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frenchie
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Topic: Grunge Posted: May 17 2005 at 07:43 |
AKA The Seattle Sound
I obsess over this genre as much as prog and I am trying to build up a collection. I have quite a few grunge albums by Smashing Pumpkins, Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam, Nirvana (tho i consider them weak and overrated in regards of grunge and don't like them very much), Stone Temple Pilots, Pixies, Soundgarden.
I just love the hair, the style, the mix of great hard rock tunes and acoustic tunes, the distinct vocal styles that chris cornell, layne stayley, eddie vedder, kurt cobain and scott weiland share (billy corgan and frank black are different).
I am currently after these albums.
- Green River - Rehab Doll/Dry as a Bone - Soundgarden - Louder Than Love - Temple of the Dog - Temple of the Dog (i only have an mp3 version) - Alice in Chains - Dirt (only have a copied version) - Mad Season - Above - Mother Love Bone - Apple - Nirvana - In Utero - Smashing Pumpkins - Earphoria/Vieuphoria (only have earphoria copied cd)
If anyone has an interest in grunge like I do then we should start a discussion about the great rock movement here!
I'll be impressed if any of you can tell me the link between the four albums in my signature!
Edited by frenchie
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Dreamer
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 11:09 |
I don't know much, but isnt it abit similar to alternative? I'm not too clever when it comes to this types of music...
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 13:26 |
Dreamer wrote:
I don't know much, but isnt it abit similar to alternative? I'm not too clever when it comes to this types of music... | alt rock? it leans more towards heavy metal at times. Grunge is really heavy distortion that was actually based on songs like fallen angel and 21st century scizoid man by king crimson, reli hard driving guitar riffs with lots of reverb and distortion with harsh lyrics, hard hitting drums and sludgy basslines.
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 14:37 |
Damn, I used to have most of those CDs you listed. All gone now. Divorce stuff.
I've only got a couple of CD from that era left. AIC's "Jar of Flies" is one of my favs of the genre. No Excuses is a great tune to run to. Soundgarden rocked! I think Chris Cornell has one of the best voices in Modern rock. Pearl Jam's "Ten" is a classic, probably the best albums to come out of the 90's. Mad Season kicked, with Lane Staley really hitting the power gut vocals. No cookie monster stuff. Have you checked out the Screaming Trees? The "Singles" movie soundtrack is pretty good too.
Have you heard Chris's brother in prog band Somnabulist? He sounds just like Chris and the band is like a heavy YES.
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James Lee
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 14:50 |
Grunge was sort of alternative/ underground music's return to heavy and dirty sounds, a bit of punk and metal influence, a bit of arena rock, a little psychedelia. Nirvana was the breakout band (for some reason- they weren't the best by a long shot) and Pearl Jam took more of a mainstream approach...and then we got Bush and the Foo Fighters (Dave Grohl ex-Nirvana) and it kinda lost momentum.
Don't miss Mudhoney's "Superfuzz Bigmuff", Screaming Trees' "Anthology", and Tad's "8-way Santa"; absolute classics of the genre. Anything from the SubPop label (up until around '95 or so) is worth hearing if you have any liking for the style. The Pixies (like Dinosaur Jr. and The Jesus & Mary Chain) were more of an inspiration to grunge rather than a grunge band themselves...they probably also were a big inspiration for the first crop of Emo bands.
regarding your question, are you looking for the musicians who played on all of those albums, or the tragic story behind them? If the latter, you could include Alice in Chains' first big single "Would" (i.e., "Wood") as well.
Edited by James Lee
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 17:17 |
i would say that when kurt died grunge died with it, smashing pumpkins "mellon collie" left behind grunge to explore other areas and then they did some goth stuff, lost their way and split up...
soundgarden lost their way after superunknown and disbanded in 97
pearl jams last grunge record was in 94, they then concentrated more on straight forward hard rock, abandoning the dynamics of their first 3 albums.
Alice in chains eventually split up when layne staley died
Stone temple pilots split up
Then came a few post grunge bands like silverchair, foo fighters, but the movement was dead at that point. All the main grunge bands weren't grunge anymore by about 1995.
Layne Staley and Mike Mcready did make an album under the band name Mad Season in 95 tho, its meant to be really good.
