Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

His 'n' Hers

 
Album Review: His 'n' Hers

  • Artist: Pulp
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: June 21, 1994
  • Total Time: 50:38
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Pulp had been kicking around since 1981, but for all intents and purposes, their 1994 major-label debut, His 'n' Hers is their de facto debut: the album that established their musical and lyrical obsessions and, in turn, the album where the world at large became acquainted with their glassy, tightly wound synth pop and lead singer Jarvis Cocker's impeccably barbed wit. This was a sound that was carefully thought out, pieced together from old glam and post-punk records, assembled in so it had the immediacy (and hooks) of pop balanced by an artful obsession with moody, dark textures. It was a sound that perfectly fit the subject at hand: it was filled with contradictions -- it was sensual yet intellectual, cheap yet sophisticated, retro yet modern -- with each seeming paradox giving the music weight instead of weighing it down. Given Pulp's predilection for crawling mood pieces -- such effective set pieces as the tense "Acrylic Afternoons," or the closing "David's Last Summer" -- and their studied detachment, it might easy to over-intellectualize the band, particularly in these early days before they reached stardom, but for all of the chilliness of the old analog keyboards and the conscious geek stance of Cocker, this isn't music that aims for the head: its target is the gut and groin, and His 'n' Hers has an immediacy that's apparent as soon as "Joyriders" kicks the album into gear with its crashing guitars. It establishes Pulp not just as a pop band that will rock; it establishes an air of menace that hangs over this album like a talisman. As joyous as certain elements of the music are -- and there isn't just joy but transcendence here, on the fuzz guitars that power the chorus of "Lipgloss," or the dramatic release at the climax of "Babies" -- this isn't light, fizzy music, no matter how the album glistens on its waves of cold synths and echoed guitars, no matter how much sex drives the music here. Cocker doesn't tell tales of conquests: he tells tales of sexual obsession and betrayal, where the seemingly nostalgic question "Do You Remember the First Time?" is answered with the reply, "I can't remember a worst time." On earlier Pulp albums he explored similar stories of alienation, but on His 'n' Hers everything clicks: his lyrics are scalpel sharp, whether he's essaying pathos, passion, or wit, and his band -- driven by the rock-solid drummer Nick Banks and bassist Steve Mackey, along with the arty stylings of keyboardist Candida Doyle and violinist/guitarist Russell Senior -- gives this muscle and blood beneath its stylish exterior. The years etching out Joy Division-inspired goth twaddle in the mid-'80s pay off on the tense, dramatic epics that punctuate the glammy pop of the singles "Lipgloss," "Babies," and "Do You Remember the First Time?" And those years of struggle pay off in other ways too, particularly in Cocker's carefully rendered observations of life on the fringes of Sheffield, where desperation, sex, and crime are always just a kiss away, and Pulp vividly evokes this world with a startling lack of romanticism but an appropriate amount of drama and a surplus of flair. It's that sense of style coupled with their gut-level immediacy that gives His 'n' Hers its lasting power: this was Pulp's shot at the big time and they followed through with a record that so perfectly captured what they were and what they wanted to be, it retains its immediacy years later. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Joyriders (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (3:25)
Lipgloss (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (3:34)
Acrylic Afternoons (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (4:09)
Have You Seen Her Lately? (Lyrics) Pulp, Jarvis Cocker Pulp (4:11)
Babies (Lyrics) Russell Senior, Candida Doyle, Steve Mackey, Jarvis Cocker, Nick Banks Pulp (4:04)
She's a Lady (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (5:49)
Happy Endings (Lyrics) Pulp, Jarvis Cocker Pulp (4:57)
Do You Remember the First Time? (Lyrics) Pulp Pulp (4:22)
Pink Glove (Lyrics) Pulp, Jarvis Cocker Pulp (4:48)
Someone Like the Moon (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (4:18)
David's Last Summer (Lyrics) Jarvis Cocker, Pulp Pulp (7:01)
Razzmatazz [US Version Only][*] Pulp (3:41)

Credits

Candida Doyle (Synthesizer), Russell Senior (Bass), Nick Banks (Timbales), Candida Doyle (Clavinet), Nick Banks (Tympani [Timpani]), Candida Doyle (Organ), Candida Doyle (Piano), Russell Senior (Bowed Bass), Russell Senior (Violin), Nick Banks (Cymbals), Candida Doyle (Keyboards), Ed Buller (Producer), Steve Mackey (Bass), Steve Mackey (Guitar), Nick Banks (Percussion), Jarvis Cocker (Synthesizer), Russell Senior (Guitar (Steel)), Jarvis Cocker (Guitar), Jarvis Cocker (Vocals), Nick Banks (Drums), Jarvis Cocker (Piano)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: His 'n' Hers
Top
His 'n' Hers
Studio album by Pulp
Released 21 June 1994
Recorded Brittania Row, London 1992–1994
Genre Britpop
Length 50:38
Label Island
Producer Ed Buller
Professional reviews
Pulp chronology
Separations
(1992)
His 'n' Hers
(1994)
Different Class
(1995)

His 'n' Hers is the fourth studio album by Pulp and is commonly cited as the band's breakthrough album. In 1998, Q magazine readers voted it the 70th greatest album of all time. A "deluxe edition" of His 'n' Hers was released on 11 September 2006. It contained a second disc of B-sides, demos and rarities. "Lipgloss", "Do You Remember the First Time", "Razzmatazz", and a new mix of "Babies" were released as singles, the latter as part of the "Sisters EP".

It lost out to Elegant Slumming by M People in the 1994 Mercury Music Prize by, as presenter Mark Radcliffe put it in an edition of British rock show 'The White Room', "one measly vote"

Contents

Track listing

Original release

  1. "Joyriders" – 3:25
  2. "Lipgloss" – 3:34
  3. "Acrylic Afternoons" – 4:09
  4. "Have You Seen Her Lately?" – 4:11
  5. "Babies" – 4:04 (does not appear on the vinyl album release)
  6. "She's a Lady" – 5:49
  7. "Happy Endings" – 4:57
  8. "Do You Remember The First Time?" – 4:22
  9. "Pink Glove"  – 4:48
  10. "Someone Like the Moon" – 4:18
  11. "David's Last Summer" – 7:01
  12. "Razzmatazz"  – 3:41 (only appears on the US release of the album)

Deluxe edition bonus disc

  1. "Live On" (BBC Mark Goodier Session)
  2. "You're not Blind" (demo)
  3. "Space" (BBC Hit The North Session soundcheck)
  4. "The Boss" (demo)
  5. "Watching Nicky" (demo)
  6. "Frightened" (demo)
  7. "Your Sister's Clothes" (from the Sisters EP)
  8. "Seconds" (from the Sisters EP)
  9. "His 'n' Hers" (from the Sisters EP)
  10. "Street Lites" (b-side to Do You Remember The First Time)
  11. "You're a Nightmare" (BBC John Peel Session)
  12. "The Babysitter" (b-side to Do You Remember The First Time)
  13. "Deep Fried in Kelvin" (b-side to Lipgloss)

Personnel

  • Jarvis Cocker – Vocals, School Piano, Vox Marauder Guitar, EMS Synthi A
  • Russell Senior – Fender Stratocaster Guitar, Violin, Bowed Bass
  • Candida Doyle – Farfisa Compact Professional II Organ, Stylophone 350S, Korg Trident II, Fender Rhodes Piano, Wurlitzer Piano, Hohner Clavinette, Steinway Grand Piano
  • Nick Banks – Drums, Percussion, Treated Cymbals, Timpani, Fire Extinguisher
  • Steve Mackey - Fender Jazz Bass

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "His 'n' Hers" Read more