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This Is Hardcore


FieldValue
nameThis Is Hardcore
typestudio
artistPulp
coverPulp-This Is Hardcore.jpg
released30 March 1998
recordedNovember 1996 – January 1998
genre
length69:49
labelIsland
producerChris Thomas
prev_titleCountdown 1992–1983
prev_year1996
next_titleFreshly Squeezed... the Early Years
next_year1998
misc{{Extra chronology
artistPulp studio album
typestudio
prev_titleDifferent Class
prev_year1995
titleThis Is Hardcore
year1998
next_titleWe Love Life
next_year2001
nameThis Is Hardcore
typealbum
single1Help the Aged
single1date10 November 1997
single2This Is Hardcore
single2date16 March 1998
single3A Little Soul
single3date8 June 1998
single4Party Hard
single4date7 September 1998
  • The Townhouse, London
  • Olympic, London

This Is Hardcore is the sixth studio album by the English rock band Pulp, released on 30 March 1998. Following the success of Different Class (1995), friction grew in the band, culminating in the departure of the guitarist and violinist Russell Senior. Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker left for New York alone to decompress and write in isolation. These new songs took a much more art rock approach and glam rock influence.

After reconciling with the band, work on the album began in November 1996 and finished in January 1998. Lead single "Help the Aged" was released on 10 November 1997, followed by "This Is Hardcore" on 11 March 1998. After the album's release, two more singles were released: "A Little Soul" on 8 June and "Party Hard" on 7 September.

As with the band's previous album, This Is Hardcore received generally positive reviews from critics and debuted at No. 1 on the UK Albums Chart, but with far fewer sales. The album earned Pulp a third successive nomination for the 1998 Mercury Prize. A deluxe remastered edition of This Is Hardcore was released on 11 September 2006, containing a second disc of B-sides, demos and rarities.

Artwork

The cover photo was art directed by Peter Saville and the American painter John Currin who is known for his figurative paintings of exaggerated female forms. The model photographed is Ksenia Zlobina and the images were further digitally manipulated by Howard Wakefield, who also designed the album. Currin was also the art director for the "Help the Aged" video, based on his painting "The Never Ending Story". Advertising posters showing the album's cover that appeared on the London Underground system were defaced by graffiti artists with slogans like "This Offends Women" and "This is Sexist" or "This is Demeaning".

The music video for the title track was directed by Doug Nichol and was listed as the No. 47 best video of all time by NME. A bonus live CD entitled "This Is Glastonbury" was added to the album later in 1998.

Commercial performance

The album had first-week sales of just over 50,000, 62% fewer than Different Class first-week sales of 133,000. The album was certified gold by the BPI April 1998 for sales of 100,000. As of 2008, sales in the United States have exceeded 86,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Reception and legacy

Nick Hornby, writing in Spin, proclaimed that on the album "England's unofficial poet laureate Jarvis Cocker perfects his poetry of the prosaic". Rolling Stone noted that This is Hardcore was "less bright and bouncy" than its era-defining predecessor, but praised it as being "even more daring and fully realized", noting that "it plays like a movie, a series of scenes from a life", and declared that it "is arguably the first pop album devoted entirely to the subject of the long, slow fade", which it heralded as "a bold move because it breaks one of rock's oldest songwriting taboos". The review concluded, "In midlife oblivion, Pulp have found a strange kind of liberation. Desperation never sounded quite so entertaining." Reviews in the United States adopted a similar tone, with the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette all awarding three and a half stars out of four. The Tribune hailed it as "a smashing album about midlife crisis" and found that "[the] music is sumptuous lounge-lizard rock augmented by strings and noisy disruptions – a clever, catchy '90s take on the Bowie/Mott/Roxy glam rock of the '70s."

In a retrospective assessment of the album's impact, Matthew Horton wrote in NME that "in its sense of surrender, regret and flashes of panic, it captured the time to a tee." In an article entitled, "How Pulp's This Is Hardcore Brought Britpop to a Halt", Horton maintained that it was "a sloughing-off of fame’s skin, a rejection of the Britpop monster". He concluded, "It's an end, a hard-wrought epitaph to a band's jaunt in the limelight and a suitable jump-off point for what had been a rare old few years – for us, at least." Another review found the song "A Little Soul" to be "Cocker's most disconsolately beautiful", drawing "from the musical blueprint of Smokey Robinson's 'Tracks of My Tears.'"

This is Hardcore was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. In 2013, NME ranked it at number 166 in its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time. In 2014, US LGBT magazine Metro Weekly placed the album at number 46 in its list of the "50 Best Alternative Albums of the '90s". In 2017, Pitchfork ranked it seventh in "The 50 Best Britpop Albums".

