Castlefield Bowl, Manchester
A hit-heavy set reminds us how the Sheffield masters earned their place in British pop culture – with plenty of sleaze and sonic adventure thrown in

Jarvis Cocker makes a grand entrance. The rest of Pulp have taken their place at the front of the stage, the string players are ready to the band’s right, and then their frontman emerges at the top of a Hollywood staircase, silhouetted by a massive full moon. He has a spindly, instantly recognisable silhouette, of course. There’s no mistaking; Jarv is here.

Mid-set he mentions Pulp’s first foray to Manchester; an appearance at the Boardwalk in October 1992. Subsequently, things changed for Pulp; hit albums and fame. And for Cocker, an elevated position in our country’s cultural life, including presenting radio shows, an appearance on BBC One’s Question Time and in the film Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, a recently published memoir-of-sorts (Good Pop, Bad Pop), and a fully-fledged solo career under the name Jarv Is. His idiosyncrasy remains intact; at the very least, he pronounces “party” like no one else I’ve heard (in a Yorkshire French accent).

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

‘It could be your next-door neighbour’: how female MPs cope with misogynistic abuse

As Nicola Sturgeon quits, online vitriol continues to leave female politicians fearing…

AFC championship game: Cincinnati Bengals v Kansas City Chiefs – live!

Email Hunter with your thoughts or tweet @HunterFelt Brady hasn’t made up…

‘Mind-boggling’ methane emissions from Turkmenistan revealed

Leaks of potent greenhouse gas could be easily fixed, say experts, and…

Antarctica’s biggest Covid outbreak yet puts US station McMurdo on pause

10% of personnel infected with authorities stopping inward travel just as peak…