Damon Albarn (/ˈɔːlbɑːrn/,AWL-barn;[2] born 23 March 1968) is an English musician, singer, songwriter, and record producer. He is the frontman and main lyricist of the rock bandBlur and the co-creator and primary musical contributor of thevirtual bandGorillaz.
Damon's paternal grandfather Edward, an architect,[15][16] had been a conscientious objector during theSecond World War and was involved in a farming community inLincolnshire, becoming a peace activist. In 2002 Edward Albarn died; Damon stated in an interview that Edward did not want to live any longer and decided to go on ahunger strike.[16][17] In 1968, at the age of six months, Albarn was a "testing expert" for designs for educational aids and toys for children including fibreglass furniture and play-structures fancifully called "The Kissmequiosk". "The Apollo Cumfycraft" and "The Tailendcharlie" produced by his father's company "Keith Albarn & Partners Ltd" under the trade-name of "Playlearn, Ltd."[18]
Commemorative plaque at 21 Fillebrook RoadLeytonstone, East London, where Albarn was brought up
When Damon and Jessica were growing up, their family moved toLeytonstone, East London.[12] The household was described as "bohemian"[19] and their upbringing as "liberal".[13] Damon and Jessica were also raised in theQuaker religion. Albarn agreed with his parents' views, later claiming, "I always thought my parents were absolutely dead right. I went against the grain in a weird way – by continually following them."[13] His parents primarily listened toblues, Indianragas andAfrican music.[12] When Albarn was nine years old, his family took a holiday trip toTurkey for three months before settling inAldham Fordstreet, Essex, an area described by Albarn as "one of those burgeoningThatcher experiments where they were building loads of small estates".[20] The population of the area was predominantlywhite as opposed to the ethnically mixed part of London which he had become used to. He described himself as "not really fitting in with the politics of the place."[20]
Albarn was interested in music from an early age, attending anOsmonds concert at the age of six.[21] He started playing guitar, piano and violin in his youth and was interested in composing music, one of his compositions winning a heat in the nationwide Young Composer of the Year competition.[12][21] Damon and Jessica both attended a primary school nearby which, according to Damon, wasburnt down seven times over a period of 18 months by one of the teachers. After both siblings failed theirEleven-Plus exams, they started attendingStanway Comprehensive School, where Damon described himself as being "really unpopular" and "[irritating to] a lot of people".[20] However, he developed an interest in drama and started acting in various school productions.[12][20] It was at Stanway where he would meet future Blur guitaristGraham Coxon, who recalls seeing him act and feeling that he was a "confident performer" as well as a "show off".[20] Albarn's first words directed at Coxon were "Yourbrogues are crap, mate. Look, mine are the proper sort"[12] as he was showing off his leather shoes, fashionable footwear at the time influenced by theMod Revival.[20] Nevertheless, the pair went on to become good friends, owing to their shared passion for music, particularly bands such asthe Jam,the Beatles,the Human League,XTC andMadness.[12] Albarn has also creditedthe Specials andFun Boy Three as some of his earliest influences,[22] andJohn Lennon in his taking up songwriting.[23]
He studied acting at theEast 15 Acting School inDebden, but left after the first year. On leaving drama school he entered a production and management contract with Marijke Bergkamp and Graeme Holdaway, owners of the Beat Factory recording studio, where the members of Blur, then known as Seymour, did their first recordings. His first band was thesynthpop group, Two's a Crowd.[19] Before Blur, he played with the Aftermath and Real Lives.[13]
Albarn (right) andGraham Coxon (left) performing withBlur at Newcastle Academy in June 2009
Albarn enrolled on a part-time music course at London'sGoldsmiths College in 1988, claiming that his sole intention was to gain access to the student union bar.[24] Albarn was in a group named Circus alongside Coxon and drummerDave Rowntree.[25][26]Alex James, a fellow student at Goldsmiths, eventually joined as the group's bassist. They changed their name to Seymour in December 1988, inspired byJ.D. Salinger'sSeymour: An Introduction.[26][27] In March 1990, after changing their name to Blur, they signed toFood Records.[28]
