HomeMusicPulp frontman Jarvis Cocker shares 'mind-blowing' meaning behind Disco 2000 title

Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker shares ‘mind-blowing’ meaning behind Disco 2000 title

The “mind-blowing” meaning behind the classic track Disco 2000 has been shared by Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker.

The song is one of Pulp’s best-known releases and sits alongside Common People, Sorted for E’s & Wizz, and Something Changed on their monumental Different Class. Though many are still trying to figure out the mystery figure mentioned in the anthemic Common People, the origins of Disco 2000 proved to be as interesting. Cocker shared all in an interview with Daniel Rachel, which featured in their book, The Art of Noise. The Pulp frontman confirmed it was the “futuristic,” far-off feel of the year 2000 which inspired the song and that the song itself is based on a true story.

The Deborah mentioned in the hit song was Deborah Bone, the mental health nurse who was honoured in the 2015 New Year’s Honours. She died on December 30, 2014, the day her MBE was announced.

Cocker said of the song: “The phrase Disco 2000 I liked. We’d done a party when I was at art college and I’d done some slides on very early computer technology that said Disco 2000 on them. That idea when I was a kid, the year 2000 seemed the most futuristic thing ever. The year 2000 was looming and it had seemed mind-blowing to me as a kid that I’d be alive in the year 2000 and we would be in space and I’d be there and wasn’t that incredible.

“It was very naive to think that now. It was 1995 and the millennium was only five years away and I thought, ‘This is a very upfront song: what subject could go with that?’ It seemed to me that a lot of people of my generation had that feeling and maybe you would have that thing of saying when you left school, ‘We’ll never forget each other and we’ll all meet up in the year 2000.’

“I guess a lot of people made pacts and it never happened. In the case of the fountain that I wrote about in that song, Sheffield Council didn’t help by actually removing it in 1998. So it physically couldn’t happen even if people had remembered to do it.

“Then it was memories of a true story of a girl who was born at the same time as me, and my mum was in the same maternity ward as hers, and we ended up going to the same school.”

The legendary frontman has since discussed the origins of the song’s message, saying he “fancied” Deborah “for ages”. He said: “There was a girl called Deborah—she was born in the same hospital as me. Not within an hour—I think it was like three hours—but you can’t fit three hours into the song without having to really rush the singing!

“But basically you know the whole thing was the same—I fancied her for ages and then she started to become a woman and her breasts began to sprout so then all the boys fancied her then. I didn’t stand a ‘cat-in-hell’s chance’. But then I did use to sometimes hang around outside her house and stuff like that.”

Disco 2000 has remained a staple of recent live shows from Pulp, who are set to perform a series of shows across June this year to promote new album, More.

Ewan Gleadow
Ewan Gleadowhttps://cultfollowing.co.uk/
Editor in Chief at Cult Following
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