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Suede / Dog Man Star review

Suede’s 1994 album assessed on its 30th anniversary

Has there been a finer year, a more important year for British music than 1994? That probably depends on how old you are. 1967, 1972, 1977, 1988 and 2004, among many others, could probably stake a claim too. But for those of us who came of age in the era of britpop, alt rock and rave and the astonishing 90s British music boom, 1994 is the pivot point around which the world turned. There was music before 1994, and there was music after 1994, and they were not the same. It changed everything. It was the year that gave us Manic Street Preachers’ gripping, grim The Holy Bible, the year that gave us the exuberant, bullish joy of OasisDefinitely Maybe, the year that gave us Blur’s perfectly formed instant classic Parklife, the year of The Prodigy’s dark rave-up masterpiece Music for the Jilted Generation. Admittedly it was also the year of Whigfield and Rednex, when the best selling album was Bon Jovi’s greatest hits and Wet Wet Wet were at number one for what felt like an entire lifetime, but let’s not let the facts get in the way of a good story. 1994 was a hell of a year, when British music stretched and pulled in every direction to create a template for the rest of the decade, pulling us out of post-Cobain malaise. Those albums; Manics, Oasis, Blur and the Prodigy, formed four points of a star that we can really only recognise in retrospect, but one that now seems to blaze. An incredible, uniquely British identity that pulled from the past and the future, in hope and in hate to define something pretty damn incredible and totally ours.

Four points, of course, don’t make a star. You need five. That’s where Suede came in. Suede had gotten the jump on what was very soon going to be called ‘Britpop’ early with the glam pomp of their self-titled debut, which had given them a Brat Summer of their very own back in 1992. Brett Anderson had spanked himself with a microphone on live TV while Bernard Butler had thrashed and swished his way across the land in a succession of frilly shirts, selling themselves as the new Morrissey and Marr (Moz himself was less impressed – “he’ll never forgive God for not making him Angie Bowie” was his perfectly calculated take down). Four classic singles had been begat, the album went straight in at number one and snagged that year’s Mercury Prize for good measure. A new bratpop paradigm had, apparently, come. Mark E Smith declared it nothing but a “glam racket” on that year’s Fall single of the same name, but the rest of us were pretty impressed. All that work was supposed to pay off with Dog Man Star, the promised follow up that would see the quartet embrace their darker, grander and more intense side, something which they’d already hinted at on album tracks like ‘The Next Life’ and ‘Pantomime Horse’ and recent stand-alone single ‘Stay Together’.

It was a move that, if anything, was bolshier and brattier than simply redoing the sneering glammy punk of their debut. Anderson and Butler had huge ideas: to be musically grander and lyrically darker – more sexual, weirder, bigger: Mantras, orchestras, Bryon quotes, references to everyone from eden ahbez to the Pet Shop Boys, songs that pushed the ten-minute mark. A lead single given the name ‘We Are The Pigs’ — the least likely title for a hit song ever. And so it proved.

By the time the album came out, late in the Autumn, the landscape was completely wrong for it. Blur and Oasis, and Pulp and Elastica, had dragged the indie paradigm into something that sounded so much more fun than Suede’s knowingly dark and self-consciously grand vision of British rock. Oasis were about cigarettes and alcohol. Brett Anderson was peddling evocative ballads about gay sex and heroin (admittedly so were Blur, more or less, but they had the good sense to wrap their seedier leanings in disco lights). Blur were touting “British Image Number One”, Noel Gallgher was getting the Union Jack spray painted on his guitar, and here was Brett declaring “I don’t care for the UK tonight”. The whole thing was deliberately, obnoxiously and gloriously out of step. That was the whole point. Suede had taken one look at britpop and said “bugger that”. The album came out to rapturous reviews, but a disinterested public had already moved on to more immediate gratification. Dog Man Star peaked at number three and then vanished.