In October 1990, Blur released their first single, "She's So High", which reached number 48 in theUK Singles Chart.[29] The band had trouble creating a follow-up single, but made progress when paired with producerStephen Street. The resulting single, "There's No Other Way", became a hit, peaking at number eight.[30] As a result of the single's success, Blur became pop stars and were accepted into a clique of bands who frequented the Syndrome club in London dubbed the "Scene That Celebrates Itself".[31] The recording of the group's debut album was hindered by Albarn having to write his lyrics in the studio. Although the resulting albumLeisure (1991) peaked at number seven on theUK Albums Chart, it received mixed reviews,[29] and according to journalistJohn Harris, "could not shake off the odour of anti-climax".[32] Albarn has since referred toLeisure as "awful".[33]
After discovering they were £60,000 in debt, Blur toured the US in 1992 in an attempt to recoup their losses.[34] Albarn and the band became increasingly unhappy and homesick during the two-month American tour and began writing songs which "created an English atmosphere".[35] Blur had undergone an ideological and image shift intended to celebrate their English heritage in contrast to the popularity of Americangrunge bands likeNirvana.[36] Although sceptical of Albarn's new manifesto, Balfe gave his assent for the band's choice ofAndy Partridge of the bandXTC to produce their follow-up toLeisure. The sessions with Partridge proved unsatisfactory, but a chance reunion with Stephen Street resulted in him returning to produce the group.[37]
The second Blur album,Modern Life Is Rubbish, was released in May 1993 and peaked at number 15 on the British charts,[38] but failed to break into the USBillboard 200, selling only 19,000 copies.[39][40] Despite the album's poor performance, Albarn was happy with the band's direction and wrote prolifically for Blur's next album.Parklife was released in 1994 and revived Blur's commercial fortunes, with the album's first single, the disco-influenced "Girls & Boys", achieving critical acclaim and chart success.Parklife entered the British charts at number one and stayed in the album charts for 90 weeks.[41] Enthusiastically greeted by the music press,Parklife is regarded as one of Britpop's defining records.[42][43] Blur won four awards at the1995 Brit Awards, includingBest British Group andBritish Album of the Year forParklife.[44] Coxon later pointed toParklife as the moment when "[Blur] went from being regarded as an alternative, leftfield arty band to this amazing new pop sensation".[45] Albarn was uncomfortable with fame, however, and he suffered frompanic attacks.[20]
Blur began working on their fourth albumThe Great Escape at the start of 1995.[46] Building upon the band's previous two albums, Albarn's lyrics for the album consisted of several third-person narratives. James reflected, "It was all more elaborate, more orchestral, more theatrical, and the lyrics were even more twisted ... It was all dysfunctional, misfit characters fucking up."[47] The release of the album's lead single "Country House" played a part in Blur's public rivalry with Manchester bandOasis termed the "Battle of Britpop". Partly due to increasing antagonism between the groups, Blur and Oasis decided to release their new singles on the same day, an event theNME called the "British Heavyweight Championship". The debate over which band would top the British singles chart became a media phenomenon, and Albarn appeared onNews at Ten.[48] At the end of the week, "Country House" outsold Oasis' "Roll With It" by 274,000 copies to 216,000, becoming Blur's first number-one single.[49]
The Great Escape was released in September 1995 to positive reviews, and entered the UK charts at number one. However, opinion quickly changed and Blur found themselves largely out of favour with the media.BBC Music writer James McMahon recalled how the "critical euphoria" surrounding the album lasted "about as long as it took publishers to realise Oasis would probably shift more magazines for them".[50] Following the worldwide success of Oasis'(What's the Story) Morning Glory?, the media quipped that Blur "wound up winning the battle but losing the war."[51] Blur became perceived as an "inauthentic middle-class pop band" in comparison to "working-class heroes" Oasis, which Albarn said made him feel "stupid and confused".[48] Bassist James said: "After being the People's Hero, Damon was the People's Prick for a short period ... basically, he was a loser – very publicly."[52] In theNew Statesman,Stuart Maconie noted "Albarn... was mocked as the posh boy of Britpop when in fact he’d gone to a comprehensive in Essex and his family was just mildly bohemian. Nowadays he’d be decidedly 'below stairs'".[53]
