Common People
"Common People" is one of the greatest British pop songs ever written — a sustained and formally remarkable attack on class tourism that builds from a deceptively simple opening through an escalating verse of increasingly furious specificity to a chorus that manages to be simultaneously an anthem and a cry of helplessness. Cocker's lyric operates on multiple registers at once: the narrator is angry, attracted, contemptuous, and ultimately impotent, because the worst thing he can articulate — "you'll never live like common people, you'll never do whatever common people do" — is not a threat but a fact. The production, centred on Doyle's synthesiser and a genuinely danceable groove, makes the whole thing feel jubilant even as the lyric is devastating.
Cocker has confirmed that the song is based on a real encounter with a Greek art student at Central Saint Martins who told him she wanted to live like common people. The lyric's attack on class tourism — the appropriation of working-class experience as aesthetic choice by those who have the privilege to leave it — is one of the most precise and enduring pieces of social criticism in British pop.