Different Class
Different Class is the fifth studio album by the English alternative rock band Pulp, released on 30 October 1995 by Island Records.[1] Featuring frontman Jarvis Cocker's sharply observational lyrics on British social class, relationships, and 1990s urban life, the record includes the band's signature hit "Common People," a critique of class tourism that became one of the era's defining Britpop anthems.[2] The album achieved immediate commercial breakthrough, debuting at number one on the UK Albums Chart and spawning four top-ten singles, including "Sorted for E's & Wizz" and "Disco 2000."[3] It won the Mercury Prize in 1996, recognizing its artistic impact amid the Britpop movement, and has been certified four times platinum in the UK for sales exceeding 1.2 million copies.[4][5] Critically acclaimed for its witty narrative style and orchestral arrangements, Different Class solidified Pulp's transition from cult indie status to mainstream prominence, though its success coincided with Cocker's controversial onstage protest at the 1996 Brit Awards against Michael Jackson.[6]Development and Recording
Background
Pulp, an English rock band formed in Sheffield in 1978 by Jarvis Cocker at age 15, endured over a decade of limited commercial success and frequent lineup changes before achieving mainstream recognition.[7] Early releases on independent labels such as Fire Records yielded cult followings but no significant chart impact, with Cocker's persistent songwriting and performances sustaining the project through financial hardships and rejections from major labels.[7] By the early 1990s, the core lineup stabilized around Cocker on vocals, Candida Doyle on keyboards, Nick Banks on drums, Steve Mackey on bass, and Russell Senior on guitar and violin, setting the stage for a breakthrough.[8] The band's fortunes shifted after signing with Island Records in September 1993, which provided greater resources and distribution.[9] Their 1994 album His 'n' Hers, released on 29 March, marked their first top-ten entry on the UK Albums Chart at number nine, propelled by singles like "Do You Remember the First Time?" and critical acclaim for Cocker's literate, observational lyrics on desire and social awkwardness.[10] This success coincided with the burgeoning Britpop movement, positioning Pulp amid rivals like Oasis and Blur, though Cocker's emphasis on narrative depth differentiated them from guitar-driven anthems.[8] In late 1994, amid momentum from His 'n' Hers and Cocker's growing songwriting output, the band conceived Different Class as a collection of twelve concise pop songs, each designed as a potential single to maximize commercial appeal and artistic immediacy.[11] Cocker and Mackey drove this vision, drawing from Cocker's recent compositions inspired by personal experiences and class tensions, while the addition of guitarist Mark Webber in 1995 expanded their sonic palette.[12] This rapid transition reflected Pulp's urgency to capitalize on their rising profile before competitors dominated the market, leading directly into principal recording efforts.[13]Studio Sessions
The recording sessions for Different Class were overseen by producer Chris Thomas, who had previously collaborated with Pulp on their 1994 album His 'n' Hers and emphasized the exceptional quality of the songwriting during the process.[14] The primary location was Townhouse Studios in London, where the band utilized Studio 2's 72-channel SSL G+ console and digital multitracks for capturing live rhythm sections followed by extensive overdubs.[15] Engineer David Nicholas led the technical work, with Ollo Romo assisting on programming, synchronization, and tempo mapping, particularly for tracks featuring dynamic shifts like the album's lead single "Common People."[15] Prior to the main sessions, Pulp recorded demos and backing tracks at Axis Studios in Sheffield, including a June 1995 stint from 5 to 12 under Thomas's production, allowing Jarvis Cocker to develop lyrics post-tracking amid pressure from the rapid success of "Common People."[16] Rehearsals occurred in an unconventional attic space above a pottery shop, contributing to the organic buildup before formal recording.[15] The workflow prioritized live band performances for foundational elements, such as drums miked with Sennheiser MD421 and AKG C414 on the kick, followed by meticulous editing to accommodate freeform tempo variations—rising from 90 bpm to 160 bpm in "Common People"—and additions like Cocker's unifying acoustic guitar take and violin overdubs.