Originally Posted by
veteranof1000psychicwars
Following along with all the hubbub surrounding the Oasis reunion that will probably last about three gigs...l am casting my mind back to the 90s and thinking about the massive attention they and other bands received at the time.
Was there something about it that was inherently great that we couldn't grasp over her in the States? Why is Lee Mavers of The La's revered as some sort of Syd Barrett-like visionary when his band is known for one run of the mill pop song?
Why is Oasis so popular? Granted, l think Live Forever and What's The Story are terrific pop songs, but why the adulation? What is the frenetic appeal of seeing a band live where the singer stands stock-still, with his hands behind his back, the entire show? And the songs themselves more or less sound the same, musically and vocally, and their main appeal seems to be ripping off The Beatles?
I don't mean to be coarse to those overseas but is this a case where US music fans could smell a rat, so to speak, and didn't fall for the hype around these bands, and Blur, Pulp, and so forth? Was the fact that they made so much noise in the press part of their 'appeal', and their barneys didn't mean anything in the US, i.e., their music wasn't good enough to stand on its own?
Conversely I'll mention the greatest Liverpool band to come out of the late 90s, Mansun. They were briefly popular when their first album Attack Of The Grey Lantern came out around 1997, and were forceful about not wanting to be lumped in with "Britpop shite", even after their huge hit Wide Open Space. They followed their debut with "Six", a brilliant album immediately derided for its "prog" cover art, and "songs that go all over the place"...an album Steven Wilson said recently "reinvented the progressive rock wheel".EMI told them to "cut out the prog shit or we'll drop you." Apparently Wilson and l are the only ones who have heard it.
But I digress:
What is it about Oasis, Blur, The La's, etc., that captivate people so completely in the UK, that we don't get over here? Is it purely a cultural thing? Is that why the music, purely on its own merits, didn't or doesn't succeed in other parts of the world? Why on earth is everyone in Britain breathlessly hoping for another utterance of genius from Lee "Syd" Mavers? Because of that mediocre song?
I am not intentionally slagging off these bands but am honestly interested in what the disconnect is.
And of course l will never understand why Mansun's Six, or Paul Draper's Spooky Action have never been mentioned here, but that is a different question...
So, what's the deal?
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