i guess i get to be independent in mind, even if i'm still just a wage slave. ask deej and max.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 00:36 (fourteen years ago)
A lof of the 90's underground was very diy, cassettes and cheap cds. What part of it was affluent? matador?
― JacobSanders, Friday, 16 March 2012 00:38 (fourteen years ago)
Dadamah, yes Tim, excellent choice, as would be many other little known kiwi bands from the era.
Contenderizer - I was thinking more of the idea that rebelling in the Clinton years when things were comfortable was safe vs. when things felt completely unsafe post-9/11, indie rock became that safe haven. Very broad generalization but it's an interesting idea.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 16 March 2012 00:40 (fourteen years ago)
I mean indie rock become safe music.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 16 March 2012 00:43 (fourteen years ago)
becAme. Can't get a proper thought typed up tonight.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Friday, 16 March 2012 00:44 (fourteen years ago)
i meant "affluent" in the "realization that i am an affluent american" sense. like, if you have money to burn on cassette tapes, weed and gg allin shows, you probably aren't all that poor.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 00:50 (fourteen years ago)
Damn. Y'all really suck at this. How about Dream Warriors, Kool Keith a.k.a. Dr Octagon, Atari Teenage Riot, Arto Lindsay, Son of Bazerk and P.M. Dawn?
― Frankenberry (TyroneCrumble), Friday, 16 March 2012 01:38 (fourteen years ago)
those are not overlooked
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 01:40 (fourteen years ago)
well dr octagon, ATR and PM Dawn are def not overlooked
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 01:41 (fourteen years ago)
Smilehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPVmVfoI9hs
The Swirlies?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1M3DIX9f78
Self? Are they overlooked?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-MqPaxj4Bg
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 01:55 (fourteen years ago)
I've heard lots of friends talking about Chavez lately who I never knew until less than a year ago.
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 01:56 (fourteen years ago)
I wanted those to be links, not embeds, sorry
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 02:00 (fourteen years ago)
I think Self is overlooked! Porno, Mint and Grime is kind of perfect in certain ways.
Also: yes, Diskothi-Q! You can still buy their CDs if you go to a Mountain Goats show where Peter Hughes is playing.
Finally: KLEENEX GIRL WONDER.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Friday, 16 March 2012 02:28 (fourteen years ago)
many other little known kiwi bands from the era.
The Terminals were a talented band. Cool to see that their '92 album Touch was reissued a few years ago and is on Spotify. Really unique combination of things - super raw, minimal drums, and really developed melodicism. Unique singer.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:30 (fourteen years ago)
Brian Ferry-ish, even. Peter Stapleton was the drummer.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:31 (fourteen years ago)
Thank you for posting Smile. Crucial band when I was in high school.
― Badmotorfinger Debate Club (MFB), Friday, 16 March 2012 03:32 (fourteen years ago)
man, i fucking loved swirlies for a good couple years but listening to them lately it's just very sloppy and almost kinda involves the same posturing you see in dubstep today in vein that it's just noise for noise sake, like they're trying to impress us. would be fun in a live setting but via record it doesn't allot to a very compelling listening.
that said, tiger trap or rose melberg and all her associated acts. she's a wunderkind in sense that every song she makes is instantly catchy.
― kelpolaris, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:39 (fourteen years ago)
I was thinking more of the idea that rebelling in the Clinton years when things were comfortable was safe vs. when things felt completely unsafe post-9/11, indie rock became that safe haven. Very broad generalization but it's an interesting idea.
― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Thursday, March 15, 2012 5:40 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah, that's exactly what i was talking about, and, i think, a good explanation for it. re: your earlier question, i don't think that it does entirely hold up, as there were quite a few softer, more reassuring indie bands in the late 80s/early 90s and at least as many weird and challenging ones in the new century. still, it strikes me as a good large-scale picture of changes in the way indie was defined and defined itself in the two eras.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 03:40 (fourteen years ago)
it's just very sloppy and almost kinda involves the same posturing you see in dubstep today in vein that it's just noise for noise sake, like they're trying to impress us. would be fun in a live setting but via record it doesn't allot to a very compelling listening.
speaks to so so many 90s sub-heroes. caroliner rainbow, truman's water, u.s. maple... [ducks]
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 03:42 (fourteen years ago)
blowhole
wait! what about caroliner and u.s. maple?
― sarahell, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:45 (fourteen years ago)
Caroliner Rainbow were ok though, but I was really into Bananafish and loved their compilations.
