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Watch Blur perform For Tomorrow in this stunning 1993 video

20 April 2022, 13:17

Blur's Damon Albarn in 1993

Celebrate 29 years of the Britpop band's single, with their iconic 1993 Finsbury Park performance.

Blur’s second album, Modern Life Is Rubbish, was released on 10th May 1993 and marked a turning point for the band.

Their lead track from the record, For Tomorrow, was released just a month later on 19th April.

To celebrate the song's 29th anniversary, we're looking back at the moment Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon gave a rousing performance of the single at Finsbury Park.

Watch it here:

blur tour 1993

Damon and Graham acoustic "For Tomorrow"

The acoustic performance came in the middle of a star-studded gig that year, which included performances from Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine , Sugar and culminated in a headline performance from The Cure.

If you're thinking that the crowd look a little unenthused, it's because Blur weren't one of the biggest UK's bands yet, and the word Britpop hadn't even been coined.

Blur’s debut LP Leisure had been issued in 1991 to mild acclaim and had spawned the Top 10 hit There’s No Other Way.

READ MORE: 20 facts about Blur's Song 2

The “Funky Drummer” shuffle and the pudding bowl haircuts led many people to file Blur under the label “Baggy Wannabees”, and the next single, Bang, made an underwhelming No 24 in the UK charts,The next year, Blur embarked on an ill-tempered US tour and their raucous one-off single Popscene stiffed at the bottom end of the Top 40.

When they returned to the UK, they found their old mates Suede had stolen their thunder and work on their second album ground to a halt.

So it was time for a new manifesto: reject the loud, droning guitars of American grunge and embrace all that was great in British pop. The Kinks and early Pink Floyd were the inspirations, rather than Nirvana and Pearl Jam.

The result was Modern Life Is Rubbish - initially greeted with some suspicious due to the overtly “British” images that accompanied the record, it essentially paved the way for Britpop.

And we know how that turned out!

Watch Alex James teach Johnny Vaughan to play bass with Alex James:

blur tour 1993

Johnny Vaughan learns the bass with Blur's Alex James

QUIZ: Do you know all the words to Blur's Parklife?

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All the ways you can listen to radio x, more on blur, is blur's beetlebum their most heartbreaking single, parklife at 30: ten things you didn't know about blur's classic album, what inspired graham coxon to write blur’s coffee & tv, damon albarn severed his finger while making pesto, blur vs oasis: the true story of the battle of britpop, how much of a blur fan are you.

Past Daily: A Sound Archive of News, History, Music

"Because ignorance of your culture is considered uncool"

Blur – Live In Italy 1993 – Past Daily Backstage Weekend

gordonskene

  • October 22, 2016
  • 1990s , Brit-Pop , British Invasion , Past Daily , Past Daily Backstage Weekend , Pop Music , Popular Culture , Radio , The Fourth Estate , The Press , Uncategorized

Blur

Blur in concert this weekend – recorded at the Canguro Club in Colombano Italy by RAI on November 4, 1993.

This concert hits right around the time they broke worldwide – 1993 was a good year for Blur, and for music in general. If you got past everything coming out of Britain being called “ Brit-Pop ” (a name that still makes my skin crawl), you found a lot of interesting music and a lot of energy flowing out of the recording studios, clubs and concert halls. Coupled with what was going on in the States at the time, you could say this was one of the last truly big blasts of Pop Music still overseen by major labels. Because later on in the decade things would begin to change and the stranglehold the major labels had over new music was getting slowly broken by the presence of that thing known as Downloading was looming on the horizon. Streaming was still a ways off, and even by the end of the decade, downloaded songs were in its infancy. But the writing was on the wall.

But bands like Blur, Oasis , Pulp, Lush, Ride, The Charlatans , Stone Roses and so many others were making huge inroads to the music buying public. And this concert pretty much typifies the atmosphere at the time.

Recorded in Italy, where Blur always had a huge following, which only got bigger by 1993, this set reads like a Greatest hits package, it it weren’t for the fact that all of the songs they were doing were hits in and around 1993. That was the kind of impact Blur and the others had at the time. Pretty exciting stuff. And even though every decade has its cornerstone bands and artists, it would be safe to say Blur were at least one of the cornerstone bands of the early 90s.

The sound on this is fantastic, and more than captures the excitement and energy of what was a powerhouse performance.

