Better late than never: 90s acts got into post-90s |
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Lewian
Prog Reviewer Joined: August 09 2015 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 14728 |
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Posted: September 30 2024 at 16:32 |
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Most 90s acts I know and love, I know (and love) indeed from the 90s. Here's some I found out about later (again assuming that my system has dated them correctly):
Slint - Anekdoten - Miranda Sex Garden - Bark Psychosis - Aphex Twin - Cartoon - Gastr del Sol (*) - Karda Estra (*) - Propellerheads - The Fireman - Otomo Yoshihide - The Necks - Fishmans (*) (*) By recommendation of this forum.
Edited by Lewian - September 30 2024 at 16:48 |
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Starshiper
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 08 2024 Location: Englantic Status: Offline Points: 592 |
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Ten 1990s prog albums—in chronological order
Ozric Tentacles – Erpland Pendragon – The World Galaad – Premier Février IQ – Ever Citizen Cain – Somewhere but Yesterday Arena – Songs from the Lions Cage Marillion – This Strange Engine Krel – Ad Astra Thinking Plague – In Extremis Dream Theater – Metropolis Part 2: Scenes from a Memory |
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Saperlipopette!
Forum Senior Member Joined: December 20 2010 Location: Tomorrowland Status: Offline Points: 11621 |
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In the 1990's I had my first, relatively short period of discovering of the classic UK prog scene. But pre the online reality we've been used to as a natural part of our lives in the last 20+ years or so, I soon met a dead end (+ most of the more or less random prog-bands I tried, simply failed to connect). I'll start with the bands you mention that I was already into in the 90's and still like.
Air, Aphex Twin, Belle and Sebastian, Broadcast, Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds, Cocteau Twins, Dead Can Dance, Mr. Bungle, Portishead, Radiohead, Stereolab, Swans, Talk Talk, Tortoise... Along with contemporaries like Ween, PJ Harvey, Tori Amos... at the time they probably defined me more than Prog Rock. But I was getting into everything from 20th century classical music, Minimalism, Baroque era, Early Music, old folk & world music as well. No jazz for me just yet. Here's some favorites discovered much later. Not a whole lot comes to mind really: Non Credo Godspeed You! Black Emperor The Necks Rabih Abou-Khalil Rachel's Morte Macabre Trembling Strain Pram Slowdive +Sonny Sharrock - Ask the Ages |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28029 |
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I suppose I could add Porcupine Tree to my list. I was aware of them back in 1998 when Stupid Dream came out. Steven Wilson came across in interview as very aloof (so nothing has changed lol) but I didn't understand the music. Was a very slow burner although when Deadwing came out I was fully 'in' at that time and purchased the re-issue for Stupid Dream. Loved it. Then saw them play live a few times (once just before FOABP) and there was a real buzz going round. Seeing them on The Incident tour probably even topped that. Didn't bother with the recent reformation and tour that went with the new album although I quite like it (not as much as Deadwing and In Absentia but those are perfection)
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Nogbad_The_Bad
Forum & Site Admin Group RIO/Avant/Zeuhl & Eclectic Team Joined: March 16 2007 Location: Boston Status: Offline Points: 20847 |
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Here's the ones I didn't post in the 80's thread
5UU's Camberwell Now Charming Hostess Koenjihyakkei Mr Bungle Sigur Ros Volapuk Bondage Fruit Hoyry-Kone U Totem Vezhlivy Otkaz |
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Ian
Host of the Post-Avant Jazzcore Happy Hour on Progrock.com https://podcasts.progrock.com/post-avant-jazzcore-happy-hour/ |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35804 |
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I had an account that I made in 2004 or 2005, but I only posted a few times then later came back with this one. i might have discovered PT through this forum, that was before Deadwing came out (I like Deadwing more). Kayo Dot was another that got talked about a lot, mostly in 2006, and now it hardly gets mentioned (except by me). I do enjoy the 90s PT more than later stuff generally. Stupid Dream I liked more than I expected, and I should play it again. It does have some wonderful music on it as I recall. Be nice if Steven Wilson would post here again. I have come to appreciate his work more in recent years. This ("Stop Swimming") I remember liking off Stupid Dream (it reminds me of Talk Talk's "Laughing Stock" in part). In 2005 and 2004, this forum was so different. Not just busier (really busy in 2006) but it was a lot ruder and raunchier, and more of the forum felt like Just For Fun. There was a lot of playful ribbing of Tony R's early incarnation (with the TIE fighter) and lot of sexual innuendo and jokes and comments that were much less PC than one would expect here now. Micky would call it the wild west. It was less heavily moderated than subsequently. By 2006 it was getting fairly tame, methinks. It's hard to get that right balance between exciting and rude and boring and genteel. Edited by Logan - September 25 2024 at 20:42 |
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Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Online Points: 19301 |
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Of course, we joined PA around the same time, when PT, DT & Opeth were extremely popular on this site and they were hard to avoid!! We had a heavier crowd in here at the time... Well, I discovered PT in 1998 when Stupid Dream came out, having been beguiled by 'Even Less' which appeared on one of the very first Classic Rock Mag's free CD samplers. At that stage, I'd not heard anything quite like them, other than Floyd.
