"My Chemical Romance is this generation's Nirvana"

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(And I know there's something a little weird about calling Queensryche "alternative rock." But they weren't hair metal, either; they were artsy conceptualists from Seattle, marketed as music for, uh, smart people.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:11 (twenty years ago)

chuck is right about 1990

1990 on
http://rateyourmusic.com/top_albums/year_is_1990

1991 on
http://rateyourmusic.com/top_albums/year_is_1991

nirvana only the 8th most popular album of 1991 on the rock oriented rym

what nirvana did though was kill off the popularity of hair metal bands. Kerrang instead of being full of bands that looked like trannies [Hair Metal] become full of thick lumberjack shirt wearing [Grunge] bands

also beavis & butthead taking the piss out of stewart re Winger & Warrant

DJ Martian (djmartian), Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:15 (twenty years ago)

>what nirvana did though was kill off the popularity of hair metal bands.<

No they didn't, not at all; that's one of the platitudes and delusions that arose out of Nirvana's myth. Check the list a couple posts above. Hair metal was pretty much gone before Nirvana showed up. What was being marketed and selling by 1990 was blatantly art-metal. (And I left out Extreme, who, though their biggest hit was a power ballad, were as artsy by their big second album in 1990 as any of the other bands I listed.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:26 (twenty years ago)

(And I also have no idea what those Rate Your Music links are suppposed to prove. They look completely meaningless, as far as I can tell.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:32 (twenty years ago)

Always seemed like G'n'R had more to do with hair metal's disappearance than Nirvana. Like they pushed the Sunset Strip scene in a grimier, more serious direction. Even though Axl's hair was pretty heavily teased in the beginning there.

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:33 (twenty years ago)

it's like saying old country is great and new country is dumb music for hicks -- you don't have to love new country as a whole, but if you like old country and you can't find anything at all to appreciate in new country, i find it hard to believe that you're not in some way falling back on prejudices that have little to do with music, and not being honest with yourself.

I'm not really sure that's analagous. (Trying not to take this personally as there is lots of new rock I like and I'm really only indifferent to screamo; emo I find repulsive, but that is pretty directly descended from hardcore.) People aren't arguing that you should be engaging with nu-country simply because it's new, they're saying you should do so because it's good, and because a lot of what's putting people off are signifiers that you just have a knee-jerk reaction to. Also, ageism? Since when have music critics not fetishized teenagers?

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:44 (twenty years ago)

I think the analogy might make sense for people who actually liked NIN and Smashing Pumpkins and Jane's Addiction (which counts me out.)And the nu-country analogy probably makes more sense for people who actually liked the Eagles and John Cougar and Lynyrd Skynyrd (which *doesn't* count me out.) There's lots of old rock than MCR have nothing whatsoever to do with, and lots of old country that Kenny Chesney (say) ditto.

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 14:55 (twenty years ago)

This might be a bit sweeping so late in the thread, but I've always felt that at the end of the day the only real (i.e. utilitarian) purpose of a "critical community" in any branch of the arts is to provide discerning consumers with something other than sales figures to consult when deciding where to plop their hard-earned disposable currency. As a member of said community, I do feel a responsibility to keep up with cutural trends inasmuch as it helps to place my reviews / interviews in a relevant context. But I feel absolutely NO responsibility to adjust my opinions or coverage to fit any demographic or sales trend. If I were to be serviced with an MCR disc to review,I'd damn sure listen to it. And my reaction would, by definition, be subjective but hopefully informative enough to be useful. If folks want to know how it's selling and to whom, there are plenty of charts out there.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:03 (twenty years ago)

This might be a bit sweeping so late in the thread, but I've always felt that at the end of the day the only real (i.e. utilitarian) purpose of a "critical community" in any branch of the arts is to provide discerning consumers with something other than sales figures to consult when deciding where to plop their hard-earned disposable currency.

That's the "buyer's guide" end of it, which is important, but not the whole enchilada as far as criticism. There's the Frommers guide and then there's travel writing. There's the cookbook and then there's MFK Fisher. Each has its place.

