If Blur’s second album, Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), and its attendant singles, For Tomorrow, Chemical World and Sunday Sunday, had established the group as a vital voice in British pop in the early 90s, they were still looking to prove themselves at hitmakers. But with the release of a brand-new song they’d debuted on tour, Girls & Boys, all that would change – immediately. Launching the group’s career-making Parklife album, Girls & Boys would ride a wave of support to become the summer anthem that brought Britpop to the masses.
Yet while holidaymakers could see themselves reflected in Damon Albarn’s loutish lyrics, the singer kept things distanced enough to convince the outsider indie crowd it could be their song, too. Chart subversion rarely sounded so poppy nor so irresistible – as the story of Girls & Boys reveals…
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The writing: “There’s no morality involved, I’m not saying it should or shouldn’t happen”
With Modern Life Is Rubbish, as he would with much of Parklife, Albarn took a critical look at British society, noting its foibles, its warped sense of tradition; the things that had both made and unmade the culture he’d grown up with. The inspiration for Girls & Boys, however, came while Albarn was overseas, on holiday in Magaluf, on the Spanish island of Majorca – although his countrymen would again provide fodder for his lyrics, as Albarn came into contact with the Club 18-30 package holidays of the era, witnessing the antics that took place when a certain type of reveller was let loose in foreign climes.
“I just love the whole idea of it, to be honest. I love herds,” Albarn said of the gangs of holidaymakers he observed trying their luck in Magaluf. “All these blokes and all these girls meeting at the watering hole and then just copulating. There’s no morality involved, I’m not saying it should or shouldn’t happen.”
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Imagining he was “following the herd/Down to Greece” on a getaway of his own, Albarn captured the hedonistic messiness of it all in a simple chorus refrain that would soon be heard booming around his homeland like all good terrace chants: “Girls who are boys who like boys to be girls/Who do boys like they’re girls, who do girls like they’re boys/Always should be someone you really love.”
Speaking to NME 20 years later, guitarist Graham Coxon noted, “We’d never been on Club 18-30 holidays or any of those things. We’re writing about characters that you see and you make up stories about them; there’s not a lot of first-hand experiences.” Yet Albarn had tapped into something that would resonate with listeners, whatever their lifestyle.