How Britpop Changed the Media
Miranda Sawyer explores the legacy of Britpop with contributions from Alex James, Justine Frischmann, James Brown, Andrew Harrison, Louise Wener, Andrew Collins and others.
Britpop has been picked over a lot in the past 20 years. Mostly, we concentrate on the rivalry between Blur and Oasis, the notion of Britishness and the high times in general - for music, art, politics, even football - for mid-90s Britain. How Britpop Changed The Media looks at Britpop and its legacy in a different way.
In the late 80s and early 90s, pop music had its own specialist media: NME, Smash Hits, Record Mirror, Select, The Face. Major pop stars like Madonna would make the tabloids' entertainment pages, but pop culture was rarely covered by the broadsheets. This was partly due to snobbery, partly a lack of access - pop's stars tended to be American.
Britpop, coming as it did after rave and grunge - youth cultures that were astonishingly, suddenly popular; but inaccessible to the mainstream media - was seized upon by tabloids, broadsheets and TV news. Here were stars that were easy to find - they were in Camden, or the Met Bar - and a scene that was familiar and on their doorstep. This sudden explosion of alternative indie musicians into the mainstream was a shock to the musicians themselves and changed the way we think of stars.
Britpop's point (like punk's) was that musicians and stars are like their fans. This indirectly led to the idea of ordinary people becoming instant stars, to reality TV shows like Big Brother where non-famous people become overnight celebrities. But also Britpop stars didn't want to talk to tabloids or non-music media: hence the media methods of the 2000s - phone-tapping, paparazzi-stalking, paying friends to talk.
Finally, of course, pop and indie music is a stalwart of all media now, from The Observer to The Sun. Britpop brought pop into the mainstream media, where it still rules today.
Last on
Find out about our special programming celebrating 20 years of Britpop.
Clip
-
Miranda Sawyer: When Britpop became mainstream
Duration: 01:50
Music Played
-
Blur
End Of A Century
- Food.
-
Elastica
Waking Up
- Live Forever (Various Artists).
- Virgin.
-
Nirvana
Heart-Shaped Box
- Geffen.
-
Blur
Advert
- Modern Life Is Rubbish.
- FOOD.
- 2.
-
Suede
The Drowners
- Nude Records.
-
Suede
Drowners
- Nude.
-
Suede
So Young
- Nude.
-
Saint Etienne
Nothing Can Stop Us
- FOXBASE ALPHA.
- Heavenly.
-
Menswear
Daydreamer
-
Elastica
Line Up
- Deceptive Records.
-
Blur
Parklife
- Food.
-
Sleeper
Inbetweener
- Indolent.
-
Oasis
Rock 'N' Roll Star
-
Pulp
Something Changed
- Island.
-
Elastica
S.O.F.T.
- ELASTICA.
- DECEPTIVE RECORDS.
-
Oasis
Roll With It
- Creation Records.
-
Blur
Country House
- Food.
-
Oasis
Some Might Say
-
Supergrass
Alright
- Parlophone.
-
Blur
This Is A Low
-
Elastica
2:1
- EMI.
-
Pulp
Sorted For E's & Whizz
- Island.
-
Pulp
Mis-Shapes
- Island.
-
Arctic Monkeys
Fake Tales Of San Francisco
- BANG BANG.
-
Blur
To The End
Credit
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Producer | Frank Wilson |
Broadcasts
- Sun 6 Apr 2014 13:0091热爆 Radio 6 Music
- Wed 22 Feb 2017 22:0091热爆 Radio 2
Featured in...
Celebrating the 90s—6 Music Celebrates 1994
Catch-up with 6 Music's programmes from 1994 Day and beyond.
20 Years of Britpop—Britpop at the 91热爆
The 91热爆 is celebrating 20 Years of Britpop with a week of special programming.