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Title Details Peak chart positions Certifications (sales thresholds)UK [1] [2]The Sky Is Too High: Released: 10 August 1998; Label: Transcopic Format(s): CD, LP, download; 31 The Golden D
Graham Leslie Coxon (born 12 March 1969) is an English guitarist, singer and songwriter who came to prominence as a founding member of the rock band Blur.As the group's lead guitarist and secondary vocalist, Coxon is featured on all of Blur's studio discography (although 2003's Think Tank only features his playing on one album track, plus two B-side tracks, due to his temporary departure from ...
The Sky Is Too High is the debut solo album by Blur guitarist Graham Coxon. [1] Released in 1998, he wrote, recorded and produced all the music himself. Most of the album consists of lo-fi acoustic songs with some overdubbed electric guitar and percussion, similar in style to the Blur songs "Miss America" (from Modern Life is Rubbish) and "You're So Great" (from Blur, one of the few Blur songs ...
Graham Coxon’s new entry in the genre, ... Alex James and David Rowntree became — for a Roman-candle moment in the mid-'90s — the leaders of the subgenre known as Britpop, the biggest rock ...
Coxon (left) and Albarn (right) on stage at the Newcastle Academy in June 2009. In December 2008, Blur announced they would reunite for a concert at London's Hyde Park on 3 July 2009. [89] Days later, the band added a second date, for 2 July. [90] A series of June preview shows were also announced, ending at Manchester Evening News arena on the ...
Formed in London in 1988, the group consists of singer/keyboardist Damon Albarn, guitarist/singer Graham Coxon, bassist Alex James and drummer Dave Rowntree. Three years later, their debut release, the Madchester and shoegazing -tinged Leisure (1991), peaked at number seven on the UK Albums Chart .
Happiness in Magazines is the fifth solo album by Graham Coxon. It was produced by Stephen Street who also produced Blur's first five albums and is Coxon's most commercially successful album to date. Happiness in Magazines reached 19 in the UK Albums chart and was certified Gold.
The album's lyric sheets also feature the songs' chord progressions, hand-written by guitar player Graham Coxon. [18] While Albarn explained that it was an attempt to "[let] people to know that, old-fashioned as it might seem, we write songs", [ 25 ] Total Guitar magazine attributed the inclusion of the chords to Coxon's "keen[ness] to ...