! Oh, yeah, and maybe the Allman Brothers, too. Which certainly could confuse some of the hipper participants in the room, particularly those suffering from traumatic playground memories...

Photo of Blur

But of all the meaningless terms of the moment in the modern musical trenches, the most meaningless is probably "Britpop"--which ostensibly is what this article is supposed to be about. Of course, it's awfully hard to do a "think piece" on something that's meaningless...so let's put it in a quick nutshell: As Radiohead's Thom Yorke stated in the most recent CD-ROM issue of this very magazine: "It [Britpop] was a convenient marketing ploy. Marketing ploys come and go--and that one's gone now." It was a marketing ploy, however, that only had any sort of influence in its company of origin. For when you're talking about America, Britpop has only one meaning--and that is Oasis. In Merrie Olde England, those loutish Gallagher brothers have already taken their place in the pantheon of rock Aristocracy. In the good old U.S., though, they simply represent "Britpop," for all its worth. (Of course, the American success of Oasis--and the fact that LAUNCH is only one of several thousand esteemed publications to which the Gallagher boys have yet to speak--is what led to this magazine doing a piece on "Britpop" in the first place. Which pretty much proves my point.)

On the other hand, as far as marketing ploys are concerned, it wasn't originally planned to be this way--at least not in the minds of the rock critics and perhaps the record companies who were in cahoots behind this hype. When Oasis reached the top of the U.S. charts with (What's The Story) Morning Glory? and several hit singles in early 1996, it was the first time since the mid-'80s since any British bands (and dreadful British bands like Duran Duran, Adam & The Ants, Scritti Politti and worse!) had made a splash in the American market. In fact, several major music magazines, including Musician and MOJO, had recently published long features trying to explain why Yanks had turned their backs on all British bands. After all, since the Beatles-led British Invasion of 1964, the limeys had made a habit of taking American rock and pop, improving on the formula, and then throwing it back in our faces. Other British bands had preceded Oasis in trying to make an American splash during the late '80s and early '90s--and none of them without a sufficient amount of hype, most notably those rock critic darlings Stone Roses, as well as Manic Street Preachers and London Suede. But when Oasis became the "hip" flavor of the moment with Morning Glory, the Brits obviously thought there was going to be another pop export explosion, the first of its kind in decades.

Heck, even a lot of Americans seemed to be hopeful. Right around the time of Oasis's sophomore effort, the most happening weekly club in San Francisco was Popscene at Cat's Grill & Alley Club where kids drank British Guinness, smoked British cigarettes, and danced to heavyhitters like Blur, Supergrass and, of course, those Gallagher dudes. "We knew the Anglophile population existed in the Bay Area," said one of the club's promoters at the time--but, most tellingly, the club nights were frequently sponsored by major record labels; London Records even flew in its most recent "Britpop" contender of the time--a Manchester group called Marion--simply to play five songs at one of those nights. Obviously, London Records--like all record labels--had a vested interest in seeing the "Britpop phenomenon" break big here; even John Lennon knew back in '64 that you haven't made it 'till you've made it big in the States, and these labels could smell the dollar signs.

Photo of the
Verve

And it wasn't long before every American label had signed their own "Britpop" band to promote. Again, this was business as usual for the record industry. In the '60s, when the "San Francisco Sound" exploded, A&R reps rushed into the city and signed damn near every band with an electric guitar. Same thing happened in Detroit following the MC 5 and the Stooges; didn't matter that a lot of those Motor City groups were terrible. There was heavy metal, but we're not even gonna go there. It reached what seemed to be absurd and epidemic proportions with the punk and subsequent New Wave explosion in the late '70s, as A&R scouts signed damn near everything with a purple head and safety pin through its nose, only to be surpassed in both absurdity and superficiality by the most recent "American punk rock" explosion of the '90s, with the powers-that-now-were (and, gee, aren't you glad that "we" won?) trying to pass off what amounted to a Xerox of a Xerox as something that meant anything at all.

Of course, it was no different for the trend the music industry had now decided to call "Britpop."

The one thing a lot of these '90s Britpopsters did have in their favor was a knack for drumming up free publicity. When foppish Jarvis Cocker, the lead singer and songwriter for the British band Pulp, disrupted Michael Jackson's performance at the British Music Awards, protesting the King Of Pop cavorting onstage with a small multitude of children, the antics made international headlines. And yet it didn't translate to sales for Island Records' entry into the "Britpop" sweepstakes: Pulp's subsequent Different Class. And for a long time, the vicious (and seemingly real) feud between Oasis and Blur, climaxing with Noel Gallagher stating he hoped the latter band's Daman Albarn would "get AIDS and die," was more familiar to American media fans than was the music of either band. For a long time, Oasis and Blur were head-to-head in Britain in terms of popularity, much like the Beatles and the Stones in the England of ancient times. Ironically, nine times out of 10, the British press would go with Blur over those louts in Oasis (which has something to do with class and education, I bet)--although everything changed when "Wonderwall" went into heavy rotation on MTV. And suddenly, Blur just didn't matter much anymore.

