Two bars

The 2005 Brit Awards were their usual combination of drunk, daft pop singers, pseudo-goth guitarists and drummers who spent much of the night in the toilet. But there were some piquant differences this year. Of the seventeen awards given, eleven went to bands and performers for debut albums. Through all the talk of decline and retro redundancy, music is changing. It is renewing. Something big
[This is archived content and may not display in the originally intended format.]
Artshub Logo

The 2005 Brit Awards were their usual combination of drunk, daft pop singers, pseudo-goth guitarists and drummers who spent much of the night in the toilet. But there were some piquant differences this year. Of the seventeen awards given, eleven went to bands and performers for debut albums. Through all the talk of decline and retro redundancy, music is changing. It is renewing. Something big is about to happen. We are – after a decade of disappointment – hearing new and challenging popular music.

While the brilliance of the new was being rewarded, the old was being respected, or so it appeared. BBC Radio 2 listeners voted for the best song of the last twenty five years. The palette of performers from which to choose was odd enough: the Pop Idol winner Will Young, Queen, Kate Bush, Robbie Williams and Joy Division. The omissions were odd: where were The Smiths, New Order, The Stone Roses (Waterfall anyone?), The Happy Mondays or Oasis’s Wonderwall?

Unlock Padlock Icon

Unlock this content?

Access this content and more

Tara Brabazon
About the Author
Tara Brabazon is Professor of Media Studies at the University of Brighton in the United Kingdom. She is also the Director of the Popular Culture Collective. Tara has published six books, Tracking the Jack: A retracing of the Antipodes, Ladies who Lunge: Celebrating Difficult Women, Digital Hemlock: Internet Education and the Poisoning of Teaching, Liverpool of the South Seas: Perth and its popular music, From Revolution to Revelation; Generation X, Cultural Studies, Popular Memory and Playing on the Periphery. The University of Google: Education in a (ost) Information Age is released by Ashgate in 2007. Tara is a previous winner of a National Teaching Award for the Humanities and a former finalist for Australian of the Year.