Skip to main content

Posts

Common People, Hidden Gold

  “ Common People, Hidden Gold — The B-Sides Britpop Tried to Hide” Britpop wasn’t just a soundtrack — it was a statement. Mid-90s Britain, all swagger, style, and singalong choruses. But behind the chart-toppers and cultural cool? A parallel universe of B-sides that often cut deeper, hit harder, and revealed more than the hits ever could. And it all starts with Pulp and their defining anthem, Common People. Pulp — Observers of the Ordinary, Masters of the Unseen Fronted by the ever-watchful Jarvis Cocker, Pulp didn’t just write songs — they documented lives. Common People gave them their moment, but their B-sides told the fuller story. Standout B-side: “Underwear” (demo/session variants) — stripped back, intimate, and slightly uncomfortable in the best way These tracks feel like late-night confessions — less polished, more honest, and quietly brilliant. Blur — When the Masks Slip Blur mastered the art of Britpop irony on their singles, but their B-sides often dropped the act. Hidd...
Recent posts

South America's Hidden Fire

  The Hidden Pulse of South American Rock: B-Sides, Psychedelia, And The Sound Of A Continent When people talk about rock history, the conversation usually circles around the same places. London. New York. Seattle. Maybe Berlin if someone wants to sound adventurous. But far from the usual spotlight, South America quietly built one of the most emotional, experimental, and fearless rock movements the world has ever heard. This isn’t just a side note in rock history. It’s an entire underground universe. From the psychedelic chaos of Brazil to the poetic folk-rock of Argentina and the spiritual progressive soundscapes of Chile, South American rock became a collision of politics, poetry, rebellion, folklore, and raw emotion. And like the greatest B-sides in history, many of its finest moments stayed hidden from the mainstream world. For years, these bands existed like whispered secrets passed between collectors, vinyl hunters, and late-night music obsessives. But once you step into this...

Songs That Deserve To Stay Hidden

  Songs That Deserve to Stay Hidden (Because once you hear them… there’s no going back) Some songs don’t explode. They creep in. They sound innocent. Maybe even forgettable. Until something shifts. A riff. A groove. A moment. And suddenly… you’re not in control anymore. These are the songs that should’ve stayed hidden. Not because they’re bad— but because they’re too good at what they do. 1. “Oh Well (Part 1)” – Fleetwood Mac (Peter Green era) Simple. Too simple. That riff has no right being that effective. It just walks in… sits down… and refuses to leave. No build-up. No warning. Just that hypnotic, circular pull that locks your attention in place. You think it’s background music—meanwhile it’s taken over completely. You don’t find this track. It finds you. 2. “Cymbaline” – Pink Floyd (early years) Drifting. Dreamlike. Nothing urgent. Nothing loud. And then that tension starts creeping in… slowly tightening, like something lurking just out of sight. You don’t even notice yourself...

Supertramp: Beyond The Breakfast

  One Band a Month – May: Supertramp Not Just Breakfast in America There are albums that define bands… …and then there are albums that overshadow everything else. For Supertramp, that album is Breakfast in America. It’s everywhere. It’s polished. It’s packed with hits. And because of that… it quietly hides the rest of the story. The First Listen Trap Most people meet Supertramp at their most accessible. Big choruses. Clean production. Songs that land instantly. And there’s nothing wrong with that — Breakfast in America is a brilliant record. But if that’s where the listening stops… You miss the part where things get interesting. Before the Shine Before the radio gloss, there was something more complex going on. At the centre of it all were two very different writers: Rick Davies — bluesy, grounded, slightly darker Roger Hodgson — melodic, reflective, almost dreamlike Two voices. Two styles. And instead of clashing… they created tension. The good kind. The kind that gives a band dep...

New Noise From The East

  The New Noise from the East: Where Chinese Rock Finds Its Edge Rock music never stays where it’s born. It travels. It mutates. It picks up new scars, new stories, new textures. And right now, one of the most electrifying evolutions isn’t coming from the usual places—it’s rising out of China’s underground clubs, festival stages, and digital spaces. Not imitation. Not tribute. Something entirely its own. The Firestarter: Hua Chenyu If you’re expecting a gentle entry point, think again. Hua Chenyu doesn’t ease you into anything—he throws you into the deep end. His sound is chaos, but controlled chaos. One moment it’s orchestral, the next it’s industrial, then suddenly it fractures into something that feels like theatrical rock opera. It’s dramatic, unpredictable, almost cinematic. He isn’t just performing songs. He’s staging emotional explosions. And that’s your first clue—this scene isn’t about fitting into rock’s past. It’s about reshaping it. The Pulse of the Underground: Hedgeho...