Jarvis Branson Cocker
(born 19 September 1963) is an English musician best known for fronting the band Pulp. Through his work with the band, Cocker became one of the key players in the Britpop movement of the mid-1990s.
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JARVIS COCKER TICKETS
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Biography
Cocker founded "
Arabacus Pulp" (named after a tradeable commodity seen by Cocker in an economics class) at the age of 15 while he was still at
The City School. After numerous line-up changes, and a shortening of the name to "Pulp", they eventually found fame in the 1990s with the success of the albums
His 'n' Hers
(1994) and
Different Class
(1995).
Pulp released two more albums (
This Is Hardcore
and
We Love Life
) to critical acclaim, though neither achieved the commercial success of
Different Class
. After releasing a greatest hits album, the band are now on hiatus.
Cocker is also renowned for his wit and observations of the cultural scene. He was a frequent guest on TV shows in the 1990s, as well as hosting an arts series for the
Channel 4 - "Journeys into the Outside". Here he took a trip across the globe, meeting so-called "outsider artists", people who create wacky and wonderful works of art, and trying to understand what compels them to do so. Cocker's penchant for TV appearances was reflected in a parody of "
Common People" ("Showbiz People") which was featured on the satirical comedy show
Spitting Image
in 1996.
BRIT Awards incident
Cocker invaded the stage at the 1996
BRIT Awards in a spur of the moment protest against
Michael Jackson's performance. Jackson performed surrounded by children and a
rabbi, while making '
Christ-like' poses and performing his recent hit, "
Earth Song". Cocker and his friend
Peter Mansell (a former Pulp member) performed an impromptu stage invasion in protest.
Cocker was detained and interviewed by the police on suspicion of assault. He was accompanied by comedian
Bob Mortimer, a former solicitor, who represented him in that capacity. He was subsequently released without charge. Opinions from the press on Cocker's actions were mixed. The 2 March 1996, edition of
Melody Maker
, for example, suggested Cocker should be knighted, and
Noel Gallagher, of
Oasis claimed "Jarvis Cocker is a star and he should be given an
MBE". However, other journalists and the organisers of the BRIT Awards were outraged by Cocker's behaviour. In response to the ensuing media scrutiny of the action, Cocker responded, "My actions were a form of protest at the way Michael Jackson sees himself as some kind of Christ-like figure with the power of healing... I just ran on the stage... I didn't make any contact with anyone as far as I recall."
[1]
The resulting press attention saw the band's record sales soar and a waxwork statue of Cocker, which cost £30,000, was placed in Rock Circus,
London.
On 2nd July 2009 he appeared as a panellist on
BBC TV's
Question Time and responded to a question about Jackson's recent death by saying he thought the attention it drew had been hyped by the media. When asked what he objected to about Michael Jackson at the time of the Brit award incident he reiterated his earlier comments about Jackson and Christ (whilst admitting he himself wasn't religious). When asked 'Otherwise as a performer you thought he was a genius?' He replied, 'He invented the moonwalk.'
Solo career
Jarvis: 2006-2009
At the 2006
Reading festival, the video for '
Running the World' was played on the main video screens of the main stage before the headline act,
Muse, performed. This video contained a
karaoke-like presentation of the song's lyrics to encourage the crowd to sing along.
Cocker is now following a solo career — his debut album,
Jarvis
, came out in the UK on 13 November 2006. In March 2007, he appeared on French band
Air's new album
Pocket Symphony
.
On
14 February 2007, he was chosen to give the award for Best British Newcomer (awarded to the
Fratellis) at the Brit Awards.
He curated the 2007
Meltdown Festival at the
South Bank Centre in London. The acts he chose include
Motörhead,
Roky Erickson and the Explosives with
Clinic,
Devo with Drumsize,
Iggy & The Stooges,
Cornershop and
The Jesus and Mary Chain.
[2]
In March 2008, Cocker made a small tour of
Latin America (
México,
Argentina and
Chile) where he presented a new song called "Girls Like It Too".
He has also recently released a new album, 'Further Complications'.
Further Complications: 2008-present
Jarvis Cocker planned to release a new studio album, and has revealed the names of two tracks set for the record. Speaking to NME.com, he said that he had written "Girls Like It Too" and "The Usual" and hoped to have enough material to record the follow-up to his solo debut soon.
