This Is Hardcore
Best song: This Is Hardcore
Worst song: TV Movie
Overall grade: 6
On ‘His ‘N’ Hers’, Pulp were very much a pop band with the
arty side only occasionally coming out to play. On ‘Different Class’, they
struck the perfect balance between the two to create a defining album of the
era. On ‘This Is Hardcore’, they’ve begun, in places, to neglect hooks and lose
accessibility, which results in a more challenging listen; but it’s an album
worth putting effort into.
See, the subject matter of Pulp records has always looked at
the shadier parts of life, things a lot of people would rather not think about,
but before now, it was always taken from a more lighthearted, satirical angle.
Here we’re confronted with bare-bones harsh truths, nothing dressed up, and
it’s graphic and sometimes a little disturbing.
This is an album about young people, and worry about growing
old is present in several songs. In ‘Dishes’ Jarvis compares himself to Jesus,
who died at 33, and it should be offensive but it’s not. ‘Help the Aged’ is a
highlight – it’s probably the most melodic, radio-friendly song here and it
would almost have fit in on the last album, so it’s a brief respite from the
album’s unfriendly demeanour. And is that… is that a Mellotron? I’m not
completely sure but it sounds like one. (I have a minor obsession with the
Mellotron. It’s as great a rock instrument as the electric guitar.)
The title track is not something you will ever, ever get
used to. Everything I said in the introduction is multiplied by ten for this
one song, with no imagery and no euphemisms but the kind of language that makes
you also recoil from it, and it stays with you for a long time, not a hook
whizzing round your head but an uncomfortable memory in the back of your mind.
Despite the fact that the songs actually have more instrumental
sections than before, I feel like the band has become more lyrics-based than
ever. Their CD insert booklets carry the message ‘Please do not read the lyrics
while listening to the recordings’ and while I stick to that for the first
couple of lessons, I think it’s worth doing, if only because it’s the only way
you’ll pick up things like ‘I was having a whale of a time until your uncle
Psychosis arrived’ and ‘When I close my eyes I can see you lowering yourself to
my level.’
As the record goes on, the songs become more and more
theatrical (see: ‘Seductive Barry’ ‘Glory Days’ and that ‘keeeeeep believing!’
hook in ‘Sylvia’) and I can almost see them as part of a musical. Especially
the final track, ‘The Day After the Revolution’, which is overblown exactly
like the last number of a Broadway show, and surprisingly positive considering
what’s come before it, although not sickeningly so – it remains grounded with
moments like ‘You know the answers but you get it wrong (just to confuse
things.)’
The album ends with a single chord being held for ten
minutes. Ten whole minutes. I find it hard to give this any kind of artistic
meaning, but you should listen to it all the way through once, just so you can
find the hidden whisper of ‘Goodbye’ partway through.
Yes, Pulp have definitely changed here, maybe permanently.
They’re less restrained, taking more risks, and when you hear the line in ‘The
Fear’ (the meta-song opener which perfectly captures the feeling of loneliness): ‘This is the sound of someone
losing the plot’ and relate it to the smash-hit success of ‘Different Class’
and ‘Common People’, you wonder how much of this is autobiographical.
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