Turn this one up.

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The 25 most essential Blur songs

Whether or not blur ever play another live show, their catalog is still full of great tracks.

Damon Albarn

Blur recently brought their supporting tour for their 2023 comeback album The Ballad Of Darren to a close with two appearances at this year’s Coachella. Online discourse suggested the pair of performances didn’t go smoothly, an assessment buttressed by lead singer Damon Albarn saying this “is probably our last gig”—words that would carry more weight if they didn’t echo statements he’s said in the past and if they weren’t delivered onstage in America, a country that has never fully embraced Blur.

America didn’t welcome Blur with open arms, yet that distance between the country and the band inspired Albarn to write Modern Life Is Rubbish , an album instrumental in launching the Britpop era of the mid-90s. As it happens, Parklife —the album that made Blur stars in the UK—was released roughly thirty years prior to the group’s 2024 Coachella gigs. These twin occurrences provide a perfect opportunity to look back at Blur’s career. Spanning their first hit single to their latest album, this list is evidence that Blur assembled a rich, inventive body of work, filled with concept albums and fluke singles that remain captivating years after their release.

25. “Charmless Man” (1995)

The last single pulled from The Great Escape effectively acts as a punctuation mark on Blur’s Britpop era. Firmly within the tradition the Kinks established with “A Well-Respected Man,” one Blur already expanded with “Tracy Jacks,” “Charmless Man” is a portrait of a tactless glad-hander who can never resist a game of cultural one-upmanship. Unlike their subject, Blur is filled with charm here: the fleet, twisting riffs of Graham Coxon complement Damon Albarn’s singalong vocal hooks, while Alex James and Dave Rowntree lend muscle to this pure pop.

24. “Sunday Sunday” (1993)

Styled as a pounding old-fashioned knees-up—Blur hammered home the connection by recording “Daisy Bell” and “Let’s All Go Down The Strand,” a pair of vintage musical hall tunes, for its B-sides—“Sunday Sunday” is as much a satire as it is a salute. What prevents the song from succumbing to cynicism is Damon Albarn’s carefully rendered vignettes and Blur’s vigor: when the song descends into a double-time break, it seems like it could careen out of control.

23. “St. Charles Square” (2023)

The noisiest cut on Blur’s sublime middle-aged meditation The Ballad Of Darren , “St. Charles Square” functions in a similar role on this 2023 album as “Advert” did three decades earlier on Modern Life Is Rubbish : after a slower opener, it kicks the album into gear. “St. Charles Square” plays much differently than “Advert” or other similar Blur blasts of cacophony. It moves at a slower pace, a rhythm that allows the song’s sense of self-loathing dread—conveyed succinctly by Damon Albarn’s opening line of “I fucked up”—loom large, a sense of foreboding accentuated by Graham Coxon’s ugly bursts of distortion.

22. “Go Out” (2015)

Blur mended fences with guitarist Graham Coxon toward the end of the 2000s, prompting a series of intermittent concerts that ran into the early 2010s. During one of those tours, they wound up stranded in Hong Kong after the cancellation of a Japanese tour, leading the band to record new material for five days. Coxon and the band’s ’90s producer Stephen Street continued work on the record throughout 2014, resulting in 2015's Magic Whip , the original lineup’s first album since the 1990s. “Go Out,” the album’s first single, wasn’t a huge hit, possibly because it zeroed in on Blur’s artier side. Slithering with menace, “Go Out” plays like an aural collage, with Alex James’ loping bass and Coxon’s shards of guitar seeming in battle with Damon Albarn’s cut-and-paste vocal hooks.

21. “Advert” (1993)

A sequel of sorts to Blur’s stillborn “Popscene,” “Advert” also channels the frenzied blast of punk into a sharply written pop song about cultural discontent. Here, Damon Albarn paints a picture of advertisements offering a speedy escape from the squalor of modern life but his sneer is as effective as Blur’s clamor at portraying the emptiness of the entire enterprise.

20. “Chemical World” (1993)

SBK, Blur’s American record label in 1993, requested the band add a song to Modern Life Is Rubbish that could possibly appeal to American listeners. “Chemical World” is the band’s response and it’s as resolutely British as the rest of the record—a vaguely psychedelic sketch of despair woven by a woozy guitar and a sing-song melody. The song’s understated sense of discontent ties it into its parent album and points the way to Blur’s Ameri-indie-addled work of the late ’90s.