― JacobSanders, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:47 (fourteen years ago)
Man, I'm listening to Gogogoairheart and that's a good example of the turning point! Really weird vocals but the new revivalism in the music.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 03:51 (fourteen years ago)
"the turning point" - not to say that there was only one turning point, sorry.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 04:02 (fourteen years ago)
lol, sorry, i know that stuff is near and dear to you. i never had the acuity/sac hair/wherewithal required to consistently enjoy their records. a hideous character flaw, i know. heard caroliner were (or could be) amazing live.
was re: kelpo's comment abt uber-noisy music being fun in a live setting, but not too useful for home listening.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:06 (fourteen years ago)
Kill Me Tomorrow and Get Hustle strike me as other cusp bands. Part serious old school indie rock weirdness but with elements of the new revivalisms.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 04:08 (fourteen years ago)
i'm not sure i follow, tim. to my mind, bands like gogoairheart and kill me tomorrow have roots in early 90s stuff like brainiac, not so much revivalism but continuation. when you talk about "new revivalism", do you mean a reynolds/retromania kind of thing, or something else?
love kill me tomorrow though. great live band, and some great records for a little while there. so much was lost in the sinking of the good ship GSL. too bad they were new century thing, or i'd post a bunch of videos. hypothetically like this, maybe, one of my all-time favorite music/film combos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmAjUFSe_Kk
oops
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:34 (fourteen years ago)
the phrase "all-time favorite" getting a purt good workout in this here thread, courtesy mr. me
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:36 (fourteen years ago)
Lol I was just listening to Dadamah tonight; I'm planning on giving Dissolve a good listen here pretty soon as well...
Gravitar and ST 37 have turned into two of my favourite bands on the strength of their 90s stuff; Laddio Bolocko is great too, though for some reason I'm not sure if any of these count. Really dig the first Polara album too
I'm totally looking for a way to hear Caroliner's Rise of the Common Woodpile album; also am on the lookout for some US Maple
― John Nestle Harding (loves laboured breathing), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:47 (fourteen years ago)
when you talk about "new revivalism", do you mean a reynolds/retromania kind of thing
Yeah, definitely. I don't know Brainiac - did they have any element of revivalism? Gogogoairheart was really into early Rough Trade and Factory bands.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 04:48 (fourteen years ago)
Oh yeah Space Streakings is rad too, tho completely diff't than anything else I've mentioned in this thread thus far
Brainiac had a significant new-wave revival element in their sound; another band in this vein was Six Finger Satellite. Also: Servotron? (a band jjj played for me in outloud)
― John Nestle Harding (loves laboured breathing), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:50 (fourteen years ago)
(tho brainiac was more new wave and 6fs were more straight up postpunk)
― John Nestle Harding (loves laboured breathing), Friday, 16 March 2012 04:54 (fourteen years ago)
Gogogoairheart was really into early Rough Trade and Factory bands.
gotcha, and i agree, but so were unrest, another band that GGGA seemed to extend. brainiac weren't terribly "retro" to my mind, though they were strongly influenced by new wave, and their sound was very similar to kill me tomorrow's, with a comparably glammy take on dystopian futurism.
we can draw a line between the pasts observed by different eras, but everything responds to a past of some kind, right? the greasy fingerprints of 70s rockers like the stooges, black sabbath and blue cheer were all over the noisy, scuzzy indie punk that grunge rose out of. the velvet underground loomed similarly large over K-recs style lo fi. move ahead a few years, and it's not the 60s/70s but the 70s/80s that are being channeled. just saying that there's a difference between taking a few cues from something and being a "revivalist".
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:03 (fourteen years ago)
i mean, the flaming lips started out as a 70s classic rock record collection run through a drug-damaged punk filter, much like dinosaur jr. and with a similarly strong debt to neil young (another big grunge-era influence). but in the long run, i wouldn't call them revivalists, though those elements stayed in place.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:07 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah, but I think that some of that newer generation of groups really were explicitly revivalist. Did you ever hear Satisfact or Nick Forte's groups Computer Cougar and Beautiful Skin? GGGA were a little looser about it.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 05:13 (fourteen years ago)
Also, the midwest no wave groups that predated that stuff a bit - Couch, Duotron, Scissor Girls, etc.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 05:16 (fourteen years ago)
Gravitar and ST 37 have turned into two of my favourite bands on the strength of their 90s stuff; Laddio Bolocko is great too, though for some reason I'm not sure if any of these count.
