"Manchester has it's own pride and London has it's sort of pride and sometimes we can be a bit mean to each other, but I think if we dig the music we can get on really well"
About this Quote
Coxon slips a whole map of British identity into a sentence that sounds like a shrug. “Manchester has its own pride and London has its sort of pride” is doing double duty: it names a real regional rivalry, but it also gently punctures it. Manchester pride reads as earned and collective, forged in scenes and struggle; London’s is “sort of” pride, a sideways jab at a capital that can feel entitled, trend-hungry, and self-mythologizing. The wording isn’t neutral. It’s affectionate, but it’s also a musician’s eye-roll at how quickly culture gets turned into postcode competition.
The line about being “a bit mean to each other” understates the stakes in a very English way. Understatement functions here like a safety catch: he acknowledges the sniping without inflaming it, framing hostility as petty habit rather than destiny. That matters coming from Coxon, a Blur guitarist whose band was central to Britpop’s 90s “Battle of Britpop” narrative - London vs. the North, Blur vs. Oasis - a media storyline that sold records by simplifying class, geography, and taste into a football chant.
Then he pivots: “if we dig the music we can get on really well.” Not kumbaya, but a practical truce. Music becomes a shared language that sidesteps status games, offering belonging without demanding sameness. The subtext is a quiet rebuke to the press and the fans who treat scenes like factions: the point isn’t where you’re from, it’s what you’re tuned into. In a country obsessed with accent and origin, Coxon’s most radical move is making taste - not tribe - the meeting place.
The line about being “a bit mean to each other” understates the stakes in a very English way. Understatement functions here like a safety catch: he acknowledges the sniping without inflaming it, framing hostility as petty habit rather than destiny. That matters coming from Coxon, a Blur guitarist whose band was central to Britpop’s 90s “Battle of Britpop” narrative - London vs. the North, Blur vs. Oasis - a media storyline that sold records by simplifying class, geography, and taste into a football chant.
Then he pivots: “if we dig the music we can get on really well.” Not kumbaya, but a practical truce. Music becomes a shared language that sidesteps status games, offering belonging without demanding sameness. The subtext is a quiet rebuke to the press and the fans who treat scenes like factions: the point isn’t where you’re from, it’s what you’re tuned into. In a country obsessed with accent and origin, Coxon’s most radical move is making taste - not tribe - the meeting place.
Quote Details
| Topic | Music |
|---|
More Quotes by Graham
Add to List

