Moderator: Andrew
ebake02 wrote:Fuck Rolling Stone.
JRNYMAN wrote:There was a magazine in the 70's & 80's that appealed to and served the same demographic as Rolling Stone but it always remained objective and the articles never attempted to form your opinion for you and just presented the facts. Damn if I can remember the name of it... It was widely circulated and was on the newsstand next to RS. It was to RS as Cracked is to MAD Magazine. Maybe someone will know which one I'm talking about and list the name. It's not Spin or Creem..... DAMN!
Don wrote:Hit Parader was pretty popular when I was growing up.
In their Journey article, Schon said he had to wear sunglasses during the playback of SHML in the studio because he started crying. He had just broke up with some chic and was a mess at that point.
Liam wrote:I got to grow up in that era...HORRIBLE. I kinda wanted to shoot some of my friends at the time who told me "Just read the lyrics". THEY MAKE NO FUCKING SENSE.
Don wrote:JRNYMAN wrote:There was a magazine in the 70's & 80's that appealed to and served the same demographic as Rolling Stone but it always remained objective and the articles never attempted to form your opinion for you and just presented the facts. Damn if I can remember the name of it... It was widely circulated and was on the newsstand next to RS. It was to RS as Cracked is to MAD Magazine. Maybe someone will know which one I'm talking about and list the name. It's not Spin or Creem..... DAMN!
Hit Parader was pretty popular when I was growing up.
In their Journey article, Schon said he had to wear sunglasses during the playback of SHML in the studio because he started crying. He had just broke up with some chic and was a mess at that point.
mikemarrs wrote:Liam wrote:I got to grow up in that era...HORRIBLE. I kinda wanted to shoot some of my friends at the time who told me "Just read the lyrics". THEY MAKE NO FUCKING SENSE.
Same here.I was 16 or 17 when Nirvana-Nevermind hit and MTV totally changed all their videos to grunge and alternative.Overnight it seemed like bands like Def Leppard,Motley Crue,Whitesnake,etc. the whole 80's scene was shunned and the mags and MTV played and promoted nothing but Nirvana,Pearl Jam,Smashing Pumpkins,etc. Right around this time it seemed like all the girls and guys i knew immediately started liking either Rap and R&B or country instead of rock.There were lots of people who quit liking rock right around this time period.I would go to parties with a hundred people and i'd even make a bet that i could play something by Def Leppard or something from the 80's and get people moving because it was like death with no one even dancing or moving around.I made a group of people a bet at a party that i could get more people on the floor dancing with one of my 80's CD's then they could with Smashing Pumpkins.After they played the Pumpkins i put on an 80's compilation and way more people got moving,dancing around right then and these people were still refusing to acknowledge their music sucked.I even got into a fight at this same party because of these idiots.The first half from 1992 until nearly the end of the 90's were horrible until KISS had their reunion then other 80's bands started getting back together.By 1996 almost all the grunge bands either went away or had important members die.
mikemarrs wrote:Don wrote:JRNYMAN wrote:There was a magazine in the 70's & 80's that appealed to and served the same demographic as Rolling Stone but it always remained objective and the articles never attempted to form your opinion for you and just presented the facts. Damn if I can remember the name of it... It was widely circulated and was on the newsstand next to RS. It was to RS as Cracked is to MAD Magazine. Maybe someone will know which one I'm talking about and list the name. It's not Spin or Creem..... DAMN!
Hit Parader was pretty popular when I was growing up.
In their Journey article, Schon said he had to wear sunglasses during the playback of SHML in the studio because he started crying. He had just broke up with some chic and was a mess at that point.
I started buying and collecting those in '83 pretty much all the way through '91 along with Circus.I also collected Creem and Metal Edge.In the late 80's/early 90's there was a magazine called RIP that was pretty good back then.All these magazines were way better than Rolling Stone.
Don wrote:Grown men running around wearing mascara, lip gloss and pastel colored silk scarfs, letting their excessive lifestyle dull their creativity killed rock, not Nirvana. When the fans grew out of it, the bands that changed with the fans survived.
Grunge fans didn't stop Glamrock fans from buying records. The lack of new ideas plus the explosion of sub-par copycat acts is what damaged the genre. No quality control at all by 1989. A tidal wave of crap releases from bands who should have never record deals to begin with helped pull the curtain down on everyone.
Don wrote:Grown men running around wearing mascara, lip gloss and pastel colored silk scarfs, letting their excessive lifestyle dull their creativity killed rock, not Nirvana. When the fans grew out of it, the bands that changed with the fans survived.
Grunge fans didn't stop Glamrock fans from buying records. The lack of new ideas plus the explosion of sub-par copycat acts is what damaged the genre. No quality control at all by 1989. A tidal wave of crap releases from bands who should have never record deals to begin with helped pull the curtain down on everyone.
scarygirl wrote:Well that too. Trixter and Ugly Kid Joe anyone?
[url]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byEGjLU2egA[/url]Don wrote:Grown men running around wearing mascara, lip gloss and pastel colored silk scarfs, letting their excessive lifestyle dull their creativity killed rock, not Nirvana. When the fans grew out of it, the bands that changed with the fans survived.
Grunge fans didn't stop Glamrock fans from buying records. The lack of new ideas plus the explosion of sub-par copycat acts is what damaged the genre. No quality control at all by 1989. A tidal wave of crap releases from bands who should have never record deals to begin with helped pull the curtain down on everyone.
Andrew wrote:Love me some "Worst Of The 90s" lists. Too many bands to name!
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