Mogwai on Blur: “They Were Shite” – and the Britpop Feud Explained

When Mogwai formed in Glasgow in 1995, Britpop and the ‘Cool Britannia’ cultural brand was at its zenith, with indie rock stars on the front pages of England’s tabloid newspapers almost as regularly as they graced the covers of influential music magazines NME and Melody Maker.

Mogwai, it’s fair to say, felt zero affinity with the nation’s cultural zeitgeist.

“It was a disposable culture, where people were so fixated on the next thing that bands would be discarded,” recalls bandleader and guitarist Stuart Braithwaite in a new interview with The Times. “It was like music was a joke.”

“People say British,” adds multi-instrumentalist Barry Burns, “but what they mean is English. Scotland didn’t really feel part of Britpop, it always felt culturally closer to America. We were listening to more Television than the Kinks.”

While Stuart Braithwaite tells Times writer Jonathan Dean, that he’s “not going to castigate an entire era of music”, at the time, there was one Britpop band more than any other who grated on Mogwai: Blur.

“It’d be fair to say they were the antithesis of what we felt was good in the world of music,” Braithwaite recalled in his excellent 2022 memoir Spaceships Over Glasgow: Mogwai And Misspent Youth. “Their anti-American English nationalism also grated, as did their fake cockney accents.”

You may also like

Leave a Comment