[15] Thomas described a brisk pace of roughly two songs per week, starting from rough demos refined in spring 1995, with sessions extending after Pulp's Glastonbury performance in late June to finalize cohesion despite initial doubts about track sequencing, ultimately resolved by engineer Pete Lewis.[16] Instrumentation drew from the band's core setup, including Nick Banks's Yamaha kit, Russell Senior's Fender Jazzmaster and violin, Steve Mackey's Musicman Sabre bass, and Candida Doyle's array of keyboards like Minimoog and Roland Juno 6, blended with Cocker's synth contributions for the album's polished yet narrative-driven sound.[15] This approach yielded a runtime of approximately 53 minutes, though vinyl constraints prompted minor trims for certain editions to preserve audio fidelity.[10]Musical Style and Themes
Genre and Composition
Different Class is classified within the Britpop genre, incorporating elements of alternative rock and pop, characterized by its melodic hooks, guitar-driven arrangements, and orchestral flourishes that distinguish it from contemporaries like Oasis or Blur.[17][18] The album's sound draws on 1970s glam rock influences filtered through 1990s indie sensibilities, with Jarvis Cocker's songwriting emphasizing narrative-driven structures that blend verse-chorus forms with extended bridges and spoken-word interludes.[19] Compositionally, the album relies on a core band setup including electric and acoustic guitars (primarily by Cocker and Russell Senior), bass (Steve Mackey), drums (Nick Banks), and keyboards (Candle Vntz, with additional organ and Mellotron contributions from Cocker), creating layered textures that support Cocker's wry vocals.[1] Select tracks feature orchestral arrangements by Anne Dudley, adding strings and brass for dramatic swells—evident in "I Spy" (track 4), "Something Changed" (track 7), and "F.E.E.L.I.N.G.C.A.L.L.E.D.L.O.V.E." (track 9)—which enhance the album's cinematic quality without overpowering the rock foundation.[17] These elements contribute to a polished yet subversive pop aesthetic, where punchy rhythms and lush instrumentation underscore thematic contrasts between aspiration and reality.[20][21]Lyrical Content and Class Commentary
The lyrics of Different Class, composed mainly by frontman Jarvis Cocker, offer sharp social commentary on British class structures, interweaving themes of aspiration, resentment, and the futility of cross-class mimicry with narratives of sexual intrigue and suburban ennui. Released on October 30, 1995, the album's wordsmithery draws from Cocker's working-class Sheffield upbringing and his observations of London's stratified society, portraying class not as abstract ideology but as a visceral barrier shaping personal agency and authenticity.[8][22] Central to the album's class critique is "Common People," a track inspired by Cocker's real-life 1988 encounter at Central Saint Martins art college with a privileged Greek student who romanticized working-class existence, claiming she wanted to "live like common people" despite her safety net of familial wealth.[23] The song satirizes this "class tourism"—the affluent's superficial adoption of proletarian aesthetics for thrill or cultural cachet—through escalating verses that dismantle the fantasy: "You'll never understand/How it feels to live your life/With no meaning or control/And with nowhere left to go," culminating in the bitter refrain that such lives cannot be chosen or escaped at will.[23][8] Cocker has framed this as a broader indictment of 1990s patronizing voyeurism, where northern accents shifted from markers of effeminacy in Sheffield to symbols of "earthy" authenticity in southern elite circles, exposing how class performance serves self-interest rather than genuine empathy.[23][22] Tracks like "Mis-Shapes" extend this lens to marginalization beyond economics, rallying "misfits" and "mistakes"—those deformed by societal norms including class rigidity—with defiant lines such as "Mis-shapes, mistakes, misfits/We're not going to waste our lives/Lying in the sand," positioning outsiders as agents of upheaval against persecutory conformity.[22][8] In "I Spy," class antagonism fuels a tale of adulterous sabotage, where the working-class narrator infiltrates bourgeois domesticity, declaring "It's not a case of woman v. man/It's more a case of haves against haven’ts," thus inverting power dynamics through intimate subversion rather than overt confrontation.