Spike Island
by Pulp

Album: More (2025)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • In May 1990, The Stone Roses held a concert at Spike Island, a disused chemical plant in Widnes, Cheshire. 28,000 fans assembled to watch a band that had become the spiritual center of youth culture.

    The event has since passed into music mythology, and 35 years later, Jarvis Cocker wrote a song about it. Not because he was there (he wasn't) but because the concert's cultural fallout coated many British musicians in the following decades.
  • "Spike Island" was a group effort written by Cocker and his Pulp bandmates Candida Doyle, Mark Webber and Nick Banks, along with touring musicians Andrew McKinney, Emma Smith, and Adam Betts, and Sheffield compatriot Jason Buckle - formerly of All Seeing I - whose own hazy recollection of the concert mostly involved a DJ endlessly bellowing "Spike Island, come alive!" between every track.
  • This is the second Pulp track that references the Spike Island show. Their 1995 single "Sorted for E's and Wizz," which was shared as part of their 1995 album Different Class, chronicled a post-rave comedown in all its baggy-eyed glory. That tune was inspired by a girl Cocker met in Sheffield's Leadmill club who'd been to the Spike Island show and could only remember people going round saying, 'Is everyone sorted for E's and whizz?'"

    That phrase stuck in Cocker's mind, and decades later he musically revisited the Spike Island show.
  • The music video was directed by Jarvis Cocker. He fed iconic photographs from Pulp's Different Class CD booklet into an AI app, prompting the software to animate and transform these still images in surreal, often uncanny ways.
  • Pulp debuted the song live in Chicago at the Aragon Ballroom on September 8, 2024. The single was released on April 10, 2025, as the lead-off for their eighth studio album, More.
  • More was laid down at Orbb Studio in Walthamstow E17 and produced by James Ford (Arctic Monkeys, Blur). It was recorded over three weeks starting on November 18, 2024, the shortest amount of time any Pulp album has taken to record.
  • More is Pulp's first album in 24 years, following We Love Life in 2001. It's their first album since Freaks (1987) without bassist Steve Mackey, who passed away in 2023. The record is dedicated to his memory.
  • It took nearly five decades for Pulp to place on a US radio airplay chart, but "Spike Island" earned them a listing when it debuted at #38 on the Billboard Adult Alternative Airplay chart for the week of May 10, 2025.
  • More debuted at #1 on the UK Albums chart. It was Pulp's first chart-topper since 1998's This Is Hardcore.
  • There is an online theory that's the blue man in the "Spike Island" video references the 1998 hit "Blue (Da Ba Dee)" by Eiffel 65.

    "I went on quite a few anti- Brexit marches, and I got asked to do something," Jarvis Cocker told Mojo magazine. "For some reason, I thought it would be a good idea to paint myself blue and sing that song 'Blue' by Eiffel 65."

    He added that manager Jeanette Lee tried to talk him out of it.

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