An early 1996Q interview reported that relations between Blur members had become strained; journalist Adrian Deevoy wrote that he found them "on the verge of a nervous breakup."[52] Coxon, in particular, began to resent his bandmates[52] and, in a rejection of the group's Britpop aesthetic, made a point of listening to noisy American alternative rock bands such asPavement.[54] Albarn grew to appreciate Coxon's tastes in lo-fi and underground music, and recognised the need to change Blur's musical direction once again. "I can sit at my piano and write brilliant observational pop songs all day long but you've got to move on," he said,[52] and decided to give Coxon more creative control over their new album. Albarn visited Iceland during this period: "I used to have a recurring dream, as a child, of a black sand beach. And one hazy, lazy day [laughs], I was watching the TV and I saw a programme about Iceland, and they had black beaches. So I got on a plane ... I was on my own. I didn't know anybody. I went into the street,Laugavegur, where the bars are, and that was it."[55]
After initial sessions in London, the band left to record the rest of the album in Iceland, away from the Britpop scene.[52] The result wasBlur, the band's fifth studio album, released in February 1997. Although the music press predicted that the lo-fi sonic experimentation would alienate Blur's teenage girl fanbase, they generally applauded the effort. Pointing out lyrics such as "Look inside America / She's alright", and noting Albarn's "obligatory nod toBeck, [and promotion of] the new Pavement album as if paid to do so", reviewers felt the band had come to accept American values during this time – an about-face of their attitude during the Britpop years.[56] Despite cries of "commercial suicide," the album and its first single, "Beetlebum", debuted at number one in the UK.[57] Although the album could not match the sales of their previous albums in the UK,Blur became the band's most successful internationally,[57] particularly in the US, helped by the successful single "Song 2". After the success ofBlur, the band embarked on a nine-month world tour.[52]
Blur's sixth studio album13, released in March 1999, saw them drift further from Britpop. Albarn's lyrics – more heartfelt, personal and intimate than on previous occasions – were reflective of his break-up withElastica frontwomanJustine Frischmann, his partner of eight years.[58] Recording for Blur's next album began in London in November 2001. Not long after the sessions began, Coxon left the group.[59] Coxon stated "there were no rows" and "[the band] just recognised the feeling that we needed some time apart".[60]Think Tank, released in May 2003, was filled with atmospheric, broodingelectronic sounds, featuring simpler guitar lines by Albarn, and largely relying on other instruments to replace Coxon. The guitarist's absence also meant thatThink Tank was written mostly by Albarn. Its sound was seen as testament to Albarn's increasing interest inAfrican andMiddle Eastern music and to his control over the group's direction.[61]Think Tank was another UK No. 1 and achieved Blur's highest US position of No. 56.[38][40] The album was also nominated for best album at the 2004Brit Awards.[62]
In December 2008, Blur announced they would reunite for a concert atLondon's Hyde Park on 3 July 2009.[63] Days later, the band added a second date, for 2 July.[64] A series of June preview shows were also announced, ending at Manchester Evening News arena on the 26th. All the shows were well received;The Guardian's music criticAlexis Petridis gave their performance at Goldsmiths College a full five stars, and wrote that "Blur's music seems to have potentiated by the passing of years ... they sound both more frenetic and punky and more nuanced and exploratory than they did at the height of their fame".[65] Blur headlined theGlastonbury Festival on 28 June, where they played for the first time since their headline slot in 1998. Reviews of the Glastonbury performance were enthusiastic;The Guardian called them "the best Glastonbury headliners in an age".[66]
The band released their second greatest-hits albumMidlife: A Beginner's Guide to Blur in June 2009. After the completion of the reunion dates, Albarn toldQ that the band had no intention of recording or touring live again. He said, "I just can't do it anymore", and explained that the main motivation for participating in the reunion was to repair his relationship with Coxon, which succeeded.[67]
