Re: Music genre revisionist history
11I thought the "godfather of grunge" appellation was invented as PR for "Keep On Rockin' In A Free World."
janeway wrote: Fri Jul 18, 2025 4:52 am i do want to apologize if i offended anybody with my posts lately .. i was in denial of my impulses going wild
Hole played a similar move on the debut, if memory serves (can't recall the exact riff). And Dinosaur were covering a Neil song live at the time also ('Like a Hurricane', maybe? Or was it 'Cortez'?)seby wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 2:29 am You know that the intro to Mudhoney's "Broken Hands" is the Outro to Neil Young and Crazy Horse's "Cinnamon Girl", right?
I have always loved this little connector. Thanks for bringing this up.seby wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 2:29 am FWIW Mudhoney always cited The Stooges, Blue Cheer, and early Neil Young as big influences - along with The Scientists. When I listen to Mudhoney this is what I hear.
You know that the intro to Mudhoney's "Broken Hands" is the Outro to Neil Young and Crazy Horse's "Cinnamon Girl", right? Let alone that they sound like the very same band. The homage is brazen, open worship on Mudhoney's part:
Funny little aside: I admittedly haven't listened to Mudhoney a whole lot, but feel I know what their general sound is and could recognize if a song was recorded by them. My friend who seemed to be into most of Kurt Cobain's favorite bands once put on the 1985 self-titled feedtime album and I immediately thought with 100% conviction it was Mudhoney.seby wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 2:29 am FWIW Mudhoney always cited The Stooges, Blue Cheer, and early Neil Young as big influences - along with The Scientists.
I spent a while covering what I believe "emo" pretty much applies to here:losthighway wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 7:46 am Lord, emo. I'm on this 90s hardcore/punk/emo Facebook group where people share cool records and nostalgia. Once in a while someone gets on a high horse about "real emo" and I always bristle. If Rites of Spring, Angel Hair and Christie Front Drive are all emo then wtf is emo anyway? Weezer isn't really emo but emo isn't really real.
Straight talk?indiegrab_360 wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 3:15 pmI spent a while covering what I believe "emo" pretty much applies to here:losthighway wrote: Tue Sep 27, 2022 7:46 am Lord, emo. I'm on this 90s hardcore/punk/emo Facebook group where people share cool records and nostalgia. Once in a while someone gets on a high horse about "real emo" and I always bristle. If Rites of Spring, Angel Hair and Christie Front Drive are all emo then wtf is emo anyway? Weezer isn't really emo but emo isn't really real.
Again, not on any high horse, just bringing up my perspective. It's all gravy really.
I actually think some of this is kinda funny. Seeing as I was in a scene band in NJ in 2004-05. The height of the MySpace/Purevolume wave.
The term "emo" kind of splits into about 3 distinct different sub-genres rather quickly...
1. acoustic,
2. post-hardcore/aggressive/screamo,,, and then
3. Pop/Rock I guess.
A lot of confusion around hardcore/punk vs. post-hardcore of the emo variety. Because a lot of bands mix a variety of styles but were active during the 2001-07 wave.
I dunno seems like in these genre histories, the authors desperately want the history to be long and illustrious and fit into a certain mold, even if that's not completely accurate. Like writing an essay or something where you have to hit on various different points, make sure everyone gets mentioned (regardless if they're even really involved).
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