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:14 (twenty years ago)

I feel you, Mark. But even when I pick, say, the Lester Bangs anthology, regardless of my literary / intellectual reaction to the writing itself I either end up tracking down The Godz reisuues or not.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:28 (twenty years ago)

But don't you ever read about records you already have?

Mark (MarkR), Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:31 (twenty years ago)

Of course I sometimes read about stuff I already own, Mark. And that sort of reading is part of an ongoing evaluation-and-re-evaluation process. With as many discs as I personally own, there's a way in which I often find myself "sold" on something more than once, often years down the line. I appreciate witty, well-written critiques as much as anyone and strive to hold my own work to a pretty high standard. And so, no: it's not 100% economic. But with very few exceptions that would seem to be at least the initial purpose of music writing published in periodicals. Posterity,etc can be entrusted to decide which stuff actually transcends this.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:44 (twenty years ago)

Chuck, which one of those bands had an album that was certified triple platinum within three months of release? That was the Nirvana difference (to sound like an infomercial). None of those bands did anything like that, and once you acknowledge that there was a difference between Queensryche and Nirvana, which you seem loathe to do for some reason, you can start looking for a reason that might have happened. The other thing that was big at the time wasn't that Nirvana was displacing Poison, but rather that it took the top spot from Michael Jackson. That was when there was the long dark teatime for the style of pop that had arisen in the late '80s. It wasn't as much of a deal for the artists like Madonna, but the lower teirs of the charts were where suddenly bands like Candlebox and Collective Soul took over for the last gasps of Duran Duran and their imitators.
Granted, Nevermind was the peak with a long tail, and while it made it possible for albums like Dookie to thrive in the marketplace, it also alienated a lot of people, who went to rap, fueling rap's long rise.
But to argue that Living Colour was somehow on the level of Nirvana both speaks to a vast over-estimation of Living Colour's popularity and a fundamental lack of appreciation in the different sounds. Living Colour sounds really very little like Nirvana outside of them both making rock albums. Living Colour (and Faith No More and Ugly Kid Joe— who was at best a one-hit wonder— and Queensryche and Jane's Addiction) came out of much more of a metal millieu and really didn't share a lot of the sound (even though Candlebox was Living Colour's opening band on their Stained tour).

js (honestengine), Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:48 (twenty years ago)

Dude, I think you are misremembering the 90s if you think Nevermind caused a "long dark teatime for the style of pop that had arisen in the late '80s."

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:53 (twenty years ago)

JS, I *said* those albums didn't sell as much as *Nevermind.* But the difference was one of degree, not of genre. And I never said any of those bands *sounded* like Nirvana; we're talking marketing, not sound. Nirvana don't particularly sound like Green Day or NIN, either. (And I've never understood what the "taking the top spot from Michael Jackson" stuff is supposed to mean. That's like saying "Celine Dion took the top spot from System of a Down." The top spot changes all the time.)

And oh yeah, late '80s pop was great. Nirvana, if anything, made things worse (partially by making people distrust rock bands who sounded happy.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 15:57 (twenty years ago)

(Though Collective Soul and Green Day had their happy moments I suppose. In the late '80s, Collective Soul or Candlebox could have been marketed as hair bands. So again, Nirvana really didn't change that much. Jon Bon Jovi and Mariah Carey were still doing just fine, last time I checked.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:02 (twenty years ago)

Plus Better Than Ezra, the Gin Blossoms, Tripping Daisy, Lit, the Goo Goo Dolls kinda--mid/late-90s rock laid a good foundation for power-pop love in the 00s. It's too bad that didn't get picked up instead of all the early-PJ revivalists...

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:04 (twenty years ago)

I have nothing against Mariah doing fine but why JBJ hasn't finally died is still troubling to my sensitive emo-ridden soul.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:04 (twenty years ago)

To say nothing of the ska revival if you're talking about happy guitar-based music...

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:04 (twenty years ago)

No, the ska revival was not happy guitar-based music, the ska revival was a sign that boorish demons had decided to shit over humanity.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:05 (twenty years ago)

But arguably this was all an attempt by rock to colonize some of pop's cultural position. Pop was there all the time, it just really blossomed in terms of cultural visibility when mainstream rock flamed out in the late-90s.

