Product description
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Blur - Leisure - CD
.co.uk
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Oft remembered as a false start before Blur's eventual
ascension to the position of Britpop spokesmen, 1991's Leisure
belongs to a very different age. Much of it is fairly
lightweight: a naive dance-rock hybrid, and not a million miles
away from EMF ( /exec/obidos/artist-search/EMF/%24%7B0%7D ).
Leisure certainly has its moments, though, and when they come,
they're quietly stunning: "Sing" (later revived for the
Trainspotting soundtrack) is a crystalline clatter, guided
through huge psychedelic rain clouds by Alex James' wandering
bass; even today, it sounds one of Blur's most beautiful moments.
"There's No Other Way" is equally deserving of note; powered by a
titanic baggy beat, it stands as one of the greatest indie disco
floor-fillers of the 1990s. Despite its faults, Leisure is an
occasionally great album; it's questionable, though, that many of
Blur's "Song 2" converts would even recognise it as the same
band. --Louis Pattison
BBC Review
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Recorded at the point when all roads more or less
still led to the baggy Madchester scene, Leisure is infused with
a dancey gloss and big recursive chunks of funky drumming
favoured by the big-league luminaries such as The Stone Roses,
Inspiral Carpets, and Happy Mondays. “Bad Day” is particularly
indebted to the scene, as are the pulverising dynamics of “Slow
Down,” though “There’s No Other Way” suggests that the melody of
REM’s “Stand” (from the album, Green) had also percolated through
their collective consciousness.
Graham Coxon’s churning atmospherics add an echoing depth to
“Sing”, beautifully offsetting its bruising metronomic chug. He’s
cautious about indulging in too many guitar heroics, opting
instead to clown around with some dopey fuzzbox on “Repetition,”
or give it some choppy Pete Townshend chords on “Come Together.”
Vocally, Damon Albarn is less expressive, operating somewhere
between a knowing perma-smirk delivery, or a kind of gormless
intoning (as on “Fool” and the shoe-gazing alienation anthem of
“Birthday”). There’s not a lot of range there but it fits the
bill.
Though generally reckoned to be the poorer cousin to their
following albums, there’s a charming innocence to the music – a
quality that wasn’t able to survive the transition from simple
pop band to the an unstoppable Brit award-winning machine. The
spacey jangle of “She’s So High” encapsulates the relaxed appeal
of sunshine-drenched choruses, eagerly repeated simply because it
sounded good rather than what it all might mean.
The record honestly captures the band at the point where they
didn’t have to worry about being spokesmen for a generation,
solve third world debt or be cultural commentators with something
to say. All they had to do was play as well as they could and
look as pretty as the video director would allow. In this sense,
Blur had nothing to say but said it very well, an accurate enough
reflection of the matey hedonism of the day. --Sid Smith
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