[22] "Sorted for E's & Wizz" ties class commentary to escapist subcultures, chronicling the disorientation of ecstasy-fueled raves as a flawed rebellion against stagnant prospects, with lyrics evoking the comedown's revelation of unbridgeable divides: "The life of the party/You're the life of the party/But you're not coming home with me."[8] Cocker's prose avoids didacticism, favoring ironic detachment and vivid vignettes—such as in "My Favourite Parks Are Car Parks," where "grass is something you smoke"—to underscore how class scarcity warps everyday perceptions and pleasures.[8] This approach, rooted in Cocker's intent to infiltrate and unsettle from within after Pulp's breakthrough, renders Different Class a document of mid-1990s Britain under Conservative rule, where Blair-era optimism masked enduring hierarchies, a tension echoed in later cultural shifts like Brexit.[8][22] The lyrics' enduring bite stems from their empirical grounding in lived disparities, privileging causal observation over sentiment, and challenging listeners to confront the permanence of class as a determinant of opportunity and identity.[23][22]Release and Promotion
Initial Release
Different Class, the fifth studio album by the English rock band Pulp, was initially released on 30 October 1995 by Island Records in the United Kingdom.[7] The album was distributed in several physical formats, including compact disc (catalogue number CID 8041), 12-inch vinyl LP (ILPS 8041), and audio cassette (ICT 8041).[24] These editions featured the standard track listing of twelve songs, with the cover artwork depicting a black-and-white photograph of a suited man and woman against a suburban backdrop, designed to evoke themes of social aspiration and class distinction.[24] Upon release, Different Class debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart dated 11 November 1995, marking Pulp's first chart-topping album after 17 years in the music industry.[7] It achieved first-week sales of approximately 133,000 copies in the UK, reflecting strong initial demand buoyed by the prior success of the lead single "Common People."[25] By the end of its second week, the album had been certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry for shipments exceeding 300,000 units, underscoring its immediate commercial impact.[1] Internationally, the album saw releases in Europe and other markets shortly thereafter, though with varying chart performance outside the UK.[24]Marketing and Singles
The singles promoting Different Class were strategically released to build anticipation and sustain momentum around the album's October 1995 launch by Island Records. "Common People", issued on 22 May 1995, served as the lead single, peaking at number two on the UK Singles Chart and introducing Pulp's sharp class-based narratives to a wider audience.[26] [23] This was followed by the double A-side "Sorted for E's & Wizz" / "Mis-Shapes" on 25 September 1995, which also reached number two despite—and partly due to—intense media scrutiny.[27] [28] Post-album, "Disco 2000" appeared on 27 November 1995, charting at number seven, while "Something Changed" followed on 25 March 1996, entering at number ten.[29] [30] These releases, supported by music videos and radio play, capitalized on Britpop's peak popularity to drive album sales. A pivotal marketing element emerged from the controversy surrounding the "Sorted for E's & Wizz" single, whose cover art and insert depicted a method for packaging ecstasy pills—slang for "E's"—and amphetamines, or "wizz", into a concealed wrap.[31] This prompted tabloid backlash, including a Daily Mirror front-page story on 20 September 1995 headlined "Ban this sick stunt", accusing the band of glamorizing drug culture.[32] Pulp defended the materials as illustrative of rave scene realities rather than instructional, with frontman Jarvis Cocker stating the song critiqued drug-fueled escapism without endorsement.[33] The ensuing debate, amplified by TV appearances and press coverage, generated free publicity equivalent to a major advertising campaign, boosting the single's chart performance and pre-album hype.[32] Additional promotional tactics included localized efforts, such as the Warp Records shop in Sheffield distributing signed posters to the first 500 buyers of the album on release day, fostering fan engagement in Pulp's hometown.[1] Island Records also produced niche materials, like a French comic book adaptation of the album's themes for targeted markets, tying into the record's narrative of social observation.[34] Overall, the campaign leveraged controversy and sequential singles to position Different Class as a cultural touchstone amid 1990s class tensions, without relying on conventional advertising spends.Artwork and Packaging
