• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

90s music flashback. Who remembers...

I tend to split the 90s music into three phases, because they each feel different to me.

1990-1992 -- mostly a fresh feeling to music from this era, as compared to the late 80s. Music feels sometimes controversial, and pushing the boundaries of societal norms. Generally feels scene-like... be it, the rave-scenes... the homo-friendly-scenes... the depressed-kids-scenes... the drug-popularity-scenes...

1993-1997 -- this is quite a comfortable phase for 90s music. The fresh and controversial feelings have gone now, and most popular music from this time feels very innocent and light hearted.

1998-2000 -- build up to the millennium. The music from this phase feels quite optimistic, and there is more dance/celebration type music. Synthetic and computer generated music feels quite advanced now. The distinct sounds of sample keyboards from earlier years have now been completely replaced with computer generated sounds, which are much more complexly arranged. The innocence and light hearted feel is now gone. Music now feels more serious and constructed, or at least, it feels like it has been created more mindfully and impersonally, unlike the music in earlier years.

Well said!

I do the same thing with the 80s...the early 80s I think of the punk and ska stuff, the middle I think of the pop Duran Duran British stuff and the end of the 80s is flavored by Bon Jovi type stuff.
 
90's music I found tolerable.

Captain Hollywood Project "More and More" Other lyrics were unintelligeble...More and more and more...dunno where wegoaningto..

Corina "Temptation" (early 90's slut anthem), purple catsuit to those stupid ass hip-hop baggy clothes people wore then.

White Town "Your Woman"

Shakespeare's Sister's Stay...cheesy ass song and video. Great stuff.

Tom Cochrane...Life is A Highway. Good artist, overplayed song.

It was a rainy afternoon in 1990, big city...jeesh it's been 20 years...Candy, you were so fine...Iggy Pop and Kate Pierson...REAL WHITE TRASH LOVE song.

Paperboy "Ditty", Brother ain't from Mt. Vernon, but he's money earnin'!

Mark Morrison "Return of the Mack"

Supersuckers "Born with a Tail"

Mike Watt "Liberty Calls"
 
I tend to split the 90s music into three phases, because they each feel different to me.

1990-1992 -- mostly a fresh feeling to music from this era, as compared to the late 80s. Music feels sometimes controversial, and pushing the boundaries of societal norms. Generally feels scene-like... be it, the rave-scenes... the homo-friendly-scenes... the depressed-kids-scenes... the drug-popularity-scenes...

1993-1997 -- this is quite a comfortable phase for 90s music. The fresh and controversial feelings have gone now, and most popular music from this time feels very innocent and light hearted.

1998-2000 -- build up to the millennium. The music from this phase feels quite optimistic, and there is more dance/celebration type music. Synthetic and computer generated music feels quite advanced now. The distinct sounds of sample keyboards from earlier years have now been completely replaced with computer generated sounds, which are much more complexly arranged. The innocence and light hearted feel is now gone. Music now feels more serious and constructed, or at least, it feels like it has been created more mindfully and impersonally, unlike the music in earlier years.

Well said!

I do the same thing with the 80s...the early 80s I think of the punk and ska stuff, the middle I think of the pop Duran Duran British stuff and the end of the 80s is flavored by Bon Jovi type stuff.
The funny thing is, I feel those phases of 90s music have coincided with personal moments for me in the 90s. I see those phases as follows:

The early phase (1990-92) - essentially a hangover period from the 80s where the decade is still trying to find its unique voice. Music was essentially similar to the 80s with added synthetic beats and dance vibes. The Madchester scene's seeds were flourishing by now, and continued to do so, while old-skool house begat modern techno. These forms essentially dominated the charts for a bit. I believe there was even an attempt at a late-70s revival in terms of fashion and things - flares were everywhere again. And of course there was old-skool rap. :lol: Me, I was finishing primary school by then, so the music scenes were reminiscent of the older times.

