Something I've been thinking a bit about over the past week, if not of interest, feel free to skip.
I've been doing a lot of field recording in London this year, and one of the themes I'm going for is protests/picket lines/vigils/etc. One of the events I went to along these lines was the vigil for Brianna Ghey outside the Department of Education. There were a thousand or so trans teenagers there and as I walked and listened to them I was surprised at how familiar they seemed to me. Kind of gawky, slightly pretentious but over-reaching rather than arrogant, not sure how to hold themselves or look or converse with other people, but also quite excited about the possibilities of the world, and dressing... experimentally. Reader, I am also describing myself aged 15-18, 100%.
Now I should maybe say at this point that not only am I not trans, I am in fact a cisgendered heterosexual chubby balding middle-aged man from the West Midlands. (Well, most of those things anyway.) But when I was 15-18 there really were not a lot of people I felt were like me. At school I was weird, at sixth form I was weird, at university, sadly, I was still weird. The only time I communicated with anyone who seemed to be from my universe was when I met Pulp fans. When I heard Mis-Shapes for the first time back in 1995, you could say that it resonated with me, and why the criticism of the song has always seemed to me to be missing the point entirely.
A little over a week ago in Sheffield Arena, I was standing behind a lesbian couple, and watched as they acted out every lyric of This Is Hardcore, it was amazing, you only get that back in row Q. Then as I left I did a little people watching. It was only a minority, but there were all the gawky, awkward people I remembered, and quite a few of them were obviously LGBTQ in one way or another.
So, here's my question for the Bar Italia Forum, and a bit surprised that it hasn't come up before (I know most of us are gloomy middle-aged introverts, so perhaps it isn't that surprising) -
Are Pulp A Queer Band?
Now I know that the actual members of the group are all straight, including Jarvis of course. And I think most people on here are too, including me, to be fair. But there were a LOAD of non-straight people there at the arena, and I feel like this may be A Thing. If they were a new band in 2023, can you imagine how much this would be Definitely A Thing?
So, any thoughts? This may just end up being a review of Mis-Shapes, but maybe it's something else. Let me know.
Don't have much time because I've got to leave for work in a minute but wanted to post on this. The short answer is, I don't really know but surely a band like Pulp, who embrace outsiderdom so wholly must surely act as a magnet for marginalised groups in society. I was attracted to them in the early 90's because they articulated a sense of being not 'normal'. I don't remember there being a highly visible LGBTQ+ movement in indie music in the mid 90's but I'm sure a lot of that demographic were there at the time. If younger generations find solace and kindred spirits in Pulp then that's fantastic but we'd need some input from people who aren't heading towards 50!
Interesting and I did notice this in pockets in Dublin.
Jarvis writing from the female point of view, especially around His N Hers was a unique thing at the time from a male pop singer, and possibly still would be? I dont think it was ever done too heavy-handed but as another straight white bloke, I'm more than open to correction on that.
Another type of demograph-spotting for me at the Pulp shows has been more disappointing - I've seen one black person in all the gigs I've been to this summer. One more than I saw at Wembley for Blur but given the passion and presence of Latin Americans and South East Asians, it did pause me to wonder why.
It's a very interesting point and one which I wrote about for my degree. There's a definite sense of knowing queerness to some aspects of Pulp's presentation. The use of makeup is often naively perceived as being a gay signifier but Pulp certainly had that escapist glamorousness and it marked them out as different from the assertively hetero britpop crowd. Jarvis has been an expressive, 'effete' (from a societally prescribed perspective) performer whose on stage movements were often reminiscent of voguing. He also welcomed an interview with Attitude Magazine in 1995 (accompanied by a striking photoshoot) you wouldn't catch any other acts of the time doing that. They were certainly aware of and welcoming to their gay audience- witness the 'Jarvis is queen' toilet graffiti in the Mis-Shapes video and the two young men discussing Jarvis' attractiveness/otherness in the No Sleep Til Sheffield documentary. Additionally, there's the friendship with Leigh Bowery's band Minty, founded at Eve Club back in the day. There's more if you look for it...
I dont think Pulp is a queer band. It's just a band with a frontman that wasn't (or isn't) the stereotype male in the 90s, an era where strong masculinity was back.
Not everything is LGBTQ whatever + -, i'm not, far from it, yet songs like We Are the Boyz, I'm a Man, Dishes or Mis Shapes are among the foundations of the man i am today. I'm a man, not doubt about that. but not Queer. There's millions of way to be a man, a male, a dude, whatever people want to call it.
You can be "different" and not be gay. No that there's anything wrong with that ;)
Not everything is sexual when it comes to identity or personality.
So no, Pulp isn't a queer band. Jarvis is not queer. He's the ugly guy who's into ladies and found a way to express it in a different way.
He was the "Odd" one in an era where being odd was... odd. Now being odd is the new normal, right ?
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 12:44:43 PM
Not a queer band necessarily but there were certainly presentational reflections of queer culture which were there for those who recognised and appreciated them.
I dont think Pulp is a queer band. It's just a band with a frontman that wasn't (or isn't) the stereotype male in the 90s, an era where strong masculinity was back.
Not everything is LGBTQ whatever + -, i'm not, far from it, yet songs like We Are the Boyz, I'm a Man, Dishes or Mis Shapes are among the foundations of the man i am today. I'm a man, not doubt about that. but not Queer. There's millions of way to be a man, a male, a dude, whatever people want to call it.