[3] "I've got vague ideas," he said of the forthcoming LP. "I'd like to do another album before the end of the year."
Cocker debuted a new song, "Angela", on
BBC2's "The Summer Exhibition: A
Culture Show Special", on 13 June 2008. the video is available inside the UK.
[4]
On March 6,
Pitchfork Media revealed the cover art and album title for
Further Complications
, due out May 18, 2009.
[5] It was recorded by
Steve Albini.
Around the record's release, Jarvis participated in a project proposing to tackle the question, "What is Music?" It was designed to enter into the debate over the future (or lack of) of the music industry. "Does this mean," asked the singer, "that music can now go back to being an art form again? Also, what happens if you get a band to rehearse in an art gallery instead of a rehearsal space?"
[6] Consequently, Cocker and his band installed themselves in an art gallery in Paris for five days. Each day, Jarvis and his musicians performed a variety of different tasks. These included soundtracking a relaxation class, inviting local musicians to join them in a jam, and arranging activities with local school-children. The events were organised around Jarvis's public rehearsals for his forthcoming live dates. Films of the exhibition can still be found online.
[7]
Further Complications
saw Cocker embrace an altogether more muscular sound, whilst retaining his trademark witticisms (on 'Leftover', he sings "I met her in the Museum of Paleontology / "And I make no bones about it"). Reviews generally praised both the themes and sound of the record, with
Drowned in Sound in particular writing that
Further Complications
was "a huge leap forward" for Cocker.
[8]
Side projects
Musical
Cocker sang a duet, "Ciao!", with
Miki Berenyi on British
shoegazing band
Lush's 1996 album
Lovelife
. In 1997, he collaborated with
David Arnold on a cover of
All Time High by
Rita Coolidge, the theme from
Octopussy
. Furthermore, he gained co-writing credits for several songs ("Walk Like A Panther", "1st Man in Space", "Drive Safely Darlin'", "Stars On Sunday", and "Happy Birthday Nicola") on The
All Seeing I's album
Pickled Eggs & Sherbet
, released in 1999. He contributed lead vocals to "Drive Safely Darlin'". He also performed live with
The All Seeing I on
Top Of The Pops
, singing "Walk Like A Panther" in place of
Tony Christie, who sang on the recorded version.
In 2001 he contributed "Everybody Loves The Underdog" to the soundtrack for
Mike Bassett: England Manager
. He re-emerged in 2003 to promote a new album, under the
pseudonym "Darren Spooner", for his new band
Relaxed Muscle. The same year, he appeared on the
Richard X album
Richard X Presents His X-Factor Vol. 1
. In 2004, Cocker collaborated with
Nancy Sinatra on her new album, as well as with
Marianne Faithfull on her album
Kissin' Time
, with the song "Sliding through Life on Charm."
In 2005 Cocker co-wrote three tracks ("La Degustation", "Basque Country" and "Fred de Fred") on Sheffield-based
electronica duo
The Lovers' self-titled debut album. That same year he also covered "I Can't Forget" by
Leonard Cohen as part of the tribute show for the film
Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man
.
Cocker also contributed to the soundtrack for
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
, writing and performing three
Electro tracks: "This Is the Night", "Do the Hippogriff" and "Magic Works". He appeared briefly in the film as lead singer of the band
The Weird Sisters. The fictitious group also featured
Jonny Greenwood and
Phil Selway from
Radiohead,
Steve Mackey from Pulp,
Jason Buckle from Relaxed Muscle and
Steve Claydon from
Add N to (X).
In 2006 Cocker appeared on albums
Monsieur Gainsbourg Revisited
(song "I Just Came to Tell You That I'm Going", co-performed with
Kid Loco) and
Rogue's Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs, and Chanteys
(song "A Drop of Nelson's Blood"). His song "Running the World" appeared over the closing credits of the film
Children of Men
. Also in 2006, along with Steve Mackey, he 'curated' the two-
CD compilation,
The Trip
, which featured a wide selection of tracks by artists as varied as
The Fall,
Gene Pitney,
The Beach Boys, and
The Polecats. He also co-wrote lyrics on the
Charlotte Gainsbourg album
5:55
, with
Neil Hannon and members of
Air. Cocker and
Beth Ditto (
The Gossip) recently collaborated on a cover version of
Heaven 17's "Temptation" at the
NME Awards in London. In 2008, Cocker contributed
Born to Cry
, (originally a
Pulp song released on the
Notting Hill soundtrack CD - though not featured in the film and co-written by
Richard Hawley) to
Tony Christie's album of songs by Sheffield based songwriters,
Made in Sheffield
.
