Chocol8 wrote: ↑Tue Nov 14, 2023 7:47 pm
I think it was a lot more than grunge in 1991. More like a move to anything but hair metal that settled on grunge for a bit...
1. Nevermind - Nirvana
2. Ten - Pearl Jam
3. Achtung Baby - U2
4. Metallica (a.k.a. The Black Album) - Metallica
5. Blood Sugar Sex Magik - Red Hot Chili Peppers
6. The Low End Theory - A Tribe Called Quest
7. Out of Time - R.E.M.
8. Use Your Illusion I - Guns N Roses
9. Use Your Illusion II - Guns N Roses
10. Blue Lines - Massive Attack
11. Loveless - My Bloody Valentine
12. Cypress Hill - Cypress Hill
13. BadMotorFinger - Soundgarden
14. Screamadelica - Primal Scream
15. Dangerous - Michael Jackson
16. Temple of the Dog - Temple of the Dog
17. Apocalypse '91 - Public Enemy
18. Death Certificate - Ice Cube
19. Luck of the Draw - Bonnie Raitt
20. O.G. Original Gangster - Ice-T
I concur. On the old forum I authored a thread about another direction I thought the rock music scene might travel around that time.
To quote that post at length:
Jellyfish, The 1990 Late 60s Revival, And The Way Things Might Have Gone
"Though I was a die hard rocker and metalhead in 1990, I will readily admit an attraction to the band Jellyfish which first hit the scene that year. I found them both musically and visually fascinating.
The subject of the implosion of hair metal has recently been discussed on this forum. Immediately previous to hair metal's demise there was a feeling that its expiration date was fast approaching. This posed the urgent question: What was going to be the next thing? Who was going to show us the way out of this morass of juvenile lyrics and pretty boy posturing which rock music had become? For a short while, maybe a period of a year or so, I was convinced there was going to be a return to the stylings of the late 60s.
Perhaps no band better represents this "return to the 60s" vibe than Jellyfish.
In case you've never heard of Jellyfish, or maybe have forgotten them, I suggest that you check out songs and videos from their 1990 debut album called
Bellybutton.
The influences of Jellyfish are pretty easy to discern. Obviously, some Beatles, an aggressive Cheap Trick type pop/rock sensibility, some truly beautiful Beach Boy style harmonies, some shades of the Monkees, even Hanna Barbara and Sid and Marty Kroft are in there. There's a whole lot of stuff going on, all of which I like.
But Jellyfish wasn't the only band showcasing a late 60s musical style around this time. Anyone remember the band The Front and their song "Fire"? Their singer both sounded and looked eerily like Jim Morrison. Then there was Deee-light. Lenny Kravitz was in "pseudo Woodstock mode" during his
Let Love Rule period. Even hard rock bands weren't immune to the influence of the late 60s revival, as evidenced by Badlands, Raging Slab, the Black Crowes, and White Zombie.
All these examples were going on in 1990. This leads me to my question: Is a late 60s inspired sound the direction things could have gone post hair metal if grunge hadn't taken over?"