Supergrass: we're splitting (but we're alright about it)
With their zany videos and cheeky-chappy lyrics, Supergrass encapsulated the optimistically laddish and retro-tinged zeitgeist of the Britpop era. But despite being one of the mid-90s' most commercially successful home-grown talents and enjoying considerable critical acclaim in their own right, they were forced by a cruel quirk of pop history to live in the shadow of two giants in what is now considered a gilded musical age: Blur and Oasis.
The Independent — With their zany videos and cheeky-chappy lyrics, Supergrass encapsulated the optimistically laddish and retro-tinged zeitgeist of the Britpop era. But despite being one o... more info