yes, last i heard, indie rockers en masse had rejected the teachings of pavement and burned all existing record of their heresy
― a dystopian society awaits if we continue on this path. (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 08:10 (fourteen years ago) link
well, if not, then why not
― لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 3 September 2010 08:13 (fourteen years ago) link
guys you're ignoring this important youtube comment
#maitlanr6 months ago 103
early 90s man. that was our sixties. and we blew it!
― gross rainbow of haerosmith (underrated aerosmith albums I have loved), Friday, 3 September 2010 08:16 (fourteen years ago) link
the 90s are gonna make the 60s look like the 50s
― a dystopian society awaits if we continue on this path. (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 08:29 (fourteen years ago) link
lol reactionary lex is back
― Prime Minister Dougal McGuire (King Boy Pato), Friday, 3 September 2010 08:54 (fourteen years ago) link
god there are some b&s tracks i can vibe to but this is just abject
― i am legernd (history mayne), Friday, 3 September 2010 09:05 (fourteen years ago) link
Aaliyah - "Are You That Somebody?" - freaking greatAphex Twin - "Windowlicker" - feel like I should vote for this but it's not even my fave Aphex track let alone fave track of the 90s :-(Beck - "Loser" - this was the first time I ever had the feeling I was being "marketed to" like my generation had become a demographic, and I didn't particularly like itBelle and Sebastian - "The State I Am In" - at a particular moment in time, this was meaningful, but that moment has passedBjörk - "Hyperballad" - freaking greatDaft Punk - "Da Funk" - just a bit of fun, be coolDepeche Mode - "Enjoy the Silence" - hated at the time, but it's really grown on meDJ Shadow - "Midnight in a Perfect World" - can't remember how it wentDr. Dre [ft. Snoop Doggy Dogg] - "Nuthin' But a 'G' Thang" - can't remember how it wentMazzy Star - "Fade Into You" - oh just go awayMy Bloody Valentine - "Only Shallow" - see my Aphex entry. Not my fave MBV track.Neutral Milk Hotel - "Holland, 1945" - can't remember how it wentNirvana - "Smells Like Teen Spirit" - oh just go awayThe Notorious B.I.G. - "Juicy" - can't remember how it wentOutKast - "Spottieottedopalicious" - can't remember how it wentPavement - "Gold Soundz" - can't remember how it went also OH JUST GO AWAY god I fucking hate PavewankPulp - "Common People" - God I fucking hated this song with an utter passionRadiohead - "Paranoid Android" - a moment in time but that moment has passedWeezer - "Say It Ain't So" - can't remember how it wentWu-Tang Clan - "Protect Ya Neck" - can't remember how it went
So OF THIS LIST it looks like the only tracks I still have unreserved love for are Aaliyah and Bjork. But at the same time I feel like I should vote for what Aphex Twin or MBV *mean* to me, and *mean* to my impression of what 90s music was about. Even though there are other songs by those artists that should get the nod.
But now I'm listening to Hyperballad again, I'm getting the same "BUT THIS ISN'T EVEN THE BEST SONG!" vibe.
Oh wah waht a boring and unrepresentative list etc. moan groan complain etc.
― cymose corymb (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:01 (fourteen years ago) link
I hate the nineties and "Loser" is not at all my favorite Beck, but hating that song or dismissing it as an example of being "marketed to" is crazy talk. It could have been released in 1979. Just a buncha cool sounds and non sequiturs stitched together whose chorus happened to be exactly the generational catchphrase adapted by record companies.
― Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:18 (fourteen years ago) link
think that was Kate's point...?
― great British wasteman = u (DJ Mencap), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:22 (fourteen years ago) link
I mean given it originaly came out on a microindie before Geffen jumped on it, I don't think there's any suggestion that Beck was a literal marketing creation, but I can see why someone might roll their eyes at its presentation
― great British wasteman = u (DJ Mencap), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:24 (fourteen years ago) link
Neutral Milk Hotel - "Holland, 1945" - can't remember how it went
played it about an hour ago and i can't remember how it went. as with weezer and pavement and belle and sebastian, totally unremarkable piece of music.
― i am legernd (history mayne), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:24 (fourteen years ago) link
^ this. this is otm. but i remember feeling that same weird twinge of encroachment in 93. i loved the song in spite of the feeling that i'd been sold, but it was definitely there. wasn't beck's fault, either, cuz he was clearly & authentically of my generation & culture, but he was one of the first examples of what i then thought of as "my" outsider/slacker/indie-refusenik youth culture and values being sold back at me by the dreaded "mainstream". it was somewhat jarring in that sense.
whether or not this makes sense to you probably says a lot about where and who you were at the time.
