Dubstar: 21st Century
Shoegaze and dreampop run through Dubstar’s DNA like the word Blackpool in a stick of rock. It might not be obvious at first, but if you know what to listen for, you’ll spot it.
21st Century is a prime example of this musical heritage. The inspiration came from Twentieth Century, a song on the Pet Shop Boys’ Fundamental album—not in melody or lyrics, but in its use of a century as a thematic marker, a place. It put me in mind of two other songs I love: Twentieth Century by John Foxx and Winona by Drop Nineteens. In fact our own 21st Century owes more than a nod to that Shoegaze classic.
Referencing other songs has long been a Dubstar hallmark. From Chris’s opening guitar flourish in I (Friday Night), through the Owner of a Lonely Heart sample in No More Talk (though lifted from its original source), through If It Isn’t You and its reference to the magnificent Durutti Column to the reference to Cocteau Twins When Mama was Moth in Swansong and even the United States of Being medley in So Say We All, musical callbacks are woven into our work. It’s great to hear Chris and Sarah continuing and even expanding on this tradition in their solo projects too.
Winona and 21st Century begin with nearly identical lyrics: “Now there’s a gap in the twentieth/twenty-first century.” Though the songs take different paths, that opening line has always struck me. It captures a feeling of something missing in our lives — maybe a product of the era we live in?
Written in 2008, 21st Century was built on simplicity, repetition and texture. The guitar parts were laid down at Gavin’s studio, Base HQ, behind Newcastle’s Central Station, while Sarah’s vocals were recorded later at my place in Hove. Aside from the Yamaha CP-70 interlude, the song has only two sections and one overriding mood—a reflective audio poem about the emotional toll of deception.
COERCIvE CONTROL
Before gaslighting became a widely used term, I had already noticed how some people manipulate others by controlling their access to information—not just by limiting what they hear, but by shaping how they interpret the little they’re allowed to have. Someone might receive good news or a compliment, only to be told, “They didn’t mean that,” or “They’re after something.” It’s the kind of conspiratorial thinking that’s easily exploited.
But the most insidious tactic is deliberately creating gaps in a narrative that can only be filled with paranoia. Those are the “gaps in the twenty-first century” the song explores.
At the time, I realised that many of my own opinions about people and situations had been shaped almost entirely by just one person’s stories. And those stories were created not out of malice or manipulation, but because gossip and the gossiper —by their nature—demand attention. And gossip is compelling for many reasons, especially the gaps that are left out that you fill with your own imagination. Gossip invites motivated reasoning to fill in the blanks, something I now try to avoid like the plague.
“Don’t judge a person by the stories of others.”
I’ve never considered myself a gossip (at least, I hope not). But looking back, I’ve had moments where my words may have landed the wrong way. If so, I apologize. Around the late 2000s and early 2010s, I made a conscious decision to stop forming judgments based on secondhand tales, this song is one of the results.
THINKING BACK NOW
I’m fond of 21st Century. I think it would have made a great second-to-last track on the original United States of Being. It’s a side of Dubstar that isn’t heard often and it hints at the deeper musical and lyrical terrain we might have explored together. Maybe for the sixth album?