Desi Britpop: How Cornershop voiced immigrant life into the mainstream
The Fatboy Slim remix of Brimful of Asha didn’t just become a hit; it became a national pulse. By 1997 it was everywhere, turning up on radio, in clubs, in passing cars. The beat was brighter, faster, easier to live with. A reflective song about South Asian musical lineage became a pop rush anyone could claim. Most listeners didn’t know who Asha was. The rhythm was enough.
Behind that remix is Cornershop, a band from Leicester led by Tjinder Singh with his brother Avtar, David Chambers, and later Ben Ayres. The name itself is a provocation, reclaiming the derogatory term used for South Asian shopkeepers across Britain. It was less a joke than a quiet dare: say it out loud and think about why it exists.
Their songs rarely behave like obvious singles. The original Brimful of Asha honoured Asha Bhosle, records, cassette counters, and the everyday rituals of brown listening culture. A Punjabi version of Norwegian Wood followed the same instinct. It was not a novelty crossover; it reflected how British music actually sounded in homes shaped by migration.
Cornershop’s politics was shaped in the shadow of the seventies and eighties, when Enoch Powell’s Rivers of Blood speech still echoed in daily life. South Asian families were not abstractions; they were targets. The National Front marched openly. Racism was not coded or ironic. It was loud, local, and physical. For young brown musicians, identity was never an accessory. It was the condition of the room. So when Britpop arrived waving Union Jacks and selling tidy nostalgia, Cornershop sounded like another England altogether, one closer to the uneasy country described in England’s Dreaming than the pub chants on daytime radio.
The Morrissey incident made that distance clear. When nationalist symbolism was excused as provocation, Cornershop smashed his image onstage. No irony, no essay, just a refusal.
The remix gave them scale, while the catalogue gave them weight. Cornershop were never a passing moment; they are a memory that keeps resurfacing. The real question is not whether they belong to Britpop, but whether Britpop ever understood the England they were singing about.



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