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Pulp

Pulp Album: “Different Class / Deluxe Edition (2CD)”

Pulp Album: “Different Class / Deluxe Edition (2CD)”
Album Information :
Title: Different Class / Deluxe Edition (2CD)
Release Date:2006-01-01
Type:Album
Genre:Rock, Mainstream Rock, Cover Art
Label:Universal Music
Explicit Lyrics:No
UPC:00602498400517
Track Listing :
1 - 1 Mis-Shapes Video
1 - 2 Pencil Skirt Video
1 - 3 Common People (full length version)
1 - 4 I Spy Video
1 - 5 Disco 2000 Video
1 - 6 Live Bed Show Video
1 - 7 Something Changed Video
1 - 8 Sorted for E's & Wizz Video
1 - 9 F.E.E.L.I.N.G.C.A.L.L.E.D.L.O.V.E. Video
1 - 10 Underwear Video
1 - 11 Monday Morning Video
1 - 12 Bar Italia Video
2 - 1 Common People - Live Glastonbury Festival
2 - 2 Mile End Video
2 - 3 P.T.A. - Parent Teacher Association Video
2 - 4 Ansaphone - Demo previously unreleased Video
2 - 5 Paula - demo previously unreleased Video
2 - 6 Catcliffe Shakedown
2 - 7 Can We Dance Again (Demo Previously Unreleased)
2 - 8 Don't Loose It (Demo Previously Unreleased)
2 - 9 Whiskey in the Jar Video
2 - 10 Disco 2000 - Pub Rock Version (Previously Unreleased)
2 - 11 Common People - Vocoder Mix
2 - 13
2 - 14
2 - 15
2 - 16
2 - 17
2 - 18
2 - 19
2 - 20
2 - 21
2 - 22
2 - 23
Review - :
{@Universal UK} reissued the three key '90s {$Pulp} albums as double-disc deluxe editions in 2006. Thankfully, the deluxe edition of {$Pulp}'s 1995 masterpiece {^Different Class} is not just a recycling of {^Second Class}, the collection of B-sides that appeared as a bonus disc in a repackaging of the album in 1996. That's partially due to the fact that {^Second Class} drew heavily from {^His 'n' Hers}-era B-sides, which now appropriately appear on the concurrently released {^His 'n' Hers} deluxe edition, so this 11-track collection of non-LP material and rarities feels quite different than the 1996 bonus disc. Completists should also be aware that this disc does not contain all the B-sides from the {^Different Class} singles, but that's because the singles carried B-sides that were largely consisted of alternate mixes; a "Vocoda Mix" of {&"Common People"} shows up here, but there are plenty of mixes that didn't carry over here, only two of which may be missed by collectors: an alternate, extended {&"Live Bed Show"} and a 7" single mix of {&"Disco 2000,"} which is considerably different than the album mix thanks to added organ, synths, harmonies, and, yes, a prominent {\disco} beat. These may be missed by certain trainspotters, but all the crucial non-LP material from the {^Different Class} era is here, all worthy of the classic album they supported. There's the cutting, wickedly funny teacher-student sex tale {&"PTA"}; there's {&"Mile End,"} their contribution to the {^Trainspotting} {\soundtrack}, a nimble evocation of slum living that's far catchier than its subject should be; there's {&"Whiskey in the Jar,"} a surprisingly sinewy cover of the {$Thin Lizzy} version of the Irish anthem that was given to the {^Childline} charity album; then, there's the heartbreaking {&"Ansaphone,"} a B-side for {&"Disco 2000"} that's presented here in a slightly different demo version. {&"Ansaphone"} is grouped together with four demos of unheard songs from the sessions, all very strong. For starters, there's {&"Paula,"} whose light, skipping music camouflages the cynicism of the friends-with-benefits celebration of the lyrics. It's followed by the tremendous {&"Catcliffe Shakedown,"} a six-minute epic that may be driven by a slightly dorky beat (which {$Jarvis Cocker} calls "frankly ridiculous" in his great liner notes, which also feature full lyrics for all songs on these two discs), but it gains strength from its gangly rhythms, and it's distinguished by a great {$Jarvis} lyric that, by his own admission, resembles {&"I Spy,"} but where that contained a barely veiled menace, this is pure riotous satire of a nasty down-class small town ("why not try our delicious lager-styled drink?"). The sleek, svelte {&"We Can Dance Again"} pales a bit in comparison to this deliberately cinematic gem, but it's a great piece of knowing retro-{\disco}, as is the fantastic {&"Don't Lose It,"} which is sensual and urgent in equal measures. Rounding out the rest of the deluxe edition is their transcendent version of {&"Common People"} that closed their triumphant last-minute headlining slot at the 1995 {~Glastonbury Festival} and {$Nick Cave}'s inspired "Pub Rock Version" of {&"Disco 2000,"} which sees its first release here. With the possible exception of the "Vocoda Mix," which finds a threadbare idea stretched a little too far, this is all great music, a fitting companion to a classic album, and makes this a truly deluxe deluxe edition. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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