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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Online Points: 19301 |
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Oh, yes I can think of one!!
Jarre... was quite familiar with his stuff up to mid-80's (say Rendez-Vous?) then more or less stopped listening to him and never checked on any new stuff. I think this was partly because I left college in 86 and he was popular with some of the girls... so, stuff like Chronologie and Oxygene 7-13 I never bothered with at all until much later. Indeed, there are still some 90's albums of his I may or may not know/ have heard which I need to back track on. I'll admit, he's never been a right at 'the top of the tree' fave, but I have enjoyed revisiting his back catalogue over the past year or so.... This might be stretching it a bit, but there are a couple of 90's Mike Oldfield albums I never got round to hearing at the time, which fall into the same category...
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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35804 |
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You were late to the internet. I only discovered it six years earlier due to reading about it online. I bought Porc. Tree's In absentia on CD in 2004 or maybe early 2005, but it did not do it for me. Maybe I heard it at the wrong time in my journey, but Porcupine Tree is a darling of PA that has never really connected with me. And I have heard a fair amount of its music, some of which I quite like, but nothing that deeply or meaningfully resonated with me. It does remind me of bands like Radiohead and Kayo Dot very much at times, which I love. It seems clear to me that Steven Wilson has been very influenced by Thom Yorke and Radiohead, but Yorke/Radiohead is just so much more meaningful to me. And PT had been very inspired by Pink Floyd, and I love Pink Floyd (up to an including The Wall at least) |
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Logan
Forum & Site Admin Group Site Admin Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Vancouver, BC Status: Offline Points: 35804 |
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Thanks, and no worries. I had intended for that to be optional. I really love hearing people's stories with how it relates to music (Richard's and Jared's posts, for instance, plus yours were a pleasure to read, and so have been different takes). And nice to see that long a list from David. :) My concern (not that it matters much) for future participants (if there are any) might be that I was not clear enough in the OP about people sharing their own examples as it relates to them, and/or sharing their own experiences. It's a long enough OP to warrant a tl;dr (too long; didn't read) reaction. I often write with too little economy, and too many ideas presented, which can confuse. Character limitations, but I had wanted "Better late than never: 90s acts you got into post-90s" as my title and some people are very title-focused rather than considering the requests in the OP and/or seeing how others responded. People only have so much time and focus. As long as it's cordial, and somewhat thoughtful, it's [mostly] all good to me. Edited by Logan - September 25 2024 at 10:59 |
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AFlowerKingCrimson
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Anglagard
Anekdoten Tool Radiohead Not much non prog actually. I still have yet to really get around to Phish otherwise they would be on the list.
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Jared
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 06 2005 Location: Hereford, UK Status: Online Points: 19301 |
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You know, I've been wracking my brains over this one and can barely think of an example of a band who were predominantly from the 90's, whose music I have only recently cottoned on to and love now?
During the 90's, (before the Intrawebz arrived) I was predominantly listening to new albums by bands who had already been around in the 80's (Marillion, IQ). Most 90's bands I listened to, I picked up on at the end of the decade (P Tree, Spock's and a host of smaller Neo bands) and listen to only intermittently these days.. Dream Theater, PoS, Threshold and Vanden Plas could all be included I suppose, but I listened to them then, not so much these days... I have very few 90's albums from 90's groups in my stable, tbh...