In January 2010,No Distance Left to Run, a documentary about the band, was released in cinemas and a month later on DVD and was nominated asBest Long Form Music Video for the53rd Grammy Awards, Blur's first-ever Grammy nomination.[68][69] In April 2010, Blur released their first new recording since 2003, "Fool's Day" in April 2010 as part of theRecord Store Day event as a vinyl record limited to 1000 copies; it was later made available as a free download on their website.[70]
In February 2012, Blur were awarded the Outstanding Contribution to Music award at the2012 Brit Awards.[71] Later that month, Albarn and Coxon premiered a new track together live, "Under the Westway".[72] Blur entered the studio early that year to record material for a new album, but in May producer William Orbit told theNME that Albarn had halted recording.[73] Blur released two singles "The Puritan" and "Under the Westway" on 2 July.[74] That August, Blur headlined a show at Hyde Park for the2012 Summer Olympics closing ceremony which was followed by a world tour the following year.[75] On 19 February 2015, Blur announced on social media that they would be releasing their eighth studio album on 27 April, titledThe Magic Whip, Blur's first album in 12 years and first in 16 years in their original line-up.[76][77]
Albarn andJamie Hewlett met in 1990 when Coxon, a fan of Hewlett's work, asked him to interview Blur.[78] The interview was published inDeadline magazine, home of Hewlett's comic strip,Tank Girl. Hewlett initially thought Albarn was "arsey, a wanker", and despite becoming one of the band's acquaintances, Hewlett often did not get on with its members, especially after he started going out with Coxon's ex-girlfriend, Jane Olliver.[78] Nonetheless, Albarn and Hewlett started sharing a flat onWestbourne Grove in London in 1997.[79] Hewlett had recently broken up with Olliver and Albarn was also at the end of his highly publicised relationship with Frischmann.[78]
The idea to create Gorillaz came about when the two were watchingMTV: "If you watch MTV for too long, it's a bit like hell—there's nothing of substance there. So we got this idea for acartoon band, something that would be a comment on that," Hewlett said.[80] The band's music is a collaboration between various musicians, Albarn being the only permanent musical contributor, and incorporates influences including alternative rock, Britpop,dub,hip-hop, and pop music.[81][82] In 2001, the band'seponymous debut album sold over seven million copies, and featured hits such as the songs "19-2000" and "Clint Eastwood," earning them an entry in theGuinness Book of World Records as the Most Successful Virtual Band.[83]
Albarn on stage with Gorillaz at theBrixton Academy in London, June 2017
The second Gorillaz studio album,Demon Days, was released in 2005 and included the singles "Feel Good Inc.", "Dare", "Dirty Harry", "Kids with Guns" and "El Mañana".Demon Days went five times platinum in the UK,[84]double platinum in the United States[85] and earned fiveGrammy Award nominations for 2006[86] and won one of them in theBest Pop Collaboration with Vocals category.[87] The combined sales ofGorillaz andDemon Days had, by 2007, exceeded 15 million albums.[88] Gorillaz released their third studio album,Plastic Beach, in early 2010, which was received with high praise. In December 2010, the group releasedThe Fall, recorded over 32 days during their North American tour.[89]
In a 2012 interview, Albarn talked about the unlikelihood of any future Gorillaz releases; his relationship with Hewlett had soured when Albarn chose to undercut the role of animation on theirEscape to Plastic Beach World Tour.[90] Albarn later rescinded this claim, stating "When Jamie [Hewlett] and I have worked out our differences, I'm sure we'll make another record."[91] On 23 March 2017, the fifth Gorillaz studio album,Humanz, was announced and released worldwide on 28 April 2017.[92] The sixth Gorillaz album,The Now Now, was announced on 31 May 2018 and released on 29 June 2018.[93] In 2020, Gorillaz began a project calledSong Machine, in which new songs with collaborations would be released as monthly "episodes". The first nine episodes were compiled together along with more songs in Gorillaz's seventh studio album,Song Machine, Season One: Strange Timez, which was released on 23 October 2020 to positive reviews.[94][95][96][97] A second season of Song Machine was planned, though it was later scrapped.[98][99] On 31 August 2022, their eighth studio album,Cracker Island was announced, and was later released on 24 February 2023.[100]