You can be "different" and not be gay. No that there's anything wrong with that ;)
Not everything is sexual when it comes to identity or personality.
So no, Pulp isn't a queer band. Jarvis is not queer. He's the ugly guy who's into ladies and found a way to express it in a different way.
He was the "Odd" one in an era where being odd was... odd. Now being odd is the new normal, right ?
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 12:44:43 PM
In agreeance with this.
I wouldn't say they are a 'queer' band, but they are a band for everyone or anyone regardless of demographic - especially those who feel like the outcasts and misfits that may feel a special resonance with the music.
And what you would hope from their gigs would be fan-filled safe spaces where everyone can just be themself and enjoy themselves.
-- Edited by legohairjordan on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 01:21:26 PM
I dont think Pulp is a queer band. It's just a band with a frontman that wasn't (or isn't) the stereotype male in the 90s, an era where strong masculinity was back.
Not everything is LGBTQ whatever + -, i'm not, far from it, yet songs like We Are the Boyz, I'm a Man, Dishes or Mis Shapes are among the foundations of the man i am today. I'm a man, not doubt about that. but not Queer. There's millions of way to be a man, a male, a dude, whatever people want to call it.
You can be "different" and not be gay. No that there's anything wrong with that ;)
Not everything is sexual when it comes to identity or personality.
So no, Pulp isn't a queer band. Jarvis is not queer. He's the ugly guy who's into ladies and found a way to express it in a different way.
He was the "Odd" one in an era where being odd was... odd. Now being odd is the new normal, right ?
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 12:44:43 PM
In agreeance with this.
I wouldn't say they are a 'queer' band, but they are a band for everyone or anyone regardless of demographic - especially those who feel like the outcasts and misfits that may feel a special resonance with the music.
And what you would hope from their gigs would be fan-filled safe spaces where everyone can just be themself and enjoy themselves.
-- Edited by legohairjordan on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 01:21:26 PM
Totally
Well I've been to a lot of "britpop" bands gigs and there was always a nice crowds: people being happy etc. Even at Oasis ones. girls, dudes, whatever. Never seen anyone being rejected for their looks or anything (and yes, there were "odd" or "different" people at Oasis gigs too, not just drunk football fans).
The 90s was never about rejection anyway. It was a happy time, there was something for everyone and the bands were the top of the pyramid.
Society is more divided and violent now than it was 30 years ago.
Been thinking about this thread a lot today and another couple of points. I would recommend anyone with an interest in this particular topic go back and listen to the 4th April 94 show at Glasgow Tramshed where Jarvis comes in for some particularly nasty and sustained homophobic abuse. The fact that this whole thing was broadcast on Radio 1 is mind boggling now. If you really are looking for a queer band in the 90's then Suede are the band you want. They were always, and still are, the band that attracted the largest number of LGBTQ+ fans that I can think of. Brett was always ambiguous and they regularly, and vocally, supported gay rights. I've been rewatching the 94 TOTP episodes on BBC4 and they dedicated a performance to Derek Jarman after his death from an AIDS related illness.
I dont think Pulp is a queer band. It's just a band with a frontman that wasn't (or isn't) the stereotype male in the 90s, an era where strong masculinity was back.
Not everything is LGBTQ whatever + -, i'm not, far from it, yet songs like We Are the Boyz, I'm a Man, Dishes or Mis Shapes are among the foundations of the man i am today. I'm a man, not doubt about that. but not Queer. There's millions of way to be a man, a male, a dude, whatever people want to call it.
You can be "different" and not be gay. No that there's anything wrong with that ;)
Not everything is sexual when it comes to identity or personality.
So no, Pulp isn't a queer band. Jarvis is not queer. He's the ugly guy who's into ladies and found a way to express it in a different way.
He was the "Odd" one in an era where being odd was... odd. Now being odd is the new normal, right ?
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 12:44:43 PM
Thanks Andy, I started this thread last night and didn't realise that maybe I hadn't fully explained what I meant, so let's expand it a bit.
Now yes, Pulp are all straight, in fact Jarvis's lyrics are perhaps some of the most heterosexual around, and there's a lot of sex in there of course. And you know the 90s were a very straight time for pop music, from the entire Britpop cohort who isn't 100% straight? Does David McAlmont count? I remember how much Brett Anderson was mocked for saying he was "a bisexual who'd never had a homosexual experience." Compare that to the pop scene in the 80s, or now in fact, what was going on there?
And of course high school was an extremely homophobic place then, if you were at all different you would be called gay, and that was basically the worst insult you could receive, it would inevitable lead to bullying or even violence - the idea of anyone being openly gay in my high school was completely unthinkable, and a lot of trying to fit in and not be the victim amounted to trying your best to act like a standard straight bloke. So the experience of being different, of being an outsider, it was very similar to the experience of actually being gay, and so when Mis-Shapes came out it worked as an anthem not just for the weird kids, but for the non-straight ones too. Accidentally, of course, but plenty of things like this are entirely accidental.
So yes, of course Pulp are a straight band, but IMO they can also be a queer one, it's a reading that also works, I think. I firmly believe that the most important part of any form of art is the experience of the listener (or viewer, reader, etc.) - if they can find something in there, whether it was intended by the artist or not, that's great.
