Blur
Active: 1990–2023
28
Releases
34
Active Years
About Blur
By Mark Williams
Blur were the band that made Britpop smart. Formed in Colchester in 88 when Damon Albarn, Graham Coxon, Alex James, and Dave Rowntree met at Goldsmiths College. Emerged from the baggy scene with Leisure (91) that hinted at greatness but hadn't found its voice. Then came the transformation. With Modern Life Is Rubbish (93), Blur turned away from American grunge towards a distinctly British sound — music halls, Kinks-inspired riffs, observational lyrics about housin' estates, pubs, and the peculiarities of English life. I remember buyin' that album from Our Price. Still got it somewhere.
Parklife (94) was the one that defined a movement. The clipped spoken-word title track, the jaunty Girls & Boys, the poignant This Is a Low — a state-of-the-nation address wrapped in pop hooks. Four Brit Awards. Ninety weeks on the UK chart. Blur were suddenly the biggest band in Britain.
The rivalry with Oasis in 95 became tabloid legend. The Battle of Britpop — Country House versus Roll With It on the same day — a masterstroke of media manipulation. Blur won the singles chart battle. Oasis won the album war. But the rivalry, however manufactured, captured the mood of mid-90s Britain and pushed both bands to new heights. It felt real at the time. You had to pick a side.
Then Blur did what Blur did best — they changed direction entirely. Blur (97) was a self-titled reinvention, lo-fi and abrasive. Song 2 was intended as a joke on grunge — two minutes of shouty distorted noise — became their biggest international hit. A stadium anthem everywhere from football matches to video games.
Tender (99) and the album 13 showed 'em at their most emotionally raw. The gospel-tinged Tender became one of their most endurin' songs. After Think Tank (03) the band went on extended hiatus as Damon focused on Gorillaz. Reunion shows in 09, 12, 15, and 24 confirmed their endurin' popularity — sold-out stadiums across the UK.
Blur's place in British music history is secure. The art-school band that made Britpop intellectual without losin' the pop sensibility. Damon's sharp compassionate observations of British life, Graham's idiosyncratic guitar work, and their willingness to evolve — from baggy to Britpop to lo-fi to experimental. Their best songs capture the absurdity and beauty of modern Britain with wit, warmth, and glorious noise.
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Complete Discography
SHE'S SO HIGH
Documented across 3 weeks
THERE'S NO OTHER WAY
Documented across 8 weeks
BANG
Documented across 4 weeks
POPSCENE
Documented across 2 weeks
FOR TOMORROW
Documented across 4 weeks
CHEMICAL WORLD
Documented across 4 weeks
SUNDAY SUNDAY
Documented across 3 weeks
GIRLS AND BOYS
Documented across 8 weeks
TO THE END
Documented across 7 weeks
PARKLIFE
Documented across 8 weeks
END OF A CENTURY
Documented across 6 weeks
COUNTRY HOUSE
Documented across 12 weeks
THE UNIVERSAL
Documented across 10 weeks
STEREOTYPES
Documented across 9 weeks
CHARMLESS MAN
Documented across 10 weeks
BEETLEBUM
Documented across 10 weeks
SONG 2
Documented across 7 weeks
ON YOUR OWN
Documented across 8 weeks
M.O.R.
Documented across 3 weeks
TENDER
Documented across 11 weeks
COFFEE + TV
Documented across 9 weeks
NO DISTANCE LEFT TO RUN
Documented across 5 weeks
MUSIC IS MY RADAR
Documented across 12 weeks
OUT OF TIME
Documented across 11 weeks
CRAZY BEAT
Documented across 5 weeks
GOOD SONG
Documented across 2 weeks
UNDER THE WESTWAY
Documented across 3 weeks
THE NARCISSIST
Documented across 1 week