When I checked this out again before including it here the opening few acoustic guitar chords of this reminded me of A Day in the Life; but it’s something entirely different.
All the more so for me as Pulp was my elder son’s* favourite band at that time.
(*He was into good music at a very early age.)
Mackey was an important contributor not only to Pulp’s sound but also to their look and their videos.
This song is from 1992 but wasn’t a hit until it was included on The Sisters EP two years later, though it has achieved a BPI silver disc award, presumably from downloads/streaming.
Pulp: Babies
Stephen Patrick (Steve) Mackey: 10/11/1966 – 2/3/2023. So it goes.
It is fair to say that the 1960s would not have been the 1960s without their songs to help soundtrack the decade. Most of their songs have become standards.
In memoriam I present perhaps one of their lesser known compositions. Like many of theirs it was a hit in the US for Dionne Warwick (albeit with a slightly altered title) but in the UK it became Adam Faith’s last top twenty success.
Electronica – dance music in general – isn’t my thing. But the sound of Faithless, whose lead vocalist Maxi Jazz, died last week hadn’t passed me by: even if up until two or so weeks ago I didn’t know their name. It finally penetrated my consciousness when I heard their track God is a DJ on the radio.
One of the band’s claims to fame is that the following gained the distinction of becoming the runout music for West Bromwich Albion FC. Not a bad achievement.
Faithless: Insomnia
Maxwell Fraser (Maxi Jazz,) 14/6/1957 – 24/12/2022. So it goes.
The second single from the 1998 album of the same title. Not an obvious choice for a single but Pulp were still riding the Common People wave at the time though trying to get away from it.
I was shocked to hear of rapper Coolio’s death today. He was only 59. Then again I suppose that is quite venerable for someone in the area of popular music.
As you may have guessed rap is not my thing. Indeed in the past I have been known to say the genre is spelled with a silent ‘c’ at the beginning.
Whatever, no-one who was around at the time could have missed this, his biggest UK hit, a No 1 in 1995. (I’ll pass over his spelling of gangster.) It is a very good reimagining of Stevie Wonder’s Pastime Paradise.
Coolio: Gangsta’s Paradise
Artis Leon Ivey Jr (Coolio); 1/8/1963 – 28/9/2022. So it goes.