I dont know if you are gay or not but i feel like this touching you personally. I never witnessed any violence against gay people (or people who "looked" gay) during my childhood and teen years. Maybe I got lucky I dont know. And i dont come from any privileged background i gotta add: regular school, regular friends, regular life. But not in England... But did witness verbal violence about other things: race, shape, attitude... etc
I would add that many other insults were doing the round back then and probably nowadays too : paki, nigger, jew... or blonde, or fat, or girafe, or midget or insults about being from some other exotic country (i'm part ukrainian). I mean, maybe that touched you more, but some other insults were also as strong in the 90s. I guess it depends on someone's experience and people around them.
It's hard growing up, people are mostly awful to each other. My 4 year old doesn't want to wear shorts in this heat because he fears his "friends" will mock him. At 4 !
To me, the "Queer" band of the 90s was Suede, or Placebo. Not Pulp. Pulp was the one for the different ones, and no difference was more important than the other. Or "promoted" by the band. That's why I think Pulp isn't a queer band. It's a different band, formed by shy and odd looking people. And their statement is right here on their most popular album... Different Class.
The queerest britpop song to me is... Girls and Boys by Blur. Or Trash by Suede. Way more than Mis Shapes, which is way more... straight about what it is about. It's about being different in a non sexual way, which is an oddity for Jarvis, where most of his lyrics are sexual. It's about looking odd, behaving odd, thinking odd, but not necessarily gay or queer. It's about being judged for not checking all the boxes, in a global way.
But totally agree with your last sentence: Art is about the listener. So maybe Pulp has been adopted by the Queer community lately I dont know, but in the 90's, they were just the band with that weird guy singing about being a Common guy hitting on a rich spoilt girl. That was about it.
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 02:40:45 PM
-- Edited by andy on Sunday 23rd of July 2023 02:41:14 PM
I remember Jarvis routinely being derided as 'gay' at my and my friends schools. Everything and everyone who was different was called 'gay'. He was subject to some half witted homophobia by the tabloids too- 'shirt lifter' being one laughable slur. The Tramshed incident is a good reflection of this and Jarvis' response of saying 'yes, I am gay' was a good retort to a clueless idiot.
To me, the "Queer" band of the 90s was Suede, or Placebo. Not Pulp. Pulp was the one for the different ones, and no difference was more important than the other. Or "promoted" by the band. That's why I think Pulp isn't a queer band. It's a different band, formed by shy and odd looking people. And their statement is right here on their most popular album... Different Class.
I remember someone from school describing Suede as a "Britpop version of the Pet Shop Boys". You also had some of the lyrics ("We kiss in his room to a popular tune" etc) and the sleeve of the self-titled looks like two men kissing. I can sort of understand their point.
I dont know if you are gay or not but i feel like this touching you personally. I never witnessed any violence against gay people (or people who "looked" gay) during my childhood and teen years. Maybe I got lucky I dont know. And i dont come from any privileged background i gotta add: regular school, regular friends, regular life. But not in England... But did witness verbal violence about other things: race, shape, attitude... etc
I was trying my best not to talk about myself, but I really should I suppose. Am I gay? Short answer is "no." Longer answer is, romantically I have always been 100% hetero, sexually I have just never had a strong drive one way or the other, and if I were a teenager today, who knows? But right now I'm middle aged and happily married and the very idea of pursuing a relationship with anyone else, male or female, is just of no interest at all, so there is no use soul-seaching on the subject. But when I hear gay people talk about being alienated by straight culture, or trans people talking about being alienated by cis culture, I still think I get that.
So I hope there are some LGBTQ+ board members who can share their experience.
I remember someone from school describing Suede as a "Britpop version of the Pet Shop Boys". You also had some of the lyrics ("We kiss in his room to a popular tune" etc) and the sleeve of the self-titled looks like two men kissing. I can sort of understand their point.
Try this now and you would be in trouble for "queerbaiting"! I wonder if anyone has bothered to ask Brett about his sexuality in the last 25 years or so.
I think he enjoyed playing with the idea as a committed Bowie fan (who also enjoyed the notoriety of claiming bi-sexuality at one point) but having read his books, he seems like a very conventional straight person in reality.
I dont know if you are gay or not but i feel like this touching you personally. I never witnessed any violence against gay people (or people who "looked" gay) during my childhood and teen years. Maybe I got lucky I dont know. And i dont come from any privileged background i gotta add: regular school, regular friends, regular life. But not in England... But did witness verbal violence about other things: race, shape, attitude... etc
I was trying my best not to talk about myself, but I really should I suppose. Am I gay? Short answer is "no." Longer answer is, romantically I have always been 100% hetero, sexually I have just never had a strong drive one way or the other, and if I were a teenager today, who knows? But right now I'm middle aged and happily married and the very idea of pursuing a relationship with anyone else, male or female, is just of no interest at all, so there is no use soul-seaching on the subject. But when I hear gay people talk about being alienated by straight culture, or trans people talking about being alienated by cis culture, I still think I get that.
So I hope there are some LGBTQ+ board members who can share their experience.
