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mikemarrs wrote:did alternative rock kill melodic rock?
you always read on discussion boards how alternative rock killed all the huge metal or melodic 80's bands?
what do you think....
Greg wrote:Actually, I think what killed the melodic rock sound of the early 90's were the melodic rock acts themselves. Eventually, everybody started sounding like everybody else...
TRAGChick wrote:OH GOOD GOD.....LOOK WHAT I FOUND!!
http://www.myspace.com/kineticsect
"Kinetic Sect" ~ Mark is 2nd from the left:
Moon Beam wrote:TRAGChick wrote:OH GOOD GOD.....LOOK WHAT I FOUND!!
http://www.myspace.com/kineticsect
"Kinetic Sect" ~ Mark is 2nd from the left:
Holy youngness Nora!
Your Hubby Bub looks about 12 there.
I can still tell it's him though even with him looking down.
Thanks for sharing this with us.
larryfromnextdoor wrote:Moon Beam wrote:TRAGChick wrote:OH GOOD GOD.....LOOK WHAT I FOUND!!
http://www.myspace.com/kineticsect
"Kinetic Sect" ~ Mark is 2nd from the left:
Holy youngness Nora!
Your Hubby Bub looks about 12 there.
I can still tell it's him though even with him looking down.
Thanks for sharing this with us.
she married Ralph Machio..
strangegrey wrote:Alternative is the label that they gave grunge...I would say that Alternative was what resulted from the stupid deaf-eared frenzy that resulted from people going gah gah over shit bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam. Both bands devoid of talent in all respective ways.
They weren't considered alternative.....the bands that copied their formula were labeled as such.
I know it's a semantic....but it's an important distinction....because I feel the two bands responsible for melodic rock's downfall in the early 90s, were Nirvana and Pearl Jam.....all of the alternative shit that followed was just the liverpool effect....and really, the glut of alternative bands between 93-95 jsut hastened the fall of alternative/grunge in the late 90s.
strangegrey wrote:Greg wrote:Actually, I think what killed the melodic rock sound of the early 90's were the melodic rock acts themselves. Eventually, everybody started sounding like everybody else...
Alt/Grunge began 'eating itself' by about 94-95. However, there wasn't a death blow that took it out of it's/our missery. (and this is where I agree with what you say, Greg) Alt/Grunge flopped like a dying fish between 96-2000....and no one ever took it out of its/our misery.
Marc S wrote:Plus I think MR and hair rock had reached implosion point.
RipRokken wrote:Marc S wrote:Plus I think MR and hair rock had reached implosion point.
You know, melody did start returning to radio several years ago, but the problem was that the bulk of it was not fresh at all -- if anything, everything sounded like the same high-soaring choruses and hooks sung in the same keys. They would be catchy if they weren't so incredibly familiar.
That is a real challenge for melodic rock these days, is simply coming up with fresh melody (or at least, songs that sound fresh). I think it takes much more than the vocal line, though -- the musicians can help out tremendously, making a song with a good but familiar melody very catchy. This is how Lenny Wolf from Kingdom Come seems to always put out great stuff -- his vocal lines are dang near the same in half the songs he writes, but he somehow scrapes by and keeps the songs catchy thru the instrumentation (my opinion). JSS soars and excels with his melodies -- they are truly melodies that stand on their own.
One of the best, freshest melodic rock CD's I've bought in the last few years was TNT's "My Religion" (closely followed by "All The Way to the Sun", and I've played both of those discs to death. CATCHY!
mikemarrs wrote:did alternative rock kill melodic rock?
you always read on discussion boards how alternative rock killed all the huge metal or melodic 80's bands?
what do you think....
Blue Radio Girl wrote:larryfromnextdoor wrote:Moon Beam wrote:TRAGChick wrote:OH GOOD GOD.....LOOK WHAT I FOUND!!
http://www.myspace.com/kineticsect
"Kinetic Sect" ~ Mark is 2nd from the left:
Holy youngness Nora!
Your Hubby Bub looks about 12 there.
I can still tell it's him though even with him looking down.
Thanks for sharing this with us.
she married Ralph Machio..
Three words, ya'll...
Co-ordinated Chuck Taylors.![]()
Marc S wrote:I'd agree with that and its probably why we have ended up with a great deal of output over the last few years in drop D, Db or E along with other odd tunings, which take it somewhere else.
Jeremey wrote:in my opinion, there's a big difference between alternative and grunge, both labels which were co-opted by the corporations and twisted into marketing strategies that removed any true significance from the original source material.
Jeremey wrote:in my opinion, there's a big difference between alternative and grunge, both labels which were co-opted by the corporations and twisted into marketing strategies that removed any true significance from the original source material.
i tend to think of alternative as running parallel to the mainstream in the early to mid eighties, when bands like journey and van halen and debbie gibson and wham were selling tons of records, bands like REM, the smiths, the pixies, the sugarcubes, bad brains, fishbone, red hot chili peppers (before the LA riots) & others were on underground labels and being played all over college radio stations...eventually the best of that crop was co-opted by the major labels and you wound up with REM, RHCP, and Bjork being used to sell credit cards and hamburgers.
grunge was another label put on guys like soundgarden, nirvana, pearl jam & others which was again co-opted and came to meant nothing at all....truly when nirvana hit, it put a sudden stop to hair/glam metal and blase pop music from the early 90's, but melodic rock was truly out of the mainstream consciousness long before that. even bands in the early 90's like tesla and mr big, and bad english, i think were closer aligned with pop and hair metal than bands like toto, journey, or hagar-era van halen.
what killed melodic rock in my opinion? i think to some extent, like all genres, it devoured itself by being watered down with record companies trying to find the next big band...creatively, a lot of those bands had been around since the late 70's, and the creative lifespan of any band starts to wind down after about 6-8 years. as far as one genre superceding another - i would say it was hair metal that squashed true melodic rock on the airwaves....bands like twisted sister, quiet riot, motley crue, and poison truly took the pop music mantle from melodic rock acts in the mid to late 80's.
anyway, just my opinion...
RipRokken wrote:Jeremey wrote:in my opinion, there's a big difference between alternative and grunge, both labels which were co-opted by the corporations and twisted into marketing strategies that removed any true significance from the original source material.
Excellent point, and it always happens. Only really underground music (a lot of it too polarizing to be of use) seems to be immune from corporations. To me, the perfect example of a band themselves becoming a corporate puppet is Nickelback. I'm not incredibly familiar with their music, nor have I ever bought a Nickelback album, but I really liked a few of their earliest singles. Now, anytime I hear a new Nickelback song, I just cringe. Sing-songy, cheesy (to me, anyway), corporate rock -- they've just been neutered or spayed, whichever applies The shame of it in my experience is that now I equate the singer's voice with this crap, so it's kinda ruined Nickelback altogether for me -- the same happened to me with James Hetfield of Metalica ("Unforgiven Too", anybody?), as I can't hear Hetfield's voice and not think of cheese anymore.
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