I really want to see the film Singles... pearl jam have a cameo role in the film and the whole soundtrack is grunge! There are a few shots from the film in the video for "would?" by alice in chains.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 17:23 |
oh yeah, and james pretty much gets it, but all of those albums had pearl jam members before pearl jam released their debut.
Green River has Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament and apparently the first grunge album in 85. They made 3 albums and disbanded in 88.
Mother Love Bone made one studio album featuring Stone and Jeff, Andrew Wood died of a heroin overdose (he was the vocalist). Pearl Jam covered "Crown of Thorns" on their dvd, "live at the garden", which is quite recent.
Temple of the Dog formed and made a tribute album for Andrew Wood (check out Say Hello to Heaven). This album featured Soundgarden's Chris Cornell and Matt Cameron (later to drum for pearl jam) and Jeff Ament, Eddie Vedder and Stone Gossard who later formed Pearl Jam after TOTD's only album was released.
So these albums all have pearl jam members in common.
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Peter
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 18:03 |
Never heard any that I liked. I find it formulaic (soft/heavy/soft/heavy, etc.) and predictable, and didn't like the growling vocals. Really, I can't relate to it. -- what is the attraction? I don't actively hate it, or anything, but it does nothing but irritate and/or bore me. Where's the melody? Where's the fun? Where's the love? The lyrics all seem to be ugly/disfunctional, too. More macho anger music -- give me good old rock and roll any day!
Sorry.
Edited by Peter
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 18:44 |
actually i dont know any grunge bands that have growling vocals, and all of it is VERY melodic and full of range and ideas, i dont know what the hell you've been listening to peter but you havent described grunge at all. If you did mean grunge then i am very confused about your view!
Edited by frenchie
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 18:47 |
pearl jam are classic rock n roll to me, inspired by the who, they even joined them on tour, eddie vedder sings "i am one" from quadrophenia so beautifully alongside pete and john.
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Peter
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 20:03 |
frenchie wrote:
actually i dont know any grunge bands that have growling vocals, and all of it is VERY melodic and full of range and ideas, i dont know what the hell you've been listening to peter but you havent described grunge at all. If you did mean grunge then i am very confused about your view! |
Maybe I don't quite say what I mean when I ask where the melody is, Frenchie (I'm not a musician), and maybe I heard the wrong stuff, but aren't Nirvana and Soundgarden grunge, and don't they have growling, gravelly, angry type vocals? (Forerunners of the Nickleback-type sound?)
Don't take it personally, please -- you started the thread, and I'm not trying to insult your taste in music, but just meant to reveal more about my tastes in music as a reviewer. I'd like to hear that Who cover, too, as the Who are one of my all-time fave R&R bands.
I only know grunge from the radio, BTW.
Edited by Peter
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 20:42 |
that "i am one", isn't a cover, eddie vedder came onto stage to take over from roger on vocals, i think he does "see me feel me/listening to you" as well. I have it on cd, i could send the tracks to you, its from live at the royal albert hall which is originally a dvd.
sorry peter, by growling i thought you meant opeth/death metal style vocals. I would call grunge vocalists bluesy yet gravelly, nirvana are grunge but a weak and commercial verison of it.
Grunge IS about harsh lyrics, not vocals, some of the music is very melodic, having a strong blend of acoustic and electric songs.
The best examples of grunge are "Alive" by Pearl Jam, "Hunger Strike" by Temple of the Dog, "Nutshell" By Alice in Chains, "Black Hole Sun" by Soundgarden, the list could go on.
I am betting that the radio rarely play any good grunge, the best grunge is quite underplayed, but in the early 90s it was rather popular.
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Peter
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Posted: May 17 2005 at 21:06 |
frenchie wrote:
that "i am one", isn't a cover, eddie vedder came onto stage to take over from roger on vocals, i think he does "see me feel me/listening to you" as well. I have it on cd, i could send the tracks to you, its from live at the royal albert hall which is originally a dvd.
sorry peter, by growling i thought you meant opeth/death metal style vocals. I would call grunge vocalists bluesy yet gravelly, nirvana are grunge but a weak and commercial verison of it.
Grunge IS about harsh lyrics, not vocals, some of the music is very melodic, having a strong blend of acoustic and electric songs.
The best examples of grunge are "Alive" by Pearl Jam, "Hunger Strike" by Temple of the Dog, "Nutshell" By Alice in Chains, "Black Hole Sun" by Soundgarden, the list could go on.
