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Nowadays, Jarvis
Cocker may spend more time loafing his way around Parisian walkways
than he does assembling the next lyrical pastiche to modern life,
but the former Pulp frontman’s elegant and witty musical
contributions to indie culture remain as evident today as they were
at the height of the band’s fame in the mid 90s.
In a Britpop movement that was as much about the pride of being
homegrown as it was the music, Jarvis’s work and inspiration
always came down to one key point – real life.
Raised in Intake, a rough council estate in Sheffield, he was
abandoned by his father at the age of seven, and thrust into the
reality of a stark urban upbringing. Some years later he emerged
energised and inspired, ready to touch the hearts and minds of a
generation of indie kids with a combination of great tunes, lanky
dance moves, and a well-considered opinion or two.
Here, he tells 24housing magazine’s James Evans about
squats, squalor and orange squash.
“To me, growing up in a council area meant, however
involuntarily, you were in with the cut and thrust of community and
reality.
“It was genuine, if, at times, a bit rough. I mean, there
were always kids inflicting serious injury on themselves, not to
mention their passengers, by jumping over a stream on a trial bike
or something like that. So some aspects of it weren’t so
great, but growing up in those areas was quite a good laugh; it was
real, and I think anyone who has ever moved away from a housing
estate will miss some part of it.
“I suppose we didn’t have much cash. I’d often be
sent into school dressed in peculiar creations from my
mother’s sewing machine. Combined with long hair and an
inbuilt shyness, it might have explained why I didn’t attract
a great number of friends.
“But there was so much stuff that was going on – a kind
of buzz. That made it a great place to start a band. It’s
funny, because you see so many famous people staring down camera
lenses, crying out that they had to escape from somewhere by
forming a group, or becoming a boxer, maybe. But for me it
wasn’t about that, because I didn’t want to escape my
working class routes – that would be like denying they were a
part of me.
"Instead, the inspiration behind making music was to be able to
talk about things that happened on our streets and behind closed
doors. So that’s what we did.
“At the time – during the early 80s - that kind of
stuff wasn’t represented in music. Film had always
managed to depict what was going on in the backstreets, and some of
kitchen sink realism stuff from the 60’s had been a perfect
portrait of gritty Britain.
“That said, I’d love to pretend I was busy gathering
inspiration from high-rise blocks and windy alleyways in my
immediate post-school years, but the reality was something
different, and there were times when council estates could be as
depressing as they were inspiring. I wouldn’t recommend
sitting around on the dole for seven years for the sake of
£30 a week as a lifestyle choice, put it that way.
“When it dawned on me at the age of 25 that I should do
something with my life, it seemed right to move to London. It was
incredible how many people were sleeping rough or in squats back
then, including me.
“Dossing down in squats was always a risky business, because
you knew that any day you might find yourself chucked out. When the
inevitable happened you’d be stood there on the pavement
filled with a profound but terrifying realisation that you really
didn’t have a roof over your head.
"Thanks to housing provision and the work of charities such as
Shelter, I don’t think that situation has to exist any
more.
“But those experiences brought out the best in me, and
certainly made me more connected with social accommodation issues,
which has probably why I like to involve myself in these things
nowadays.
“Everyone looks on the idea of having a roof over your head
differently. I remember there was a buzz-phrase a few years ago,
‘council estate chic’, which went around for a while
attached to Pulp’s music. But back in the day, the reality
was if you were living in those conditions they weren’t very
pleasant, and definitely not chic.
"It bothers me still even today when someone comes and does a
fashion shoot on a council estate because they want it to look a
bit gritty. I think that’s a bit pathetic and exploitative.
It also becomes more difficult to write legitimately about that
stuff, because you’re increasingly aware of making sure
you’re not being looked upon as some pretender.
“Peoples’ lives are fascinating – in housing
estates, suburban areas, or wherever. I’m just intrigued in
the way we live, and I suppose growing up on a rough council estate
gave me quite a bit to play with.
“As for how much things have changed over the years,
I’m probably not the right person to pontificate as I spend a
lot of time in Paris and it has been a few years since I have been
living at the sharp end of things, but it’s clear that in
most aspects of modern life we’re a lot better off these
days.
"If you’re rational and sensible, you get a roof over your
head.
“The other thing to consider of course is that the world of
social housing in which we grew up in the 1960s doesn’t
really exist anymore. I think having kids makes you realise this,
and I’ve been known to embark on very deep philosophical
slightly drunken discussions with friends on this subject.
“Council housing is still here, of course, but I’m not
so sure the working classes still exist. I mean, there’s not
much industry left anymore, especially if you take a place like
Sheffield. Being working class back then really did mean you
performed manual labour, and that created certain
communities.
"It’s more like a state of mind now. So much of it has
changed.
“I think class has become less obvious in the grand scheme of
things, making it more difficult to decide where things are at. The
middle classes start going to football games and all that, while
working classes now own pepper grinders and sometimes might buy
some rocket salad. It’s not as clear cut, it merges into
one.
“I think the remaining distinctions come down to spending
power. Everyone’s consuming the same thing, it’s just
whether you buy freshly squeezed orange juice, or settle for the
blue-stripe version. It’s all processed in the same
factories, after all.
“Add to that the fact that the higher you get up the social
ladder the more boring it usually gets, and I think we all need to
be content in who were are.
Certainly, I can’t imagine growing up without the adventure
of council housing, and society would be a much more sterile place
without its influences.”
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