Cover Design
The cover artwork for Pulp's Different Class was conceptualized by The Designers Republic, a graphic design studio known for its work with the band on previous releases, employing a bold, modernist aesthetic with bold typography and stark imagery.[24] The primary front cover image depicts a stylized photograph of a woman in an elegant pose, rendered in high-contrast black and white with the album title in white sans-serif lettering overlaid, evoking themes of social aspiration and class distinction central to the album's lyrical content.[24] Sleeve design credits are attributed to Blue Source, incorporating elements that align with the band's critique of British social hierarchies through visual irony.[1] A distinctive feature of the original packaging was its interactive "aperture" sleeve format, which included six double-sided insert cards allowing purchasers to select from twelve possible cover images for personalization, ranging from portraits of individuals in formal attire to scenes suggesting upward mobility or domestic irony.[35] [36] This modular design encouraged fan engagement and reflected the album's title by subverting traditional album packaging norms, mirroring Pulp's narrative of rejecting conformity within class structures.[35] The fold-out sleeve further integrated these elements, with the reverse side featuring track listings and band credits in a minimalist layout.[36] Subsequent reissues, such as the 2025 30th anniversary edition, restored this original aperture sleeve to preserve the choose-your-own-cover concept, underscoring its enduring significance in the album's presentation.[37]Packaging Variations
The original 1995 compact disc edition of Different Class was released in multiple configurations, including a standard version housed in a jewel case with a clear tray and a 20-page booklet inlay, while some copies featured a circular promotional sticker on the front cover.[17] A limited edition CD variant allowed consumers to "choose your own cover" from 12 interchangeable sleeves depicting various individuals, packaged within the standard jewel case alongside the die-cut fold-out insert and artwork cards.[24] This choose-your-own-cover feature extended to the initial vinyl pressing, which offered three packaging options: the limited interchangeable covers edition, a standard cover without inserts, and an export version with the standard cover but lacking the internal sleeves.[38] Cassette editions followed a simpler format, typically in a standard plastic shell with printed J-card inserts matching the album artwork, without the modular cover elements.[24] Subsequent reissues introduced further variations. The 2006 CD remaster retained the jewel case but updated the booklet with additional liner notes, while maintaining compatibility with earlier artwork.[39] Vinyl reissues in 2014 and 2016, pressed on 180-gram black vinyl, included printed inner sleeves but omitted the original interchangeable covers, focusing instead on high-fidelity replication of the standard gatefold design.[38] The 2025 30th anniversary edition, available as a 4-LP set or 2-CD deluxe package, features remastered audio from original tapes and includes a 28-page booklet with new band interviews and unseen photography; the vinyl version recreates the modular cut-out elements from the 1995 limited edition, accompanied by a 12-inch by 12-inch poster of miniature cover images.[37] These anniversary packages emphasize archival fidelity, with the LP housed in a deluxe box to accommodate the expanded components.[25] Regional variations, such as the U.S. CD release on Island Records (314-524 165-2), mirrored the UK standard edition but occasionally included different matrix etchings or promotional inserts tailored to North American markets.[24] Japanese editions, titled Common People, adopted similar jewel case packaging but incorporated obi strips and translated liner notes, aligning with local distribution norms.[24] Across formats, packaging differences primarily stem from promotional strategies and manufacturing choices, with the 1995 limited editions prized by collectors for their interactive elements.[40]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions
Different Class debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart dated 11 November 1995, marking Pulp's first chart-topping album, and remained on the chart for 75 weeks, including one week at the summit.[41][7] The album achieved moderate success elsewhere, peaking at number 44 on the Australian Albums Chart for three weeks in April 1996.[42]| Country | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | 1 | 75 |