It was a body blow to a band already thoroughly bloodied. Butler, grieving his recently-passed father, and always the black sheep of Suede anyway, had departed the band mid-recording. He’d already distanced himself from his bandmates who were both struggling with his broader musical visions and who, frankly, didn’t think he was very much fun anyway, and he loathed what producer Ed Buller was doing to his songs. As far as Bernard Butler was concerned, the only person suitable to finish the album in the producer’s chair was, well, Bernard Butler. When he issued an ultimatum – fire Buller or look for a new guitarist – the rest of the band, tired of his attitude, called his bluff. Butler recorded a few final guitar parts, alone in a totally different studio, and vanished from Suede forever, emerging the following year with David McAlmont and the astonishing single ‘Yes’. The remaining members, meanwhile, found a new guitarist (17-year-old Richard Oakes) and pushed themselves through the relentlessly grueling process of promoting an album people didn’t care about (including a memorably intense French tour with a similarly bruised and bloodied Manic Street Preachers). The experience would galvanise Suede, hammering them into a closer unit and setting them on the path to record the sharp, swaggering Coming Up, an album that would put them back on top.

It could, on paper, have left Dog Man Star the overlooked and unloved child in the Suede family. Their debut had been a classic, Coming Up was the ‘return to form’. That means the record that bridged them must be a curio at best. And so it would be… if it wasn’t for the fact that Dog Man Star is incredible.

And it is incredible. It’s the sound of a band pushing themselves, quite literally, to breaking point and then going further and actually breaking themselves in the process, and in doing so, creating something truly extraordinary. It’s an album that demands your full attention, rewarding repeated listens with new details and hidden depths. An album that rewards good headphones. An album that can shape itself around your mood. 

Though he didn’t oversee the finished product (and has complained about the sound of the record ever since) Butler’s musical ambitions are still the heart of the album, though they’re tempered for the best (whether he likes it or not) by Buller, Anderson, bassist Mat Osman and drummer Simon Gilbert reigning in his excesses in his absence. It’s full of moments where the one countering the other sparks astonishing results.

Like ‘The Wild Ones’. Anderson himself rates the ‘The Wild Ones’ as Suede’s best song, and frankly, he should know – a sweeping ballad of doomed romance as much about addiction and obsession as it is about love and sex, Anderson’s writing is at its most evocative here, painting vivid pictures with just a few well-chosen words. “We’ll be the wild ones, running with the dogs today,” he croons, somehow managing to sound both triumphant and desperately sad at the same time.

Like ‘The Asphalt World’, the album’s sprawling centerpiece, a masterpiece of tension and release. Butler’s playing here is astonishing, searing and bombastic and subtle and understated within a few bars. 

In the case of both songs, Butler’s plans were even grander. Included on the 30th anniversary reissue are the original seven and 12 minute edits respectively – neither quite work. Suede needed Butler to push them to those heights, but the songs also needed him to accept editing with good grace. Perhaps that’s why he’s never been given the chance to remix the whole thing, something that must have been considered as the album hits these key anniversaries.

Dog Man Star is full of those moments of graceful ambition and decadence – ‘The Two of Us’ strips everything down to Anderson’s reverby croon and raises absolute goosebumps. ‘Black & Blue’ riffs sweetly on Nat King Cole’s ‘Nature Boy’, Anderson in storytelling mode, all space and clarity and doom and gloom. ‘Still Life’ is pure, knowing, self-conscious orchestral indulgence. It swells and swells and balloons and absolutely delights in its own melodrama. Apparently it’s one of the points where Osman and Gilbert had their doubts, and this is probably the song that caused Rolling Stone to call the album “one of the most pretentious ever released by a major label.” It’s a fair point, but its pretensions are part of its appeal. This is a record shooting for a point beyond the universe. Anderson and Butler both, in different ways, had their eye on escaping this reality. They earn that bombastic finale.

