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The band's latest, self-titled album strays even farther from the debut's straightforward guitar pop, delving into soul, funk, and R&B between high-energy rockers and sprawling progressive experimentation. But group members opted to throw fans off their trail by releasing the album's perkiest cut, "Pumping on Your Stereo," as the band's single and pairing it with a video that used Jim Henson's Creature Shop to create 12-foot puppet replicas of the band members, who played various singing instruments. Oh, giggled the press, there go those cheeky chaps again.
Yet for all they've done to further this image, Quinn says, they don't necessarily embrace it. "People think we sit around with hats with propellers on them, and that can get really annoying," he says, punctuating the sentence with an exasperated laugh. "I think we've got a healthy disrespect for what we do. Maybe if we paid more attention and spent more time culturing a mature, very cool image, then we wouldn't have to deal with all that stuff. We try and take our music quite seriously, but the rest of it we don't. I suppose people get confused by that."
Some people were doubtlessly confused by Supergrass' video for "Mary," its latest single. Filled with horrific and genuinely spooky imagery, it's as if the propellers twirled free from those beanies and started impaling passersby with razor-sharp blades, splattering the screen with blood. British MTV responded by banning the video outright. As for domestic MTV, Supergrass' only forums for airplay -- shows such as Alternative Nation and 120 Minutes -- have disappeared from the schedule, and "Mary" isn't likely to garner enough teen votes to make it onto TRL. The only real option for Supergrass fans is to download the clip from the band's Web site, www.childrenofthemonkeybasket.com.
"This is the first video that we the band have actually scripted, which is quite worrying, because it got banned and it was pretty sick and stuff," Quinn says. "For us, we're always sort of playing with humor, and it just seemed funny to us. It's a very dark humor. It's based on horror movies that we used to watch in the mid- to late-'70s and early '80s -- very bleak and bleached-out. It really fits the song, which is quite a dark, sleazy little basement number."
The banning of the "Mary" video might represent the end of an era, with one of the most visually innovative acts to appear on MTV opting to keep its art confined to records and the stage. "Obviously we're far more interested in making music," Quinn admits. "It's very hard for us to invest energy in a video like 'Mary' -- to actually put down our foot and say we want to do this video how we want to do it -- and then just not see it get played anywhere. It's sad."
Fortunately, American fans don't have to rely on MTV for Supergrass spottings, since the group has embarked on its first-ever U.S. arena tour as the opening act for Pearl Jam. It's late in the season, which might lead to some unpredictable weather conditions at outdoor amphitheaters, but Quinn, a veteran of European outdoor festivals, remains unconcerned.