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Graham Coxon - Happiness In Magazines
Reviewed
by The Guardian,
14 May 2004
Judging by his past four
solo albums, the prospect of Graham Coxon abandoning his
deliberately wilful, largely miserable, self-aware lo-fi
doodlings seemed as likely as Damon Albarn being best man
at Liam Gallagher's wedding. But times have changed, and
Coxon is celebrating his emancipation from Britain's
best-loved Britpop band by embracing everything Blur once
held dear.
Never has getting the sack
sounded so much fun. Perfect pop rubs up against blues,
punky rants waltz with old-fashioned crooning. All Over
Me has the disembodied feel of Bowie's Space Oddity,
while Are You Ready is a lush homage to Ennio Morricone.
Hopeless Friends' refrain:
"You used to think about magic and how to fit in,
now you think about madness and how to stay thin,"
will give the gossips something to analyse. That Coxon
has made a great lost Blur album will give Albarn much to
think about.
(4/5)
Betty
Clarke
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