Music videos
Cocker has also directed
music videos, most notably "On" by
Aphex Twin, "Sudden Rush" by
Erlend Øye and "Aftermath" by
Nightmares on Wax. (All three co-directed with Martin Wallace). He also made a very brief appearance in the music video for "A Little More For Little You" by Swedish rockers
The Hives.
Broadcasting
On 12 October 2006, a fictional Jarvis Cocker was a lead character in a drama on
BBC Radio 2, as part of their . On 31 December 2008, Cocker guest edited the
Today
programme on
BBC Radio 4.
[9] He also guested as a panellist on BBC's Question Time in July 2009.
[10]
Personal life
Cocker was born in
Sheffield. His father,
Mac, a DJ and actor, left the family and moved to
Sydney, Australia, when Jarvis was seven and had no contact with him or his sister Saskia thereafter, leaving them to be brought up by their mother, now a
Conservative councillor.
[11]
In 1988, at age 25, Cocker took a sabbatical from Pulp to study Fine Art and Film at
Central St Martins, from which he graduated in 1991.
[12]
Jarvis Cocker credits his upbringing almost exclusively in female company for his interest in how women think and what they have to say. He wrote a song ("A Little Soul" on
This Is Hardcore
) about being abandoned by his father, and in 1998 traveled with his sister to Australia to meet him for the first time in nearly 30 years. Mac Cocker had a successful radio DJ career in Sydney beginning with
Double J in the 1970s and then
Triple J in the 1980s, and did not counter a common impression there that he was
Joe Cocker's brother or cousin (despite both being from Sheffield, they are not related in any way). By the time of his son's visit, Mac Cocker had moved to a
hippie commune in
Darwin, Northern Territory. Cocker says he has forgiven his father for abandoning them. "I don't feel any bitterness towards him at all. I feel sorry for him."
[13]
Cocker has lived in
Paris since 2003, with his wife, Camille Bidault-Waddington, and his son, Albert (born 24 March 2003).
In April 2009 he announced that they were divorcing "on amicable terms", but that he was staying in Paris to remain in his son's life.
[14]
Cocker had previously lived in Paris in the early 1990s, writing lyrics for Pulp's breakthrough album
His 'n' Hers
there.
Discography
See Pulp and Relaxed Muscle for their respective discographies
Albums
- Jarvis
(13 November 2006) #37 UK
- Further Complications
(18 May 2009) #19 UK, #155 US
Singles
; from
Jarvis
:
- "Running the World" (download only) (21 August 2006)
- "Don't Let Him Waste Your Time" (8 January 2007) UK #36, UK Indie #1
- "Fat Children" (16 July 2007) UK #158
; non-album single:
- "Temptation (Live)" (Beth Ditto & Jarvis Cocker) (18 February 2008) UK #148
; from
Further Complications
:
- "Angela" (download only) (17 April 2009)
Others
- The Trip
(with Steve Mackey) (2006)
- Songs for the Young at Heart
(2007) - contributed a reading of The Lion and Albert
- Marianne Faithfull's album, Easy Come, Easy Go
(2008) - "Somewhere (A Place For Us)"
- Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
by David Byrne and Brian Eno (2008) - uncredited guitar [15]
References
- [SPACE] Jarvis' stage invasion at the 1996 Brits
- Cocker promises high and low culture as Meltdown curator
- {{Dead link|date=March 2009}}
- BBC
- News
- [1]
- [1]
- [1]
- BBC - Today
- BBC.co.uk
- Jarvis Cocker: Lone star - Profiles, People
- Paris match
- "Jarvis Gets Real." Interview with Jarvis Cocker by Giny Dougary. ''The Times Magazine'', London, 16 March 2002.
- Jarvis' marriage Pulped
- David Byrne