Ok I get what you are saying and understand the process :)
As for any trauma, traumas are mainly done by other people. I certainly dont undermine gay or queer sufference because of society, but to me it doesnt have anyhting to do with Pulp
Gay, straight, tree, worm, bee, alien... We all belong to the universe. The day people accept that, maybe we can live in a better world. But will it happen ? Nah
As an LGBTQ+ person, every time I go to watch Pulp and Jarvis says Jesus it must be great to be straight I know hes talking about something else but to me, for a second, I am just able to release a bit of frustration at homophobic bullying Ive had. To be honest their style, the message to be yourself and not to be scared to be different, growing up in a small town where I got beaten up for for being different, a lot about the group chimed with me when I was younger. I know that is not just queer lived experiences, which is why they are popular for so many but it was - and is - so relatable.
And I will say of course I love Suede and I saw on the internet the other day someone say Damon Albarn invented bisexuality in 1995 so I think the queer bashing and tabloid culture is still unfortunately with us to some extent.
I think Pulp are an attractive proposition for today's generation of young, queer, leftie, student-age or teen-age, social media-using music listeners - they've got that killer combination of fantastic, enduring music replete with themes that matter to them (sex, class, the reality of life, love) and the perfect outside packaging, with an intriguing, charismatic and attractive frontman, characterful and well-dressed members, and an aesthetic that swings between perfect retro-90s kitsch (His 'N' Hers, Different Class) and retro-50s (This Is Hardcore).
Common People will always have a pull for young people, especially with the lyrics. It's great that Pulp's biggest hit was such a signifier of their ethos. It's a real flagship song with so much exposure and airplay.
Pulp probably also attract a younger generation because basically, outside of Rap and shit pop music, there is literally nothing else.
So people who want different things dig in the past. Nothing is set in stone, Pulp could become a band for Queer. but that sounds a bit weird, considering Jarvis basically spends his time making love to girls in his mind in 99% of his songs :D
I always felt Jarvis's lyrics echoed my life: A bullied child. A young single mother, demonised by the Government & press of the day. A working class person with aspirations and dreams.
I was someone who never fit in anywhere at any time. Until Britpop hit me in 1994. Then there seemed to be many bands that understood - after all they were around my own age so there was a lot of shared history, and, very importantly, a shared pop culture. Which is why I was dismayed (to say the least) when Britpop turned into Laddism and all the glamour, intelligence and optimism drained out of it.
Looking at Pulp from a distance of 30 years I can see how many people, feeling marginalised in some way, would be drawn into the music and the lyrics. There is an inclusivity to the attitude of Pulp - the make up, the clothing, the posturing as well as the lyrics.
Of course the band is more than the music and reading the thoughts and opinions of all the band members over many (many, many) years it is obvious that they are all very much open to the LGBTQ+ community and all for being inclusive to those marginalised groups (the odd clumsy remark here and there aside!)
I see no reason why Misfits could not apply to any LGBTQ+ person, and not just us freaks in the jumble sale clothing. Pretty sure it all overlaps - we are all more than one thing, right? And no one is going to gatekeep here, are they? What you find personally relatable, what connections you make that make you enjoy the music more is a very good thing.
TL;DR: I think we all project what we want onto a band and there are many ideas and interpretations of the music that are fun to discuss. Without bigotry.
-- Edited by Zurdta on Monday 24th of July 2023 01:30:32 PM
I see no reason why Misfits could not apply to any LGBTQ+ person, and not just us freaks in the jumble sale clothing. Pretty sure it all overlaps - we are all more than one thing, right? And no one is going to gatekeep here, are they? What you find personally relatable, what connections you make that make you enjoy the music more is a very good thing.
TL;DR: I think we all project what we want onto a band and there are many ideas and interpretations of the music that are fun to discuss. Without bigotry.
-- Edited by Zurdta on Monday 24th of July 2023 01:30:32 PM
Not going to lie, when I saw this thread title yesterday I just felt a bit nervous clicking on it. But what you've said here perfecrtly sums up the way I feel.
There are no tq+. There are only gays, lesbians and bisexuals. And stop reclaiming the word queer.
It is fashionable for modern straight girls to idealize and fetishize homosexuality. And these straight girls, who consider themselves trans gay men and have no relation to real homosexuals, now make up a large part of the so-called LGBTQ+ movement. It's such a shame.
[LOUD WRONG BUZZER NOISE]
Zurdta wrote:
I always felt Jarvis's lyrics echoed my life: A bullied child. A young single mother, demonised by the Government & press of the day. A working class person with aspirations and dreams.
I was someone who never fit in anywhere at any time. Until Britpop hit me in 1994. Then there seemed to be many bands that understood - after all they were around my own age so there was a lot of shared history, and, very importantly, a shared pop culture. Which is why I was dismayed (to say the least) when Britpop turned into Laddism and all the glamour, intelligence and optimism drained out of it.
Looking at Pulp from a distance of 30 years I can see how many people, feeling marginalised in some way, would be drawn into the music and the lyrics. There is an inclusivity to the attitude of Pulp - the make up, the clothing, the posturing as well as the lyrics.
Of course the band is more than the music and reading the thoughts and opinions of all the band members over many (many, many) years it is obvious that they are all very much open to the LGBTQ+ community and all for being inclusive to those marginalised groups (the odd clumsy remark here and there aside!)
I see no reason why Misfits could not apply to any LGBTQ+ person, and not just us freaks in the jumble sale clothing. Pretty sure it all overlaps - we are all more than one thing, right? And no one is going to gatekeep here, are they? What you find personally relatable, what connections you make that make you enjoy the music more is a very good thing.