I am betting that the radio rarely play any good grunge, the best grunge is quite underplayed, but in the early 90s it was rather popular. |
Thanks for the info, French Safe! Yes, I meant gravelly more than growling, as I know that adjective is often used to describe the type of death metal vox that I loathe, and find just plain corny, affected, and irritating (as in my Haggard review -- the vocals absolutely RUINED that disc for me. I don't think many folks my age want to hear a "singer" who is actually TRYING to sound like a demon, especially one with a thick German accent -- that just made it even sillier/more juvenile for me.
Some of the more acoustic grunge passages are fine, but when the Nickleback-type vox (which seems to be the style of 3/4 of the bands on my local rock station) come in, I just switch it off. All that anger just depresses and bores me. Give me some feel-good Weezer, and harmonizing, and a little sensitivity, any day.
But then, I like Coldplay OK too, and I bet most guys your age HATE them, correct?
To each his/her own, but still, I'd like to hear more of your fave grunge -- perhaps I could like some of it after all, if it's R&R based....
(But I am indifferent to the hair and the clothes, at 44!)
Edited by Peter
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Trotsky
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 00:21 |
A bit off the point but I did hear that one of the second generation grunge-bands Days Of The New turned prog after leader Travis Meeks fired the rest of the band (who became Tantric) ... I mean I know he called the albums Days Of The New, Days Of The New II and Days Of The New III and the last album had a 10 minute track, but I've only heard the first album and that was a dull affair ... any views?
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spectral
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 04:33 |
smashing pumpkins are supposed to have gone a little prog with "Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness" - a pretty cool record by all accounts.
I too used to love grunge, but stopped listening to it back in 1994 - just before kurt cobain died. I actually find listening to it now quite difficult, as it isn't as good as I remember it.
Pearl jam became dull after Yield and the rest of the scene imploded when kurt died. Any bands who surfaced after 1994 aren't worth listening to. Stone Temple pilots being one of them!
It was fun while it lasted though and when Nirvana came on the scene I remember being blown away by them. Pearl Jam were one of my faves at the time though.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 08:25 |
actually stone temple pilots surfaced in 1992, The album core is a grunge classic, and the follow up purple.
Their single Plush rivalled Pearl Jam.
Mellon Collie has lots of different musical genres in it, 2 prog tracks on there.
Peter: i think coldplay are great, but nickelback are one of the worst bands ive ever heard, nothing to do with grunge and the vocal styles aren't alike in my opinion. Nickelback = sh*t, Grunge = Amazing.
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spectral
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 09:35 |
don't you think stone temple pilots were just pearl jam clones? I bought their first album, but the singer (whose name escapes me, but isn't he in that G 'n' R band now) seemed to just rip off vedder, IMO.
Do you still enjoys revisting the grunge albums? I bought rearviewmirror: pj greatest hits - it has some good songs, but didn't make me want to buy the albums again.
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Dan Bobrowski
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 11:03 |
I've got most of the STP stuff. I still love it. They really never hit their stride.
Have you heard their cover of Zep's "Dancing Days?" I dig it.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 12:22 |
spectral wrote:
don't you think stone temple pilots were just pearl jam clones? I bought their first album, but the singer (whose name escapes me, but isn't he in that G 'n' R band now) seemed to just rip off vedder, IMO.
Do you still enjoys revisting the grunge albums? I bought rearviewmirror: pj greatest hits - it has some good songs, but didn't make me want to buy the albums again. | I remember reading an interview with Eddie Vedder circa 1992,93 Interviewer: I really love the new single Plush! Eddie: That's not us, its by Stone Temple Pilots!!! STP have a different style, they are only a four piece, they have a more camp image, dressing up in weird clothing and often being topless, their sound uses a different style, most grunge vocals sounded like that tho. Eddie, Scott, Layne and Chris all sound similar. Scott Weiland is now the frontman for Velvet Revolver with Slash and Duff.
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frenchie
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Posted: May 18 2005 at 12:24 |
rearviewmirror is the best greatest hits album ive ever heard, so many get released nowadays that are half assed, but that one has effort put into it. 2 Discs, Disc One: Upside has 17 of the hard rocking tunes and to give balance to the album there is Disc Two: Downside which has 16 mellow tracks. Includes A Sides, B Sides, Album Tracks and tracks that werent on any albums.
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