In 2003, Albarn released an EP,Democrazy, a compilation of demos he recorded in various hotel rooms during the United States portion ofThink Tank's tour.[103]
In 2018, Albarn collaborated withKali Uchis, taking co-writing credits and performing on the song "In My Dreams", which appears on Uchis' albumIsolation.[112]
The first single by the line-up, "Herculean", was released in late October 2006, and peaked at No. 22 in theUK Singles Chart. A second single, "Kingdom of Doom", and the band's debut album were then released in January 2007. That single fared slightly better than "Herculean", peaking at No. 20, while the album peaked at No. 2 in theUK Albums Chart and wentgold during its first week of release in the UK.[119] "Green Fields" was released as the third single from the album in April 2007, just missing out on the Top 50. On 27 April 2008, the Good, the Bad & the Queen headlined theLove Music Hate Racism Carnival in Victoria Park where they introduced on stage several guests including ex-Specials keyboard playerJerry Dammers.[120][121] He also worked with Syrian rapper and friendEslam Jawaad on the song "Mr. Whippy", though the song does not appear on the album it is a B-side on theHerculean single.[122]
Rocket Juice & the Moon is the title of Albarn's side-project featuringRed Hot Chili Peppers bassistFlea andafrobeat legendTony Allen. Albarn has stated that he is not responsible for the name; someone inLagos did the sleeve design and that was the name it was given. Albarn has claimed that he is content with the outcome, as trying to come up with band names is difficult for him. The band performed together for the first time on 28 October 2011 inCork, Ireland, as part of the annualCork Jazz Festival. They performed under the moniker Another Honest Jon's Chop Up!. Their debut album was released on 26 March 2012.[123]
Albarn, along with Tom Girling and Jason Cox, established Studio 13, a recording studio for their own use, with the first projects at 13 being pre-production work for Blur's similarly-named album, as well as Albarn's contributions to theRavenous soundtrack.[124] Since then, Studio 13 has been used not only for Albarn's projects, but also by other notable artists, includingPaul Simonon,Jorja Smith, and others.[125]
Collaboration withTerry Hall during 1994–2003: Having cited Hall as one of his early influences very often, Albarn and Hall went on and held a friendship for many years. They collaborated for multiple times includingThe Rainbows EP, in which Albarn co-wrote lead track "Chasing A Rainbow" with Hall. Later in Hall’s second solo albumLaugh released in 1997, the two co-wrote "For The Girl" and "A Room Full Of Nothing". Hall also sang on a non-album track "911" by Gorillaz;[127] they were both lead vocals on "Lil' Dub Chefin'" bySpacemonkeyz vs Gorillaz for both album and single version. In 2003, Hall andMushtaq releasedThe Hour of Two Lights, in which Albarn co-wrote and sang on the track "Ten Eleven". The album was also released on Albarn's labelHonest Jon's Records in the UK.
In 2003, Albarn worked with thegarage rock bandthe Strokes on their albumRoom on Fire. ProducerGordon Raphael claims that Albarn was experimenting with backing vocals on the record. In the end, however, Albarn's contributions did not make the record. "Well, I guess the songs are just perfect the way they are," Albarn stated.[128] In the same year he performed "Fashion" live withDavid Bowie.[129]
Albarn has contributed backing vocals to the songs "FM" onNathan Haines'Squire for Hire and "Small Time Shot Away" on Massive Attack's100th Window, which were released in 2003, however, for both tracks, credit was given to Gorillaz frontman2-D instead. More recently, on Massive Attack's 2010Heligoland album, he sang on the track "Saturday Come Slow" and contributed keyboards to the track "Splitting the Atom".[130]
In 2016, Albarn appeared onDe La Soul's studio albumAnd the Anonymous Nobody... on the song "Here in After". Albarn had previously collaborated with the group on Gorillaz' albumsDemon Days,Plastic Beach, andHumanz on the songs "Feel Good Inc", "Superfast Jellyfish", and "Momentz", respectively.[133][134][135]
In February of 2025, Albarn contributed toIs This What We Want?, a fully silent album made by 1000 UK artists, in protest against copyright laws in the UK regarding artificial intelligence.