TL;DR: I think we all project what we want onto a band and there are many ideas and interpretations of the music that are fun to discuss. Without bigotry.
-- Edited by Zurdta on Monday 24th of July 2023 01:30:32 PM
This is such an absolutely lovely write-up! Perfectly articulated.
Thanks Violin Thing and Zurdta for excellent posts. The "Jesus it must be great to be straight" line has always stood out to me, what ever did he mean by this? I think back to Jonathan Richman's "I'm Straight" where the word very much doesn't mean "not gay" and wonder how it has shifted in usage over the years. Don't think there are many other lyrics with that kind of ambiguity, none that come to mind anyway, but Pulp certainly had some photoshoots which are at the very least sexually ambiguous.
Not so much thanks Anna, but it seems to have already been addressed, so let's move on.
Most important thing to stress here, I think: alternative interpretations to a band don't in any way invalidate your own feelings or interpretation, I wouldn't tell anyone the way they relate to the music is wrong. But having a variety of ways of listening for different fans is just really interesting to me, and I want to hear more.
Thanks Violin Thing and Zurdta for excellent posts. The "Jesus it must be great to be straight" line has always stood out to me, what ever did he mean by this? I think back to Jonathan Richman's "I'm Straight" where the word very much doesn't mean "not gay" and wonder how it has shifted in usage over the years. Don't think there are many other lyrics with that kind of ambiguity, none that come to mind anyway, but Pulp certainly had some photoshoots which are at the very least sexually ambiguous.
Not so much thanks Anna, but it seems to have already been addressed, so let's move on.
Most important thing to stress here, I think: alternative interpretations to a band don't in any way invalidate your own feelings or interpretation, I wouldn't tell anyone the way they relate to the music is wrong. But having a variety of ways of listening for different fans is just really interesting to me, and I want to hear more.
So on one hand, yeah. I'm a nerdy weirdo who used to be called "gay" in school, I read books and was gangly and crap at sport and was shit with girls, convinced it was 'true love' every time one spoke to me for 5 minutes. I liked different music to my peers, and I was a bit leftie and came home to my parents who were probably complaining about David Cameron or Nick Clegg when I got through the door.
But also, on a certain level, I'm probably not the best person to be a Pulp fan. I'm very middle-middle-class - my parents are both university academics - I went to a private school (!), one of those liberal 'independent' types that posit themselves as being intellectual rather than old money, and in reality are Lib Dem factories. I'm now doing a humanities degree at a uni where a massive % of people have a large amount of privilege (and are very in-your-face with it, they wear f***ing signet rings!) - I'm looking for a minimum-wage job but I don't need one to survive. I feel a need to be upfront about that, you can't and shouldn't really hide it.
I also have a very left-wing point of view, and never particularly hidden it either (I remember being told by some kid in 2019 that "you only vote Labour cos you're poor and you've probably got a small garden"). I think we should abolish private schools (and little shits like that kid), I think we should redistribute wealth in this country, I think if I said what I wanted to say about the ruling and political classes I'd probably get both banned and also reported to Prevent. Not that I'm a huge fan of the Labour party right now either. Austerity is a murder machine.
Pulp's music is my favourite of anyone's but I'd never want to declare an ownership of it, I'm conscious on some level that it is Not For You, that I will Never Understand How It Feels. My job is knowing that and reflecting on it without being a self-conceited congratulatory arsewipe. But Jarvis also writes so well about the self-absorption of my social class, of the useless paraphernalia that clutters up His 'N' Hers, the matching towels, pink quilted eiderdowns and everything. There's a quote from a Jarvis interview circa 1999 - "Being middle class is having two Sunday newspapers in your house and a Dyson vacuum cleaner. It is a certain materialistic way of furnishing your own coffin as comfortably as possible, a terrible blandness. Nobody should aspire to that." I love the way Jarvis punctures the middle class while making it quite clear that they are neither his focus nor his audience - the posh girl in Common People gets moved out of the picture, he smiles and holds her hand and humours her and from then on in, he refuses to centre her, she's off to the side, just out of focus beyond the camera - the way the working class are treated by the middle class, who will just look past them on the street. Jarvis rips apart the middle class without ever giving them the spotlight. It's brilliant.
The working class reality of Pulp's music is, really, what I think got them patronised and packaged as a kitsch novelty by the press. Like, listen to his accent! Never mind Russell's! And they wear such funny clothes! We're supposed to believe that Blur were the ones who 'went arty' (by imitating Pavement guitar scronk) while Pulp disappeared. Pulp were arty from the beginning! It's not even This Is Hardcore - 'I Spy' already says more than any of those mid-90s Britpop records, musically and lyrically. And it is the sound of decades of class resentment being harnessed into a finessed plan of revenge. And then people like me come and write about it and say what's it about.
I guess what I'm trying to say with all of this is that who you are as a person, how you listen to music, it can be fluid. I've absolutely fallen in love with Pulp - I see no reason why the LGBTQIA+ community (which I'm also part of) couldn't see something to love, too. Because - at the end of the day - it's not necessarily about whether you detect little undertones, or certain lines in songs - it's the entirety of what a band is and says, it's how the music sounds, how the singer sounds and the things he says. And you're allowed to love those things, and with Pulp being a batch of misfit socialists, that's the sort of people you are going to attract. And it's probably a demographic with its fair share of queer folk, too.
