His 'N' Hers
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Average customer review:Product Description
Pulp's breakthrough album arrived after an unbelievably long haul, and then Jarvis Cocker was suddenly sharing front pages of music magazines with Liam and Damon. Here, the songs explored now-familiar Pulp territory, social class, seedy sexual encounters, voyeurism ('Babies'), bad sex ('you bought a toy that can reach the places he never goes'), good sex, and lots more sex, all blessed with Cocker's humorous, touching and, conversely, often innocent lyrical observations. Capable of writing almost unbearably tender love songs and laments for wasted lives ('your hair is a mess and your eyes arejust holes in your face'), Cocker's honesty and insight were distilled to perfection in the wonderful 'Do You Remember The First Time'.
Track Listing
- Joyriders
- Lipgloss
- Acrylic Afternoons
- Have You Seen Her Lately?
- Babies
- She's A Lady
- Happy Endings
- Do You Remember The First Time?
- Pink Glove
- Someone Like The Moon
- David's Last Summer
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #16489 in Music
- Released on: 2003-08-25
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 51 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Fifteen years after forming Arabacus Pulp as a schoolboy, Jarvis Cocker finally scored his first hit single with "Babies"--a sexually-charged tale of teenage voyeurism which saw Jarvis on Top Of The Pops with "I hate Wet Wet Wet" written on his jacket. At the time, the Scottish superstars dismissed such behaviour as desperate attention-grabbing from indie no-hopers. Britain, though, had already decided it could do with a pop star who could wring poetry from the grubbier little enclaves of small-town life. And in low rent synth-dramas, such as "Acrylic Afternoons", "Pink Glove", and the bilious "Joyriders", Jarvis began to deliver in earnest, coming on like the missing link between Serge Gainsbourg and The Human League. His'N'Hers didn't finish off the job, of course--it would take a more dynamic producer and a class-avenging anthem called "Common People" to make him a national treasure. Wet Wet Wet's career though, never quite recovered. --Peter Paphides
Customer Reviews
Pulp's finest album
Somehow more raw, more angry, more honest than Different Class; I found it harder to get into at first, but after a few listens, there simply isn't a weak song on there, and there are angst-ridden haunting tracks aplenty. It has something of an eighties feel, but Pulp were never quite at home with the shoutiness of Liam or the inanity of Country House, just as they didn't know what to do when they got properly famous.
If you've got into Pulp through Disco 2000 or Es and Whizz, this wil be a revelation.
Music to do just about anything by
I bought this when it first came out. I was in Virgin and a song was playing in the background (Lipgloss). I bought the album without listening to anymore and have never regretted it.
Jarvis Cocker's voice is distinctive and edgy. The songs are contemporary with subjects such as anorexia and joyriding being tackled in a non-confrontational yet non-glorifying way.
Every song on this album makes me sing along to it and I bought my next Pulp album - 'A Different Class' - because I loved 'His 'n' Hers' so much. For those of you who don't have this album yet but have heard 'A Different Class', you can expect a less commercial pop flavour from 'His 'n' Hers' and this is what gives it the edge for me. I just love 'His 'n' Hers' and never tire of hearing it.
The Best Pulp Album
Musically just as good as the more popular "Different Class", but infinitely better production. "Different Class" featured some rather muddy, headachy production that pretty much wrecked much of it, despite the fact that it contained excellent songs. The "wall of sound" on "His & Hers" is crystal clear and brings out the very best of Pulp's 70s inspired kitsch.
Best tracks are undoubtedly the singles "Babies" and "Do You Remember the First Time?" with "Acrylic Afternoons" and "Lipgloss" coming very close seconds. Without a doubt the best material Pulp released, and shows beyond all doubt that "Common People", whilst good, was certainly not their best work.