"Closet Romantic" appeared on the soundtrack forTrainspotting alongside an early Blur recording, "Sing", which is from their debut album. Albarn composed the score with collaboration byMichael Nyman for the 1999 movieRavenous, and was nominated for aSaturn Award for Best Music for his work.
In collaboration with theatre directorRufus Norris, Albarn has created an opera for the 2011 Manchester International Festival based on the life of Elizabethan scientistJohn Dee and titledDoctor Dee.[137][138]
Albarn recorded the film score for the film version of the bookThe Boy in the Oak, which was written by his sister, Jessica Albarn. The film was set for a spring 2011 release in select theatres.[139]
In 2014, Albarn contributed the song "Sister Rust" to the soundtrack of science fiction filmLucy.[140][141]
Albarn provided a track for the filmThe White Helmets called "Crashing Down", an abandoned track initially planned for the Gorillaz albumPlastic Beach.
Albarn's live band is called the Heavy Seas, and features guitarist Seye, drummerPauli the PSM, guitaristJeff Wootton andMike Smith on keyboards.[145] Both Smith and Wootton had previously been a part of Gorillaz'Escape to Plastic Beach World Tour.[146] With the exception of drummer Pauli, all members have played live with Gorillaz.
Albarn had a long-standing and publicized relationship withElastica frontwomanJustine Frischmann from 1991 to 1998.[29] This relationship profoundly influenced his songwriting, notably on theBlur album (1997) on the track "Beetlebum" – said to be about their experiences with heroin[147] – and a number of tracks on13 (1999), such as "Tender" and "No Distance Left to Run", said to be about their break-up in 1998.
Albarn began a relationship with artistSuzi Winstanley in 1998. Winstanley gave birth to their daughter, Missy, named after rapperMissy Elliott, on 2 October 1999.[148] Albarn described becoming a father as "witnessing a life force"[148] and saying:
It massively changes you. It slowly sort of shaves off the unpleasant thorny bits and hopefully creates a nicely rounded... I don't know, having a kid, you just become far more, inevitably you look to the future far more and, you know, it's desperate sometimes when you have a particularly bad few weeks of the newspaper just reminding you about this is wrong, this is wrong. We've got ten more years everyone.[149]
Albarn and Winstanley are speculated to have separated in 2023, with reviewers noting allusions to a breakup in the lyrics of Blur's ninth studio albumThe Ballad of Darren (2023). Albarn has declined to specify if these lyrics are related to his relationship status with Winstanley.[150] However, in an interview withParis Match, he stated that he had had a difficult breakup within the last few months, without mentioning anyone by name.[151]
In 2006, Albarn was awarded an honorary Master of Arts degree from theUniversity of East London, saying it was "great to receive [the] award from an institution where my dad used to work and which I, as a child, used to think of as that big building with lots of interesting people in".[152]
In 2015, Albarn was made an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the Queen's New Year Honours list of December 31, which recognises British citizens for their achievements in public life and service to the United Kingdom.[153]
In 2016, Albarn, a long-time advocate of themusic ofMali, titling his 2002 albumMali Music, has been given the title "Local King", and has had a school of music and dance named after him south ofBamako.[154]
In 2020, Albarn was granted Icelandic citizenship. He visited the country in the mid-90s for recording, as well as on holiday, and subsequently bought a house inReykjavík.[155]
Albarn has been an active supporter of various charities and philanthropic efforts throughout his career as a musician and has been involved in various charity albums and singles. DRC Music, a collective formed by Albarn, released their debut albumKinshasa One Two as a charity album in which all of the money earned is given toOxfam.[157] Albarn has also formed a collective withRed Hot Chili Peppers bassistFlea,Yeah Yeah Yeahs guitaristNick Zinner, andFranz Ferdinand frontmanAlex Kapranos to make a charity single with the money earned from that single also donated to Oxfam.[158] In 2013 Albarn, alongside fellow Blur bandmate Graham Coxon, performed live with former rivalNoel Gallagher of Oasis andPaul Weller ofthe Jam to play Blur's 1999 single "Tender" in support ofTeenage Cancer Trust.[159][160][161]
In 2005, Albarn, among others, criticised the LondonLive 8 concert for not featuring enough black artists; among the few included wereMs. Dynamite,Snoop Dogg, andYoussou N'Dour. Eventually the organisers added a separate concert at theEden Project in Cornwall to the programme to showcase African musicians. Albarn said he did not want to perform at Live 8 because he thought it was too "exclusive" and may have been motivated by self-promotion.[130]
