Photo: WENN
Pulp have remained typically coy about their plans for more live shows, teasing fans at the potential of reuniting again.
The band were speaking at the launch of their brilliant new documentary movie, PULP: A Film About Life, Death And Supermarkets, during a Q&A with journalist Paul Morley at the Sheffield Documentary Festival - where they were mobbed by their native hometown fans.
When asked about their plans for the future, drummer Nick Banks teased: "I just think if you do something and it feels good, do it again."
When quizzed by NME to elaborate afterwards, Banks added: "In the group, as with any group, there's a spectrum of desire.
"I enjoy it so much that I just want to play. But for some of the others, it's a case of 'I've done that now, I want to do something else for a bit'. I'm very pro [carrying on], I'd like to do more stuff. But we're a disparate group of people, with different ideas."
Watch the trailer for PULP: A Film About Life, Death And Supermarkets below
Despite the incredible demand for the band's return, it does seem to be up in the air. Guitarist Steve Mackey previously told NME about the chances of the band making a new record: "I know you're not going to believe this but we honestly haven't talked about it."
Keyboardist Candida Doyle added: "We're just not that kind of band. If you step back into that environment where you want to release records, then all these complications step up."
The news is sure to disappoint some fans, especially after frontman Jarvis Cocker told the Guardian that he intends to spent the rest of 2014 writing music, because despite everything else, it remains his main focus: "Whether it's to impress girls, or whatever, music is the thing that has become my means of self-expression."
"So this year I'm taking a break from the radio show to find out if I've got any interesting songs left to write or whether I've written them all."
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