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As for The Menace, I could see what Justine was trying to do - bring in more electronics, go further down the post-punk route, but the material isn't as good and it doesn't sound like their hearts are in it... the constant touring of the first record, the smack addictions, the Donna and Justin thing, the pressure to follow up the debut, the line up changes and indecision... it all had a negative effect on the band and they may as well have knocked it on the head, to be honest because it would have been a miracle if the second album had been any good.
What made it worse, and this often gets forgotten as the popularity of British guitar music would start to surge again as a new wave of bands came along, but by 2001 it was too late as a lot of Elastica's '90s British guitar music peers had either split or were perceived as being on the slide.
Damon's heart was in Gorillaz and not Blur and Think Tank would not have been made if he hadn't felt obligated to do so. Pulp's We Love Life didn't generate any huge hits and their greatest hits would chart poorly. Suede were fumbling through the making of A New Morning with a newly sober but still not with it Brett Anderson and would soon split. Supergrass still retained their audience but their chart success had long faded. Oasis were down to two original members and had slid in popularity immensely. The Verve had split, The Boo Radleys had split. Ash were doing well, though.
― Gholdfish Killah (Turrican), Friday, 15 December 2017 18:55 (six years ago) link
three years pass...
one month passes...