Pulp are back with their first new album since 2001. New single “Spike Island” precedes the release of the album More, due on 6 June. It’s as good an excuse as any to dive into a back catalogue which chronicles Britain as it was for the outsiders downtrodden, and eccentric.
From the pool tables and supermarket aisles of “Common People” to the raves of “Sorted for E’s & Wizz”, they’re time capsules in song.
But as friend of Big Issue Jarvis Cocker sang on “Do You Remember the First Time”, we’ve changed so much since then. Here’s how the Britain of 2025 compares to the country when Pulp released their last proper album.
- Jarvis Cocker: ‘We’re all just getting through it the best we can’
- Britpop’s returning heroes remain a different class
- Pulp star Nick Banks explains how Jarvis Cocker incident with Michael Jackson changed everything
Study sculpture at St Martin’s College
Recently-introduced tuition fees of £1,000 a year caused a huge stir for those going to university in 2001. Undergraduate fees now stand at £9,250 a year, although Central St Martins do a short course introduction to sculpture, for £740, if you’ve got a thirst for knowledge.
Smoke some fags and play some pool
Forget the pocket change needed to get the balls out of the pool table, it’s cigarettes which make the most “Common People” pastime of all that little bit more out of reach. In January 2000, a 20-pack cost £4.01. Nowadays, it’ll set you back an average of £16.60.
Rent a flat above a shop
In “Common People”, this was the simple option. Renting in London, however, has become ever-more expensive. The weekly rent for a local authority flat in the capital in 2001 was £63. By 2023, that would be £114.31.