This is also a record that’s smart enough to stay on the ground sometimes. It’s easy to get swept up in the decadence and drama and forget that Dog Man Star has some nailed-on, punchy rockers. The glam riff that powers ‘This Hollywood Life’ is an all-timer. The swooping chorus of ‘We Are The Pigs’ is pure Suede. It’s the band distilled. The bottom drops out of your stomach from it. It’s up there with anything on Suede or Coming Up. ‘New Generation’ is a belter with a terrace anthem energy that could have sat on Definitely Maybe itself, though Butler and Osman’s musical dexterity elevates it substantially above the meat and potatoes Gallagher sound. Suede were rejecting Britpop while proving they could still lead its field if they wanted to.

And it all works together so well. Despite the rough birthing. You can hear the tension in every note, but somehow it works in the album’s favour. There’s a desperation to these songs, a feeling that this might be the last chance to make something truly great.

Dog Man Star is the sound of a band throwing everything at the wall and, miraculously, having it all stick. It’s an album that takes risks, that dares to be difficult, that refuses to play it safe. It’s a piece of art that rewards patience, that reveals new layers with each listen. It’s the kind of record that you can spend years unpacking, finding new favorite moments and hidden details. In a career full of highs, it stands as Suede’s grandest achievement – a level of remarkably realised ambition they wouldn’t get near again until 2018’s The Blue Hour, and a glimpse of where they might have gone if circumstances had been different. That they did it all on their second album is frankly astonishing. It ended Suede mark #1 on an extraordinary high, not despite its difficult birth but because of it.

And these days it’s recognised as such. Even by the time Suede mark #2 folded in on themselves in 2003, Dog Man Star was being talked up as an overlooked classic by fans. When the band reformed the Coming Up line-up in 2010 for a supposedly one-off gig at the Albert Hall, ‘The Asphalt World’ in all it’s grandeur, a stark and shivering ‘The Two of Us’ and a near perfect performance of ‘The Wild Ones’ were the highlights of the night – moments so powerful (along with a version of ‘Metal Mickie’ that fair took the roof off) they helped create the momentum for a third phase of the band’s career which has now lasted longer than the first two combined. Like the Manics’ contemporary Holy Bible, it’s an album that could have been the band’s final statement, beloved but underperforming commercially, but instead has become their enduring classic and a definitive example of this version of Suede.

30 years on, we’re given the chance to appraise Dog Man Star all over again. And while this reissue adds nothing new to its story – aside from some upgraded artwork and a welcome half-speed remaster for the vinyl edition, everything here was present on the 2011 reissue or the 20th anniversary box set – it’s still a joy to dive into the layers of an album that, three decades later, remains a fascinating, emotional, dark and bombastic masterpiece.

Review by Marc Burrows. The Dog Man Star 30 reissue is out on 18 October 2024.

Tracklisting

Dog Man Star Suede / 30th anniversary

    • CD 1
      1. Introducing The Band 2.37
      2. We Are The Pigs 4.20
      3. Heroine 3.22
      4. The Wild Ones 4.50
      5. Daddy’s Speeding 5.21
      6. The Power 4.31
      7. New Generation 4.37
      8. This Hollywood Life 3.50
      9. The 2 Of Us 5.45
      10. Black Or Blue 3.48
      11. The Asphalt World 9.25
      12. Still Life 5.19
    • CD 2
      1. My Dark Star 4.24
      2. The Living Dead 2.48
      3. Stay Together [long version] 8.29
      4. Killing Of A Flash Boy 4.05
      5. Whipsnade 4.18
      6. This World Needs A Father 3.53
      7. Modern Boys 4.08
      8. Eno’s Introducing The Band 16.05
    • CD 3
      1. La Puissance (The Power) 1.23
      2. The Living Dead [piano version] 2.47
      3. We Believe in Showbiz [unreleased at time of recording] 3.47
      4. Still Life [orchestral version] 5.13
      5. The Wild Ones [original unedited version] 7.16
      6. The Asphalt World [original unedited version] 11.26
      7. Stay Together (Single Version) 4.22
      8. NME Flexi 3.55

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48 Comments

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SDE Fanatic

Also in 1994, there was Second Coming. Can’t believe it’s not been mentoined.
At the time, it was the most anticiapated follow up since ‘The White Album’.
The Stone Roses’ second album is also one of the most unfairly maligned.
The knee-jerk instant reaction by many was ‘What’s this?” or ‘Where’s She Bangs The Drums Part 2?’

