FEATURE:
Groovelines
Blur – Country House
__________
PERHAPS not…
Blur’s best or most regarded song, it is one of their most significant. One reason why it is so important is because it is the song that went up against Oasis’ Roll with It in the Britpop battle of 1995. I wanted to mark thirty years of Country House. Released on 14th August, 1995, it reached number one in the U.K. One of the biggest problems with the song is the video. One of the most depressingly retrograde and obnoxious videos of its time, it is small wonder band member Graham Cox hated the shoot. With more than a nod to the puerile and horrible comedy of Benny Hill, it is the nadir of Blur’s videos. Directed by artist Damien Hirst, it is the only big black mark. The song itself is taken from Blur’s fourth studio album, The Great Escape. That album was released on 11th September, 1995. Country House was the lead single from the album. Many might have expected Stereotypes or Charmless Man to lead. However, at a time when Britpop was at a peak, perhaps the sound and feel of Country House was seen as the most promising commercial single. It definitely delivered! The Great Escape followed 1994’s Parklife. Following perhaps their best album, there would have been a lot of pressure on the band to keep their momentum and popularity high. The Great Escape is a fifteen-track album that comes in at just under an hour. I think it is top-heavy in terms of its most commercial/accessible songs. Perhaps not the same blend and balance as you get on Parklife. However, I also think The Great Escape is underrated. Some of Blur’s most fascinating and nuanced songwriting. Damon Albarn’s lyrics particularly standing out. Country House might seem an anomaly to some. However, it did resonate with many critics. Before going deeper with the song, I want to start out with some collected critical reception from Wikipedia:
“David Stubbs from Melody Maker felt the song "sounds at first to be taunting us with that old Britpop standard, um, thingummy, the one that goes Our house is a very, very, very nice house/With two cats in the yard.. but turns out to be a cynical account of the miserable fat-rat city achiever attempting to find solace in the big rural pile of his dreams — a seemingly chirpy but ultimately very unsettling vignette hinting at Blur's darker edges." Pan-European magazine Music & Media named it Single of the Week, adding, "Everything about this song makes you think of Mott the Hoople's laddish version of David Bowie's 'All the Young Dudes'. Whatever, it has won them the UK championship at the expense of Oasis." Also Mark Sutherland from NME named it Single of the Week, writing, "Yup, Blur's first new material since the epoch-shaping Parklife LP is nothing short of a classic pop single. In the space of the time-honoured three-and-a-bit minutes, it manages to recall everyone from Madness to The Beatles to, um, Chas and Dave, craft the most infectious chorus of modern times and still squeeze in the astonishing line He's reading Balzac, knocking back Prozac before tea-time. And you can't really ask for much more than that." Another NME editor, Johnny Cigarettes, described it as "feisty, upbeat singalong pop". Smash Hits gave 'Country House' five out of five, praising it as "a classic pop tune”.
I will bring in some different perspectives on Country House. It is important to remember its context and how this song – together with Oasis’ Roll with It – dominated the news in August 1995. In terms of quality, you could argue Blur reigned on Parklife and they would deliver their fantastic eponymous album in 1997. In some ways, The Great Escape was not as revered. However, it does contains some terrific music. Whether you were around in 1995 and remember Country House or are hearing it new now, it does have its own charm. This is what AllMusic noted about Country House and the attention it received in 1995:
“In the summer of 1995, it had been reduced to this -- Blur versus Oasis. The two bands represented polar opposites of the pop audience -- elite versus the working class, art school versus blue collar, and art school versus gut instinct. It was a brilliant pairing, better even than the Beatles versus the Rolling Stones, because these two bands actually hated each other. Blur leader Damon Albarn would claim that the animosity began when Oasis singer Liam Gallagher taunted him at a party after Oasis' "Some Might Say" reached number one. According to Albarn, Gallagher spotted him, then got in his face, screaming "number one!" This very well may be true -- Liam is not known for his humility -- but it lets Albarn off the hook when he wanted the face-to-face, High Noon showdown that emerged in August of 1995 more than any of the other major players.
As it turned out, both Blur and Oasis were set to deliver the sequels to hit albums in the fall of 1995. Blur was offering their fourth album, while Oasis was set to prove that their debut wasn't a fluke. Originally, they weren't going to release their lead singles -- the songs that touted their upcoming releases -- on the same day, but when Albarn discovered that Blur's "Country House" and Oasis' "Roll With It" were going to be released within a week of each other, he decided to ditch all pretense and have his band's single released the same week as Oasis'. A real risky move, since if his band stiffed, the other band would have vaulted beyond anyone's expectations.
Most observers believed that the rivalry would be contained to Britain's weeklies, but a strange turn of events happened. Brit-pop became a cultural phenomenon, transcending indie culture and dominating the mainstream. That meant that everybody knew about Blur versus Oasis, that they were anxiously awaiting the results of the August release of "Country House" and "Roll With It." National news broadcasts devoted precious time to the rivalry, and everybody awaited the results of the charts with baited breath. In the final few days, it was revealed that Oasis had a major problem when their label, Creation, had a problem with the bar codes on their singles, thereby meaning their single simply wasn't registered as many times as Blur's. And Blur claimed the number one slot -- the first in their history -- with "Country House."
