Moderator: Andrew
Seven Wishes wrote:"Abysmal? He's the most proactive President since Clinton, and he's bringing much-needed change for the better to a nation that has been tyrannized by the worst President since Hoover."- 7 Wishes on Pres. Obama
Jonny B wrote:Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later.
.ebake02 wrote:Unfortunately, the metal scene didn't really do itself any favors. The quality of music coming out of the metal scene during latter portion of the 80s was amateurish at best. Every shitty bar band on the sunset strip was getting a record deal and screen time on MTV.
Jonny B wrote:If there's any mean bones in my body, they're right here, on this topic. For I feel it would've done the American music scene a HUGE favor had Cobain killed himself before he became famous. Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later. I'm just very happy the European metal scene refuses to live in a post-Nirvana world. At least they know how to write good metal.
Jonny B wrote:Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later.
Andrew wrote:Down tuned guitars and shitty singers continue to be the staple of US metal.
Andrew wrote:Jonny B wrote:If there's any mean bones in my body, they're right here, on this topic. For I feel it would've done the American music scene a HUGE favor had Cobain killed himself before he became famous. Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later. I'm just very happy the European metal scene refuses to live in a post-Nirvana world. At least they know how to write good metal.
I agree. Down tuned guitars and shitty singers continue to be the staple of US metal.
Archetype wrote:Andrew wrote:Jonny B wrote:If there's any mean bones in my body, they're right here, on this topic. For I feel it would've done the American music scene a HUGE favor had Cobain killed himself before he became famous. Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later. I'm just very happy the European metal scene refuses to live in a post-Nirvana world. At least they know how to write good metal.
I agree. Down tuned guitars and shitty singers continue to be the staple of US metal.
What about Iced Earth, Kamelot, Symphony X, etc?
Yes, I get your point and agree, but there are still a few good US metal bands (unfortunately they're more popular in Europe than in their home country!)
Jonny B wrote:Personally, I would add Evanescence to the bunch as well. They're a polarizing group...you love them or hate them...but I consider Amy Lee and co. one of the very few shining lights of the US music scene. I seriously thought they would be the Nirvana of the previous decade as far as changing the music landscape, I mean that is how much I thought they had stood out in comparison to the pop/grunge/rap/whatever crap was on the radio at the time. But they had virtually zero impact in the US scene. But they certainly changed the European music scene to a certain extent, which I'm thankful for.
Jonny B wrote:Personally, I would add Evanescence to the bunch as well. They're a polarizing group...you love them or hate them...but I consider Amy Lee and co. one of the very few shining lights of the US music scene. I seriously thought they would be the Nirvana of the previous decade as far as changing the music landscape, I mean that is how much I thought they had stood out in comparison to the pop/grunge/rap/whatever crap was on the radio at the time. But they had virtually zero impact in the US scene.
verslibre wrote:Jonny B wrote:Personally, I would add Evanescence to the bunch as well. They're a polarizing group...you love them or hate them...but I consider Amy Lee and co. one of the very few shining lights of the US music scene. I seriously thought they would be the Nirvana of the previous decade as far as changing the music landscape, I mean that is how much I thought they had stood out in comparison to the pop/grunge/rap/whatever crap was on the radio at the time. But they had virtually zero impact in the US scene.
I wouldn't say zero. If you were anywhere near FM or inside a Best Buy, you heard an Evanescence song (when they were new). No, they didn't spawn a bunch of knockoff bands but I didn't think they were anything to write home about. They were the "flavor of the week."
ebake02 wrote:Along with Lzzy Hale and Halestorm.
slucero wrote:I remember hearing about Nevermind well before it's release in a Gina Arnold article in our local music mag BAM Magazine... "This will be huge" were her words.
I saw Nirvana. Once. 1991 New Years Eve at the Cow Palace in S.F.
Having been to the Cow Palace quite a few times for lots of great metal shows through the 80's... I went with an open mind. Hell it was New Years Eve.
Nirvana came on and opened with "Drain You".
In all my years of going to shows I've NEVER seen an audience reaction like the one I saw that night. I was sitting in the seats, opposite the stage with the whole floor of the arena in front of me. Being about 15 feet higher allowed me an unobstructed view to the stage. The whole of the floor audience, from stage to me was standing, and jumping up and down in unison.. I literally watched the whole of the floor FLEX as they jumped. It was sheer joyful pandemonium.