But, as time went on. listeners and fans kept going back to it, and found a very interesting and heavy album.
Dog Man Star is wonderful. But, if another record from that time deserves a long overdue SDE release, then it’s Second Coming.

SDE Resident

I have to say I really didn’t and still don’t like this album at all. I love the debut and absolutely love Coming Up but this is not for me. I don’t own any copies of this album at all but streamed it last night on Quboz (24/44) to check my memory.

Of course this is just my opinion and not a statement of fact, others may absolutely love it.

I am keen to understand why no SDE Blu Ray for Dog Man Star here and therefore no SW stereo remix because his remix of the debut was sublime and I am so hoping for a SW stereo remix of Coming Up.

My real concern is to what extent does this decision make an SDE Blu Ray of Coming Up with SW stereo remix now less likely or even unlikely.

surroundaround
SDE Reader

I was really hoping that this album would get the SDE treatment! I actually think this album would be better in surround than the first. So here’s to hoping for a miracle and that it still gets a 5.1 and/or ATMOS disc!

SDE Reader

An excellent review, which is very befitting, since DMS is the greatest album of all time (IMHO obviously…)

Was lucky enough to grab the dinked edition but not lucky enough to have had time to listen to it yet – have heard very good things about the new mix, much more sympathetic than the original one apparently.

SDE Reader

I’m glad I have the 2011 edition, so this 30th omits the Demos at the end of the disc 1, and splits the 2nd into two discs and adds a single edit and NME flexi ? So really its only for completists ? I’ve always thought Daddy’s Speeding was a greatly underrated track on this album. I’m not a fan of the added ‘the london’ to the bands name for the oversea’s versions.

For sure some great albums in ’94, second year of uni and CD trips to the local independent music shops, hmv and our price… ah fun memories.

In addition to Suede, Blur, Oasis and Manics mentioned the follow were in high rotation for me

Portishead – Dummy
Soundgarden – Superunknown
Weezer – Weezer
Nirvana – MTV Unplugged
Beck – Mellow Gold
REM – Monster
Tori Amos – Under The Pink
The Cranberries – No Need to Argue
Underworld – Dubnobasswithmyheadman
Massive Attack – Protection
The Stone Roses – Second Coming
Tom Petty – Wildflowers
Pink Floyd – Division Bell

Kauwgompie
SDE Legend

Musically the transition from the 80’s to the 90’s was hard for me. I didn’t like the loud Brit pop and even louder and darker grunge. I tried but at the end of the day I gave up on it and realized it wasn’t for me. I didn’t mind expanding beyond New Wave and 80’s pop but not this! So I veered towards electro and lounge. Looking back, I was looking for happy music not anything dark. Not all Brit pop is somewhat dark and raw but a lot of it is. Oasis is a perfect example. A couple of good hit songs but loud and raw, nothing happy about it (to me!). Suede is a class act with lots of high quality output. I bought all the reissues and occasionally it is fun listening to the various musical layers, excellent vocals & melodies but it will never be my go to music.

Mick Ronson
SDE Reader

Totally the opposite for me. Very easy to get out of the late eighties into the nineties. Stock Aitken Waterman vs Nirvana ……hmmm.

britbandfan
SDE Resident

One of my favorites! Glad you mentioned The Blue Hour which still blows me away. I’ll be interested to hear if the remaster improves the sound because something always seemed off in the mix of DMS…

-SG-
SDE Fanatic

Ok, so revised artwork, the original back photo is now the front cover sans the little guy riding the dragon through the window.