― having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:25 (fourteen years ago) link
by "this" i meant alfred's initial response to KDT.
― having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:26 (fourteen years ago) link
not history mayne's inability to properly listen to music
Thanks for your dismissal of my personal reaction to a song as "a dismissal". It was not a dismissal, it was a pretty powerful disillusioning - which was probably rather important for me to make at that age, and in that time and place. I'm not denying that that song was, certainly, a generational moment. However, it did mark for me the moment (along with Grunge Boutiques in Macy's and the like) that I realised that anything and everything could/would be coopted by the mainstream, that I wasn't so unique and that I should stop being such a fucking snob about music because many of the lines were absolutely arbitrary and "indie" or "alternative" or whatever it was that I'd been a part of in the late 80s and early 90s was really just one lifestyle choice among others.
― cymose corymb (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:27 (fourteen years ago) link
i was 13 when 'loser' 'dropped', felt it was something of a parody?
― i am legernd (history mayne), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:27 (fourteen years ago) link
Karen, no offense, but that disillusionment seems like a good thing in retrospect, no?
― Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:28 (fourteen years ago) link
wasn't beck's fault, either, cuz he was clearly & authentically of my generation & culture, but he was one of the first examples of what i then thought of as "my" outsider/slacker/indie-refusenik youth culture and values being sold back at me by the dreaded "mainstream". it was somewhat jarring in that sense.
Yes. This ^^^^^^^^
It was that sense of having your own self-generated culture sold back to you that I disliked, not the song. The song was actually pretty catchy.
― cymose corymb (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:29 (fourteen years ago) link
This was my ENTIRE point.
So then, thank you, record company!
― Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:30 (fourteen years ago) link
Not really, no.
― cymose corymb (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:33 (fourteen years ago) link
it totally was, but it was a clever insider's self-mockery. delivered to us from one of us, if you will. the otm wit was a big part of what made it feel so weirdly intrustive on pop radio. plus awesome. still love it, btw, though not as much.
― having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:33 (fourteen years ago) link
As for Neutral Milk Hotel, still haven't heard'em, don't remember'em at all at the time. Were their tapes passed around in college dorms or something? Were they played on college radio?
― Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:36 (fourteen years ago) link
kind of glossing over the parallel doublethink required, because at the same time is was SO FUCKING GREAT to see this stuff beginning to break through to the mainstream, to see "kool thing" on MTV and trade secret tapes of nevermind demos while waiting for it to officially drop.
― having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:37 (fourteen years ago) link
speaking of tapes.
and yes, afred, college students passed neutral milk hotel demos around as if they were doobies
― having taken an actual journalism class (contenderizer), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:38 (fourteen years ago) link
once again, there is a huge transatlantic divide on this [via the bbc]
― i am legernd (history mayne), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:39 (fourteen years ago) link
I remember similar sort of phenomena, but the reaction to this stuff starting to break through to the meainstream wasn't so much "SO FUCKING GREAT!" but "Oh shit, we're about to get really completely screwed, aren't we?"
Perhaps that's down to indie snobbery, perhaps that was the cynicism that would haunt my generation. But my personal reaction to the sight of the kind of people who used to beat me up in high school suddenly walking around in Kurt Cobain t-shirts was "oh fucking shit, end times" rather than untrammelled joy.
― cymose corymb (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:40 (fourteen years ago) link
Downloaded Neutral Milk Hotel years ago after it came high in an ILX poll. I remember them nearly as dull as The National.
― Chewshabadoo, Friday, 3 September 2010 11:45 (fourteen years ago) link
now that's just mean
― do you know sixty (electricsound), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:47 (fourteen years ago) link
Sorry!
― Chewshabadoo, Friday, 3 September 2010 11:51 (fourteen years ago) link
I remember when Neutral Milk Hotel came out - I think I read an article about Tribe 8 in like Relix or something - but I could never find any of their albums and Olivia Treble Control was a better band name anyway. Every now and again, someone extols the genius of "The Aeroplane Flies High (Turns Left, Looks Right)" to me and I'll go check out some song samples on iTunes, but it's always really unremarkable.
― a Bud Light Chelada 22 oz. on a sort of a date (kkvgz), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:53 (fourteen years ago) link
Olivia Treble Control was a better band name anyway.
it is kinda better than their actual name
― do you know sixty (electricsound), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:57 (fourteen years ago) link
my horribly-formed attempt at one of those faux-naive skot seward posts.
― a Bud Light Chelada 22 oz. on a sort of a date (kkvgz), Friday, 3 September 2010 11:58 (fourteen years ago) link
I'd pick any number of the >20 tracks before these, but from this list I'll go MBV. Stunning piece of music, one of my favourite album openings ever.
