Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
- UlricvonCatalyst
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Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
As the thread title says, some time in the last week or so I noticed Graham Coxon all over my YouTube feed.
Specifically here, here, here and here.
All uploaded within the last month or so, give or take. I see he has The End Of The F***ing World OST to plug, but these mostly seem to be career retrospectives/historical records. I do hope he hasn't discovered he's come down with something life-threatening and wants to say his piece without having to write a book!
They get quite in-depth on his tones and creative process, so maybe of interest even to those who aren't huge fans (though obviously not David).
There's quite a bit of crossover, so I'm not really recommending you watch them all unless you really rate him (like I do). Ironically the audio of the one with Stephen Street & Coxon in the studio is dismal.
Specifically here, here, here and here.
All uploaded within the last month or so, give or take. I see he has The End Of The F***ing World OST to plug, but these mostly seem to be career retrospectives/historical records. I do hope he hasn't discovered he's come down with something life-threatening and wants to say his piece without having to write a book!
They get quite in-depth on his tones and creative process, so maybe of interest even to those who aren't huge fans (though obviously not David).
There's quite a bit of crossover, so I'm not really recommending you watch them all unless you really rate him (like I do). Ironically the audio of the one with Stephen Street & Coxon in the studio is dismal.
- PorkyPrimeCut
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
I have virtually zero interest in Blur but have always been strangely fond of Graham Coxon. I like his attitude & his playing style. I watched the first of the four links you posted & really enjoyed it. It was great to hear him mention Slint as one of his influences. The man has taste.
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- UlricvonCatalyst
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Modern Life Is Rubbish was a huge LP for me in its day, but post-Parklife I didn't really follow them (though I liked the odd song here and there).
I feel that a lot of animosity towards them is because of a) Alex James and b) Britpop, but I'd venture to suggest that if Oasis hadn't existed Blur might have fared a whole lot better from a historical perspective, by dodging the Britpop (guilt by) association. Obviously it was an entirely fabricated 'movement' but it pretty much hinged on there being two polar opposite heavyweight hit machines that drank in the same Camden pub(s).
Anyway, for me, Coxon is the most interesting figure to have emerged from that era/oeuvre, with a distinctive musical voice informed by his wide-ranging influences. The fact that the Blur used to include chord boxes for the songs on their inserts was a nice egalitarian touch too.
I feel that a lot of animosity towards them is because of a) Alex James and b) Britpop, but I'd venture to suggest that if Oasis hadn't existed Blur might have fared a whole lot better from a historical perspective, by dodging the Britpop (guilt by) association. Obviously it was an entirely fabricated 'movement' but it pretty much hinged on there being two polar opposite heavyweight hit machines that drank in the same Camden pub(s).
Anyway, for me, Coxon is the most interesting figure to have emerged from that era/oeuvre, with a distinctive musical voice informed by his wide-ranging influences. The fact that the Blur used to include chord boxes for the songs on their inserts was a nice egalitarian touch too.
- mezcalhead
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
This is an interesting viewpoint. There was a lot I liked about Blur at the time, although they haven't necessarily stayed the course with me. Albarn and Coxon seem to still have a drive to keep making new and different music and I think that is a good thing even if I haven't wanted to listen to most of it. It's certainly a contrast from whatever the remnants of Oasis are doing.UlricvonCatalyst wrote: ↑Sat May 19, 2018 11:02 pmI'd venture to suggest that if Oasis hadn't existed Blur might have fared a whole lot better from a historical perspective, by dodging the Britpop (guilt by) association.
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- m0n0mania
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Still no better
- aliendawg
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
I like Graham and I like Blur too. Didn't know people had this kind of hate towards them haha He reminds me of John Frusciante in some ways... The voice, mood always changing, acting like a spoiled child from time to time.
"With the resurgence of offsets it seems like we're also seeing a resurgence of people who don't know what to do with them" - 601210
- shadowplay
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
I thought the song he did with Lisa Knapp was good, though I couldn't get all the way through his contribution to the Shirley inspired album. The playing was fine, I just couldn't take his adenoidal wee voice on it's own and I felt the arrangement was uninspiring but to be fair a lot of it was fairly forgettable with some notable exceptions.
Other than that I'd probably not just run but sprint from Blur but probably no faster or slower than I would from all of the britpop shitbags that cast a pawl over those times.
fucking cheese boys permanently open gob is something of a barrier. I danced round the room when I learned Cheesefest was a massive loss for him.
D
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- aliendawg
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
What did Alex James do? Lol
"With the resurgence of offsets it seems like we're also seeing a resurgence of people who don't know what to do with them" - 601210
- shadowplay
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
The only positive think I can think of is, since you mentioned them, is at least he's never been a member of the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
D
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- aliendawg
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Man!
For real though... Where I'm from we didn't get much from Blur except for their music. Now I'm curious to know what they did to have people hating on them so much
For real though... Where I'm from we didn't get much from Blur except for their music. Now I'm curious to know what they did to have people hating on them so much
"With the resurgence of offsets it seems like we're also seeing a resurgence of people who don't know what to do with them" - 601210
- UlricvonCatalyst
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
They had the temerity to hit their commercial prime during an era that isn't quite far enough in the distant past yet for people to 'reappraise' without the race to the bottom that inevitably throws up the likes of Tony Blair, Menswear and (NSFW) Ladism.Luiz Spindola wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 7:34 amMan!
For real though... Where I'm from we didn't get much from Blur except for their music. Now I'm curious to know what they did to have people hating on them so much
Last edited by UlricvonCatalyst on Tue May 22, 2018 9:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
- aliendawg
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
I'm sorry... I don't get it. It probably makes more sense over there in Europe
"With the resurgence of offsets it seems like we're also seeing a resurgence of people who don't know what to do with them" - 601210
- shadowplay
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Hard for me to be objective and I'm generally the lone voice who can't stand grunge and britpop.Luiz Spindola wrote: ↑Tue May 22, 2018 7:34 amMan!
For real though... Where I'm from we didn't get much from Blur except for their music. Now I'm curious to know what they did to have people hating on them so much
Horrible plastic geezer mockney knees up mother brown class tourism*.
Hint of musichall.
Retro in the naffest lowest common denominator way.
Annoying singer, annoying bass player.
Endless tabloid fodder.
Classic student 'disco' pish.
Ultra conservative.
I thought that grunge was created purely to annoy me, since it seemed to rope in so many sounds, styles and tropes I despised and I admit I took it personally but alas along came Britpop and the UK became hysterical much like medieval farmers did after eating Ergot infected grain. Unfortunately hysterical Britpoppers didn't die en mass like those who ate a lot of ergot.
One thing I'll give Blur is that they aren't Oasis but that's like saying a cat shite is better eating than a dog shite.
I was hoping it was all forgotten about but then some anniversary came up and folk actually began reminiscing about one of the worst things to ever happen in music.
D
*always bad unless it's me driving along imagining I'm a down at the heel count by day and international jewel thief by night.
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- budda12ax7
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Don't forget the package shoe gaze / Brit pop tour of Blur, Ride and Cathernwheel hitting posh clubs near you this summer. Second stage is Echobelly and Elastica. VIP Tickets went on sale....
- aliendawg
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Re: Graham Coxon suddenly omnipresent
Never thought I'd see people hating shoegaze on an offset guitar forum
"With the resurgence of offsets it seems like we're also seeing a resurgence of people who don't know what to do with them" - 601210