Track listing

Personnel

Pulp

  • Jarvis Cocker
  • Nick Banks
  • Candida Doyle
  • Steve Mackey
  • Mark Webber

Production

  • Chris Thomas – production
  • Pete Lewis – engineering
  • Lorraine Francis – assistant engineering
  • Jay Reynolds – assistant engineering
  • Olle Romo – programming
  • Matthew Vaughan – programming
  • Magnus Fiennes – programming
  • Mark Haley – programming
  • Anne Dudley – string arrangement (2, 5, 7, 9)
  • Pulp – string arrangement (2, 5, 7, 9)
  • Nicholas Dodd – orchestration (5, 9) Additional musicians
  • Anne Dudley – piano (5, 7, 11)
  • Chris Thomas – piano (5)
  • Neneh Cherry – featured vocals (9)
  • Mandy Bell – backing vocals (1, 9)
  • Carol Kenyon – backing vocals (1, 9)
  • Jackie Rawe – backing vocals (1, 9)

Artwork

  • John Currin – direction
  • Peter Saville – direction
  • Horst Diekgerdes – photography
  • Howard Wakefield – design
  • Paul Hetherington – design

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1998)Peak
positionEstonian Albums (Eesti Top 10)European Albums ChartIcelandic Albums (Tonlist)
8
6
2

Year-end charts

Chart (1998)PositionUK Albums (OCC)
75

Certifications

References

References

  1. Sturdy, Mark. (15 December 2009). "Truth and Beauty: The Story of Pulp". [[Omnibus Press]].
  2. Laws, Mike. (11 December 2014). "The 10 Best Britpop Albums of All Time (or At Least Since 1993 or So)". Suzan Gursoy.
  3. (8 November 1997). "New Releases: Singles".
  4. "パルプ {{!}} ジス・イズ・ハードコア". [[Oricon]].
  5. (6 June 1998). "New Releases: Singles".
  6. (5 September 1998). "New Releases: Singles".
  7. "PulpWiki - This Is Hardcore (album)".
  8. Cocker, Jarvis [https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2003/sep/03/art.pulp 'They're not grotesque – they're beautiful'] Retrieved 11 December 2007.
  9. Anon [http://www.acrylicafternoons.com/hardcore.html 'PULP – ACRYLIC AFTERNOONS – This Is Hardcore] Retrieved 8 July 2008.
  10. Kelly, Amanda. (19 April 1998). "'Sexist' Pulp ads attacked; Anything goes, say advertisers. Not so, say angry women with spraycans". The Independent.
  11. "100 Greatest Music Videos".
  12. Jones, Alan. (11 April 1998). "The Official UK Charts: Albums – 11 April 1998". Music Week.
  13. Caulfield, Keith. (18 April 2008). "Keith answers readers' questions on Bette Midler, Radiohead, Celine Dion and more!".
  14. Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "''This Is Hardcore'' – Pulp". [[AllMusic]].
  15. Kot, Greg. (3 April 1998). "Pulp: ''This is Hardcore'' (Island)". [[Chicago Tribune]].
  16. Browne, David. (13 April 1998). "''This is Hardcore''".
  17. Sullivan, Caroline. (27 March 1998). "Confessions of a pop group". [[The Guardian]].
  18. Hochman, Steve. (5 April 1998). "Pulp 'This Is Hardcore' Island". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  19. Patterson, Sylvia. (21 March 1998). "Comedown People".
  20. DiCrescenzo, Brent. "Pulp: ''This Is Hardcore''".
  21. Yates, Robert. (May 1998). "Velvet Overground".
  22. Kot, Greg. (25 April 1998). "Pulp: ''This Is Hardcore''".
  23. Hornby, Nick. (May 1998). "People's Poet".
  24. Masley, Ed. (22 May 1998). "For the Record". [[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]].
  25. Horton, Matthew. (11 April 2013). "How Pulp's 'This Is Hardcore' Brought Britpop to a Halt". NME.
  26. Pearson, Paul. (30 March 2018). "Pulp's This Is Hardcore is still a shattering piece of work after 20 years".
  27. (23 March 2010). "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die: Revised and Updated Edition". Universe.
  28. Barker, Emily. (25 October 2013). "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time: 200-101".
  29. Gerard, Chris. (4 April 2014). "50 Best Alternative Albums of the '90s".
  30. (29 March 2017). "The 50 Best Britpop Albums".
  31. (April 18, 1998). "Kassetid ja CD-d: EESTI TOP 10". [[Sõnumileht]].
  32. (April 18, 1998). "European Top 100 Albums".
  33. (May 8, 1998). "Íslenski Listinn Topp 20 (1.5.'98 –8.5.'98". [[DV (newspaper).
  34. "End of Year Album Chart Top 100 – 1998". Official Charts Company.
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