19. “There’s No Other Way” (1991)

Blur’s first hit single “There’s No Other Way” is emblematic of Baggy, the Madchester offshoot steeped in psychedelic fashion and overcooked house beats. Bustling with color and rhythm, the single is fast fashion—it represents a particular time and place, namely the paisley-speckled British indie scene before it was blown out by grunge—but Blur’s inherent pop gifts lend it a lasting appeal.

18. “Death Of A Party” (1997)

An early Blur song revived and refurbished for Blur’s indie makeover of the late 1990s, “Death Of A Party” benefited greatly by not being cut at the time of Leisure . While Blur could manage to conjure bewitching psychedelia at the outset of their career—witness “Sing,” which received a re-airing in 1996 as part of the Trainspotting soundtrack—the beaten and battered Blur of ’97 could give “Death of a Party” the eerie, open textures it needs: the tense guitar and spectral organ make the song sound suspended in time.

17. “The Ballad” (2023)

The origins of “The Ballad” lie in “Half A Song,” a cut on Damon Albarn’s low-profile solo EP whose title conveys the tune’s unfinished state. Darren “Smoggy” Evans spent years encouraging Albarn to complete the tune and the songwriter eventually complied, turning it into the gorgeous keynote “The Ballad” for their 2023 album The Ballad Of Darren . Reminiscent of early Blur excursions into ’60s lounge, “The Ballad” doesn’t hit its target as directly as “To the End”: it luxuriates in its own languid pace, creating a sense of middle-age melancholy that’s oddly comforting.

16. “Trouble In The Message Centre” (1994)

Pitched partway between new wave flash and post-punk dread, “Trouble In The Message Centre” strikes a discordant note on the otherwise jubilant Parklife. Blur doesn’t abandon their pop instincts here—the guitar and keyboard riffs are sharpened, Damon Albarn offers a singalong chant of “la-la-la” toward its conclusion—which only makes the song sound more barbed and urgent.

15. “Coffee & TV” (1999)

The first Blur single to be sung by Graham Coxon—previously, he took the lead on the Blur album track “You’re So Great”—“Coffee & TV’ evokes the miniature charms of the American indie rock the guitarist loved so. Coxon’s subject is small—he’s writing about alienation, yearning to detach himself from the modern world—he sings in a tentative, earnest voice that seems as unaffected as any number of lo-fi rockers from the States. “Coffee & TV” still seems like a Blur song, thanks to its lively cadence and bright melody.

14. “All Your Life” (1997)

Originally released as the B-side of “Beetlebum,” the single that introduced Blur’s Ameri-Indie makeover, “All Your Life” plays like a farewell to Britpop, complete with a pre-chorus where Damon Albarn sings “Oh England, my love, you lost me, made me look a fool.” Perhaps this lyric proved too direct for the abstract Blur yet the immediacy of “All Your Life” is why it endures: it’s pitched precisely between the crystalline pop charms of Britpop and the noisy ecstasy of late-90s Blur.

13. “Country House” (1995)

Blur’s first number-one single arrived with great fanfare. They triumphed over archrivals Oasis in a battle of the charts, a rivalry that spilled out of the music press and into the mainstream in a moment that marked the apex of Britpop. “Country House” fittingly sounds like the high-water mark for Britpop, a smirking satire of a dissatisfied professional who ditches the city for a huge house in the country, punctuated by blaring brass, candied harmonies, and knotty guitar.

12. “End Of A Century” (1994)

Arriving just a few years before Y2K, “End Of A Century” does contain a trace of pre-millennial malaise—the changing of the calendar, “it’s nothing special”—but the true focus of the song is another kind of ending. Damon Albarn paints a portrait of a couple whose love is slowly dissipating—“we kiss with dry lips when we say goodnight”—the disconnection slightly camouflaged by Blur’s sighing harmonies and brass, not to mention Graham Coxon’s winding guitar.

11. “To The End” (1994)

Most of Parklife is devoted to barbed guitar-pop or new-wave revivalism, making the lush contours of “To The End” even more distinctive. Wrapped in an orchestra as cinematic as anything Burt Bacharach or John Barry conjured, Blur evokes the louche lounge-pop of the 1960s, enlisting Stereolab’s Laetitia Sadier as Damon Albarn’s sultry foil.