...Oh yeah Space Streakings is rad too, tho completely diff't than anything else I've mentioned in this thread thus far
― John Nestle Harding (loves laboured breathing), Thursday, March 15, 2012 9:50 PM (16-20 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
yeah, what counts and what doesn't is a weird question. i don't really think of laddio bollocko as "overlooked" per se. more as a taste acquired by few. they've got a small but very dedicated and vocal following, and are basically still active as the psychic paramount. same might maybe said for gravitar, st 37 and space streakings (???), but even among psyche/drone & skin graft fan circles, they aren't much discussed. still, i don't think that they were ever destined to be loved by more than a handful of folks. unlike SUPERCONDUCTOR and THE KENT 3, bands that deserve to be heard and loved by every man, woman and child on earth.
i will say that this particular song, "stack collison with heap" by st 37, is absolutely fantastic, goofy vocals included, and criminally overlooked:
http://youtu.be/1W3RHgmDcDo
unfortunately, it's from 2002, after their period of designated greatness, so fuggit
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:28 (fourteen years ago)
yeah, exactly! don't know couch, but spent time w both duotron and scissor girls. i think they help build the case that there wasn't any sudden dip towards revivalism in the way strong 80s influences began to show up in 90s indie & punk, but rather a progression of novel-seeming reference points through various bands and scenes. i mean, something had to give after the 70s scuzzrock well ran dry. (dry or not, the scandinavians did pick up that dropped ball and run a few more yards with it in an explicitly revivalist fashion in the late 90s/early 00s: turbonegro, hellacopters, gluecifer, etc.)
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:35 (fourteen years ago)
leading to more commercial stuff like the darkness and the ark
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:37 (fourteen years ago)
Space Streakings
mentioned by john nestle harding up there. japanese noise punk hip hop noise noise. an "interesting" band who were probably insane live, but who live or die in my mind by one song: "YOUNGMAN II". might as well be the death set, but way better:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjagElyU9kk
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 05:46 (fourteen years ago)
god, i listened to a LOT of this shit
the case that there wasn't any sudden dip towards revivalism in the way strong 80s influences began to show up in 90s indie & punk, but rather a progression of novel-seeming reference points through various bands and scenes.
That's certainly reasonable. I think I felt the shift acutely because I'm 44 now and all those bands were slightly younger. It was not my generation that was doing that revival!
There's something to be said, also, about revivalist-oriented bands being concerned with explicit stylistic signifiers in a way that, I didn't think, indie rock - no matter how rooted it may have been in older musics - did before. If you look at a record like the Rapture's Mirror, everything about it is a signifier from the Marquee Moon-style cover on.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 05:50 (fourteen years ago)
Now that I think about it, you could say that about the Mummies too, but there seemed to be something central about the new revivalism and I think its lasting presence has borne that out.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 06:22 (fourteen years ago)
hey, i'm 44 too! cheers. anyway, i get what you're saying and don't want to be an argumentative dick, but i got the same feeling from stuff like halo of flies, mudhoney, and green river. like everything was supposed to be a refracted, punk-lensed throwback to heavy 70s guitar god shit. song titles like "biker rock loser", blues & primitive rock structures, funhouse-aping cover on pussy galore's right now. the huge 70s rawk & boogie/blooze stamp on urge overkill. motorbooty magazine's p-funk worship, reflected in their house band, big chief. screaming trees (late 60s/early 70s acid rock), soundgarden & jane's addiction(zep), GBV with their who worship and hippieish lyrical fancies, butthole surfers (entirely their own thing, but came on like freedom rock burnouts, covered "american woman" and "sweat leaf" early on). hell, even pop-tatari boredoms wore a big, hairy 70s influence. plus just the styles. so many bands dressed like they were either in motorhead or refugees from a bad acid version of woodstock. i suspect this was more prominent/apparent in the backwards/woods pacific northwest than elsewhere in the country, where the 70s love was less "ironic", but it was everywhere at the time. or so it seemed to me...
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 06:25 (fourteen years ago)
mummies refer to a garage rock tradition that's been active and reverently revivalist at least since the early 80s. ime, it goes back as far as the milkshakes and nomads in 1981, but bands like DMZ were digging more or less the same ditch in the late 70s.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 06:28 (fourteen years ago)
LOL I just realized Dream Warriors are those dudes who sampled that Quincy Jones song that was used in Austin Powers.. I suppose yeah, that was somewhat overlooked...
― billstevejim, Friday, 16 March 2012 06:35 (fourteen years ago)
dream warriors had a huge hit w "my definition". figured that post had to be a joke.
― Fozzy Osbourne (contenderizer), Friday, 16 March 2012 06:36 (fourteen years ago)
Yeah, I think the fact that it was, as you say, a "refracted, punk-lensed throwback" is what made it seem more like something new than that Rapture record. I'm interested in postmodernism taken to the extreme that everything else gets shut out. The Japanese probably did it to the biggest extreme with heavy '70s guitar rock - High Rise and such.
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 06:44 (fourteen years ago)
Ha, I'm looking at the official High Rise web site:
"The concept is composed with heavy, radical sound and rock'n'roll ideological formation."
― timellison, Friday, 16 March 2012 06:53 (fourteen years ago)
Mummies!
The Couch you guys are talking about are Midwestern no wave? Bcz I have an album by Couch called Fantasy from 99/2000 (released in the States by Matador!) But they were an instrumental band from Germany...
― John Nestle Harding (loves laboured breathing), Friday, 16 March 2012 11:53 (fourteen years ago)