What is Britpop?
Britpop is British guitar-driven alternative rock from the 1990s that blended hook-heavy songwriting with tabloid-sized ambition, pitting regional scenes against one another while borrowing melody from The Beatles and attitude from punk. Stations dedicated to Britpop keep that lineage audible—jangle, sarcasm, and singalongs intact.
The Britpop era: 1992–1998
Suede ignited theatrical glam-punk sparks while Blur packaged art-school irony into punchy singles. Oasis answered with thunderous confidence imported from Manchester warehouses, and Pulp translated kitchen-sink drama into disco-punk sermons.
By 1997 the movement dominated UK media even as exhaustion set in. What survived was a songbook so durable that “retro” never quite applied—the riffs still read as modern arrogance.
What you'll hear on New Clear Radio's Britpop stream
Core rotation includes: Oasis, Blur, Pulp, Suede, Elastica, Supergrass, Sleeper, Echobelly, Cast, The Verve, plus producers’ favorites and live session cuts when mastering quality allows.
Why Britpop still sounds fresh
The lyrics were specific—tube stops, terrace chants, crumbs on Formica—yet emotionally roomy enough for global audiences. Pair that with deliberate 320kbps presentation and the snare drums regain the air they lost on compressed FM.
How to tune in
Open the New Clear Radio web player, select your preferred bitrate, and bookmark the stream for instant Union Jack adrenaline. For car and couch listening, grab the iOS or Android app and cast to anything that respects high-quality Bluetooth codecs.