1995

On This Day 01/11/1995 Human League

On this day, 1 November 1995 pop band Human League played St David’s Hall on there greatest hits tour.

Formed in Sheffield in 1977. Initially an experimental electronic outfit, the group signed to Virgin Records in 1979 and later attained widespread commercial success with their third album Dare in 1981 after restructuring their lineup.

The album contained four hit singles, including the UK/US number one hit "Don't You Want Me". The band received the Brit Award for Best British Breakthrough Act in 1982. Further hits followed throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, including "Mirror Man", "(Keep Feeling) Fascination", "The Lebanon", "Human" (a second US No. 1) and "Tell Me When".

The only constant band member since 1977 has been lead singer and songwriter Philip Oakey. Keyboard players Martyn Ware and Ian Craig Marsh both left the band in 1980 to form Heaven 17, leaving Oakey and Adrian Wright to assemble a new line-up.

The Human League then evolved into a commercially successful new pop band,with the line-up comprising Oakey, Wright, vocalists Joanne Catherall and Susan Ann Sulley, bassist and keyboard player Ian Burden and guitarist and keyboard player Jo Callis. Wright, Burden and Callis all left the band by the end of the 1980s, since which time the band has essentially been a trio of Oakey, Catherall and Sulley with various sidemen.

LIVE LINE UP:

Philip Oakey - vocals

Joanne Catherall - vocals

Susan Sulley - vocals

Neil Sutton - synthesizer

Russel Dennett - synthesizer, guitar, vocals

Fergus Geronde - percussion

Phil Edwards - synthesizer

David Beevers - technica

Setlist

Being Boiled

These Are the Days

Love Action (I Believe in Love)

Filling Up With Heaven

A Doorway?

The Sound of the Crowd

Housefull of Nothing

Mirror Man

Blind Youth

Seconds

The Lebanon

The Stars Are Going Out

(Keep Feeling) Fascination

Stay With Me Tonight

One Man in My Heart

Human

Don't You Want Me

Tell Me When

Human Nature

(Gary Clail / On-U Sound System cover)

Encore:

Together in Electric Dreams

(Philip Oakey & Giorgio Moroder cover)

On This Day 15/10/1995 Pulp

Images may be subject to copyright

On this day, 15 October 1995, rock band Pulp played Cardiff University on their Different Class tour. The tour was in support of their fifth album Different Class.

The album was a critical and commercial success, entering the UK Albums Chart at number one and winning the 1996 Mercury Music Prize. It included four top-ten singles in the UK, "Common People", "Sorted for E's & Wizz", "Disco 2000" and "Something Changed".

Different Class has been certified four times platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), and had sold 1.33 million copies in the United Kingdom as of 2020.

Widely acclaimed as among the greatest albums of the Britpop era, in 2013, NME ranked the album at number six in its list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time while Rolling Stone ranked it number 162 in their 2020 revised version of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

The album was released in the UK at the height of Britpop. It followed from the success of their breakthrough album His 'n' Hers the previous year. Two of the singles on the album – "Common People" (which reached number two on the UK Singles Chart) and "Disco 2000" (which reached number seven) – were especially notable, and helped propel Pulp to nationwide fame.

The inspiration for the title came to frontman Jarvis Cocker in Smashing, a club night that ran during the early 1990s in Eve's Club on Regent Street in London. Cocker had a friend who used the phrase "different class" to describe something that was "in a class of its own". Cocker liked the double meaning, with its allusions to the British social class system, which was a theme of some of the songs on the album. A message on the back of the record also references this idea: "We don't want no trouble, we just want the right to be different. That's all."

Review - South Wales Echo