vchimpanzee said:I happened to be listening to a countdown show (not Casey Kasem's) when "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was played, before anyone had heard of Nirvana. The DJ said this was a groundbreaking song on the scale of "My Sharona" by The Knack. It meant the introduction of a whole new era in music. Those are my words. I don't remember his exact words, but they were something like that. It was an interesting and different song to say the least. Before the part where it gets really loud and angry, but even then it was a song that marked a new era indeed.faaradar said:Saturday marked the 20th anniversary of Guns N’ Roses releasing its double album “Use Your Illusion.” My old friend, Rick Sopher, and I went to Turtle’s Records store in Baymeadows for a special midnight opening to buy it.
Guess what album was released the following week? Nirvana’s “Nevermind.” The ground-breaking grunge record would take a few months to erupt in popularity, but it’s amazing to me how music history shifted in the week between “Use Your Illusion” and “Nevermind.” The passing of the rock torch from metal to alternative occurred 20 years ago this week, although no one knew it at the time. And since rock is basically dead now, that was the last significant shift
From Hays Carlyon @ Florida Times-Union
I loved that Nirvana song and album at the time. But so many of the grune bands that came after were stale sounding and unoriginal..I gradually lost interest in the entire genre.
Think of how much rock music changed from 1971-1991 with so much amazing music recorded in that time period. But post Nirvana has anything changed at all? Sonically does a 1996 rock song sound like a 2006 or 2011 rock song? It seems like it to me.