Say what you will about Nirvana, good or bad.. but there's no denying that they were a force of nature live.
Ehwmatt wrote:slucero wrote:I remember hearing about Nevermind well before it's release in a Gina Arnold article in our local music mag BAM Magazine... "This will be huge" were her words.
I saw Nirvana. Once. 1991 New Years Eve at the Cow Palace in S.F.
Having been to the Cow Palace quite a few times for lots of great metal shows through the 80's... I went with an open mind. Hell it was New Years Eve.
Nirvana came on and opened with "Drain You".
In all my years of going to shows I've NEVER seen an audience reaction like the one I saw that night. I was sitting in the seats, opposite the stage with the whole floor of the arena in front of me. Being about 15 feet higher allowed me an unobstructed view to the stage. The whole of the floor audience, from stage to me was standing, and jumping up and down in unison.. I literally watched the whole of the floor FLEX as they jumped. It was sheer joyful pandemonium.
Say what you will about Nirvana, good or bad.. but there's no denying that they were a force of nature live.
Nirvana was in the right place at the right time. They were one of the first bands I got into on my own, independent of my old man's influences, but they haven't stood the test of time for me. Almost every other grunge band stands the test of time far better for me.
If one of the better grunge bands broke first, like Alice In Chains or Pearl Jam, the three pieces of mainstream narrative about Nirvana would be Cobain's drug problems, Cobain's redecoration of his walls, and Dave Grohl breaking free from a scummy drug addict to become a great musician and songwriter in his own right.
mikemarrs wrote:Alice In Chains in my opinion were a hundred times better than Nirvana.Hated the alternative movement as a whole but if their is one band that was good it was Alice In Chains.They had more of a straight ahead rock vibe and had some great acoustic tunes as well.
slucero wrote:I remember hearing about Nevermind well before it's release in a Gina Arnold article in our local music mag BAM Magazine... "This will be huge" were her words.
I saw Nirvana. Once. 1991 New Years Eve at the Cow Palace in S.F.
Having been to the Cow Palace quite a few times for lots of great metal shows through the 80's... I went with an open mind. Hell it was New Years Eve.
Nirvana came on and opened with "Drain You".
In all my years of going to shows I've NEVER seen an audience reaction like the one I saw that night. I was sitting in the seats, opposite the stage with the whole floor of the arena in front of me. Being about 15 feet higher allowed me an unobstructed view to the stage. The whole of the floor audience, from stage to me was standing, and jumping up and down in unison.. I literally watched the whole of the floor FLEX as they jumped. It was sheer joyful pandemonium.
Say what you will about Nirvana, good or bad.. but there's no denying that they were a force of nature live.
Andrew wrote:Shit band that were in the right place at the right time (wrong time for normal rock fans).
AIC were a very good band....
Most other grunge bands were like the punk revolution of the late 70s. Noisy for a few years then half dead.
Andrew wrote:Shit band that were in the right place at the right time (wrong time for normal rock fans).
AIC were a very good band....
Most other grunge bands were like the punk revolution of the late 70s. Noisy for a few years then half dead.
brywool wrote:I remember folks saying 'It was like losing John Lennon'. Not EVEN. Nirvana was okay, but not even CLOSE to that kind of status. Just because he died, he was elevated to sainthood. I got so tired of hearing how great they were (and I'm FROM Seattle kids). Sorry, just didn't get it. Grohl turned out to be pretty darned talented, and I prefer his writing to Cobain's. Still, people really liked the a lot, I just didn't get it. Out of that whole scene, Soundgarden was the most interesting.
Darn tootin' on King's X.
Andrew wrote:Jonny B wrote:If there's any mean bones in my body, they're right here, on this topic. For I feel it would've done the American music scene a HUGE favor had Cobain killed himself before he became famous. Many talented musicians ended up in the unemployment line because of him. US metal has become irrelevant in the post-Grunge era, has steadily declined, and in spite of a few small glimpses of hope, still shows little signs of recovering 20 years later. I'm just very happy the European metal scene refuses to live in a post-Nirvana world. At least they know how to write good metal.
I agree. Down tuned guitars and shitty singers continue to be the staple of US metal.
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