Michael Azerrad s Book for the 90s
51a whole Tortoise chapter called 'The band that ruined Chicago forever'
Rick Reuben wrote:Marsupialized reminds me of freedom
Moderator: Greg
Rick Reuben wrote:Marsupialized reminds me of freedom
Possum Hiss wrote:Fugazi(They shouldn't have been in the original, considering they already had Minor Threat in it and the majority of Fugazi's work came in the 90s)
Michael Azerrad wrote:Although Fugazi's legend grew even larger in the Nineties, Brendand Canty feels the band's early days tell its truest story. "People might look back at us and think we're this icon," he says, "but at the time there was just a couple of hundred people coming to the shows and it wasn't huge and nothing had potential. It was just inportant to do it. And the fact that we all wanted to go on the road and work as hard as possible, and that we were able to, is in itself its own success story. It doesn't necessarily have to be about getting anywhere, but about getting through the process of fulfilling your own possibilities."
marsupialized wrote:a whole Tortoise chapter called 'The band that ruined Chicago forever'
Zak THICK wrote:might I suggest...
Rancid
Sunny Day Real Estate
NOFX
Mighty Might Bosstones
Rocket From The Crypt
Weezer
Uncle Tupelo
Built To Spill
Mayfair wrote:recap Beat Happening and K Records
Bradley R. Weissenberger wrote:Shin guards for all!
Christopher_Dragon wrote:Mayfair wrote:recap Beat Happening and K Records
Don't you think that Kill Rock Stars would be a more obvious choice?
Mayfair wrote:One of the things I really liked about his book was that he was able to talk about a few different bands from around the country that did not just follow the wave but started their own path (put out their own and their friends records, booked shows in places these type of shows had not happened in yet, etc). These to me were not just randomly picked great bands, they were bands that help define what we know consider the way to do things.
SO, in answer to the question, I would choose bands from the 90's that continued in that vein but since they were more of a second wave (yeah, arguably the fourth wave but you know what I mean) their importance is not defined by their innovation as the first book's bands were, but for their full tilt investment in addition to being great bands. I would start with Fugazi (yes, was in the first book) and Dischord, continue to Superchunck and Merge, Tsunami and Simple Machines, Unrest and Teenbeat, recap Beat Happening and K Records, include Drag City and the revolution of sorts they and their bands brought forth (Royal Trux, Pavement, Palace, Smog, etc), continue on from more Touch & Go and Matador as they both helped define the 90's, look at the Louisville contingent (Slint, King Kong, Bastro, Squirrel Bait, etc), Unwound would be good, maybe even the Monomen and that whole Bellingham Estrus thing.... I feel like I am forgetting a few more naturals... I guess more on Sub-pop, maybe more labels...
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