This Is Hardcore

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (33 ratings)
This Is Hardcore album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 65:18

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

04.04.11
Slithering and introspective
1998 | Label: ISLAND RECORDS

“I am not Jesus, though I have the same initials,” Jarvis Cocker drawls at the beginning of “The Dishes,” by way of response to being anointed as the savior of British rock. If Pulp had been a typical band, they’d have followed their commercial breakthrough by making a record along the lines of Different Class: playful, snarky, detached, poppy. But they’d never been a typical band, and following the departure of longtime guitarist Russell Senior, they made this slithering, introspective 1998 album, whose jokes are mostly at Cocker’s own expense when they’re not simply bitter about fame. Its single “Help the Aged” finds him playing a sleazy old man trying to inveigle an ingĂ©nue into the sack; “Party Hard” is a Bowie-ish rocker about partying too hard and its aftermath. The album’s centerpiece is its ingenious, relentlessly creepy title track, on which stuttering orchestral loops flicker across the mix like strobes, while Cocker describes an artist’s career in the spotlight as intimacy transformed into brightly lit pornography, passion stripped of meaning for its participants and then recharged with sick new meaning by voyeurs. (The “deluxe edition” is augmented with a set of B-sides and sketched-out demos from that era that… read more »

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Excellent angst

Britster

I know 'Different Class' is the go-to Pulp album, and for good reason, but if like me, you found its Britpop trappings a little obvious after the impressionistic swirling songs of His'n'Hers, then you might dig 'This is Hardcore' A LOT. It takes the classic Pulp sound but dips it in more ambitious arrangements and some new sounds, such as Bowie on 'Party Hard'. Some of Cocker's (bitter)sweetest songs are also here eg. 'A Little Soul'

user avatar

The Britpop Hangover Album

KrisWright

For me, "This Is Hardcore" marks the end of Britpop. Jarvis Cocker sounds older, wiser and sadder here than he did on "Different Class" and, somehow, that makes him even more appealing. He, like the rest of his Britpop peers, finally got everything he ever wanted only to realize that it would never satisfy him. "This Is Hardcore" strikes me as a record made by a dreamer just as he's watching his dreams evaporate. It really is something worth hearing. I will say that the 8 and half minute slow number "Seductive Barry", despite being a worthwhile song, tends to kill the momentum when listening to the album in one go. But that's just a technical complaint, really. I particularly recommend the title track, "A Little Soul", "Sylvia" and the American bonus track "Like A Friend". But, really, I recommend the whole album, especially to fans of the mid-90s Britpop era. This is the music that ran over the credits.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Anagrams

By Maris Kreizman, Audiobooks Editor

"Anagrams" is the name of one of my favorite books - it's clever and heart-wrenching at the same time.I like sad songs you can dance to, and I like sad songs you can cry to. I like girl groups and electro-pop and Brit pop and twangy torch songs. I'm still haunted by some of the songs that I was obsessed with when I was a kid. I think "twee" and "deep" are not mutually exclusive. more »

0

Getting Started on eMusic

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Welcome to eMusic, home of the music you love and the music you're about to love. From timeless classics to current game-changers and trendsetters, eMusic is the perfect place to expand both your collection and your musical horizons. We know at first our catalog can be overwhelming, which is why we put together this collection of musts to start you on your way. In the first section, you'll find thrilling new releases and recent classics.… more »

They Say All Music Guide

“This is the sound of someone losing the plot/you’re gonna like it, but not a lot.” So says Jarvis Cocker on “The Fear,” the opening track on This Is Hardcore, the ambitious follow-up to Pulp’s breakthrough Different Class, thereby providing his own review for the album. Cocker doesn’t quite lose the plot on This Is Hardcore, but the ominous, claustrophobic “The Fear” makes it clear that this is a different band, one that no longer has anthems like “Common People” in mind. The shift in direction shouldn’t come as a surprise — Pulp was always an arty band — but even the catchiest numbers are shrouded in darkness. This Is Hardcore is haunted by disappointments and fear — by the realization that what you dreamed of may not be what you really wanted. Nowhere is this better heard than on “This Is Hardcore,” where drum loops, lounge piano, cinematic strings, and a sharp lyric create a frightening monument to weary decadence. It’s the centerpiece of the album, and the best moments follow its tone. Some, like “The Fear,” “Seductive Barry,” and “Help the Aged,” wear their fear on their sleeves, some cloak it in Bowie-esque dance grooves (“Party Hard”) or in hushed, resigned tones (“Dishes”). A few others, such as the scathing “I’m a Man” or “A Little Soul,” have a similar vibe without being explicitly dark. Instead of delivering an entirely bleak album, Pulp raise the curtain somewhat on the last three songs, but the attempts at redemption — “Sylvia,” “Glory Days,” “The Day After the Revolution” — don’t feel as natural as everything that precedes them. It’s enough to keep the album from being a masterpiece, but it’s hardly enough to prevent it from being an artistic triumph. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

more »

Activity

  • 04.25.12 Thank you Mexico City - An amazing audience to end this short tour & our longest concert ever ! Next stop Spain for http://t.co/QCw19DiQ xx
  • 04.06.12 Tune in to Pulp as they make their only US TV appearance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, this Monday, 9 April 2012.
  • 03.05.12 It Happens At Pomona: Music at the Edge of Los Angeles. Pulp at the Fox Theater, 19 April 2012. http://t.co/OjbrSt1M
  • 03.02.12 At last - a Pulp concert in Italy! Fiera della Musica, near Pordenone. Friday 13 July 2012. http://t.co/HPmMZJJz
  • 02.28.12 Head North. Pulp will headline Ruisrock in Turku, Finland on Friday 6 July 2012. http://t.co/yg9w8O1O
  • 02.27.12 Pulp in Romania at B'estfest, Bucharest. 8 July 2012. http://t.co/XwzM8Qw5
  • 02.27.12 If you didn't get lucky with Pulp @TeenageCancer tickets, please consider making a donation. http://t.co/t5IXauXC
  • 02.21.12 Pulp are pleased to announce an extra show at NYC Radio City, 10 April 2012. Tickets about to go on sale. x http://t.co/IM58Vy5l
  • 02.20.12 Join Pulp & support Teenage Cancer Trust. Live concert at London Royal Albert Hall, 31 March 2012. Presale 9am Weds at http://t.co/0wycPaaK
  • 02.07.12 The truth will out. Pulp's first time in Mexico City. Palacio de los Deportes, 23 April 2012. x
  • 01.28.12 Is everybody in? SF sold out in 8 mins, NYC a couple of hours. Live on. x
  • 01.23.12 Pulp in San Francisco at the Warfield Theater, 17 April 2012. http://t.co/ymukJIrj