From PulpWiki

Pulp: 17th November 1998 - Hereford Leisure Centre (live)

Details

Additional musicians: Richard Hawley (guitar, backing vocals), Joel White (piano, backing vocals), Gareth Dickinson (Jarvis 2)

Setlist

  1. The Fear
  2. Babies
  3. Joyriders
  4. A Little Soul
  5. Underwear
  6. TV Movie
  7. Seductive Barry
  8. Sorted For E's & Wizz
  9. Help the Aged
  10. Sylvia
  11. Party Hard
    ----
  12. This is Hardcore
  13. Glory Days
  14. Common People
    ----
  15. Disco 2000
  16. Something Changed

Recordings

There are no recordings in circulation.

Reviews

Robin Bresnark in Melody Maker:

Happy! Sad. H-h-h-happy! Sad. You know those theatrical mask things, one with a smile big enough to house a Manic's packed lunch, the other with a frown deep enough to please a Manics fan? That's tonight, that is. Or maybe tonight's more like a fortune cookie in reverse: the unpalatable, paper-thin, trite message stuff first, and the tasty, crunchy bit to follow. Whichever way you look at it, there's something very schizoid about this bill. Happy! Sad. H-h-h-happy! Sad. Pulp...

EELS. Eels are just sad. They play the Stones' "Satisfaction" and it packs as much punch as the sound of Capital Gold drifting from a pensioner's rickety old Morris Minor. They play their own songs and it just feels like someone's left a tinny transistor radio crackling static onstage, the distant mumbling of a talentless cipher. Three seconds of "Climbing To The Moon" are moving (fair's fair), but the rest is dust, singer E hovering motionless by his mic like he's waiting for a bus to come. The buses are on strike tonight. Sad, sad, sad, sad, sad...

Happy! That's PULP, right? Well, no - not this year, it isn't. You know the story (bad sales, bad moods, bad hair), but no one knows the solution, do they? How do you promote an astonishing album of experimental miserabilism like 'This Is Hardcore" with a f***ing smile on your face? How do you walk onstage singing "The Fear" and camp it up for the pop kids? It's impossible, right? Well, no, not quite...

Dancing in front of a nifty inflatable mattress backdrop is one Jarvis Cocker. To his right is Jarvis Cocker. Two Jarvis Cockers? Yup: one's real, one's an impersonator. They're both singing "The Fear", both shimmying about to the ominous throb of the music, but only one of them's saluting and leaping and doing that weird angular-twirly-pointy thing with his index finger. He's the impersonator. The other one's the genius, a genius because he's letting his doppelgänger do the clichéd Happy! Pop! bit for him, just like he let E do the clichéd sad, experimental miserabilism bit for him earlier. Jarvis is making sure everyone gets exactly what they want tonight ("they used to be such fun"/"they're brilliant now they're bleak") - but not from bloody him, thank you very much. And that's just inspired.

The trick comes once we start seeing single again. When all there is left is Jarvis and us. And the songs, and the show, and the effort, and the conviction and the soul. Not the band, mind, though they back him better than ever through the frantic, anthemic sounds of "Sorted For E's And Wizz" and "Party Hard", Pulp personnel numbers two through six skulk unseen in the shadows tonight. Which leaves Jarvis to harmonise that schizophrenia all by himself. Which leaves Jarvis to become a star again.

Which he does almost straight away, by playing "Babies" and making it sound new, rooted to one spot by dint of his guitar, expressing everything with one eyebrow, one voice and one intention: Look At Me. Which we do, throughout a quivering "Joyriders" and an unblemished, milk-pure "TV Movie"; throughout a swollen "Sylvia", his body telling the story, another flick for each feeling, Braille for each beat, semaphore for each sound. So new songs like the staggeringly jagged "This Is Hardcore" mingle seamlessly with old ones like the jubilant "Underwear" without an iota of discrepancy, without the slightest sense that the inclusion of songs like "Disco 2000" and "Common People" in the set is merely to appease the recently repulsed.