You may have these opinions but they are narrowminded at best and bigoted at worst.
This is not the first time you have made such remarks.
And for this opinion I always get a ton of hate. If Pulp accept people who are rejected by society, then don't I also deserve acceptance and respect?
-- Edited by Anna on Monday 24th of July 2023 01:57:08 PM
No.
In short, views that explicity wish to not only exlude a section of society, but actually deny their existence, is incompatible with any inclusive & accepting group. This is not a difficult concept.
Also not accepting of fascists - but we figured that would be understood.
You are not adding to this discussion - you are deliberately trolling. You may disagree the point being made by weej - fair enough - but you are deliberately stating your opinion that TQ+ people do not exist. You understand that your opinion is abhorrent to many people - and you certainly understand it is an opinion that is abhorrent here.
We understand that you are never going to alter that opinion. Therefore it is pointless debating the issue further.
Thanks Violin Thing and Zurdta for excellent posts. The "Jesus it must be great to be straight" line has always stood out to me, what ever did he mean by this? I think back to Jonathan Richman's "I'm Straight" where the word very much doesn't mean "not gay" and wonder how it has shifted in usage over the years. Don't think there are many other lyrics with that kind of ambiguity, none that come to mind anyway, but Pulp certainly had some photoshoots which are at the very least sexually ambiguous.
I always took it to mean 'conventional', and therefore 'boring and dull'... but when you listen to the song, I can't quite buy it, because the word has shifted so much. I think it could be a deliberately ambiguous choice, but also a lot of queer people are probably going to equate being straight with conventionality and there's an implicit stance on the staid typical straight relationship in that song (because her new squeeze is so boring and probably doesn't respect her much as a woman), so even with the original meaning of the lyric, it's something that's accessible to LGBTQIA+.
The "Jesus it must be great to be straight" line has always stood out to me, what ever did he mean by this? I think back to Jonathan Richman's "I'm Straight" where the word very much doesn't mean "not gay" and wonder how it has shifted in usage over the years. Don't think there are many other lyrics with that kind of ambiguity, none that come to mind anyway, but Pulp certainly had some photoshoots which are at the very least sexually ambiguous.
Not so much thanks Anna, but it seems to have already been addressed, so let's move on.
Most important thing to stress here, I think: alternative interpretations to a band don't in any way invalidate your own feelings or interpretation, I wouldn't tell anyone the way they relate to the music is wrong. But having a variety of ways of listening for different fans is just really interesting to me, and I want to hear more.
Straight was connected to someone not willing to break the law - hence the term 'going straight'. Back in 1994 around my area, UK Midlands, being referred to as 'straight' was attuned to being 'straitlaced' - I was often called 'straight' because I didn't do drugs. "Nah, not her, she's straight." So the drugs being distributed around the pub would pass me by (man, the 90s were a strange time!) So, a way of calling someone boring, or someone with more moral fibre? (They were calling me boring, I know!)
So straight meant boring. Within the song, I always thought it was a sarcastic remark referring to the woman being stuck with her boring boyfriend/husband and living a traditional husband/wife life, which fits with the theme of the His'n'Hers album. Jesus, it must be great to be straight!
He's so straight, as in not only boring, but also unwilling to bend or compromise or open his mind to anything outside his traditional idea of sex - 90s vanilla sex - so she got a toy to reach the places he never goes! And who can blame her? (Remember this also a time when Ann Summers' Parties were all the rage for housewives!)
And with the chorus referring to the first time - which for many is a very straightforward, missionary, functional experience - it seems her sexual experiences have not expanded, with the exception of the toy. Is Jarvis offering something more kinky perhaps? If he could only whisk her away from the straight boyfriend/husband...
Back to the word, straight. The meaning has changed over the years. The expanded modern meaning - the various interpretations - opens of whole new world of what not being straight could mean and enhances the frisson of the song! Afterall, there is more variety in sex toys now, so the implication is that the sexual/relationship experiences outside of the traditional husband/wife roles, could be more exciting, more unusual and more pleasureable especially when one considers the fluidity of gender and sexuality.
What Jarvis meant at the time of writing (if he meant anything) and how he views it now may also have changed.
[Side note: Songs are more than their composition and execution - what we, the listeners, bring with our own experiences and connections are as important as the song itself. One cannot meaningfully listen to music or view a piece of art without those connections. Unless you are a Philistine and do not want to indulge in meaningful listening/viewing - like the straight guy in the song, eh?]
It's kind of indicative of Pulp's fringe-ness, isn't it? There's something powerful about the idea that it's the outcasts and misfits who are better at this stuff, that the mainstream idea of sex - predicated on being a muscley hunk of the kind that terrorised young Jarvis - is hopeless, and that Jarvis has power in his ability to approach this stuff right. It's quite subversive.
Probably my favourite song by Pulp when you boil everything down.
-- Edited by lipglossed on Monday 24th of July 2023 03:55:20 PM
It's kind of indicative of Pulp's fringe-ness, isn't it? There's something powerful about the idea that it's the outcasts and misfits who are better at this stuff, that the mainstream idea of sex - predicated on being a muscley hunk of the kind that terrorised young Jarvis - is hopeless, and that Jarvis has power in his ability to approach this stuff right. It's quite subversive.
Probably my favourite song by Pulp when you boil everything down.