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Music has always been a matter of energy to me. On some nights I believe that a car with the needle on empty can run 50 more miles if you have the right music very loud on the radio. Hunter S Thompson
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Psychedelic Paul
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 16 2019 Location: Nottingham, U.K Status: Online Points: 40091 |
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Porcupine Tree, who I'd never heard of before 2010.
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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As I think can be seen from the list I've posted here, I've had much interest for the '90s music in the post-'90s, and I find a lot of good music there from various genres.
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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MikeEnRegalia
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 22 2005 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 21162 |
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Sorry for not reading the instructions thoroughly. For Opeth, it was specifically The Moor which pulled me over to the dark side (of growling vocals). |
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43644 |
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Ignore this, I misunderstood the topic.
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David_D
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 26 2010 Location: Copenhagen Status: Offline Points: 15119 |
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Here're my favourite '90s albums, I got into in the post-'90s, and disregarding the genre: Anekdoten (S) - Vemod ( Änglagård (S) - Hybris ( Bondage Fruit (J) - II (1996) Gordian Knot (USA) - Gordian Knot (1998) Nekropsi (TRK) - Mi Kubbesi (1996) Landberk (S) - Rigtigt Äkta (1992) Ozric Tentacles (UK) - Erpland (1990) Porcupine Tree (UK) - Coma Divine... (1997) Psychotic Waltz (USA) - Into the Everflow (1992) Tool (USA) - Undertow (1993), Ænima (1996) Babes in Toyland (USA) - Fontanelle (1992) Kyuss (USA) - Sky Valley (1994) Nirvana (USA) - In Utero (1993) Radiohead (UK) - OK Computer (1997) Soundgarden (USA) - Badmotorfinger (1991) Thought Industry (USA) - Songs for Insects (1992) Brygada Kryzys (PL) - Cosmopolis (1992) Shellac (USA) - At Action Park (1994) Edited by David_D - September 25 2024 at 15:42 |
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quality over quantity, and all kind of PopcoRn almost beyond
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Cristi
Special Collaborator Crossover / Prog Metal Teams Joined: July 27 2006 Location: wonderland Status: Offline Points: 43644 |
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Threshold
Porcupine Tree The Gathering Paradise Lost Nevermore |
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richardh
Prog Reviewer Joined: February 18 2004 Location: United Kingdom Status: Offline Points: 28029 |
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The American prog trio of Spocks Beard, Echolyn and Dream Theater certainly. I could possibly shove IZZ in there as well as they started in that decade. I'm not sure exactly what I was still listening to in the 90's. I have a feeling I was still catching up with seventies prog and once I got to where I needed to be with that then started to find out about 90's prog bands via PA and other online sites. I loved Mansun and still do, probably the single most underrated band of that decade. I was listening to them at the time though so wasn't a later discovery. Although I liked a lot of the mainstream 90's bands a lot more than 80's bands I've never really got into the likes of Portishead and Massive Attack that much. I love the theme music to Luther (Glory Box) and Unfinished Sympathy but that seems as much that I need by those bands (but I respect them). Also never got into the whole grunge scene at any point.
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Logan
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Me, or Mike or both. (j/k, my list is longer). Was Don Caballero one you got into post 90s?
I listened to American Don (2000) some years after it came out, and I'm sure I have heard the second from 1995. I'm more of post-rock guy than math rock, but I'm quite sure I have mentioned Don Caballero in topics, especially when I was newer here. Lots of my current favourites from the 90s I only got into over the past five years (EdIt: oops, make that ten years). I have listened to a huge amount of music over the past twenty years. Well, mostly from, maybe 2003 to 2010 and then again in more recent years. I did start listening to Podcasts quite a bit, don't now, and I do still listen to True Crime stuff, sad though it can be. I do hope that more people will try to mention their own acts with albums from the 90s that they discovered and/or got into after the 90s and really like now. Time will tell if this works or not. And that we will comment on each others choices as well. One issue I sometimes have with top ten lists is that we don't comment more on each others lists, and there is very limited discussion. David has has been doing his albums you were into in the 70s and 80s, I wanted to do a few topics about bands (and albums) that released music during a decade that you only got into later and are some particular favourites of yours (ones you would happily play right now). Thought it might present an interesting counterpoint to David's topics. :) Edited by Logan - September 24 2024 at 19:52 |
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