It has been reported that Pulp, the iconic Britpop band, will reunite and perform live for the first time in a decade. A list of “possible” dates and locations was provided by drummer Nick Banks, but he couldn’t provide any further details. The band’s lead singer, Jarvis Cocker, had previously hinted at a reunion on social media.
Banks claimed the band from Sheffield had been planning for “a couple of months,” but nothing had been finalized. Banks told BBC Radio Sheffield, “It’s not bad news, is it?” when asked if the performances will take place in 2023. On the subject of playing in his hometown of Sheffield, he said: “It does “t take the brain of Britain to connect those dots.
it is perhaps lucky that pulp did not attempt to record an album at this point, as the writing credits would have been exceptionally complicated…
i believe the shirt jarvis is wearing here was fashioned out of an old curtain by his sister, saskia pic.twitter.com/znKDVXeGxL
— pulp songs (@Pulp_Songs) July 2, 2020
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” “We never got to the point where we started calling one other names or throwing our toys out of the cradle as a group. As long as it’s kept in a drawer under the bed, the band will one day emerge from the depths.” And while “everything needs to come from your majesty,” as he put it, “Cocker has been driving the reunion”.
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Content on external websites is not within BBC control. 12,000 people attended a one-off Pulp concert in 2012, nearly 35 years after the band’s formation. In 1978, the band, well known for classics like Disco 2000, Common People, and Babies, was formed.
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