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:05 (twenty years ago)

(And interestingly, plenty of the bands who hit big in Nirvana's wake - Alice in Chains and Stone Temple Pilots, for instance - came out of just as much a "metal mileu" as Jane's Addiction or Faith No More did.) (And hell, I was reviewing Subpop albums in a metal magazine in 1986.) xp

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:06 (twenty years ago)

Kinda weird way to put it, Eppy; I'd tend to think pop's ability to perfect taking things from The Underground etc. had more reached a particularly great level in the late nineties (unfortunately fronted by some of the duller personalities around, but that's beside the point).

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:07 (twenty years ago)

I think it was taking from a different underground than the culture was focused on, though.

I'm putting this from a rock fan's perspective, obvs.

Eppy (Eppy), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:08 (twenty years ago)

No, fair enough.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:10 (twenty years ago)

xpost Eppy— It did critically. Though that could be selection bias.

Chuck— How can it be a difference of degree and not genre if they didn't sound like Nirvana? As far as the Michael Jackson thing, I think that it was a pretty symbolic thing. Nothing like Nirvana had ever been a #1 before, and Jackson was the "king of pop."
And a difference in degree on its own is significant, if only based on the magnitude of that degree. Again, triple platinum in three months. That's amazing, and seems to imply that there were a lot of people out there who were waiting for an album like Nevermind to come along. Commercial radio was suddenly playing "Smells Like Teen Spirit," a mopey nonsensical muddle of angst and gibberish. It didn't sound like anything else on the radio, aside from a few college stations and that nascent X format. Nevermind was a milepost like Thriller was a milepost (and it was a better album than Thriller, just to toss the obligatory bomb).
And yeah, a lot of their legacy has been crappy. A lot of the My Chemical Romance appeal still owes itself to the legacy of the angsty suburban kids who bought Nevermind. But Nevermind was the first album like that which didn't require actively looking for it. And I don't blame Faith No More and Anthrax for Korn and Limp Bizkit, even though I might (Limp Bizkit opened up for FNM on FNM's last tour, and played three Rage Against the Machine covers).

js (honestengine), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:12 (twenty years ago)

Having been employed as a buyer at a Chicago mom-n-pop record store during the whole Nirvana thing, I can attest that industry-wise, "Teen Spirit"'s "taking the top spot from Michael Jackson" was over-reacted to like a shot heard 'round the world. Billboard op-ed pieces of the time reflected an unprecedented (and unrepeated) panic. Execs and establishment critics who had never heard Pixies, Husker Du or Jesus and Mary Chain were't trained to hear the bubblegum hooks underneath the distorted roar and seemed to truly believe that the world as they knew it was crashing down at their feet. More hilariously, Nirvana's success had an observable, asteroid-like impact on major label A&R, allowing Thurston Moore (who got Nirvana signed to Geffen) and Cobain to get virtually all of their noisy friends majorlabel contracts (The Melvins on Atlantic!)Of course , all those cloth-eared trend-hopping A&R's were out on their asses when NONE of that stuff sold, and things were back to normal by the time St. Kurt offed himself into immortality

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:13 (twenty years ago)

Ah, the days of Dig and Dink, hanging tenaciously to the lower rungs.

js (honestengine), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:17 (twenty years ago)

> How can it be a difference of degree and not genre if they didn't sound like Nirvana? <

Uh, because not everybody in every genre sounds exactly the same?

"Symbolic things" matter to people who want to create myths. ("King of Pop" is another myth, by the way. Michael's sales hadn't exactly been on the upswing through the '80s. Being displaced by Nirvana means zilch.) (And he was having hits long after Nirvana, as I recall.)

And lots of hit songs don't "sound like anything else on the radio." If you doubt me, go ask Chumbawamba or OMC or Lou Bega or Crazy Frog. Or Living Color or Faith No More or Queensyryche, for that matter.

As for *Nevermind* vs. *Thriller*...well, nevermind.