-- Edited by lipglossed on Monday 24th of July 2023 03:52:04 PM
Well, that escalated quickly ! I wont be so harsh on Anna, as i'm anti communities, any form of... I think they are the cancer of society. but i've always been an outcast, so what do i know !
thanx for the "straight" line explanation, very interesting !
As for the Pulp "pose" in some photos or videos being ambiguous, it lies within the british males population right ?
Even Oasis fans and football hooligans talk about hair, kiss each other on lips and hug. It always surprised me as a foreigner. It's like they don't know where they stand sexually. anyone got an explanation for that ?
I think it depends on individuals' security in their masculinity.
Well for the British guys i've known it was more a fear of opposite sex and not knowing how to behave around them. Dont know about italians or spanish.
Even Oasis fans and football hooligans talk about hair, kiss each other on lips and hug. It always surprised me as a foreigner. It's like they don't know where they stand sexually. anyone got an explanation for that ?
Afraid this is very much not my experience of British masculinity, especially not in the 90s!
Even Oasis fans and football hooligans talk about hair, kiss each other on lips and hug. It always surprised me as a foreigner. It's like they don't know where they stand sexually. anyone got an explanation for that ?
Afraid this is very much not my experience of British masculinity, especially not in the 90s!
Depends on the town maybe ? Ive seen that a lot from oasis fans from Manchester in the early 00s
I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the line "I've kissed your mother twice and now I'm working on your dad". Taken at face value, it would imply that he is bisexual but I've always thought it was a mechanism to get in with the daughter. He doesn't say that he is working towards kissing the dad so perhaps he's trying to butter him up so that the daughter is his for the taking, perhaps by buying him a drink or something.
Oh, and I've always thought that Jarvis is talking to two different people at the start of "Razzmatazz" - the trouble with person 1's brother is he's always sleeping with person 2's mother.
-- Edited by Ian on Monday 24th of July 2023 07:57:03 PM
I think "I've kissed your mother twice, and now I'm working on your dad" is as it reads. I think "twice" gives the game away. He's kissed your mother *twice*, so now he's going to do it to your dad, too. The protagonist might be bisexual, or he might be secure enough in his own masculinity that it doesn't matter.
The Razzmatazz one I've always thought was a deliberately nonsensical, playground insult. Suits the bitter vibe of the song. It's a slightly powerless pisstake from a bitter dumpee.
Ian's interpretation of Pencil Skirt is closer to how I've always understood it - it's implying that he's working his way into the woman's life to the point that he's friendly with her parents. "Kissed your mother twice" as in a familiar friendly peck on the cheek on a couple of occasions, "working on your dad" as in becoming matey with him too, not going in for a full-blown snog! Although obviously there's humour in the looseness of the phrasing.
With Lipglossed on Razzmatazz though.
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"Yes I saw her in the chip shop / so I said get yer top off"
Yeah the line about the dad is clearly him trying to get on his good side, i think it's pretty obvious you need to separate the first part of the sentence and the second part. And as said before, kissed the mother. but not on the lips, why would he say that to his girlfriend ? Pretty weird :D
Jarvis never really made ambiguous lyrics I think. Bar Razzmatazz, which is the weirdest one, I dont know if he's talking about incest and stuff. But yeah, "low" humans are mentionned in this song Maybe he means the brother is sleeping (like just sleeping, resting) like a baby in his parents' bed despite being i dont know 20 or soemthing. Ive seen 8 years old still breastfed so nothing surprises me... Or maybe they are half bros and sis with different mums.
the only line i didnt get was the "straight" one from Do You Remember... but it's been explained now. 30 years later ! Wow. It's always made me think because it didn't make sense at all in the song.
Yes Neil Hannon is from Northern Ireland as you mentionned the song Sunrise is all about that. Probably the only one in the catalog if i remember correctly.
This is a useless piece of info but I'm still a bit starstruck at seeing someone famous - I saw Neil Hannon looking at the cakes in Tesco the other week. I knew I recognised the face when he was walking towards me and I hung around feigning interest in the spices and he went off to the cakes then.
Not that Jarvis can't suck cock if he wants to or anything. I just didn't think the song was quite so literal.
Yes its the lyrics, at least thats what i hear
Again, always pretty obvious when he sings about sex or anything. Theres the odd lyric that maybe isnt clear here and there but most of the time, my foreigner ear understood everything.
He's sending himself up in The Professional in spectacular fashion, the public version at least. And he always loves a pun.
And yeah, it's "A sucker of..."
It's: 'Cocker's short for sucker, a sucker of (cocks)' but he misses out the word 'cocks'. As I remember it's written in the lyrics but semi blanked as in: 'c----'.
He's clever and the nudge-nudge element underplays this but as an example of self-loathing there can't be many better by a famous popstar. He's at the peak of his lyrical powers on this track and the band more than match it with their musical backing. A total triumph. What a side-two opener on the album, it could have been.
For the first time in years, I listened to a live version of its sister-piece, Ladies Man last night - the only time he ever performed it live. And it was with Air, not Pulp!
That makes sense- it does sound a bit like an Air song. Haven't listened to it in years, will have to track that performance down. Got to agree about The Professional- it is a stellar track by anyone's standards. Wish they'd gone further down that path.
Might be a lil biased coming from a queer person, but yes, theres something definitely queer about Pulp.
