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{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}
{{Infobox song
{{Infobox song
| Name = This is a Low
| Name = This Is a Low
| Type = Song
| Type = Song
| Artist = [[Blur (band)|Blur]]
| Artist = [[Blur (band)|Blur]]
| alt Artist =
| Album = [[Parklife]]
| Album = [[Parklife]]
| Published =
| Published =
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| Label = [[Food Records]]
| Label = [[Food Records]]
| Producer = [[Stephen Street]]
| Producer = [[Stephen Street]]
| Chart position =
| Tracks = {{Parklife tracks}}
| Tracks = {{Parklife tracks}}

| prev =
| prev_no =
| next =
| next_no =
| Misc = {{Extra tracklisting
| Misc = {{Extra tracklisting
| Album = [[Blur: The Best Of]]
| Album = [[Blur: The Best Of]]
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| next_track = "[[For Tomorrow]]"
| next_track = "[[For Tomorrow]]"
| next_no = 17
| next_no = 17
}}<br>{{Extra music sample|filename=Blur - This Is a Low.ogg |title="This is a Low" |Type=Song|format=[[Ogg]]}}
}}
}}
{{Extra music sample|filename=Blur - This Is a Low.ogg |title="This is a Low" |Type=Song|format=[[Ogg]]}}

}}
"'''This is a Low'''" is a song by English [[alternative rock]] band [[Blur (band)|Blur]] for their third studio album, ''[[Parklife]]''. The song was released as a promotional single in 1995.
"'''This Is a Low'''" is a song by English [[alternative rock]] band [[Blur (band)|Blur]] for their third studio album, ''[[Parklife]]''. The song was released as a promotional single in 1995.


== Background and Recording ==
== Background and Recording ==

Revision as of 22:29, 29 July 2013

"This Is a Low"
Song

"This Is a Low" is a song by English alternative rock band Blur for their third studio album, Parklife. The song was released as a promotional single in 1995.

Background and Recording

Originally titled “we are the low”, the song began life as an instrumental during the Parklife sessions. In the guitar solo, Graham Coxon played three solos, including one of him sat in front of his amp, turned up to maximum volume.[1] According to bassist Alex James, Damon Albarn was finding it hard to write lyrics. In his autobiography, A Bit Of Blur, he revealed that "for Christmas I bought him a handkerchief with a map of the shipping forecast regions on it... you can never tell where the muse is going to appear."[2] “We always found the shipping forecast soothing,” James explained. “We used to listen to it [on the american tour] to remind us of home. It’s very good for a hangover. Good cure for insomnia, too.”[1] On 4 February 1994, the penultimate day of official recording, Albarn was due to go into hospital for a hernia operation. Pressured to come up with the lyrics, Albarn took advantage of the map James had given him. “I’d had this line – ‘And into the sea go pretty England and me’ – for a long time", Albarn revealed. "So I started at the Bay of Biscay. Back for tea. ‘Tea’ rhymes with ‘me’. And then I went ‘Hit traffic on the Dogger Bank’. ‘Bank’ – ‘rank’ – so ‘up the Thames to find a taxi rank’. And I just went round.”[1]

Music and lyrics

The song is in the key of E major [3] and is in 4/4 time. In total, the song contains two verses, two choruses, a guitar solo and two further choruses. The music commences with a four-chord guitar progression, before moving straight into the first verse. The music is based in the mixolydian mode, highlighted by the fact the V chord (B minor) is minor instead of major.

The song's lyrics reference a low-pressure area of weather hitting Britain. The lyrics are based on the Shipping Forecast, with references made to the various areas surrounding the country.[1] In the lyric "sail on by with the tide", passing reference is also made to the tune Sailing By, which ends each day's broadcast of BBC Radio 4. Music writer John Harris described the lyrics as "a fantasia centred around the shipping forecast - [an] inexplicably calming institution that soundtracks the switching-off of the UK's night-lights - narrarated as if the writer was gazing at the whole of the british isles."[4]

Locations named in the song

This is a list of the shipping areas mentioned in the song (in context):

  • Biscay - "Around the Bay of Biscay and back for tea"
  • Dogger, Thames - "Hit traffic on the Dogger Bank / Up the Thames to find a taxi rank"
  • Tyne, Forth, Cromarty, Forties - "Up the Tyne, Forth and Cromarty / There's a low in the High Forties"
  • Malin - "And on the Malin Head, Blackpool looks blue and red"

The song also mentions one of the most westerly point on British mainland, Land's End: "the Queen, she's gone round the bend, jumped off Land's End", as well as Blackpool (and its famous lights) and The Thames.

Reception

"This is a Low" is often chosen as a stand-out track from the album, including as a selected highlight by Allmusic, who describe the track as a "swirling, epic closer".[5] John Harris described the song as Parklife's "key masterstroke" and "close to perfection". Harris also compared the quality with "any of Blur's illustrious forebears" including The Beatles."[4]

It is also very popular within the band, this is proved by the surprise inclusion on Blur's Best Of compilation album. "This is a Low" was the only album track included on the album, selected ahead of some a-sides. The tracklisting was selected by the band members. It was also later included on the band's 2009 Midlife: A Beginner's Guide to Blur compilation.

The song has been performed live many times, most notably as the final song at Blur's most famous concert, Mile End stadium gig of 1995,[6] as well as Glastonbury 1994, where the song was voted by fans on the festival's website to appear on the compilation DVD Glastonbury Anthems. It was performed by Damon Albarn and Graham Coxon as their first reunited performance as Blur at the 2009 NME Awards.[3] Also Blur performed this song in the 2012's Brit Awards as an encore.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Cavanagh, David (July & August 1995). "How did they do that?". Select. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Alex James (2007). Bit of a Blur. pp. 110–111.
  3. ^ Parklife album booklet, page 16
  4. ^ a b Harris, John (2004). Britpop! Cool Britannia and the Spectacular Demise of English Rock. Da Cap Press. ISBN 0-306-81367-X. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help); Unknown parameter |authorsarticle= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Parklife- Allmusic [1] Last accessed: July 21, 2008
  6. ^ Allmusic- A Knees Up at Mile End [2] Last accessed: 16 July 2008