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:20 (twenty years ago)

(And right, I can see how the "Jackson displacement" thing may have overhyped right when it happened. Billboard is ALWAYS looking for industry-changing trends! Last week it was three kids' CDs at the top of the album chart. This week, apparently, it's a debut r&b album topping the chart when its hit single hadn't previously been available for download. So I don't doubt industry types panicked. That's their job, near as I can tell. But a decade and a half latter, to pretend the displacing Michael thing was anything more than a coincidental blip strikes me as completely willfull. Maybe, for a few weeks in 1991, it LOOKED like the world might have changed. But by now we know better.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:27 (twenty years ago)

And he was having hits long after Nirvana, as I recall.

I think there might have been an external factor playing into that.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:29 (twenty years ago)

(Although I do like the idea of desperate Geffen A&R types trying to dig up the corpse and make it write something.)

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:30 (twenty years ago)

The Nirvana panic lasted more than a week - it didn't really die until around the time Cobain did - and, symbolically at least, it opened the doors for Green Day and eventually My Chemical Romance to storm the charts. Which is the big difference between Nirvana and MCR as far as I can tell - what they're doing is part of a by now long-established commercial trend and, regardless of musical quality or demographic share, isn't having ANY overarching effect on industry patterns or attitudes. They are business as usual, which Nirvana just plain wasn't.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:36 (twenty years ago)

the true test: has MCR induced Weird Al to come out of (semi)retirement and regain superstardom? (ala smells like nirvana)

irrigation can save your purple, Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:37 (twenty years ago)

Irrigation— Kurt Cobain said that was how he knew that he'd made it- when Weird Al did a parody.

Chuck— Right. So why'd Nirvana have the traction that those other one-hit wonders didn't? And even though I love LC and FNM, they were one-hitters in terms of popular conception.
For all your "not that great, not that big of a deal," there still seems to be the popular perception that Nirvana WERE a huge deal. Where'd that come from?
And again, if you can't tell the difference between what Nirvana was doing and art metal, you're not really trying.

js (honestengine), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:44 (twenty years ago)

My next conception of what "this generation's Nirvana" means -- people are going to be co-opting the most obvious part of your sound and milking it for easy MOR hits even a decade later. In other words, this is the sound you're going to hear a lot of. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon... and for a long time. "Nirvana" is kind of shorthand for a lot of acts signed around that time, regardless of how much similarity they actually had when you get down to the music.

On a mostly unrelated note, my sister is engaged to a guy who has a band that is influenced by "Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains, Silverchair, and Soundgarden" according to something I just read. I really just want to cry, sometimes.

mike h. (mike h.), Thursday, 9 March 2006 16:59 (twenty years ago)

One of my friends married a guy who plays in a band called Loud Love that manages to over-glop so much of what I originally liked about grunge that I can't even stand to talk to him (since that's all he'll talk about. His band is big in Ohio, apparently).

js (honestengine), Thursday, 9 March 2006 17:01 (twenty years ago)

"The difference between what Nirvana was doing and art metal" can best be illustrated by listening to "Incesticide" with the following (possibly apocryphal) anecdotal material in mind: Kurt's favorite label in the late '80s / early 90s was Touch N Go, home of such perenially marginal bands as Butthole Surfers and The Jesus Lizard (both often enshrined on KC's many ratty t-shirts). When TNG owner Corey Rusk (who had recently lost his chief A&R person, according to Chicago legend) ineptly passed on the Nirvana demos (later enshrined on "Incesticide") a krestfallen Kurt was directed Geffen-ward by Thurston Moore as a sort of 'consolation prize.' In other words, if Kurt had gotten his way, Nirvana's second album would've been on a SMALLER indie label than Sub Pop and would have featured "Hairspray Queen" and "Mexican Seafood" as emphasis tracks. Instead, the poor guy was forced to top the charts and change the world. Again, not a whole lot of biographical / aspirational common ground with My Chemical Romance...

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 17:09 (twenty years ago)

JS, please read more closely. I never said Nirvana weren't a big deal, never said I couldn't tell them from art-metal. I said they didn't change the world as permanently or unprecedently and unrepeatably as people pretend. And they didn't. Given the way their myth has been self-perpetuating, it's no surprise that folks believe otherwise.