| Australia | 44 | 3 |
Sales and Certifications
Different Class achieved substantial commercial success primarily in the United Kingdom, where it was certified four times platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), equivalent to 1.2 million units shipped.[43] As of 2020, UK sales totaled 1.33 million copies.[43] The album reached platinum status in the UK by late 1995, double platinum by December 1995, and quadruple platinum by 1998.[1] Worldwide, sales were estimated at 1.5 million copies by September 1996, including approximately 40,000 units in the United States.[44] No certifications were awarded by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[45] Aggregate data indicates total Pulp album sales exceeding 1.76 million worldwide, with Different Class accounting for over 1.2 million, predominantly from the UK market.[5]Critical Reception
Contemporary Reviews
Different Class received widespread acclaim from UK music critics upon its release on October 30, 1995, with reviewers highlighting Jarvis Cocker's incisive lyrics on social class, unrequited desire, and British underclass life, set against polished pop arrangements.[6] The album topped Melody Maker's list of the best albums of 1995, reflecting its resonance amid the Britpop surge.[6] NME ranked it seventh on its year-end list, praising its narrative depth and melodic hooks that elevated Pulp beyond peers like Oasis and Blur.[6] Mojo placed it eleventh, noting the blend of orchestral swells and disco-inflected grooves on tracks like "Disco 2000" and "Common People."[6] In the United States, SPIN magazine awarded the album 9 out of 10 stars in a March 1996 review by Barry Walters, commending its "shabby-chic" sophistication and Cocker's voyeuristic storytelling as a sharp antidote to mainstream Britpop bombast.[46] The New York Times, in a June 1996 concert review, described Different Class as Pulp's breakthrough, fusing long-standing romantic angst with explicit class antagonism, evidenced in songs decrying middle-class appropriation of working-class experiences.[47] Critics across outlets agreed the record's strength lay in its unsparing realism—Cocker's barbs at social climbers and suburban ennui—without romanticizing poverty, distinguishing it from contemporaneous releases.[48] Some reviewers noted minor flaws, such as occasional over-reliance on dramatic strings, but these did not detract from overall enthusiasm; AllMusic's assessment echoed this, calling it Pulp's pinnacle for transforming cult appeal into universal anthems via "glitzy, gaudy stomp."[48] The Mercury Prize win in 1996 further validated contemporary sentiment, with judges citing its "originality and accessibility."[6]Retrospective Assessments
In the years following its release, Different Class has been widely reassessed as a cornerstone of Britpop, celebrated for its incisive lyrics on class disparity, sexual frustration, and suburban ennui, which retain relevance amid ongoing British social divides. Publications have highlighted tracks like "Common People" for their enduring critique of performative empathy among the affluent, positioning the album as a prescient snapshot of 1990s inequality that echoes in contemporary discussions of economic stagnation and cultural aspiration.[8][49] Critics have praised Jarvis Cocker's narrative prowess, with retrospective analyses emphasizing how the album's storytelling—evident in songs like "Disco 2000" and "Something Changed"—transforms personal anecdotes into broader commentaries on lost youth and social mobility, outlasting the era's guitar-driven trends. A 2016 Pitchfork review commended Pulp's avoidance of overt retro revivalism, crediting the production's balance of orchestral swells and electronic flourishes for sustaining replay value without gimmickry. Drowned in Sound's 2006 reissue appraisal deemed it the strongest Britpop release of 1995 and potentially the genre's apex, attributing its longevity to Cocker's unflinching voyeurism in depicting infidelity and hedonism.[22][50][19] Not all reassessments are unqualified; a 2015 Quietus essay argued that Different Class contains weaker tracks compared to Pulp's prior His 'n' Hers, critiquing filler like "Live Bed Show" for diluting the album's thematic punch despite its commercial polish. This view underscores a recurring observation that while the singles dominate retrospectives, deeper cuts occasionally falter in cohesion, reflecting Britpop's occasional prioritization of hooks over structural rigor. Nonetheless, 20th- and 30th-anniversary pieces in 2015, 2020, and 2025—from NME to Albumism—reaffirm its status as an era-defining artifact, with its class-war rhetoric cited as more substantive than peers like Oasis, influencing subsequent indie lyricists focused on authenticity over bombast.[51][13][20]Criticisms and Dissenting Views
