Music Blogs

Legends Of Britpop: Where Are They Now?

Posted Thu Apr 23, 2009 10:52am PDT by Luke Lewis in The NME Blog

Photo Gallery – Legends Of Britpop: Where Are They Now?

When I worked on a rival music mag, one of the regulars I looked after was the "Where Are They Now" feature. It was notoriously difficult to fill each month, primarily because, nine times out of 10, the answer to the question "where are they now?" turned out to be: "Erm, well, we're still going actually, got a few gigs lined up, there's a label in Germany might be putting out our next album."

The fact is, most bands who've ever had a modicum of success never really give up. They keep plugging away, even if the eyes of the media are no longer on them. It's just that the band increasingly becomes a hobby rather than a profession, and it needs to be fitted around, and funded by, day jobs.

There's nothing shameful about that, and the object of NME's Britpop photo gallery is not to sneer at has-beens. Rather, it's motivated by a genuine curiosity about how musicians live and make money once their time in the spotlight is over.

In many cases, the answers are heartwarming. Bernard Butler, for example, surely derives more satisfaction (not to mention commercial return) for his work as a producer--on Duffy's Rockferry, among other albums--than he ever did as reluctant underling to Brett Anderson in Suede.

Many refugees of the Britpop diaspora are more successful than you think. The Longpigs' Crispin Hunt co-wrote Newton Faulkner's giant hit "Dream Catch Me" (yeah, thanks for that), as well as, somewhat more impressively, moonlighting for a parliamentary committee advising the government on reform of the House Of Lords.

Even those bands on the lower rungs of mid-'90s indie have found ways to survive. Somewhat improbably, epic rockers Puressence are huge in Greece. They also recently scored an iTunes Top 40 album in America, prompting a stateside tour. Meanwhile, the fact that Bis's Manda Rin runs a successful badge company feels like a neat continuation of the band's tweecore aesthetic.

Other bands haven't been so lucky. I wonder if the people who scoffed when Mansun split up would have been quite so snide if they'd known that frontman Paul Draper was undergoing chemotherapy treatment at the time, having been diagnosed with cancer in 2002.

And few bands in history can have been quite as unfortunate as Marion. After they were monumentally screwed by their label London Records in the late 90s, frontman Jaime Harding drifted into heroin addiction and (according to some reports) petty crime. An attempted reunion in 2006 was stymied when Harding developed a blood condition and underwent open-heart surgery. The tour was put back to 2008, but was cancelled again when Harding was struck down with pneumonia.

But our gallery is intended only as a starting point. We need your help to expand it. Which other Britpop survivors do you know of?

Perhaps you work in a bar with one of Cast, or your band recorded a demo with the drummer from Echobelly. Maybe you spotted him out of Thurman taking your bins out. Whatever it is, share your knowledge by posting a comment below.

45 Comments

1. Yahoo! Music User -
BRITPOP=LAME

2. Anne -
*shakes fist at poster #2*

3. DUDE -
Who are these groups/people?....

4. Yahoo! Music User -
emeraldbox 11, I will personally track down poster number 1 (even if it takes the rest of my life), and tell that person that he or she is a major tool!

5. Dayan -
YOU LOOK LIKE NERDZ!!!

6. nlk -
AND WHY DO WE CARE??!!

7. DY -
Never heard of any of them...

8. Scott J -
poster no 1=lame

in the 90s i was teen and i was a huge fan of britpop. sadly the only person in mainstream american hell.

suede was the best band of that whole era. hon. mentions to the divine comedy(who STILL make music together),elastica,kula shaker,dubstar(sarah blackwood is now lead of all-girl electronic band client) and lush.

of course some of the other bands were less popular than the aformentioned. but you forgot one band...spacehog!

9. LionsFanatic -
snore

10. Poppa -
Few 90's Britpop bands were good (Blur and Pulp primarily). The rest were formulaic and overproduced (The London Suede is the most overrated of the bunch). The 80's bands were better (The Smiths, the Jesus and Mary Chain, etc.). In the 90's, most good music was coming out of America - the Pixies, Nirvana, Sugar, Pavement, etc.

11. Grant -
I hate to break the news to whoever wrote this article but "Legends" is a pretty strong work to use among this group you wrote about. There isn't a legend anywhere near the people you mentioned. Please, get a clue.

12. Michael -
better than american stuff like kid rock and limp bizkit.

13. Justin B -
Scott J Spacehog was actually formed in New York by people from Engalnd, but I agree I was a fan of Britpop in the 90', I used to hang with my Death Metal friends and play Portishead for them when we got stoned.

14. Justin B -
I agree with Poppa 80 brit pop was way better The Smiths will always be #1, plus the 80's had the cool goth and batcave offshoots.

15. -
Yahoo is clueless and needs new leader [profane]!

16. Glen -
This article has no substance. The bands of the brit-pop era in the 90's was chronicled with plain and simple information about each band in the cd boxset "The Brit Box". That's what really matters. Bands ranging from Gene, Pulp, Blur, Suede, Rialto, Mansun, The La's, Ride, and plenty of others have their fare share of stories and what is most important of all:leave their legacy in their music for people of future generations to enjoy. This article has tried to depict at their personal lives instead of their career. Pure bollocks, man! It's a bloody shame!

17. cinemetal -
Then as now, I'd gladly take Mansun over Manson.

18. Stephen R -
Legends??? Whatever does this cat consider a "legend"? I've never heard of ANY of these groups, and I travel to the UK and Europe quite a bit.

19. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
Any of these bands ever play MSG? I doubt it. that means they suck

20. Yahoo! Music User -
If you really want legends you need to go way way back to the 60's & 70's.
Page:  1 | 2 | 3 
Leave Your Comment
You must sign in to leave a comment
Select a Blog Posts
And The Winner Is...
by Chris Willman
26
As Heard On...
by Rebecca Harper, Hulu
46
Chart Watch
by Paul Grein
141
Framed
by John Kordosh
120
GetBack
by Shawn Amos
332
Hip-Hop Media Training
by Billy Johnson, Jr.
221
List Of The Day
by Rob O'Connor
332
Maximum Performance
by Lyndsey Parker
167
Musictoob
by Justin Mathews
183
New This Week
by Dave DiMartino
123
Reality Rocks
by Lyndsey Parker
581
Rock's Backpages
by Philip Norman (1970)
191
Stop The Presses!
by Us Magazine
85
That's Really Week
by Lyndsey Parker
125
The Blender Burner
by Blender Magazine
27
The MOJO Blog
by Steven Jelbert
89
The NME Blog
by Luke Lewis
49
The Spin Blog
by David Marchese
78
The Y! Music Playlist Blog
by Robert of the Radish
515
Video Ga Ga
by Lyndsey Parker
71
Viva NashVegas
by Wendy Geller
59

Jackson's `This Is It' out on DVD in January

AP
Mon Nov 30, 2009 1:02pm PST

AP - "Michael Jackson's This Is It," a film about the King of Pop's final rehearsals before his death, will be released on DVD on Jan. 26, 2010. The DVD release was announced Monday by Sony Pictures Home Ente… More »

More Music News