Touch & Go was one of my favorite labels in the mid '80s too, for whatever it's worth. I wrote a ton about Killdozer and Die Kreuzen; interviewed Scratch Acid for Spin while they were still with Rabid Cat, *before* Corey and Lisa picked them up. Touch & Go's music? Art-metal, mostly. Whether Cobain would have called it that doesn't particularly matter. (Flipper and lots of stuff on SST fit here, too.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 17:18 (twenty years ago)

Okay, before this degenerates into an argument about genre-definitions (apparently xuxhk's classifications are facts while anybody else's are arbitrary but whatever)I'll just go out on a limb and proclaim what the Nirvana "revolution" meant to me. When I first heard "Smells Like" it was a month or so before it 'topped the charts' and my reaction was "Hey, cool, here's another song like 'Makes No Sense At All' or 'Monkey Gone to Heaven' or 'I'll Buy'" - that is to say a perfect, grittly little pop tune of the kind I regularly put on mix tapes of songs I felt would be popular in a better world, i.e. one where my personal taste held sway. When "SLTS" actually GOT popular, it was as if the world had turned upside down and, as such, seemed full of sweet new possibility, from my point of view, anyway. But nothing like it ever happened again and in the end it really wasn't such a big deal, although the charts did permanently shift around to accomodate 'post-punk' etc. The whole phenom still baffles me, really.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 17:33 (twenty years ago)

>xuxhk's classifications are facts while anybody else's are arbitrary <

Please show me where I said this.

Anyway, the basic Seattle Subpop soound, five years before Nirvana hit, was basically Sabbath + Stooges + early gloomy Aerosmith (as in "Seasons of Whither"; Green River even put "produced by Joe Perry" on an early single as a joke) + the Birthday Party (HUGE influence on bands like Killdozer and Scratch Acid from the gitgo). Of COURSE the classification (like any genre classification) is only an opinion, but how that equation *wouldn't* add up to art-metal is sort of beyond my ability to understand taxonomy. Soundgarden tossed some Zeppelin (who were also a fairly blatant influence on both Jesus Lizard AND Jane's Addiction) in there; Nirvana made the sound sweeter with melodies that might have come from the Replacements or, especially, Husker Du. And yeah, the metal influence was filtered though early '80s artsy hardcore bands (Flipper, Black Flag, Wipers, etc), but what had set those bands apart from punk rock per se in the first place was that they *were* drawing on stuff like Sabbath -- slowing the songs down, making the bass sound heavier, letting their hair grow longer, and so on. The Replacements and Husker Du, at least early on, hadn't been especially shy about their metal influences, either. (One of them covered Kiss, for instance, and the other one named an EP *Metal Circus,* but that was only the beginning.) By "art metal," I mean a sound that mixes up "traditional" metal influences with seemingly more esoteric stuff. That's what Jane's Addiction did; it's what Living Color did; it's what Faith No More did; it's what Nirvana and Soundgarden did. No, they didn't all do it in the SAME WAY. But it was something that was happening in many corners at the turn of the '90s.

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 17:54 (twenty years ago)

To my tin ear, the sentence "Whether Cobain would have called it [art metal] doesn't particularly matter" seems to imply that you are privy to factual genre-classification info that others aren't. That said, I in no way disagree with your overall thesis. Carry on.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 18:03 (twenty years ago)

You know, if we were having this argument about the Sex Pistols, the same things could be said. The Ramones came first and did it better anyway... The Sex Pistols were overrated...

I would disagree with them as much about them as I do about Nirvana even though the unprecedented sales of Nirvana (something the Pistols never had) is evidence that can be submitted here.

I went to High School BC (Before Cobain). I was thinking back to my High School years while watching some current HS kids walk through my store. I cannot recall anyone with tattoos. I can recall only a couple of punk rockers with piercings. It was revolutionary for a guy to even have his ears pierced. I was not in some backwoods enclave either - I went to HS in Manassas which was then a fast-growing suburb of Washington DC. And this wasn't *that* long ago - I graduated in the mid '80s.