Albarn has been a vocal critic ofcelebrity culture, saying: "We need to dismantle very significant parts of our culture and really re-examine them. I suppose you start with the celebrity thing... you have to get rid of things likeThe X Factor immediately."[162]
Albarn was a vocal critic of the United Kingdom'swithdrawal from theEuropean Union, describing it as "wrong" and saying that "it doesn't make any sense to me whatsoever."[163] Albarn was a signatory on a 2018 editorial advocating for a "Citizen's Assembly" to resolve theparliamentary deadlock over withdrawal terms.[164] Albarn stated that the Good, the Bad & the Queen albumMerrie Land (2018) was inspired by Brexit and his reaction to it.[165]
Albarn isanti-war, holding views shared by others in his family, including his grandfather Edward Albarn, who died during ahunger strike in 2002.[17][168] In November 2001, shortly after theUnited States invasion of Afghanistan in response toSeptember 11 attacks, theMTV Europe Music Awards were held inFrankfurt, where Gorillaz won awards for Best Song and Best Dance.[169] As Albarn and Jamie Hewlett walked onto stage to make a speech after receiving the latter award, Albarn wore a T-shirt with theCampaign for Nuclear Disarmament logo on it. In his speech, he said "So, fuck the music. Listen. See this symbol here, [pointing to the T-shirt] this the symbol for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Bombing one of the poorest countries in the world is wrong. You've got a voice and you have got to do what you can about it alright?"[170][171][172]
"Each individual has their own opinions about whether war is an answer to any problems. Personally I think it's a waste of time, but I think more importantly, that it's an issue that we haven't had any say in. That's why I feel so strongly about it. I don't feel like we've really been given any choice in this matter. I think if you had a referendum tomorrow,Tony Blair would have no choice but to call off the war."
—Albarn on Britain's involvement with the Iraq invasion[173]
Albarn revealed that originally, many people whom he knew were against theIraq War were reluctant to take a stand, stating "to be honest with you whenRobert Del Naja and myself started really stepping up prior to the war it was very difficult to find anyone. And I don't want to name any names because they are people who I respect but they were really, for some reason, very reticent to stand with us. A lot of people who you would now associate with being anti-war at that particular point didn't seem to be prepared to do it."[149]
He was due to speak inHyde Park on the rally in February 2003 when a million people took to the streets of London in protest at the imminent war. In the event, he was too emotional to deliver his speech.[177] Albarn later revealed that he had "this image of my grandad in his slippers reading the paper, knowing that his grandson had been involved in something which he'd put so much of his life into" and "got over-emotional". He also stated that "it obviously wasn't the best moment to get in that state, when you're at the head of the biggest peace march in the history of this country."[17] Albarn also attended a protest in November where he commented on the diversity of people in attendance, saying that "It represents everybody. It's the voice in our democracy and that's why we should be listened to."[178] Speaking about the experience in 2008, Albarn stated:
I think in this case the only reason we went to war was the result of our individual apathy in the end. You know, our inability to really express what was I think was a consensus that this was a terrifying idea and a very badly thought-out one.[149]
TheMercury Prize is a highly prestigious annual music prize awarded for the best album from the United Kingdom and Ireland. Nominations are chosen by a panel of musicians, music executives, journalists and other figures in the music industry in the UK and Ireland.[180]
^"Colchester School of Art".Colchester Institute.Archived from the original on 19 January 2021. Retrieved30 December 2020.At Colchester School of Art we are proud to have a history dating from 1885, the year the original Art School was founded.
^Andrew Smith (10 March 2002)."Interview: Justine Frischmann: Elastica limits".The Observer.Archived from the original on 30 January 2017. Retrieved14 December 2016.Then, in early 1997, Blur had a hit with a single called 'Beetlebum', which, after being pressed in these very pages, Albarn reluctantly admitted to be about heroin.