Lüt Posted July 11, 2002 Alice in Chains is my favorite band on the list, but I wouldn't exactly call them grunge. 0 Share this post Link to post
Insomniak Posted July 11, 2002 Nirvana Grunge music died the day Kurt Cobain shot himself. 0 Share this post Link to post
Spike Posted July 11, 2002 Ah, but did he? Anyway, conspiracies aside, i'm more for AIC - and this is coming from a Nirvana fan. 0 Share this post Link to post
Sharessa Posted July 11, 2002 Heh...I could tell you which town a lot of those band members live, and how many miles it is from my house. Anyway, 3 years ago I would have picked Soundgarden because I was a real big fan of theirs, but I have to say AIC. Hmmm...I also just realised you have Temple of the Dog up there. Too bad they only made one album. 0 Share this post Link to post
Davidoom Posted July 11, 2002 Lüt said:Alice in Chains is my favorite band on the list, but I wouldn't exactly call them grunge. Well..they were a very hard grunge band then...but the Jar Of Flies and Unplugged albums they did were very delicate and softer, I suppose I favour both of them. Grunge music died the day Kurt Cobain shot himself. I tend to disagree. Soundgarden released two amazing albums, 1994's "Superunknown" and 1996's "Down On The Upside" - both IMO their best albums. The Foo Fighers' first album was a hope, Sonic Youth, Mudhoney, Best Kissers in the world, Fastbacks, Dinosaur Jr, AIC, STP all had success during the mid 90s...I think grunge died in 1997 with the end of Soundgarden, Pearl Jam's change into "No Code" and many other bands becoming defunct.. Heh...I could tell you which town a lot of those band members live - Seattle eh? :D And yeah TOTD were amazing, it's a shame Andy Wood died too... 0 Share this post Link to post
Sharessa Posted July 11, 2002 Davidoom said:Heh...I could tell you which town a lot of those band members live - Seattle eh? :D Actualy, a lot of the members of Soundgarden and AIC live in my county, up on Bainbridge Island from what I've heard. 0 Share this post Link to post
Lüt Posted July 11, 2002 Davidoom said:Well..they were a very hard grunge band then...but the Jar Of Flies and Unplugged albums they did were very delicate and softer, I suppose I favour both of them.SAP is probably my favorite AIC disc. I suppose their second one was rather grunge but it had a lot of other elements to it as well. The self-titled was something I'd describe as grungy, but I don't think it actually fit the genre itself. 0 Share this post Link to post
Sharessa Posted July 12, 2002 fraggle said:Pixies! LOL My friend keeps trying to get me hooked on them...theres one song I kinda dig, but otherwise, meh. 0 Share this post Link to post
zxcvbnm Posted July 13, 2002 gotta post on this one nirvana of course! besides, they really created grunge - it was completely new, that takes real genius. no one did it better than the originals - but there are some other good grunge groups - namely alice in chains, stp, and soundgarden. ...pearl jam = grunge? i dunno about that one, i never thought of them as that. i like pearl jam, but i dunno really. anyway nirvana rules and stuff -xooz98 0 Share this post Link to post
Amaster Posted July 13, 2002 I never considered Pearl Jam grunge either but they're my favorite band on the list. 0 Share this post Link to post
Sharessa Posted July 13, 2002 xooz98 said:nirvana of course! besides, they really created grunge - it was completely new, that takes real genius. I have no idea when they started, but Soundgarden had been around since 86, and they spawned from an earlier band, Mother Love Bone which from the little I heard of them was also grunge. 0 Share this post Link to post
Little Faith Posted July 13, 2002 Insomniac said:Nirvana Grunge music died the day Kurt Cobain shot himself. Actually, no! Grunge still exists and new grunge bands still form. Unfortunately this famous suicide did channel most of the attention to this genre unto one shocking event and when that was old news the attention that this genre deserved petered out. When people are discussing the nu-metal phenomenon they often mention hip hop and early rap/funk-rock but I think that grunge has just as big an impact on nu-metal. 0 Share this post Link to post
fraggle Posted July 13, 2002 xooz98 said:nirvana of course! besides, they really created grunge - Grunge started with the Pixies, not Nirvana! 0 Share this post Link to post
Davidoom Posted July 14, 2002 Grunge WAS started by bands like Malufunkshun, Mother Love Bone, Skin Yard, The Melvins, Green River. Mark Arm, Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard, Andy Wood, Chad Channing are many names of whom started the bands around mid 80s. Mudhoney, Soundgarden, MLB, Sonic Youth began to record albums which caused a diversion between the hair bands of Bon Jovi etc. - Soundgarden led the charge and suddenly in 1989, Andy Wood was dead. This then brought Temple Of the Dog to the front, Soundgarden, Nirvana and Alice In Chains recorded more succesful albums and then from on it went on and on.. Pearl Jam can be categorized as a grunge band, members before PJ were in totd, green river, mlb, fastbacks... Members collaborated with other grunge music counterparts during pj's reign and their sound is definatly grunge, most definatly on the first two albums. 0 Share this post Link to post
Spike Posted July 14, 2002 I'd like to see Eddie Vedder (Pearl Jam) garotted on the same piece of catgut as Scott Stapp (Creed). Man, Vedder's voice annoys me enough without Stapp replicating his godawful whinge in the here and now. 0 Share this post Link to post
læmænt Posted July 15, 2002 Who cares what grunge started with? N I R V A N A 0 Share this post Link to post