Despite its critical acclaim and commercial success, Different Class has drawn dissenting views, primarily in retrospective analyses that highlight perceived shortcomings relative to Pulp's broader discography. Music journalist John Doran, writing for The Quietus in 2015, contended that the album is not Pulp's strongest effort, asserting that the preceding His 'n' Hers (1994) endures more effectively as a cohesive whole and identifying "weak moments" amid its highs, such as less impactful tracks that dilute the narrative momentum.[51] Critics have also questioned the album's musical originality, with Pitchfork's 2016 reappraisal acknowledging Pulp's skill in avoiding overt retroism but emphasizing that the band was "not an obviously innovative" force, relying instead on polished, familiar pop structures honed by producer Chris Thomas rather than pushing sonic boundaries.[22] This view aligns with broader skepticism toward Britpop's formulaic tendencies, where Pulp's ascent was seen by some as prioritizing lyrical wit and cultural resonance over experimental depth. Further dissent centers on the album's thematic execution, particularly its class-based storytelling. While Jarvis Cocker's lyrics vividly depict social divides and suburban ennui, select commentators have lamented a perceived superficiality or dilution of earlier, more pointed social critique found in Pulp's pre-fame work, suggesting Different Class trades raw edge for accessible satire tailored to mainstream appeal.[19] Such opinions, though minority amid the praise, underscore debates over whether the record's populist triumphs masked underlying inconsistencies in songcraft and ideological rigor.Controversies
Sorted for E's & Wizz Backlash
The release of Pulp's double A-side single "Sorted for E's & Wizz" / "Mis-Shapes" on 25 September 1995 triggered immediate backlash from British tabloids, primarily over the lead track's title and lyrics, which explicitly referenced ecstasy ("E's") and amphetamines ("Wizz").[32] The Daily Mirror launched a campaign to ban the single, denouncing it as a "sick drugs stunt" and accusing the band of providing "instructions on how to score drugs," with headlines amplifying claims that it glamorized recreational drug use amid the era's rave culture.[52] This outrage was fueled by the single's provocative artwork, depicting festival-goers and drug paraphernalia, which tabloids interpreted as endorsement rather than critique, positioning Pulp at the center of a moral panic over youth drug culture.[33] Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker countered the criticism by emphasizing the song's intent as an anti-drug statement, portraying the euphoric high of substances as illusory and leading to inevitable disillusionment and comedown, rather than promotion.[32] In interviews, Cocker described the track as a sober dissection of rave scene excesses, noting how drugs "artificially make you feel good, but then it wears off and you're left with the come down," underscoring themes of emptiness over hedonism.[32] Despite the tabloid frenzy, which included calls for radio bans and public boycotts, the controversy did not derail the single's success; it peaked at number 2 on the UK Singles Chart and boosted anticipation for the Different Class album.[27] The episode highlighted tensions between artistic commentary on social vices and media sensationalism, with Pulp maintaining that misinterpretation arose from surface-level readings ignoring the lyrics' caustic realism.[53]Brit Awards Stage Invasion
