Neil Crossley
DIFFERENT CLASS
Jarvis Cocker, Steve Mackey, Candida Doyle, Nick Banks and Russell Senior, pictured in France in 1994
Avalon
“I always thought the word common was interesting. It was a real insult in Shetheld to call someone common”
JARVIS COCKER
As retail outlets go, the shop once known as Record & Tape Exchange in Notting Hill has a rich legacy. It was the store where the Clash’s Mick Jones could othen be spotted; where cashstrapped music journalists would brazenly sell mint promo copies of albums before they’d even been released; and where, in 1994, a skinny Yorkshireman called Jarvis Branson Cocker walked up to the counter with a stack of albums to sell.
Armed with his credit from the sale, Cocker headed straight for the shop’s second-hand instrument department, where he bought a Casio MT-500 keyboard. Within an hour, he had written the basic structure of a song that would become the anthem of an era for his band Pulp.
“I went back to my That and wrote the chord sequence for Common People, which isn’t such a great achievement because it’s only got three chords,” he told journalist Nick Hasted in Uncut in 2010. “I thought it might come in handy for our next rehearsal.” Cocker played his new composition to Pulp bassist Steve Mackey, who laughed when he heard it, adding that it sounded like Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s Fanfare For the Common Man. This sparked something in Cocker. “I always thought the word ‘common’ was an interesting thing. It was a real insult in Shetheld to call someone ‘common’. That set off memories of this girl that I met at college. She was from a well-todo background, and there was me explaining that that would never work. Once I got that narrative in my head, it was very easy to write, lyrically.” Other band members were as unimpressed as Mackey when Cocker played his new idea. “It sounded like cod-Depeche Mode,” recalled violinist and guitarist Russell Senior. But keys player Candida Doyle spotted a classic. “I just thought it was great, straight away. It must have been the simplicity of it. You could just tell it was a really powerful song then.”
Common People – Cocker’s memoir about a wealthy art student who wants to ‘slum it’ – would catapult Pulp into the pop mainstream and spark an intense burst of songwriting that would result in their flih album, Ditherent Class. In an era when Britpop bands obsessed over the past, Ditherent Class shone out as unique, contemporary, stylish and smart.
The album was like a docudrama of 90s Britain – kitchensink pop that othered hilarious and heartbreaking accounts of ordinary working-class life – set against an instrumental backdrop that spanned Bowie, Serge Gainsbourg and Stereolab. Ditherent Class was Pulp’s crowning creative achievement. Over two decades on from its release, its songs, themes and sounds resonate as strongly as ever.
Pulp’s 1983 debut, It, released as a mini album in a limited run of 2,000 copies
THE LONG GAME