DJFlow68
SDE Reader

This is Suede’s best album by far. A masterpiece. But this 30th Anniversary edition is actually inferior (at least material-wise, can’t speak about the audio quality) to the 2011 reissue, which not only contained almost everything you can find here (except for the “NME Flexi” and the single version of “Stay Together”, if I’m not wrong) but added a DVD with music videos, tour films, 14 songs taken from two 1993 live shows in Paris an a 2011 interview with Anderson & Butler.

SDE Fanatic

Might be their best album, but I prefer Coming Up, and The Blue Hour.

SDE Fanatic

Anyone know where one can pick up ‘Night Thoughts’ and ‘The Blue Hour’ at reasonable prices in the US? I’ve searched everywhere. Even used prices are high. I don’t think they received a US release, but they are expensive even as imports. Does this mean that they are already OOP?

-SG-
SDE Fanatic

For CD I’d try amazon, both can be had used and shipped under $20 but if you are after vinyl, I’m afraid you are out of luck.

SDE Reader

Great review for this astonishing album. I bought it in 1994 here in Italy and it changed my perception of music. A true, immortal and eternal masterpiece

Gaz S
SDE Reader

Any early reports on the quality of the DMS half-speed vinyl? My copy of the debut wasn’t great. Hoping for a better pressing this time. Thanks in advance.

tamos
SDE Reader

By far their best album – it touched me then and still touches my soul now…though why you would want this version above the 2011 CD/DVD version?

DJFlow68
SDE Reader

Exactly

moonloop
SDE Reader

The 2011 release was in dreadful packaging. I would have bought this again had it been in the hardback mediabook style the earlier deluxe editions were in but this latest version is in even worse packaging than the 2011 set. Suede are certainly lowering the bar for packaging, especially given the Autofiction “damage it to open it” reissue.

Mivs
SDE Reader

One of my favourite albums. It is almost impossible to stop playing it all the way through once the atmospherics and bass of Introducing the Band kick in. The flow of the first four tracks is breathtaking – the first track builds then there is the short lull before We are The Pigs kicks back in propelling you forward again then the angular guitar burst at the start of Herione drags you further into the dark atmosphere before the serenity of the Wild Ones. A classic.

SDE Hall of Fame

Great review.

I bought it when it was released. Not an album I’ve returned much to in the intervening years, whereas Dummy, The Holy Bible and Crooked Rain, Cooked Rain from the same year getting regular outings.

1000036325
-SG-
SDE Fanatic

Before this came out there was a lot of hype leading up to it, about 3 weeks before it’s release I got an advance copy, for those 3 weeks this was my album, no liner notes, just the music, I think I listened to it every day, for about a month immersing myself in the grand squalor of this album. I don’t think anything could be done to better what they did, but a surround mix does seem like what should be done, even if it means putting a mustache on the Mona Lisa.
Later I knew a girl who had a big subway poster of the album art, hanging on her wall…. People who said they liked alternative music would asker who they are and she would say Suede is a bit of an acquired taste… This album has really aged well, I wouldn’t call it Britpop, in a lot of ways It’s heart is much more in line with darker bands like Bauhaus or The Cure.

Eamonn
SDE Fanatic

What’s the Pet Shop Boys reference that he mentions ?

SDE Reader

Using “Running with the dogs” from Suburbia in the chorus of The Wild Ones.

SDE Fanatic

Even though I’d bought the Animal Nitrate single, I wasn’t really into Suede until one Saturday night in early 1995, when they appeared on Danny Baker’s BBC1 chat show, performing New Generation.
Richard Oakes on guitar.
That blew me away and I’ve been a huge fan ever since. Superb band who are as good today as they were thirty years ago.
I’m sure I read that Brett said the reason for the big orchestrated sound of Still Life was necessitated by not having Bernard’s guitar available.
Mark E Smith denied that Glam Racket was about Suede, more an attack on nostalgia, but the lyric “you are bequeathed in suede” was surely more than a coincidence.
As for the best album of 1994. Has to be Morrissey’s ‘Vauxhall and I”. His career best for me and by that I mean I rate it higher than any Smiths album.