The middle phase (about 1993-97) was where we began to see 90s music take form. Initially there was the "Ragga" craze which was extremely popular in 1993, while rock became sullen and moody of note. The British indie scene would sprout Britpop, popular rock and dance music with a wry nod to the music of the 60s and 70s (especially Oasis and Blur, their sounds harking back to those of the Beatles/Stones and the Kinks respectively), even leading to a revival of the Beatles. Hip independent movies like "Trainspotting" and the like also saw a 70s music revival in general. Things were bright and breezy, but with a generally unspoken dissatisfaction over the way things were (John Major was in power, remember?) and a longing for things "new" and "cool" (this Tony Blair fella). Me, I had just reached secondary school by then, and had found my "own" voice as it were. They were great days, overall, though. :bolian:

The later "decline" years: 1997 to 1999. The britpop dream was dying with the onset of New Labour reaching government and everyone growing wise to the politics of Blair and co, though the dying years were still overseen by established acts like The Verve, Manics and Blur, later to be taken over by more broader-appeal acts like Coldplay and Travis. Pop made a major comeback especially in 1998, wth the Spice Girls leading the charge since 1996. I believe there was even an ABBA revival by this time, later manifesting in the hit musical "Mamma Mia!" storming the West End. Rap, hip-hop and "RnB" (essentially souped-up soul with a hip-hop beat) and increasingly electronic processed sounds (see Radiohead), especially in the popular "trance" subgenre of dance music by decade's end, became increasingly attractive, and a signpost for the music trends of the 2000s. By this time I had hit University, and things were looking towards the future, an uncertain one in many ways.
 
What about "What If God Was One of Us" by Joan Osborne. One of those songs that I don't really like but always got stuck in my head. It was on the radio a lot I remember...
 
Tom Cochrane...Life is A Highway. Good artist, overplayed song.

Tom Cochrane has some great songs, and it's unfortunate most people don't know his other stuff. "Big Leagues" is my personal favourite. I believe that song was released in the late-80s, though... ;)

Some actual 90s songs, though:

"One Week" - Barenaked Ladies (One of my favourite bands, though far from my favourite song by them, so I posted an alternate version.)

"Californication" - Red Hot Chilli Peppers

"Creep" - Radiohead

"Song 2" - Blur

"Bobcaygeon" - The Tragically Hip (One for the Canadians)
 
I'm ashamed that I didn't mention the Gin Blossoms first-seeing as how I went to school with half of them, worked with one of the others at one of my early jobs and hung out with them when they weren't playing at bars like the now -defunct Long Wong's. I guess it's still hard to wrap my mind around the idea that this particular collection of drunks and a-holes were famous. I guess your perspective is different when you've picked 'em up off the barroom floor and poured them into the back of their van....:lol:
I was gonna post one of their songs. Here it is...

Gin Blossoms - "Found Out About You"

I will will raise you your Gin Blossoms song with another:
Gin Blossoms - Follow You Down:
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=sM0NHtpI8cQ

This thread is in dire need of some STP. For your viewing pleasure, Interstate Love Song:
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=EmXc4F78_vk
 
How about:

Len - Steal My Sunshine

Lit - My Own Worst Enemy

Beck - The New Pollution

Citizen King - Better Days (And The Bottom Drops Out)

Don't forget the Presidents of the United States of America - Lump, Peaches, Kitty, Dune Buggy

And the Spice Girls... good lord, the Spice Girls

And the Electronic craze - Moby, Fatboy Slim, Chemical Brothers, even Aphex Twin's "Come to Daddy"
 
The 90s to me were mostly about bands like Nirvana and Primus and Jesus Lizard and yeah all of those popular bands too but my tastes tended to veer towards the atonal, especially during that time period. :borg:
 
used like things from 2 unlimited ,oh and betty boo doin' the doo and the like then i discovered 'proper' music like iron maiden
 
Maiden are an amazing band. The 90s were definitely a dark time for them though, the Blaze albums were not good.
 
true enough mind you what got me into maidens music was a friend of mine giving me a load of alice cooper albums. claimed they werent 'in' enough
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top