Photo of
Supergrass

Of course, it didn't help that Blur followed The Great Escape, Virgin Records' entry, blah, blah blah--a record that at least tried to build a Brit continuum, derivative as it sometimes seemed, with the likes of Mott The Hoople, Ray Davies and Bowie--with the eponymous Blur, an album that just makes no sense at all. In fact, in years of reviewing albums, it's hard for me to recall one with less direction than Blur, flip-flopping all over the place until it's a stylistic nightmare. (It also didn't help that the esteemed Executive Editor of this magazine and I also once saw Blur perform, not long after The Great Escape, and we proceeded to do just that after only several songs. They were weak, even following the Rentals, who opened and who were perhaps the worst live band the aforementioned esteemed editor and I have ever seen at a concert that people paid lots of money to attend.) As another great Britpopster once wrote: Ay, there lies the rub. We're talking music here, folks. Pulp frequently sounded a lot like Steve Harley and Roxy Music--but like both of those artists, Pulp were too British. It's a sad cliché, but one that's sometimes true. And, King Of Pop or no King Of Pop, it just doesn't translate here. Besides, Morrissey did the Oscar Wilde thing better once upon a time. Supergrass, another early entry in the Britpop sweepstakes and Capitol Records' blah, blah, blah, continues to receive critical kudos on the side of the ocean--still, I Should Coco, the debut, sounded like lukewarm New Wave to these ears, while In It For The Money sounds like...well, I don't know what it sounds like--a new mutated form of "progressive" rock, perhaps?--but I do know what it doesn't sound like, and that's anything good. Especially good pop. (And didn't we fight the Civil War or something like that so men would never have to wear those hideous muttonchop sideburns ever again?) Speaking of mutated "progressive" rock, is Radiohead's latest opus one of those records we used to refer to as "ambitious," before filing it away on our shelf of post-playground prestige? Gene's OK, if you like regurgitated Smiths. Kula Shaker appear to be morons. And Elastica...well, Elastica ain't pop (and Radiohead is?), but they were considered "Britpop" way back when. Closer to early Chrissie Hynde than psychedelic John Lennon, leader Justine Frischmann was both sexy and talented...but she's lost two bassists in the last two years and she's pretty much missing in action at this point of the game.

No, the problem has always been defining what "Britpop" is when it comes to any stylistic musical similarities. There have been other supposed Britpop contenders--those oldtimers in Verve being the latest "sensation"("Interesting!" proclaim the critics)--though most of them have arrived on these shores with a whimper as opposed to a scream: some of them just plain boring (Cast); some of them so-so (Ocean Colour Scene); some of them pretty damn amazing (Super Furry Animals, whose Epic debut just might out-"pop" anything by Oasis) albeit totally unknown (the Super Furry Animals latest album--on Creation in the U.K.--isn't currently on Epic's new release schedule). As a result, Oasis has won, almost by default. Actually, when you're talking in the purest terms of definition, the best Britpop album of this year has been Paul McCartney's latest, Flaming Pie (how's that for clearing the room of playground victims?), his most consistent since...well, perhaps ever. Still, when it comes to Britpop, the word in America is Oasis.

Photo
of Elastica

And you know what? Rightfully so. They've certainly stirred up their own outrageous press over the last two years--in fact, a friend once wondered if the word "lowbrow" hadn't been invented to perhaps discuss forebears in the Gallagher family tree. But as a famous American popster once said, you can't fool all the people all the time--and Oasis is probably a better pop band (in the classic sense of the term) than all the other "Britpop" groups put together. In the Gallaghers' case, the genuine working-class loutishness does stand for something in rock 'n' roll terms--they actually show a heart at times--but it's the music that ultimately makes the case. Of course, we're talking about music in an era of incredibly decreased expectations--and it's safe to say that Noel Gallagher is perhaps the most obvious thief since the early heyday of Nick Lowe. But so what? The man has written some terrific songs; he's an excellent guitarist (one of my personal current faves); they're an incredibly prolific band (check out all those b-sides on British import); most importantly, while they're not terribly exciting live, they sound incredible live. And sound is ultimately what it's all about here. In fact, when I describe Be Here Now, their latest opus to friends, the first thing I always mention is that I love "the sound" of this album.

Of course, the lyrics are absolute gobblygook. But then as I've been trying to point out throughout this whole article, Britpop is meaningless--and it's therefore fitting that the world's major purveyors of the form mean nothing at all. On the other hand, when Noel, Liam and crew kick into that wonderful chorus on the album's finale, "It's Gettin' Better (Man!!)," singing those very sentiments in front of a POP! chord progression as old and basic and as simply (once!) glorious as rock 'n' roll itself...well, you almost believe it.

Even if nothing seems to be getting any better at all.