10. “Beetlebum” (1997)

Blur reacted to Britpop curdling into boorish laddism by incorporating elements of American indie-rock and lo-fi, a shift that mirrored the tastes of guitarist Graham Coxon. “Beetlebum,” the first single from the eponymous 1997 album that reinvented and revived the band, moves at a foreboding, almost narcotic pace, letting Damon Albarn’s dreamy melody be tarnished by Coxon’s gnarled guitar riffs. Blur’s slow creep accentuates the song’s essential unease, a startling sound arriving in the thick of Cool Britannia and one that retains its gloomy allure decades later.

9. “The Universal” (1995)

A distant cousin to the lush pop of “To The End,” “The Universal” deploys its sumptuous orchestra to an unnerving effect. The sweep of the strings is soothing yet slightly unsettling, mirroring Damon Albarn’s vision of a near-future comprised of satellites in every home and a populace subdued by a medication called “The Universal.” Albarn’s prognostications don’t seem far-fetched from a 21st-century vantage but that’s not the reason why “The Universal” still seems potent. The song’s power is undiminished because Blur created an uncanny valley between retro-style and futurism, letting “The Universal” exist somewhat out of time.

8. “Tracy Jacks” (1994)

The second song on Parklife , Blur’s masterful concept album about modern British life in the 1990s, is the one song on the record with the clearest lineage to the Kinks, the band that laid the foundation for wry British pop in the 1960s. Like “David Watts,” “Tracy Jacks” is a character sketch of a specific English type: a middle-aged workaday drone who suddenly snaps, deciding normal is so overrated. Graham Coxon’s guitar is as punchy as Damon Albarn’s lyrics and producer Stephen Street gives the song an alluring gleam, never leaning into the strings or synths too heavily.

7. “Tender” (1999)

13 is Blur’s breakup album, one where Damon Albarn processed the end of his romance with Elastica’s Justine Frischmann while his relationship with Graham Coxon hurtled toward a rift, accelerated by tensions in the recording studio. The pair did manage to co-write “Tender,” a gospel-inflected ballad that pleads for empathy and love. The empathy of “Tender” is startling: throughout Blur’s first decade, Albarn often danced around direct emotions, so hearing him sing plainly about a broken heart is a welcome maturation.

6. “Parklife” (1994)

Modern life has reduced “Parklife” to a meme which is perhaps not an unjust fate for a song conceived as something of a novelty. Hiring Phil Daniels, the actor who starred as chief face Jimmy in the cinematic adaptation of the Who’s mod opera Quadrophenia , to recite the verses depicting mundane neighborhood occurrences was a masterstroke: he wrings dry humor out of the lines, leaving Damon Albarn to shout “Parklife” as a punchline. It’s thoroughly British—there are no points of reference for an average American to use as an introduction—but it’s so lively, colorful, and funny, it plays like gangbusters outside of the UK anyway.

5. “For Tomorrow” (1993)

America did not agree with Blur. The band spent 1992 slogging it out in the States to an audience that was besotted by grunge. Damon Albarn recoiled from anything covered in flannel, choosing to embrace an exaggerated Britishness when writing music for Modern Life Is Rubbish , Blur’s second album. Albarn’s celebration of British culture eventually devolved into Cool Britannia but “For Tomorrow,” the first single from Modern Life Is Rubbish and the great opening fanfare for the Britpop era, remains startlingly gorgeous, capturing twentieth-century girls and boys brought down by the past as they hold on for tomorrow.

4. “Song 2" (1997)

Blur’s biggest American hit—its chart placement doesn’t convey its omnipresence in 1997, as it arrived at a time when record labels didn’t release physical singles so they could goose the sales of albums—is effectively a parody of grunge, one that flips alt-rock angst into the bubblegum shout of “Woo-hoo!” The chorus might be frivolous but the sound of “Song 2" is crushingly heavy thanks to fuzzy bass and gargantuan guitar, plus the song’s hook is bolder and bigger than so many of the post-grunge entities that wandered America in the wake of Nirvana. Blur beat those cumbersome rockers at their own game.

3. “Girls & Boys” (1994)

Blur crashed into the British Top Ten in the spring of 1994 with “Girls & Boys,” a piss-take on Eurodisco so clever that the Pet Shop Boys happily remixed the tune for one of the single’s B-sides. “Girls & Boys” helped kick off the reign of Cool Britannia in the mid-1990s but it’s nothing like the plodding trad-rock that came to define Britpop: it’s bright, colorful, vibrant, and cynical, as much art as it is pop.