In my class was a kid, Kenny Thomas, who took guitar lessons from Brian Baker. Nobody in school knew who Brian Baker was even though DCHC was a few miles away! Yet, how many kids at my old school saw Bad Religion headline Warped tour a couple of decades later? A lot more than heard him in Junkyard. And I happen to feel that "Values Here" is a much better song than anything Nirvana ever did.

The kids in my school *made fun of* people who listened to the bands that inspired Nirvana even though most of them could be heard on the then-progressive WHFS.

If we laud the Pistols for changing musical history (and really, feel free to hate them but the band was definitely a "before/after" group), how can we not laud the band that took the same things that the Pistols promissed and put it on Wall Street, Madison Avenue and other places quite far from the Bowery. But more important, it left Manhattan entirely and played for the kid in Idaho who felt alienation and found a soundtrack to that.

I guess there were kids in Idaho in 1978 who read Creem and also found music that spoke to them. But what was fascinating about Nirvana was how a whole generation felt that this cynical, loud guitar punky band spoke to them.

Sorry xhuxk that Nirvana killed fun but you know, the kids didn't need fun. Not then. And I think that's what Nirvana did. It made things mainstream that weren't before. And everyone in High School with a belly piercing, tribal tattoo or even just the kids who listen to bands such as My Chemical Romance owe a debt of gratitude to Nirvana. Whether we like it or not.

I was back in DC the day that Cobain died reviewing a Pearl Jam concert. It was a surreal moment for me. I watched the MTV coverage. Somehow I don't think that had Geoff Tate or Vernon Reid died that day that things would have been the same.

Brian O'Neill (NYCNative), Thursday, 9 March 2006 18:51 (twenty years ago)

THANK YOU FOR PUTTING TATTOOS ON MADISON AVENUE, NIRVANA

ant@work, Thursday, 9 March 2006 18:57 (twenty years ago)

Now, if Daniel Johnston "Hi How Are You?" t-shirts worn beneath unbuttoned pajama tops had become Madison Avenue couture the revolution would've been underway indeed.

Major Bloodnok, Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:10 (twenty years ago)

No, people would be complaining about them here too.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:11 (twenty years ago)

nirvana changed a lot of things for me, at least. and for a lot of my friends that have now moved on to all sorts of different types of music and bands....but yeah brian is right....if you were the right age, and not that hip and from somewhere in the sticks where you didn't really have access to much underground rock culture, it was a big deal.

i know people get sick of hearing about nirvana blah blah blah and i do too, but to say that they were the same to kids that graduated around 91 as living color or something is just bullshit.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:12 (twenty years ago)

Nice post, Brian. But this:

>The Ramones came first and did it better anyway... The Sex Pistols were overrated...<

Has pretty much nothing to do with anything I said about Nirvana, for whatever it's worth. What I've been writing has nothing to do with how good they were; it has to do with how *important* they were.

As for not needing fun "then", I wish you'd elaborate on why you think "then" was any different than any other time, because I sure don't see it myself. (Also the music of the '80s wasn't *just* fun. I still think Nirvana took away a lot more than they added. ) (And did Guns N Roses really not inspire any kids to get tattoos? I'm shocked.)

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:15 (twenty years ago)

xpost

now, whether or not the music, in retrospect is as good as living color or faith no more or soundgarden or whatever, that's another matter....

...it's the same with, say sabbath....i mean that band was a part of its time and there was a thread of music that was heading in that direction regardless of sabbath, but for whatever reason, they were the band that seemed to make a bigger impact....lots of this feels like people saying "Oh man, Sir Lord Baltimore and Atomic Rooster and Crushed Butler are at least as important to the development of heavy metal as Black Sabbath."...in a way, I see what people are saying, but for average kids it just wasn't like that.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:17 (twenty years ago)

xp (But anyway, the "tattoos and piercings" basically connect to what I said about Nirvana way upthread: "Haircuts changed, I guess.")

xhuxk, Thursday, 9 March 2006 19:20 (twenty years ago)


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