Blur's 10 best B-Sides

19 May 2023, 12:00 | Updated: 14 May 2024, 16:27

Blur in their 90s heyday: Alex James, Dave Rowntree, Graham Coxon and Damon Albarn. Picture: Alamy Stock Photo

Following the news that the Britpop legends have a new documentary set for release in July, let's dig into their extensive back catalogue...

By Radio X

Blur have shared the details of a new documentary film.

To The End - named after their 1994 single - follows Damon Albarn and co on their most recent reunion and the making of their 2023 album The Ballad of Darren- their first studio release in eight years.

The feature-length documentary will be shown in cinemas across the UK and Ireland from 19th July.

With nine studio albums under their belt - which also includes Leisure (1991), Modern Life Is Rubbish (1993), Parklife (1994), The Great Escape (1995), Blur (1996), 13 (1999), Think Tank (2003), The Magic Whip (2015) - Blur have an extensive back catalogue - including an amazing set of b-sides.

Radio X takes a look at some of the best...

  1. Blur - Bustin' + Dronin'

    Appearing alongside Song 2 in April 1997, Bustin' + Dronin' takes Blur right back to their shoegaze roots of the early 90s.

  2. Blur - All We Want

    Appearing on the second CD of the confessional Tender, this is a shock to the system after the gospel-tinged A-side. Distorted guitars and squealing synths are to the fore, with a typically arch Damon Albarn vocal.

  3. Blur - All Your Life

    If you turned over your 7" single of Beetlebum in 1999, you'd discover this Bowie-esque beauty, which Damon Albarn still plays at solo shows.

  4. Blur - Bone Bag

    Blur's turn towards what would become known as "Britpop" in 1993 really starts with the single For Tomorrow. Bone Bag appears on the CD single and is an appealing mix of pounding piano, Indian percussion and psychedelic vocals.

  5. Blur - Theme From An Imaginary Film

    Blur's Parklife era toyed with many different styles and this B-side to the title track shows where their heads were at in 1994. It's a fairground-styled waltz with a sense of humour ("Well push me over, me on my back and you on your arse"), but just a hint of darkness lurking underneath.

  6. Blur - Tame

    Another of the Stereotypes B-sides, Tame is another cryptic Albarn lyric backed by crunchy Coxon guitars and the odd synth squelch.

  7. Blur - Young And Lovely

    Appearing on the 12" of Chemical World, this finely-crafted song has the same obsession with 60s psychedelia and, in particular, the work of Pink Floyd's founding member Syd Barrett. A great example of a B-side perfectly complementing its "A".

  8. Blur - The Man Who Left Himself

    A woozy acoustic number from the Stereoptypes single in February 1996.

  9. Blur - I Know

    OK, we're cheating a bit here as this was officially a "double A-side" with She's So High, when it was released in October 1990. But I Know didn't get its own video and wasn't included on the Blur "Best Of", so here we are. This has one of Alex James' greatest basslines, a loping drum beat from Dave Rowntree and an organ loop that makes the track sound a little like early Charlatans.

  10. Blur - Black Book

    A murky, downbeat slice of melancholia, which is given an uplifting air by the beautiful voices of the London Community Gospel Choir. This track was premiered at Blur's Meltdown show in July 2000 and wound up on the flip of the standalone single Music Is My Radar.