2. “Popscene” (1992)

One of a handful of singles that could be credibly called the opening salvo in Britpop, “Popscene” imploded in the spring of 1992, barely cracking the UK’s Top 40. Commercially, it may have stiffed but its onslaught of frenzied riffs and frenetic rhythms, all punctuated by blaring horns, synthesized two classic British pop eras: it was grounded in 1960s pop and played with the energy of punk, a combination that would come to define the sound of the UK in the 1990s. It’s also where Damon Albarn began to develop his flinty cynicism: he’s sneering at the “Popscene” as much as he is celebrating it.

1. “This Is A Low” (1994)

The origins of “This Is A Low,” the majestic conclusion of Parklife , lie in a broadcast recitation of the Shipping Forecast, one warning of an impending bit of bad weather. As Damon Albarn circles Britain’s shipping ports—“Hit traffic on the Dogger Bank/Up the Thames to find a taxi rank”—Blur creates a psychedelic sway that transcends the song’s prosaic origins. As the group swirls and sighs, riding waves of sweet melody and disquieting distortion, they create a shimmering piece of music that is soothing in its gentle ebb and flow.

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Blur Live - 1995-12-13 Wembley Arena, London, England

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  • Graphic Violence
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  • Misinformation/Disinformation
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  • The Great Escape [Elmer Bernstein cover]
  • It Could Be You
  • Tracy Jacks
  • Jingle Bells [James Lord Pierpont cover]
  • Stereotypes
  • End of a Century
  • Charmless Man
  • Mr. Robinson's Quango >
  • Mack the Knife [Bertolt Brecht outro]
  • She's So High
  • Sunday Sunday
  • Bank Holiday
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  • Country House
  • Girls and Boys
  • He Thought of Cars
  • Globe Alone
  • This is a Low
  • My Sharona [Knack cover; partial instrumental]
  • Parklife [with Phil Daniels]
  • For Tomorrow
  • The Universal
  • [interview clip 1]
  • [interview clip 2]

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  • July 9, 1993 Setlist

Blur Setlist at Tallinna Lauluväljak, Tallinn, Estonia

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  • Sunday Sunday Play Video
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Note: Setlist incomplete and out of order

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5 activities (last edit by Fanoftunes498 , 8 Jul 2023, 11:17 Etc/UTC )

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  • Chemical World
  • Commercial Break
  • Pressure on Julian
  • Sunday Sunday
  • There's No Other Way

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  • Jun 18 1993 Elverket Lidingö, Sweden Add time Add time
  • Jul 03 1993 BBC Radio 1 Studios London, England Add time Add time
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  • Jul 10 1993 Heineken Music Festival Nottingham 1993 Nottingham, England Add time Add time
  • Jul 13 1993 The Water Rats London, England Add time Add time

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COMMENTS

  1. Blur Concert & Tour History (Updated for 2024)

    Duran Duran / Blur Jun 16, 1993 Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany Uploaded by Medazzaland. Blur / The Rentals Mar 20, 1996 Deinze, Flanders, Belgium Uploaded by Thierry Del Fiore. ... The last Blur concert was on April 20, 2024 at Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, United States. The bands that performed were: Blur / No Doubt ...

  2. Blur

    Blur - For Tomorrow live at the London Astoria, Damon Albarns vocals are live, the band is not, this was standard for this TV show. Recorded on April 7th 19...

  3. Modern Life Is Rubbish

    Modern Life Is Rubbish is the second studio album by the English alternative rock band Blur, released in May 1993.Although their debut album Leisure (1991) had been commercially successful, Blur faced a severe media backlash soon after its release, and fell out of public favour. After the group returned from an unsuccessful tour of the United States, poorly received live performances and the ...

  4. Blur

    TV Concert: RocklifeChannel: WDRPlace: Live Music Hall, Cologne, Germany Recorded: 16 June 1993Setlist: Intermission Popscene Come Together Colin Zea...

  5. Blur Concert Setlist at Carnival 1993 on June 3, 1993

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Stanmer Park, Brighton, England on June 3, 1993 from the Modern Life is Rubbish Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  6. Blur Concert Setlist at Live Music Hall, Cologne on June 16, 1993

    1. Modern Life Is Rubbish 9. Leisure 3. Parklife 1. Others 1. Tour stats. Complete Album stats. Last updated: 19 Apr 2024, 16:02 Etc/UTC. Jun 16 1993.

