berliner Wrote:
funny that nobody mentioned the connection (at least in time) with "progressive rock" in the 70s.
I mentioned prog. Just sort of in passing, though.
Forgot about this:
Prince of Darkness Wrote:
2a. Grunge. What the hell does grunge mean? I think it means you were from seattle in 1991 and that's it. Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden (in 91) and Alice in Chains. All are labeled grunge. Is it just that they sounded angrier and more real than the hair metal and pop confections that most of America had been subjected to for the better part of the previous decade? I don't think these bands sound anything alike, and that this term was a journalistic attempt to lump the unknown together.
I think grunge was a originally a pretty definite sound, with Mudhoney, Green River and a few other bands actually fitting under a similar stylistic umbrella with the Melvins as sort an antecedent. (Soundgarden may even have legitimately fit into this at first, but I've never listened to their early stuff so I don't know, and I think Nirvana's
Bleach is closely in this same vein.) Then MTV got a hold of it, and it applied to every new major label rock band from Seattle. By 1991 or so those big four bands - Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and Alice in Chains - all sounded pretty different from each other, but, aside from Pearl Jam, I think they started out with a lot of shared aesthetics. PJ is the only one that really never belonged there, IMO.