BLUR Fifth album “BLUR� RELEASE FEBRUARY 10th CD, VINYL, CASSETTE
PRESS As anyone who has followed their career closely will be fully aware, BLUR are a particularly multi-faceted band - intensely musical, melodically poppy, teeth-grindingly abrasive or swooningly lush, as the case may be. There is probably only one group in Britain who could have recorded songs as dissimilar as 'The Universal' (from 'The Great Escape'), 'Oily Water' (from 'Modern Life Is Rubbish'), 'Bank Holiday' (from 'Parklife') and 'There's No Other Way' (their second single from 'Leisure'). That group is BLUR and they have now delivered their most surprising, courageous and intimate album to date. Their fifth album - entitled simply 'Blur' - is that rare feat (so easy to claim, so hard to actually effect): it is a new beginning. You'll hear for yourself. 'Blur' has a completely different sound, approach and attitude to its predecessors. It puts a considerable distance between BLUR and their British pop-and-rock contemporaries, and this is intentional. In the words of Graham Coxon, "I don't think there'll be so much muddled thought about us now. It will set us apart from everybody." The facts are these. In September 1995, BLUR released 'The Great Escape', the follow-up to their classic 1994 album, 'Parklife'. 'The Great Escape,' which included the hit singles, 'Country House,' 'The Universal,' 'Stereotypes' and 'Charmless Man,' debuted at No. 1 in the charts and took the band's fixation with British culture to its grandiose conclusion. After the release of 'The Great Escape,' and the tours that followed, BLUR decided on a radical change in their musical approach. Among other considerations, they believed that something of the original spirit of BLUR had been lost. Not everyone in the band was getting along terribly well. There was too much emphasis on fame and not enough trust being given to the instincts on which the band had been formed in the first place.