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Blur - Modern Life Is Rubbish (Special Edition) (1993)

Blur - Modern Life Is Rubbish (Special Edition) (1993)

BAND/ARTIST: Blur

  • Title: Modern Life Is Rubbish (Special Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 1993
  • Label: Parlophone Records Ltd, a Warner Music Group Company
  • Genre: Alt Rock, Indie Rock, Britpop
  • Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
  • Total Time: 02:18:25
  • Total Size: 338 Mb / 1 Gb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. For Tomorrow (2012 Remaster) 4:21
02. Advert (2012 Remaster) 3:45
03. Colin Zeal (2012 Remaster) 3:16
04. Pressure on Julian (2012 Remaster) 3:32
05. Star Shaped (2012 Remaster) 3:27
06. Blue Jeans (2012 Remaster) 3:55
07. Chemical World (2012 Remaster) 6:34
08. Sunday Sunday (2012 Remaster) 2:38
09. Oily Water (2012 Remaster) 5:01
10. Miss America (2012 Remaster) 5:35
11. Villa Rosie (2012 Remaster) 3:55
12. Coping (2012 Remaster) 3:25
13. Turn It Up (2012 Remaster) 3:23
14. Resigned (2012 Remaster) 6:13

CD 2:
01. Popscene (2012 Remaster) 3:15
02. Mace (2012 Remaster) 3:26
03. Badgeman Brown (2012 Remaster) 4:48
04. I'm Fine (2012 Remaster) 3:04
05. Garden Central (2012 Remaster) 6:00
06. For Tomorrow (Visit to Primrose Hill Extended; 2012 Remaster) 6:01
07. Into Another (2012 Remaster) 3:55
08. Peach (2012 Remaster) 3:58
09. Bone Bag (2012 Remaster) 4:04
10. Hanging Over (2012 Remaster) 4:28
11. When the Cows Come Home (2012 Remaster) 3:50
12. Beachcoma (2012 Remaster) 3:38
13. Chemical World (Reworked; 2012 Remaster) 3:45
14. Es Schmecht (2012 Remaster) 3:37
15. Young and Lovely (2012 Remaster) 5:03
16. Maggie May (2012 Remaster) 4:06
17. My Ark (2012 Remaster) 5:57
18. Daisy Bell (A Bicycle Made for Two) (2012 Remaster) 2:48
19. Let's All Go Down the Strand (2012 Remaster) 3:42

As a response to the dominance of grunge in the U.K. and their own decreasing profile in their homeland -- and also as a response to Suede's sudden popularity -- Blur reinvented themselves with their second album, Modern Life Is Rubbish, abandoning the shoegazing and baggy influences that dominated Leisure for traditional pop. On the surface, Modern Life may appear to be an homage to the Kinks, David Bowie, the Beatles, and Syd Barrett, yet it isn't a restatement, it's a revitalization. Blur use British guitar pop from the Beatles to My Bloody Valentine as a foundation, spinning off tales of contemporary despair. If Damon Albarn weren't such a clever songwriter, both lyrically and melodically, Modern Life could have sunk under its own pretensions, and the latter half does drag slightly. However, the record teems with life, since Blur refuse to treat their classicist songs as museum pieces. Graham Coxon's guitar tears each song open, either with unpredictable melodic lines or layers of translucent, hypnotic effects, and his work creates great tension with Alex James' kinetic bass. And that provides Albarn a vibrant background for his social satires and cutting commentary. But the reason Modern Life Is Rubbish is such a dynamic record and ushered in a new era of British pop is that nearly every song is carefully constructed and boasts a killer melody, from the stately "For Tomorrow" and the punky "Advert" to the vaudeville stomp of "Sunday Sunday" and the neo-psychedelic "Chemical World." Even with its flaws, it's a record of considerable vision and excitement.



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  • whiskers
  •  wrote in 12:42
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