In hindsight, it has become chic to dismiss "Country House" as the product of those crazy times, particularly by Blur's guitarist, Graham Coxon, who seems to be embarrassed to be associated with a song that had either the words "country" or "house" in its title. That's completely unfair. The detached observer could reasonably offer the explanation that Blur won the battle because they offered the most distinctly British single since the Kinks made "Sunny Afternoon" a national singalong. Even if that was true, "Country House" is a brilliant piece of British pop. Yes, you already have to have an inclination for British pop to be enamored with "Country House" -- if only Andy Partridge was half as cute as Damon Albarn, the defiantly British eccentrics XTC would have registered a hit nearly as big as this -- but once you do, it instantly seems like a classic. Apart from the detached, postmodern viewpoint (something any Blur fan will take as second nature by this point, even in 1995), it's hard not to get suckered in by the wonderful hooks and the impeccably detailed production, courtesy of Blur and their producer, Stephen Street. Together, they recorded a layered single where the details -- not just the horns, but the vocal harmonies, rhythms, and guitar parts -- were buried underneath the stomping hooks, melody, and Albarn's caustic wit. This is a single where the rhymes are as natural as the offhand wit and melody -- not only does he offer the wonderous put-down "He's reading Balzac/Knocking back Prozac," he disses his rivals with "He's got Morning Glory/And life's a different story," and it's virtually impossible not to sing along.
"Country House" may have been the perfect record for its time -- it certainly was smarter, funnier, and catchier than "Roll with It" -- but it wouldn't be quite as intoxicating (it wouldn't have elevated beyond its role as a period piece) if Blur didn't know how to write and record a pop record at this point in time. They did. They knew how to maximize a distinctly British and proper record like "Country House" and make it a number one.
They wound up winning the battle, but losing the war. "Roll With It" was dismissed, but after "Wonderwall" was released, (What's the Story) Morning Glory? became a phenomenon not seen since Thriller (at least in the U.K.), and all the bad reviews Oasis received since "Roll With It" and Morning Glory disappeared. Oasis triumphed over Blur. But during that brief moment in late August/September of 1995, Blur was the victor with "Country House," and it remains the best of the two singles released that week”.
In 2012, The Guardian argue how Country House was worth another look. Always having this reputation as being a jokey, knees-up song that was throwaway and got to the top of the charts because of the battle with Oasis rather than anything to do with quality, it has depths and darkness not instantly evident., Maybe it has not aged well, yet I do think it is worth spotlighting this song ahead of its thirtieth anniversary:
“It's worth another look, though. Far from being a knocked-out knees-up, Country House is deceptively complex and completely bonkers. It's the second chorus where things get weird – Albarn's chirpy hook about "a very big house in the country" is backed by a falsetto counter, "blow, blow me out I am so sad, I don't know why", both disconcerting and wonderfully melancholy, leading into Coxon's queasiest guitar solo, a discordant, seasick riff of scarttershot notes and fractured scales seemingly beamed in from Sonic Youth or Pavement. The effect is a splash of genuine art-school creativity oddly absent from Damien Hirst's accompanying video, and totally at odds with what Britpop was supposed to be about by that point. Shed Seven could never have done it. The "Blow, blow me out"s return for the breakdown, underpinned by Coxon's chiming guitar to create a ghostly harmony that's more Pink Floyd than Lily the Pink. Even the late arrival of a Madness brass section can't wreck the magic.
When you read Liam Gallagher's famous dismissal of Blur as "chimney-sweep music", this is the track that comes to mind and you can see what he meant. But Country House has everything that made (and makes) Blur fascinating: the common touch, the terrace chorus, the arched eyebrow, the weirdness, the art-school sound, the desire to annoy and to fit in and to lead the field, to be the outsider and the everyman, all at once. It's never completely satisfying, but it's the confidence and the contradictions that save it.
Country House made an unexpected live return for the band's reunion shows in 2009 and on every occasion, quite rightly, the crowd went bananas. That's Blur – willfully awkward but eager to please. It's certainly what they were at the Brit awards this year. Treasure their stubbornness, their awkwardness and their imperfections, it's what makes them ace, and it's all on show here”.
I remember when Country House came out on 14th August, 1995. I was twelve and was starting to get into Blur. Although I became a bigger fan by the time 13 was released in 1999, it was fascinating to be around witnessing this Britpop battle! It became more about the competition and picking a side more than the songs themselves. However, thirty years later, there will be new attention for and inspection of the lead single from The Great Escape. Whether you love the song or feel it is underwhelming, there is no doubt how important it is. One of Blur’s defining moments. Getting some distance after the Britpop war with Oasis, we can view Country House on its own. Despite the terrible video and the fact there are better songs on The Great Escape, Country House is a song…
TOO big to be ignored.