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Was Spice Girls the beginning of the end for the height of Brit Pop? I am listening to a podcast about Euro 96 and what was happening in Britain during those years. Oasis Gig in London 1994, Ireland Away 1995 Combat 18, Labour landslide victory, Blur Girls and Boys, Country House TOTP 1995, Morning Glory, Cool Britannia, Trainspotting, High Fidelity, "Inside London, the Coolest city in the World", the reclaim of Union Jack, Noel Gallagher's painted Guitar at Maine Road, The Battle of Brit Pop etc etc.
Spice Girls released their single in late 1996, right? Was the Brit Pop magic over after The Euro 96 tournament and after Spice Girls? [Edited 6/20/21 13:02pm] | |
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More like it paved the way for teen pop | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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"Britpop" and "British pop" are two different entities, Spice Girls fall under British Pop but not Britpop. Arguably both categories fall under the larger category of Cool Brittania, although the Spice Girls being considered cool... yeah I dunno about that. Britpop was also something that came from the British music papers and the Spice Girls were straight to tabloids. I'd maybe argue that the end of Britpop was in sight when media coverage of the Britpop bands started coming from tabloids rather than music papers so maybe there's a crossover in the reasoning there?
[Edited 6/21/21 8:58am] | |
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