Amusiclover
SDE Reader

Oh. I agree entirely that the best album of 1994 was and will always be the sumptuous and sublime Vauxhall and I. I think he’s made good albums since, the new, unreleased one is astonishing from what I have been able to hear, but Vauxhall and I is one of his very best, as you say. I never really liked Suede but they’re a group that I am interested in but don’t really like. I know I should like them but there’s something that really puts me off them. I think it’s because they were just so hyped at the time. If I were to try again, where should I start?

SDE Fanatic

I would start with the 34 track 2CD compilation ‘Beautiful Ones – ‘The Best of Suede 1992-2018’. It’s only £6.99 on Amazon. The individual albums from the first period of Suede were reissued in 2011 in excellent 2 CD + DVDs. Those are mostly rather pricey to get nowadays. Single CD versions of those albums are however easy to find, especially on eBay.
30th anniversary sets have now been released for both Suede and Dog Man Star (hence this SDE news item). Coming Up will no doubt follow in 2026. If there is one thing you are never too far away from it is a Suede reissue.
As for the ‘reunion’ era albums, Night Thoughts and The Blue Hour are probably best sourced on eBay. Bloodsports and Autofiction can easily be found anywhere for decent prices.

SDE Resident

I’m hoping the remaster has a bit more oomph added to it. My old copy has the bass very low in the mix.

SDE Fanatic

A really impressive album. My favourite off this is New Generation.

Kendo
SDE Reader

Great review, love the album too.

Best year for music for me, 1979 for albums and 1981 for singles.

Goldmine
SDE Reader

Ah ! My favourite Suede LP. 1994 was a fantastic year for music. Along with ‘Dog Man Star’ was Marillion’s “Brave” and Pink Floyd’s “The Division Bell” – these albums soundtracked the Autumn of 94 when I lived in La Coruna, North Spain for 2 months when I was 24 years old. A wonderful time listening to “The Wild Ones” with vino blanco ☺️

Matt R
SDE Reader

Relegating Killing Of A Flash Boy to a B-side was a mad decision. It’s a fantastic song and much stronger than some of the more ballad songs.

A Bernard mix would be a curio. Maybe when they’ve flogged it completely in to the ground.
I’m sure if he is stilll interested they would go for it if it would sell enough.

I have the 2014 Blu Ray, but it’s a shame they haven’t done a proper atmos/surround sound mix. I’d definitely buy that for a dollar.

I’m off to see Bernard on Sunday in Brum. He was excellent earlier this year. I don’t suppose he’ll play any Suede tracks.

Eamonn
SDE Fanatic

Unlikely although it was fascinating to hear him reinterpret The Next Life and The Wild Ones on a tour he did late 2021

Synthetic Wife
SDE Resident

Fantastic review. As I’ve said before (and will probably say again), I was the only Yank enjoying Britpop while it was happening. I loved this album, still love it, but I couldn’t get anyone to give it a shot. Hindsight seems to be 20/20 though, as a good portion of my friend group now regard it as brilliant, and the stuff they loved in the mid-90’s never even gets a look in. A testament to the power of craftsmanship to be certain!

Brad B.
SDE Resident

Thank you for this review, still a great album both in Suede’s catalog and of the 1990’s. I worked in music retail at the time and every chance I could play ‘Dog Man Star’ during business hours I would! It was tough being a US fan of the band at the time though, I could never seem to convince people how good Suede were, even other music lovers who liked Blur and Oasis (those were the 2 that had the most traction over here, at least from what I could tell). I do think the sonics of the album are the only drawback, a remix done with care would be welcome alongside the original. Suede has given us a lot of other great music since this album for sure, but ‘Dog Man Star’ might still be my overall favorite album from them. They should be proud of it!