And why? Because, to be honest, the songs just don't matter tonight. They're brilliant - each and every one - because of who's singing them, and how. You think there's no dignity doing a predominantly greatest hits set? There is if the greatest hit of all is yourself. So tonight's joy comes through watching Jarvis' reclamation of his character, his rediscovery of that uniquely flippant rebel stance; mocking the new instant-expulsion-for-drugs-at-school rules with a tabloid-goading sass, introducing the worryingly themed "Help The Aged" as "F*** The Aged" with a resurrective undertone, with a wink that reads: "Sorry, I just got bored being me for a bit. But I'm back now. I'm back." There's the joy: he's back.

So, as an almost ironic "Something Changed" sends us home, the common people disperse to the "Gym And Tonic" bar (how pop is that?), the hardcore glumsters to their dusty coffins and Radiohead albums - but everyone's content. And Jarvis? Jarvis just skips offstage to share a beer with his looky-likey. Because he's comfortable with himself again. And we're all comfortable with that.

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Roger Morton in NME:

Jarvis is Jesus. It's official. Midway through the opening night of Pulp's first full British tour of '98, they're into the silver power chorus of 'Help The Aged' when a metal crutch is raised above the crowd. For a full verse the oversized baton waves along and then a miracle happens. The matching second crutch is hoisted up leaving one formerly wobbly fan swaying, crutchlessly, in the boudoir-twilight atmosphere. Well, after a year of not exactly sending epoch-capturing underdog anthems zinging into the charts, some proof of their pudding was needed.

Pulp have been away in the art rock colonies. They popped back for Finsbury Park but otherwise it's been all La Monte Young avant-garde name-dropping, tea with Terry Riley, and Jarv filming brick-collecting French postmen for the Outsider Art TV series. The question now is not whether they can still do the soaraway subversive pop thing, but whether they still care to.

From the opening 'The Fear' it's apparent that games are being played. Jarv struts out, gives the one-finger salute and sticks out his angle-poise arse. The Pulp-ist flock scream over his singing and then let out a mass gulp of confusion as a second, slightly more dishevelled doppelgänger Jarvis appears, playing vocal ping-pong with the impostor. Or is it the other way round? It takes most of 'The Fear' to work out which of the two Jarvi (sic) is for real (naturally, the scruffier one) and as the show settles into a crowd-pleasing 'Babies' and a steadying 'A Little Soul', a flickering ambiguity is left framing his twitchy geek-star moves.

Cocker gives big Jarvis tonight. The thunderous sleaze-glam of 'Underwear' fuels some magnificent coat-hanger spasms. Meanwhile, the other four Pulps keep their distance. For most of the night they might as well be behind the giant sofa cushion backdrop. It's as if a collective decision has been taken to allow Cocker to revel in the tangled irony of his overstated cardboard cut-out self, just as long as Steve, Candida, Nick and Mark get their way elsewhere. And they do.

A mid-set 'Seductive Barry' darkens the mood and the band unfurls in clouds of smoky ambient art-dub. The guitars freeform like escaped kites. Drums make like a heartbeat. For ten minutes Pulp become The Pervert Orb and the results are mesmerising. The experimental side is allowed into the densely guitared 'Party Hard' and writhes in the shadows of 'This Is Hardcore'. Yet, while the latter's brilliantly woozy sex-phobia seeps unease, a film of Marilyn Monroe dancing with a looking glass plays.

However much Pulp let their sound-sculpturing underwear show, there's no getting away from the gaudy outer cloak of Star-vis Jarvis and his Twitching Image Ambivalence. He makes two archetypally dry speeches, one about Hereford Cider, and the other dedicating 'Sorted For E's And Wizz' to those lobbying for special schools for teen 'drug-users'. Both are met with much maternal smiling, but the patter is throwaway, while lines like those in 'Party Hard' are not. Particularly the one that goes, "Entertainment can sometimes be hard, when the thing that you love is the same thing that's holding you down...".

The encores are straight-up, underdog-bonding euphoria - 'Common People', 'Disco 2000' and 'Something Changed' - and Cocker throws himself into the showmanship with absurd, grotesque energy. It almost seems like a simple thrill for him. It almost seems like he means it. But then so did the lookalike.

Of course Pulp still want to be great at soaraway people's pop, and they still are. But at the core of it all, in the extended aftermath of their tabloid moment, there's a fascinating struggle going on over what kind of band they are - Artcore Outsiders or Funnywalk Messiahs. Pulp have got schizophrenia.

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Page last modified on November 13, 2012, at 09:47 PM