During the 1996 Brit Awards ceremony held on February 19 at London's Earls Court Exhibition Centre, Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker invaded the stage midway through Michael Jackson's performance of "Earth Song."[54] Jackson's elaborate staging depicted him as a messianic figure in a white robe, surrounded by children portraying the healed and adoring, culminating in simulated miracles amid pyrotechnics and a cross backdrop, which Cocker later described as a "blasphemous" self-deification evoking false prophet imagery.[55] Cocker, protesting this portrayal—particularly in light of Jackson's ongoing child-related legal controversies at the time—rushed onstage with Pulp drummer Nick Banks, gesticulating mockingly, waving his arms to mimic gunfire or dismissal, and briefly lifting his jacket to expose and wiggle his buttocks toward the audience and performers before leaping into the crowd to evade security.[56][57] The intrusion halted Jackson's act temporarily, with security tackling performers and children scattering; Jackson reportedly retreated to a crucifix prop as flames erupted nearby.[54] Cocker's action overshadowed Pulp's earlier performance of "Sorted for E's & Wizz" from Different Class and the band's nominations for British Album of the Year, British Group, and British Single, amid the album's chart dominance and prior drug-culture backlash.[56] Jackson's representatives accused Cocker of assaulting child dancers, alleging a child was burned by stage fires or kicked, prompting his immediate arrest alongside Banks on suspicion of actual bodily harm under public order offenses.[58] Cocker spent the night in custody, initially held for questioning, while Pulp's label Island Records distanced itself, fearing damage to the band's momentum following Different Class's October 1995 release and Mercury Prize contention.[59] Police investigation, including witness statements and CCTV review, found no evidence of injury to performers or deliberate endangerment, leading to Cocker's release without charge on March 11, 1996; Banks was freed earlier with a caution.[58][57] David Bowie, present at the event, supported Cocker by affirming the protest's non-violent intent in statements to authorities, aiding the exoneration.[60] Cocker later reflected that the media frenzy induced personal turmoil, including substance abuse and seclusion, exacerbating the post-Different Class pressures of fame, though he maintained the act targeted institutional celebrity excess rather than Jackson personally.[56] The incident amplified Different Class's theme of class critique and outsider rebellion, cementing Pulp's anti-establishment image despite no formal awards that night, as Oasis dominated British categories.[61]Legacy and Influence
Cultural Impact
Different Class captured the socioeconomic tensions of mid-1990s Britain, particularly the lingering effects of Thatcher-era policies on working-class aspirations and social mobility, through Jarvis Cocker's satirical lyrics that highlighted class disparities and cultural appropriation.[8] The track "Common People," released as the lead single on May 1, 1995, became an anthem critiquing "class tourism" by affluent individuals slumming it among the proletariat, resonating with audiences disillusioned by economic inequality and influencing public discourse on authenticity in social interactions.[8] [62] The album's emphasis on outsiders and misfits provided a voice for those marginalized in the macho, laddish Britpop scene, positioning Pulp as advocates for the intelligent and unconventional against elitist norms.[13] [63] Tracks like "Mis-Shapes" and "Sorted for E's & Wizz" addressed youth alienation, illegal raves, and drug culture as escapes from rigid class structures, mirroring the era's uncertain futures amid rising unemployment and urban decay.[8] This portrayal extended solidarity to "wallflowers and weirdos," fostering a sense of communal defiance that echoed in subsequent indie and alternative scenes.[20] Its cultural resonance persisted into the 21st century, with retrospectives noting parallels to ongoing British class divides, including post-Brexit and austerity-era frustrations, as the album's narratives of aspiration and resentment retained relevance in analyses of persistent inequality.[8] By blending pop accessibility with sharp social observation, Different Class elevated discussions of class beyond political rhetoric, embedding them in mainstream music and inspiring a generation to confront societal hypocrisies through art rather than mere protest.[64]Accolades and Recognition
_Different Class won the Mercury Music Prize on September 10, 1996, at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London, recognizing it as the outstanding British album of the previous year; Pulp performed "Bar Italia" live during the ceremony.[65][66] The award, established by the British Phonographic Industry and others to highlight artistic merit over commercial success, provided Pulp with £25,000 and elevated the album's profile amid Britpop's peak. The album received four nominations at the 1996 Brit Awards, including British Album of the Year, British Group, British Single ("Common People"), and British Video; however, Pulp did not win any, with the ceremony overshadowed by Jarvis Cocker's onstage protest during Michael Jackson's performance.[66][3] In retrospective rankings, Different Class placed sixth on NME's 2013 list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, praised for its pop craftsmanship and social observation.[67] Rolling Stone ranked it 162nd in its 2020 edition of the 500 Greatest Albums, noting its breakthrough in capturing class tensions through witty narratives.[68] Q magazine readers voted it the 37th greatest album in a 1998 poll, though it fell to 85th in their 2006 survey, reflecting shifting tastes in retrospective assessments.[7]Reissues and Later Developments
