Parklife | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 25 April 1994 | |||
Recorded | August 1993 – February 1994 | |||
Studio | ||||
Genre | ||||
Length | 52:40 | |||
Label | Food | |||
Producer |
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Blur chronology | ||||
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Singles from Parklife | ||||
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Parklife is the third studio album by the English rock band Blur, released on 25 April 1994, by Food Records. After moderate sales for their previous album Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), Parklife returned Blur to prominence in the UK, helped by its four hit singles: "Girls & Boys", "To the End", the title track and "End of a Century".
Certified four times platinum in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI),[5] the album came to define the emerging Britpop scene in the year following its release, along with the album Definitely Maybe by future rivals Oasis. Britpop in turn would form the backbone of the broader Cool Britannia movement. Parklife therefore has attained a cultural significance above and beyond its considerable sales and critical acclaim, cementing its status as a landmark in British rock music.[6]
In 2010, Parklife was one of ten album covers from British artists commemorated on a UK postage stamp issued by the Royal Mail.[7][8] In 2015, Spin included the album in their list of "The 300 Best Albums of 1985–2014".[9] Rolling Stone magazine ranked the album number 438 in its 2020 list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".[10]
[Parklife] . . . was also the album many people point to as Ground Zero for what soon became known as Britpop. . . . "Cool Britannia" was a phrase uttered without sarcasm. Blur, and the Parklife album in particular, were the heart of that.
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