Recommendations of the Editorial team
Essential
SUEDE
1993
Suede never wanted to be Britpop. Bassist Mat Osman said laconically about their influence: “Suede were Dr. Frankenstein, but not the monster.” They still had a musical home: With their 1993 debut, they were the most successful glam band since T. Rex, and they certainly had less in common with “Cool Britannia” than with Kate Bush and her poetry about dreams of zoomorphism, Dungeons & Dragons and the magic of tarot cards. “So Young” celebrates youth, “The Next Life” celebrates the afterlife. In it, Brett Anderson himself celebrates a trip to eat ice cream in the spa town of Worthing as if it were a matter of life and death.
DOG MAN STAR
1994
The abolition of Darwin’s hierarchies: “Dog Man Star”, animal and human, no longer slave and master, but of equal status – stars. Anderson loathes the B-word, but in 1994 the Big Four of Britpop released important albums in the same year: Oasis with “Definitely Maybe”, Pulp with “His ‘n’ Hers”, Blur with “Parklife” and Anderson’s Suede with “Dog Man Star”.
Whether the record is better than the competition has been debated in pubs for more than thirty years. The final “Still Life” drove the band apart; guitarist Bernard Butler would soon leave Suede, he found the orchestration too pompous. In fact, “Still Life” offers an unembarrassing harmony of classical and pop, great beautiful sound, a completely different, much braver world than that of today’s neoclassics.
COMING UP
1996
His successor was 19-year-old guitarist Richard Oakes, who preferred a less fuzzy, less voluminous playing. “Coming Up” is the slim pop album from the band, who were able to hold their own surprisingly well in the “Cool Britannia” year of European Football Championships, Spice Girls, “Trainspotting” and the record numbers of Oasis from Knebworth. “Trash”, a pre-single based on David Bowie’s “Heroes”, evoked memories of old British masters – together with “Stay Together” their most successful UK single (number 3).
REWARDING
Head Music
1999
Richard Oakes was getting bigger and bigger because he was drinking more and more out of frustration. Brett Anderson became increasingly thin as he consumed more and more crack and cocaine out of frustration.
The result is an album that offers something more than the sum of its individual parts – electronic music was the working idea and made “Head Music” a concept album about the question of whether clubbing doesn’t primarily take place in the head. Like on the cover: the body as a psychedelic resonance space.
For a rock band, turning to electronics was daring, U2 had a hard time with “Pop” two years earlier. Trip-hop was the sound of the moment. Suede’s last number one album contained two respectable singles, “Electricity” and “She’s In Fashion”.
THE BLUE HOUR
2018
Pop that could be described as “adult” – but not in the uncool sense of adult contemporary found in “diversion playlists”: Songs like “Roadkill” or “Dead Bird” present Anderson, 51, as a survivor.
He survived his addiction to heroin in the 1990s, and later crack and cocaine. This is also why songs about animals that are in danger, were careless, were hit and died on the side of the road.
This is how Anderson’s fascination with the “Blue Hour” motif arose: dead living beings and how they can be viewed or utilized by humans, that “elevated beast”.
ANTIDEPRESSANTS
2025
Some say that the entire Gothic genre emerged in 1979, with Bauhaus, Siouxsie And The Banshees and Co., as a reaction to the escalating Cold War between the bloc powers.
Suede’s first gothic rock album also follows the idea of a lost world that is doomed – the Ukraine war and Trump hover over the eleven songs of their current album, in which Anderson also uses spoken word.
“Disintegrate” is one of their best tracks. “Antidepressants” is considered the middle piece of a trilogy of “black and white albums” and follows “Autofiction” from 2022.
SUPPLEMENTARY
A NEW MORNING
2002
The cover may be reminiscent of the great, short era of “self-burned” (does the word even still exist in the digital context today?) CDs at the beginning of the noughties, but in the new millennium Suede fatigue set in. A New Morning did not reach the top 20 of the UK charts and is the only Suede album not to be released in the US.
But even if the return to glam pop didn’t seem bold after the electronica experiments of “Head Music”, the songs, especially “Positivity”, are not as bad as their reputation. And Anderson was clean – “the first album recordings without drugs”.

