Andrew wrote:WalrusOct9 wrote:Nirvana didn't kill the 80's rock scene. It died on its own accord around the turn of the decade. Def Leppard and Bon Jovi spawned dozens upon dozens of virtually identical second-rate imitators (Just as Nirvana would in the mid-90's), while Bad English, Heart and Chicago were having a competition to see who could suck the most by singing awful Diane Warren ballads.
It would have been nice if both scenes could have peacefully coexisted, but with or without Seattle, "pop metal" or "hair metal" or whatever you want to call it was rapidly running out of gas by 1991, and definitely earned it's exile for a few years.
Perhaps, but there were plenty of great bands around in 1992 and plenty of great albums. Media turned their back on one and all in a heartbeat and in turn, many of these magazines fucked themselves up and disappeared.
Plenty of name artists and newcomers would have gone on with substaining careers, but Nirvana and Co. robbed many of a decade of work.
And look about today....how many of these shitty grunge bands still exist and how many classic rock bands are out there packing out shows.
There's only a small handful of 80's hard rock bands filling large venues. Of the bands still selling out large venues, only Bon Jovi, and to a lesser extent Poison and Def Leppard are the only ones who were affected by Nirvana and grunge.
Most of the "classic rock" bands that are still selling a lot of tickets were separate from the "hair metal" thing...Journey, Styx, Van Halen, etc, were all well established by the early 80's and thus were largely unaffacted by grunge. (or had split up by the end of the decade)
I know what you're saying, Andrew, but while there were isolated spots of brilliance (Giant and Thunder being the most prominent in my mind) in 1992, it was time for something new in the eyes of a lot of people, I think. Problem is there were more crappy albums than good albums, most likely. The average band has what, 5-8 years of solid music in them? There's plenty of exceptions, but look at the Crue, or Gn'R, or even Journey from '78-'83...they get there, they make it, and then they lose it. Something like
Laughing On Judgement Day was a great album on it's own, but wasn't all that different stylistically from what people had been hearing for the past ten years...there just wasn't anything special, new or different enough at that point to rise through the grunge and keep the genre healthy, unfortunately.
I also think a smaller but significant part of it was that a large group of listeners got old around that time and stopped caring about new music. Heart and Chicago and bands like that saw significant sales declines around 1990 and 1991 because their audience stopped wanting to hear new things like a lot of people when they hit middle-age. (sorry, I know a few of you will be offended by that, but it's the truth) Even if Journey had regrouped to put out an album as good as Escape in the early to mid 90's, I'm not sure how well it would've done, simply because radio had given up on playing new music by classic rock bands by that point. Grunge didn't kill that...middle-aged fogies only wanting to hear the hits ad nauseum is what killed it.
-Steve C.