Formosa Coweater
SDE Reader

Excellent review. Thanks.

My introduction to this band was the SDE of their debut album. Was very impressed and after reading this write-up of Dog Man Star, I am even more eager to receive the 3-CD version in the next day or two.

RobUK
SDE Reader

Great review. One of my all time favourite albums, and it was indeed a great year. (And I’d personally include Whigfield within that; great pop is great pop, and let’s not forget that she curtailed that Wet Wet Wet number one!)

KG10
SDE Reader

Since The Holy Bible was mentioned here I thought I’d mention that the single videos have been remastered in HD, which hints they could be planning something pretty big for it’s 30th anniversary (Ideally an sde blu ray with new hi res stereo, 5.1 and atmos mixes by Steven Wilson with the original uk and usa stereo mixes included in hi res as well)

The Hit Parade
SDE Resident

With all due respect, I don’t think there’s any album I actually like that I’d be less keen to hear in Atmos than The Holy Bible.

SDE Fanatic

A great review (… and so good I read it twice!)

SDE Reader

That’s a very appropriate review of an album that is – as he says – incredible. It is an absolutely towering achievement by everyone involved.

FYI Paul, the text has been pasted twice.

SDE Hall of Fame

Whilst having never been a Suede (or anything BritPop) fan, I was 27, too distracted by marriage and kids, I kinda feel for them a bit.

From a non-expert point of view they seem to have been the Japan of their time. Whilst others (Duran, Culture Club, Spandau) were having the mega-hits and number ones, the actual interesting, challenging music was coming from those slightly out of step with the new mainstream. This 1994 malarkey, if you’ll pardon the pun, was all a Blur to me. I have spent three minutes, off the top-of-my-head, no notes, trying to recall a single album I bought in 1994 and all I could come up with was “Falling Forward” by Julia Fordham. Was it personal bad-timing or did I just not like the sound of this new, cool Brittania?

As with all things, probably a bit of both.

Mick Ronson
SDE Reader

What a shame you let marriage and kids get in the way of your music listening experience. I’m a year younger and used to sing Saturday Night to my eldest, new born son to help him sleep. Honey Bee by Tom Petty, She Is Suffering by the Manics, Lover You Should’ve Come Over from Jeff Buckley were others played to death at the time, which he loved and still does to this day.
I’m not sure about the Japan analogy. Very lazy remembrance on my part but I just remember them being passed off as Roxy Music wannabes.
Thankfully, 1994 was much more than cool Britannia.
And around it ? Dog Man Star. Reached into my soul then and still does today. Simply stunning.

Gerry Hassan
SDE Reader

I remember 1994 as a year in a period of wonderful music before ‘Britpop’ was devoured in the media attention, hype and drugs.

I was a couple of years older than Chris in 1994 and marriage and kid free still listening to lots of new music (as I still am). Here are a number of great albums from that year that I really loved then and still do:

Pulp, His ‘n’ Hers
Massive Attack, Protection
Oasis, Definitely Maybe (before it all went wrong very quickly)
Nirvana, Unplugged in New York
Portishead, Dummy
Jah Wobble, Take Me to God
Neil Young, Sleeps with Angels
Pavement, Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain
Jeff Buckley, Grace
Johnny Cash, American Recordings (the start of his late great Indian summer)
Sugar, File Under Easy Listening
Flyer, Nanci Griffith
Turbulent Indigo, Joni Mitchell
Gil Scott-Heron, Spirits

And as a left-field renaissance: Tony Bennett’s, MTV Unplugged – which began another joyful reappraisal and celebration of a true great.

SDE Resident

The key question remains why no Atmos mix and SDE Blu Ray for this like the debut?

Timster
SDE Reader

That’s why I keep checking this page every 2 hours, waiting for a blu-ray miracle :)

SDE Legend

I do kinda feel they’re leave money on the table, by not commissioning a surround mix.

SDE Reader

Maybe they couldn’t find the multitrack tapes?