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strohs;1997647; said:20th anniversary of the release of Nevermind today
Muck;1997516; said:Well Mudhoney is a couple of years later being Green River's bastard step child & all.
Someone already nominated Motely Crue, I don't think we need anymore LA Sunset Strip hair bands.TexasBuck;1997481; said:I've been busting my brain trying to think: What is the best American band nobody has mentioned yet?
My answer: Sonic Youth
Critical Appeal: Check
Groundbreaking: Check
Longevity: Check
Massively Influential: Check
Adoration of fellow musicians: Check
Sustained popularity: Probably not enough
I was trying to make a case for Ratt, but sadly, they failed on nearly all my criteria.
I owe a lot to the grunge movement and it's not because I liked it. To be perfectly honest I hated every bit of it. However it it was for grunge and the Seattle influence over music at the time I never would've started exploring other forms of music like Jazz and the Blues. I needed something fresh and Gen-X pop music wasn't doing it for me. So once again, thank you Seattle for producing some of the worst music ever made, it lead me to find some of the best music ever made.Muck;1997507; said:I'll agree with everything except that.
While the Pixies influenced some of the Seattle bands (primarily Nirvana) they were still distinctly different. Bands like Green River, Screaming Trees & Soundgarden were actually around before the Pixies formed.
DubCoffman62;1997683; said:I owe a lot to the grunge movement and it's not because I liked it. To be perfectly honest I hated every bit of it. However it it was for grunge and the Seattle influence over music at the time I never would've started exploring other forms of music like Jazz and the Blues. I needed something fresh and Gen-X pop music wasn't doing it for me. So once again, thank you Seattle for producing some of the worst music ever made, it lead me to find some of the best music ever made.
Well I had enough suck as a kid to last a lifetime. I was an adult making my way through life and for me music had always been uplifting. Grunge reminded me exactly of the world that I wanted to leave behind. It was like that dude that always brings you down when you talk to him. However, music touches us all in a different way, what may be right for some may not be right for others. I'm glad you enjoyed it.TexasBuck;1997699; said:I loved the gunge movement. I was always a classic rock fan for the most part. I loved 80's metal too but there was nothing there I could truly relate to. Then some worthwhile music came from my own generation saying things that were relevant to me. The economy was horrible when I graduated from tOSU in 1991. I had no job waiting for me and had the feeling of "I prepared my whole life for this?" Grunge was there to tell me that world did in fact suck. I still love Zeppelin, the Stones and The Who. I love newer bands like Interpol, The National and Arcade Fire. But Grunge will always hold special appeal to me because I felt it was mine. 20 years later, I'm still listening to Alice and Chains, Pearl Jam, STP and Nirvana.
BuckeyeTillIDie;1997760; said:
As far as the 90s go, Pavement.
They quietly owned the 90s- especially in regards to grunge/alternative, or whatever you want to call it.
BuckStocksHere;1997777; said:Again - the title is greatest american rock bank EVER! there should only be about 10 or so bands to actually choose from. We are talking "of all time".