― seandalai, Friday, 3 September 2010 11:59 (fourteen years ago) link
Enjoy the Silence.
― Allen (etaeoe), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:02 (fourteen years ago) link
'da funk' -- then aaliyah
― the embrace of waka flocka is v pertinent (deej), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:06 (fourteen years ago) link
at least the mood im in right now. i think i voted 'g thang' highest on my ballot
Went with Hyperballad, btw, but I'm really having a good time listening to this Enjoy the Silence youtube. I haven't heard this song in years, but it's pretty dope.
― olivia tribble control (kkvgz), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:21 (fourteen years ago) link
just to say a few words in defense of NMH...
I don't know how that album went down in the US when it was released, I've always presumed it was a modest, cult success. I remember seeing them support Olivia Tremor Control at the Garage in 1998, and being entirely blown away by them. In the context of those times, you didn't often see 8-piece groups with musical saws and hobbit-looking dudes playing tubas onstage, so that was remarkable. But there was something so joyous and unhinged about the performance, swinging hard between chaos and melody: I remember the drummer playing these crazily overloaded drum rolls that were so OTT he had trouble getting back into the rhythm of the song, but somehow it all held together. The songs were great, much better than those of OTC, and they had none of that group's antiseptic slavery to a single style and moment - NMH seemed gloriously alive by comparison.
I got the album, and loved it. I remember pushing hard to write about them while I was at Melody Maker, but was turned down, and told that others in the office thought they sounded like the panpipe group from The Fast Show. An editor at The Times was more understanding at let me write some end of year blurbs about them. I was pretty obsessed with the record, but in the UK, it just seemed to pass by under the radar. I was a pretty dedicated partisan for their cause, putting their songs on mix-tapes I made for friends. If I was interviewing a musician I thought would appreciate their music, I'd make 'em cassettes, most of which probably ended up discarded and unlistened on the floors of tourvans. But if that artist turned round and said they already loved the album, it was a pretty big thrill, and would often result in long discussions about the unheralded magic of NMH, this brilliant secret were were lucky enough to be in on.
I'm really not surprised that the album has enjoyed such acclaim in the years since it was released. The 'concept' behind the songs - that Jeff Mangum was so inspired by reading the Diary Of Anne Frank that he penned this album-length treatise of love'n'death/fantasy that he travelled back in time to try and save her - is both opaque and alluring, and, of course, makes for both good copy and at-length decoding by obsessive fans. Jeff Mangum's own subsequent non-career and silence, full of mystery and hints of tragedy, also makes for a great story - the doomed artist and his final folly, etc etc. It's an archetypal 'lost album', if you like. And you'd be crazy to deny its influence on indie groups (many of whom I detest) that have followed.
I still think its a marvellous record, though I don't play it often now, as I perhaps played it too much a decade or so ago. I can't deny that it still moves me today, when I do hear songs from it, and even a track as outwardly-ebullient as 'Holland 1945' remains affecting, not least for the poetry of Jeff's lyrics, and the sentiments and stories its telling.
― Chaki doesn't have beef with unicorn (stevie), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:22 (fourteen years ago) link
I mean all the above is corny as hell, but its also the truth
― Chaki doesn't have beef with unicorn (stevie), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:23 (fourteen years ago) link
Say what you want about this list but the inevitable torrent compilation is going to kick ass.
Sometimes > Only Shallow, voted for Loser for old time's sake. Bought the CD single because I would usually rather get 2 singles than one album with my $12 for music.
― skip, Friday, 3 September 2010 12:35 (fourteen years ago) link
QFT
― skip, Friday, 3 September 2010 12:36 (fourteen years ago) link
xp: The Loser CD single was dope too! The alternate version of Soul Suckin' Jerk is soooo much better than the album version.
― olivia tribble control (kkvgz), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:37 (fourteen years ago) link
re: NMH, i got the holland 7" before the album and was v excited, the album was subsequently a ridiculous disappointment to me
― do you know sixty (electricsound), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:41 (fourteen years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_5nNQmszDw
― olivia tribble control (kkvgz), Friday, 3 September 2010 12:42 (fourteen years ago) link
between gold soundz and juicy for me
― da croupier, Friday, 3 September 2010 12:44 (fourteen years ago) link
I bought the first Neutral Milk Hotel album after reading a rave review in Spin or Magnet, liked a couple tunes but didn't really see the big fuss and then proceeded to ignore them for the next couple of years, only later realizing that In the Aeroplane had become an indie touchstone.
― jaymc, Friday, 3 September 2010 12:51 (fourteen years ago) link
At the same time, the Elephant 6 collective as a whole was definitely a *thing* if you paid attention to US indie in the late 90s. I mean, I skipped In the Aeroplane in 1998 but I did buy Olivia Tremor Control's Black Foliage.