Anniversary Editions
To commemorate the 30th anniversary of Different Class, originally released on October 30, 1995, Pulp issued an expanded reissue on October 24, 2025, through Universal Music Recordings.[4][37] The edition features remastered audio, mastered by Geoff Pesche at Abbey Road Studios under the supervision of Jarvis Cocker and Mark Webber, enhancing the original recordings for improved fidelity.[69][70] Available in 2CD and 4LP formats, the set incorporates the band's complete headline performance from Glastonbury Festival on June 25, 1995—captured four months prior to the album's debut and newly restored for this release—alongside the remastered studio tracks.[4][37] The 4LP version is pressed at 45 RPM for superior sound quality and includes a "choose your own sleeve" option with alternative cover art reproductions, a 28-page booklet containing extensive liner notes, and a poster.[71][72] No prior major anniversary editions, such as a 20th, have been documented in official reissue announcements.[73]Ongoing Relevance
Different Class continues to resonate with audiences due to its unflinching portrayal of class tensions and social aspirations, themes that echo ongoing debates in British society about economic inequality and cultural divides. A 2020 BBC analysis highlighted how the album's narratives of aspiration and resentment mirror persistent uncertainties in modern Britain, from illegal raves to mismatched romantic pursuits across social strata.[8] This enduring applicability stems from Jarvis Cocker's observational lyrics, which critique consumerist facades and interpersonal dynamics without romanticization, grounded in empirical depictions of 1990s Sheffield life that parallel contemporary urban experiences.[10] In the 2020s, the album sustains popularity among younger listeners, with its Britpop sound and witty commentary drawing Gen-Z interest amid nostalgia cycles and indie revivals. Publications have noted its appeal to new generations, evidenced by sustained streaming presence and discussions in music forums framing it as a timeless critique of elitism.[74] Pulp's 2023 reunion and subsequent tours have kept tracks like "Common People" in rotation, reinforcing the album's live draw through performances that highlight its anthemic structures and narrative punch.[75] By October 2025, ahead of its 30th anniversary, the band scheduled a dedicated London playback event with Q&A, signaling active commemoration and fan engagement.[76] Critics in 2025 retrospectives affirm the record's sonic freshness, attributing this to its blend of orchestral swells, disco-inflected grooves, and guitar-driven urgency, which avoid dated production pitfalls common in era peers.[77] Certified four-times platinum in the UK with over 1.33 million units sold including streaming equivalents, it maintains commercial viability, bolstered by Pulp's chart-topping 2025 album More, which leverages the foundational acclaim of Different Class. This interplay underscores the album's role in sustaining the band's relevance, as its Mercury Prize-winning status and hit singles continue to anchor their discography in public consciousness.[78]Track Listing and Credits
Standard Track Listing
The standard edition of Different Class, released on October 30, 1995, by Island Records in the UK, contains 11 tracks, all written by Jarvis Cocker, Candida Doyle, Nick Banks, Steve Mackey, and Russell Senior.[24] The album's running time is approximately 47 minutes.[24]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Mis-Shapes" | 3:46 [24] |
| 2 | "Pencil Skirt" | 3:11 [24] |
| 3 | "Common People" | 5:51 [24] |
| 4 | "I Spy" | 5:55 [24] |
| 5 | "Disco 2000" | 4:33 [24] |
| 6 | "Live Bed Show" | 3:29 [24] |
| 7 | "Something Changed" | 3:31 [24] |
| 8 | "Sorted for E's & Wizz" | 4:50 [24] |
| 9 | "F.E.E.L." | 4:00 [24] |
| 10 | "The Panisher" | 4:10 [24] |
| 11 | "Look What I Almost Did" | 0:51 [24] |