Pulp are somewhat of an anomaly in modern pop
music - it took them a very long time, over 15 years, to really break
through and become successful as a band. Having gone through many lineup
changes since starting as a university project from frontman Jarvis
Cocker in 1978, it was only in the early to mid-1990s that the band
finally hit huge commercial success as part of the vanguard of the
Britpop movement.
Initially the band
started as a project from a 15-year-old Cocker and his friend Peter
Dalton, and the name Pulp (taken from a Michael Caine film of the same
name) was originally shot down for being too short. At first the band
were known as Arabicus - a deliberate misspelling of the Arabicas coffee
beans, which Cocker found listed in the Financial Times commodity
index. Eventually the name evolved to Arabicus Pulp, then simply Pulp as
the name initially dismissed as being too short eventually stuck.
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