Perhaps its the ragtag thrift shop aesthetic that comes with their look, or Jarvis rather saucy lyrics, or maybe its the relatability that a group of Sheffield art nerds found each other and stuck together all those years. Theres always been a queer aspect in being an outsider, and thats exactly what Pulps lyrics sometimes feel like to me.
I am cis/straight, but, as a listener and someone who does scholarship in areas that intersect with gender and sexuality, to me and others, pop itself is queer--arch, wry, ironic, camp--especially the pop deriving from Bowie, et al. The book Shock and Awe: Glam Rock and Its History is good on this point, though obv Pulp also has mod, disco, post punk, and slavic string roots :)
I'm gay and trans. I hadn't posted here before, but since you were looking for what LGBTQ+ people thought of the question, I figured I'd chime in.
Pulp is my absolute favorite band, and I've been able to tie many of their lyrics to my own experiences around being queer, despite that surely not being what the songs were actually about at all. That's the beauty of music I think, that we can all hear songs that were personal to the people who wrote them and twist them in a way that's relatable to our own lives. I think their music is easy for queer people to relate to, just like others who don't fit in or are different in some way. A large part of what drew me to Pulp was that they are so... okay with being weird and different, and that made me feel like it was okay for me to be too.
Also, I'm observing that Russell is the avatar of quite a few of our LGBTQ+ members on here. Does/did he capture the "weird and different" best in the group?
Also, I'm observing that Russell is the avatar of quite a few of our LGBTQ+ members on here. Does/did he capture the "weird and different" best in the group?
He was weird and different in his own way. Kind of like Jarvis is, in his own. I'm not the biggest Russell fan to be honest. Songs from his era have a weird vibe around them. I Love those records dont get me wrong and there was a time in my life when they rung true, but i always felt that if i had to spend 5 mins around him i'd feel like i'm both in antartica and hell
Maybe that was just a pose. Or the act they wanted to be at the time.
Jarvis has a more "funny" weirdness about him. Like Goofy.
"This could be Antartica if it didn't look like hell
The lift is always full of puffins with fire in their belly
Not just in mating-season, every single other..."
Sorry.
Re Russell - I met him once and he was lovely but with that edge to him that can be a little scary but is also captivating.
Weirdly, I don't think he would have added anything/come up with better ideas during the Hardcore era, he was jaded and uninspired. But for WLL, his professional amateurism and creativity might have brought a nice counterpoint to the "serious musicianship" at times - i.e make I Love Life, Minnie, Roadkill sound a little more sparkly and less worthy.
Also, I'm observing that Russell is the avatar of quite a few of our LGBTQ+ members on here. Does/did he capture the "weird and different" best in the group?
Personally it's a little more of a gender envy kind of thing, but I also love that he is just so unabashedly himself.
"This could be Antartica if it didn't look like hell The lift is always full of puffins with fire in their belly Not just in mating-season, every single other..."
Sorry.
Ahh, the lost Pulp hit single: Mile End, but it's actually about Eamonn's escapades at the Bempton Cliffs. Russell plays the theremin and the spoons. It reaches #2 but is kept off the top spot by Simply Red.
Another type of demograph-spotting for me at the Pulp shows has been more disappointing - I've seen one black person in all the gigs I've been to this summer. One more than I saw at Wembley for Blur but given the passion and presence of Latin Americans and South East Asians, it did pause me to wonder why.
I haven't really been thinking about it, but come to think of it you're right. Not the most racially diverse crowd, although Bridlington is one of the least ethnically diverse places in the UK (East Yorkshire is statistically very, very white). I did actually queue next to a British East Asian student there though. We both got pulled out of the queue to do a bag-search - well, he was and I followed - we entered and I don't recall seeing him after that. Hope he got a good view, and had a nice time - he said he'd been listening to Pulp for years and years. (Like I said, lots of us young'uns. Or younger-uns...)
It's certainly worth remarking and reflecting on, though. Both gigs I've been to were very racially homogenous.
Another type of demograph-spotting for me at the Pulp shows has been more disappointing - I've seen one black person in all the gigs I've been to this summer. One more than I saw at Wembley for Blur but given the passion and presence of Latin Americans and South East Asians, it did pause me to wonder why.
I haven't really been thinking about it, but come to think of it you're right. Not the most racially diverse crowd, although Bridlington is one of the least ethnically diverse places in the UK (East Yorkshire is statistically very, very white). I did actually queue next to a British East Asian student there though. We both got pulled out of the queue to do a bag-search - well, he was and I followed - we entered and I don't recall seeing him after that. Hope he got a good view, and had a nice time - he said he'd been listening to Pulp for years and years. (Like I said, lots of us young'uns. Or younger-uns...)
It's certainly worth remarking and reflecting on, though. Both gigs I've been to were very racially homogenous.
The audience for The Specials and UB40 when I saw them were predominantly white, well near exclusively. Similar for Bloc Party. I have some Asian friends who have come to a few gigs with me. Most interesting was a friend who came with me to see From The Jam who was a bit concerned about a right wing element in the crowd before the gig. Having explained the background of Down In The Tube Station and that generally speaking Jam fans are a pretty tolerant if over exhuberant bunch he ended up having a great time.
After consultation with the other mod, this thread is now closed. I have removed some of the posts.
Can you all read the forum guidelines. Be kind to each other.
Thanks