Anthrax too I guess.

Anyway, my Nirvana comment was slightly tongue in cheek and more a broad “this one of the ways popular/alternative music shifted in the 90s and here’s why but I’m not sure what the equivalent for The Strokes/White Stripes is”

Another couple of hours for this one.

I’m not sure if there is one tbh. There was a pretty healthy garage punk scene throughout the 1990s, but only the White Stripes, Jon Spencer and Jay Reatard had any direct links to this and you’d be hard pushed to call the latter two famous enough to attribute a shift of this size to them. All the stuff going on in New York (Strokes, YYYs etc.) wasn’t connected to this at all. Personally think it’s a reaction to hip hop and, in the UK and Europe, house, techno and jungle/d’n’b being the dominant forms of music for the best part of the previous decade, and back to basics rock bands being seen as the answer to this (and for mainstream music publications to cover music that they felt more comfortable with again)

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loads of shit bands get big, ATDI were definitely being pushed as the next big thing circa 2000

Think this is a good point. I distinctly remember a “rock and roll is back” narrative being pushed by MTV in 2001. I think part of it too had to do with MTV’s finally deciding to hedge the bet it made back around 1997 when rock was basically dropped overnight for the Spice Girls and boy bands (while also not wanting to admit it possibly made a mistake, which suddenly playing newer material by the old artists would have shown).

It’s all confusing though since 2000 was an incredible year for rock music, especially by established artists. Plenty of albums (in my opinion) were coming out that were much better and much more exciting than anything The Strokes, The White Stripes, etc. ever would do. I guess latching onto new bands that were generating buzz locally made for a more exciting narrative.

This is a thought I just had today so it’s probably total garbage, but I wonder if a small part of the reset with new bands was a reaction to the violence of Woodstock 99. Like a, “Ok, rock got dumb and destructive, but look, bands are bringing back the classic style that you and your parents used to love” kind of thing.

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The most baffling thing to me about any of it was how QOTSA didn’t completely blow up with Rated R.

  • It’s one of the greatest and most exciting pure rock albums ever
  • It’s very far from nu-metal
  • It has a similarity to popular and respected rock music that came earlier
  • It has ties to the big popular rock bands of the early 90s, but those ties were relatively unknown and the band was young enough that they could have been marketed as something brand new

Just a year too early maybe?

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So like I said, everyone getting pissed off at Kid A

Yup, that and metal bands thinking they had to include a DJ

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Think there’s quite a bit in this tbh. Genuinely consider that despite some amazing records being released by rock bands during this time, the late 90s was the absolute nadir of mainstream US rock music and this was epitomised by just how shit Woodstock 99 was. Reckon it could well have been one of the things that made people reassess their music choices.

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3.34 Not a bad score, nice thread too.

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that’s a good shout actually, Rated R is on a bit of an island in the year 2000, think how successful Songs for the Deaf was a couple years later is probably testament to it just being a little bit ahead of its time (which is kinda odd to say for a pretty straight up alt-rock record but there you go)

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I didn’t really acknowledge the other part of your reply here, but surely guys like Jon Spencer and Jay Reatard are equivalent to Nirvana’s contemporaries Pixies and Mudhoney in terms of size and influence?

This is exactly what made me dislike Nirvana overall until about 2011

Not their fault though.

hence why I said indirectly

It was a different time, maann, when I wasn’t open-minded enough to remember to read the brackets.

(Five minutes ago) :man_shrugging:

My memory of it is that the music press, especially the NME, was determined to launch a new rock ‘movement’ for the 21st Century, and The Strokes and White Stripes were the first bands to have the right ingredients (image, accessibility, and novelty factor) to really catch on. QOTSA were much more similar to early 90s alt rock.

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Yeah maybe, although don’t think either were as big as the Pixies tbh. Mudhoney for sure, although the White Stripes, Jon Spencer and Jay Reatard (or The Reatards as they were then) weren’t part of the same local scene in the same way as Nirvana, Mudhoney, Soundgarden, Alice In Chains and Pearl Jam were, so more difficult to build a movement around them I guess

*aware that Nirvana and Mudhoney were probably in a different part of that scene to Soundgarden, Alice In Chains and Pearl Jam, but can discuss that the next time there’s a conversation about whether grunge existed or not

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