- Artist: Blur
- Rating:





- Release Date: April 25, 1994
- Total Time: 52:39
- Genre: Rock
| Album Review: Parklife |





| Wikipedia: Parklife |
| Parklife | ||||
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| Studio album by Blur | ||||
| Released | 25 April 1994 | |||
| Recorded | October 1993 – January 1994, Maison Rouge, Fulham | |||
| Genre | Britpop | |||
| Length | 52:39 | |||
| Label | Food, SBK | |||
| Producer | Stephen Street | |||
| Professional reviews | ||||
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| Blur chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Parklife | ||||
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Parklife is the third studio album by the English alternative rock band Blur, released on 25 April 1994 on Food Ltd. After disappointing sales for their previous album Modern Life is Rubbish (1993), Parklife returned Blur to prominence in the UK, helped by its four hit singles: "Girls & Boys", "End of a Century", "Parklife" and "To the End". The album was certified quadruple platinum in the United Kingdom.[1]
Contents |
After the completion of recording sessions for Blur's previous album, Modern Life Is Rubbish, Damon Albarn, the band's vocalist, began to write prolifically. Blur demoed Albarn's new songs in groups of twos and threes.[2] Due to their precarious financial position at the time, Blur quickly went back into the studio with producer Stephen Street to record their third album.[3] Blur met at the Maison Rouge recording studio in August 1993 to record their next album.[2] The recording was a relatively fast process, apart from the song "This Is a Low".
While the members of Blur were pleased with the final result, Food Records owner David Balfe was not pleased with the record, telling the band's management "This is a mistake". Soon afterwards, Balfe sold Food to EMI.[4]
Blur frontman Damon Albarn told NME in 1994, "For me, Parklife is like a loosely linked concept album involving all these different stories. It's the travels of the mystical lager-eater, seeing what's going on in the world and commenting on it." Albarn cited the Martin Amis novel London Fields as a major influence on the album.[5] The songs themselves span many genres, such as the synthpop-influenced hit single "Girls & Boys", the instrumental waltz interlude of "The Debt Collector", the Oi!-influenced "Bank Holiday", the spacey, Syd Barrett-esque "Far Out", and the fairly-hard rock "Trouble in the Message Centre". Journalist John Harris commented that while many of the album's songs "reflected Albarn's claims to a bittersweet take on the UK's human patchwork", he stated that several songs, including "To the End" and "Badhead" "lay in a much more personal space".[6]
Parklife, released in April 1994, debuted at number one on the UK Album Charts. The album stayed on the chart for 90 weeks.[7] Johnny Dee, reviewing Parklife for NME, called it "a great pop record", adding "On paper it sounds like hell, in practice it's joyous."[8] Rolling Stone gave the album four out of five stars. Reviewer Paul Evans wrote, "With one of this year's best albums, [Blur] realize their cheeky ambition: to reassert all the style and wit, boy bonding and stardom aspiration that originally made British rock so dazzling."[9] Allmusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine commented: "By tying the past and the present together, Blur articulated the mid-'90s zeitgeist and produced an epoch-defining record."[10]
The album won Best British Album at the 1995 Brit Awards.
All songs by Blur. All lyrics by Albarn except track 8 written by James.
| Preceded by The Division Bell by Pink Floyd |
UK number one album 7 May 1994 – 13 May 1994 |
Succeeded by Our Town - The Greatest Hits by Deacon Blue |
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