  7. Blur Concert Setlist at Queen's Hall, Bradford on October 4, 1993

    Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Queen's Hall, Bradford, England on October 4, 1993 from the Sugary Tea Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  8. Watch Blur perform For Tomorrow in this stunning 1993 video

    Celebrate 29 years of the Britpop band's single, with their iconic 1993 Finsbury Park performance. Blur's second album, Modern Life Is Rubbish, was released on 10th May 1993 and marked a turning ...

  9. 1993.06.16

    En Köln (Colonia), Alemania, el 16 de junio de 1993./ In Köln, Germany. 16 June 1993.00:40 Intermission02:59 Popscene06:40 Come Together10:21 Colin Zeal13:31...

  10. Blur

    Blur performing 'For Tomorrow', live at the London Astoria in 1993. Who came to the 'Modern Life Is Rubbish' tour? | concert tour, Blur

  11. Blur Concert Setlist at Reading Festival 1993 on August 28, 1993

    Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Little John's Farm, Reading, England on August 28, 1993 from the Modern Life is Rubbish Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  12. Blur Live in Italy 1993

    Blur - Putting the 90s in high gear. Blur in concert this weekend - recorded at the Canguro Club in Colombano Italy by RAI on November 4, 1993. This concert hits right around the time they broke worldwide - 1993 was a good year for Blur, and for music in general.

  13. Blur (band)

    Blur are an English rock band formed in London in 1988. The band consists of singer Damon Albarn, guitarist Graham Coxon, bass guitarist Alex James and drummer Dave Rowntree.Their debut album, Leisure (1991), incorporated the sounds of Madchester and shoegaze.Following a stylistic change influenced by English guitar pop groups such as the Kinks, the Beatles and XTC, Blur released the albums ...

  14. Revisiting Blur's Debut Album 'Leisure' (1991)

    The tour, by all accounts, only fortified Blur's preserving the "Britishness" in their music. In a 1993 NME interview, Albarn stated, "I just started to miss really simple things. I missed everything about England so I started writing songs which created an English atmosphere.

  15. Blur

    This is an exclusive concert performance from blur live in Kilburn in 1993 . Enjoy !

  16. The 25 most essential Blur songs

    SBK, Blur's American record label in 1993, requested the band add a song to Modern Life Is Rubbish that could possibly appeal to American listeners. "Chemical World" is the band's response ...

  17. Blur Concert Setlist at LOGO, Hamburg on November 12, 1993

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at LOGO, Hamburg, Germany on November 12, 1993 from the Modern Life is Rubbish Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  18. Rollercoaster Tour

    The Rollercoaster EP is an extended play which was distributed free in a March 1992 issue of Melody Maker in support of the Rollercoaster Tour. It includes four songs, which are individual tracks from Blur's second album Modern Life is Rubbish (1993), My Bloody Valentine's second album Loveless (1991), the Jesus and Mary Chain's fourth album Honey's Dead (1992) and a live version of a song ...

  19. Blur

    This is an exclusive concert performance from blur live in Kilburn in 1993 . Enjoy !

  20. Blur Live

    The final show of the UK tour for The Great Escape, Blur performing at perhaps their commercial peak to a rapturous crowd at Wembley. The lengthy setlist includes eight songs from each of The Great Escape and Parklife, and it's a fitting end to their Britpop stage. Track listing: The Great Escape [Elmer Bernstein cover]

  21. Blur Concert Setlist at Rock Summer 1993 on July 9, 1993

    Get the Blur Setlist of the concert at Tallinna Lauluväljak, Tallinn, Estonia on July 9, 1993 from the Modern Life is Rubbish Tour and other Blur Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  22. Blur

    This is an exclusive concert performance from blur live in Kilburn in 1993 . Enjoy !

  23. Blur Tickets, 2024 Concert Tour Dates

    Their 1993 sophomore album Modern Life is Rubbish was similarly successful, but it was 1994's Parklife that really established them as superstars thanks to the international hit "Girls & Boys". ... Find Blur tour schedule, concert details, reviews and photos. Buy Blur tickets from the official Ticketmaster.com site. Find Blur tour ...