― jaymc, Friday, 3 September 2010 12:54 (fourteen years ago) link
"Loser"
Sorry, autogoons
― office (max) (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 3 September 2010 13:02 (fourteen years ago) link
can't we just accept that Pitchfork took some critical/fan favorites whose esteem has raised over time (whether everyone realized it) over the obvious pop hits?
― da croupier, Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:09 (fourteen years ago) link
NO
― juggalo iglesias (HI DERE), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:09 (fourteen years ago) link
see if Pitchfork had just opened the list up to more than one song per artist then this discussion needn't have happened...
― i wish them hell and happiness (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:27 (fourteen years ago) link
I would like to request an argument over DJ Shadow's Midnight in a Perfect World, which has been badly neglected itt.
― Gorecki or Go Home (Paul in Santa Cruz), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:32 (fourteen years ago) link
whatever happened to that guy
― da croupier, Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:36 (fourteen years ago) link
I'm guessing "grad school"
― juggalo iglesias (HI DERE), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:37 (fourteen years ago) link
argument: DJ Shadow's Midnight in a Perfect World does not exist.
― i wish them hell and happiness (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:40 (fourteen years ago) link
according to wikipedia he's an avatar on DJ Hero, working on a new album and playing shows in Antwerp. Good for him!
― da croupier, Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:56 (fourteen years ago) link
You missed the "DJ Shadow sneaks his own records into shops in Hungary" story then I take it?
― Eejit Piaf (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 16 September 2010 18:59 (fourteen years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fcESmqxS4kI
Allegedly his latest track
― da croupier, Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:00 (fourteen years ago) link
Samples from Gary Numan?
― Gorecki or Go Home (Paul in Santa Cruz), Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:13 (fourteen years ago) link
Tuomas, it tells you on the page
About the ArtistMickey Hart, best known for his work with The Grateful Dead, has collected and performed on many unusual percussion instruments found throughout the world. He has put both traditional and little-known instruments to new and unexpected uses in his own compositions. At the same time, he has worked diligently to preserve the wisdom of ancient musical cultures through his recordings of indigenous artists. His research into the ritualistic roots of percussion is chronicled in his 1990 book, 'Drumming at the Edge of Magic'. In 1969, Henry Wolff and Nancy Hennings traveled to India and Nepal where they studied with the Kagyu branch of Tibetan Buddhism and discovered the transcendent music of the Tibetan bells. In 1972, they became the first Western artists to make use of the then unknown Asian instruments in a 20th century Western idiom. The resulting album, Tibetan Bells, led to a succession of recordings featuring these instruments.
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:20 (fourteen years ago) link
I assume you have heard the grateful dead?
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:21 (fourteen years ago) link
oops wrong thread hehe
btw these arguments still going?
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:22 (fourteen years ago) link
even the P&J arguments dont last this long. Pitchfork must be really special to posters on ILM
― pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Thursday, 16 September 2010 19:23 (fourteen years ago) link
deej you can rockcrit this shit all you want but if you ask your average outkast fan to name five kast songs from the 90s this woouldn't be one
― k3vin k., Thursday, September 16, 2010 12:45 PM (6 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
bulllllshit
― you cant see me markers (deej), Friday, 17 September 2010 00:31 (fourteen years ago) link
i still hear this one at clubs btw -- awesome 'end of the night' jam (i think i posted this somewhere)
way more than i hear rosa parks
― you cant see me markers (deej), Friday, 17 September 2010 00:32 (fourteen years ago) link
deej has been otm itt
― J0rdan S., Friday, 17 September 2010 00:44 (fourteen years ago) link
iet
― you cant see me markers (deej), Friday, 17 September 2010 00:53 (fourteen years ago) link
yeah, def the 90s outkast jam i hear out the most. not sure kevin is old enough to go to clubs tho, so won't hold that point against him.
― The Reverend, Friday, 17 September 2010 04:25 (fourteen years ago) link
lol
― J0rdan S., Friday, 17 September 2010 04:25 (fourteen years ago) link
the zinged becomes the zinger
i have never heard this song outside of me playing my own copy of aquemini, so ¯\(°_°)/¯
― t(o_o)t it and b(o_o)t it (Whiney G. Weingarten), Friday, 17 September 2010 05:23 (fourteen years ago) link
we're talking about strip clubs, right?
― Gucci Mane hermeneuticist (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 17 September 2010 11:06 (fourteen years ago) link
Midnight In A Perfect World is gorgeous, it's one of the few tracks on Endtroducing that's aged well.
― Matt DC, Friday, 17 September 2010 11:15 (fourteen years ago) link
^^^
― you cant see me markers (deej), Friday, 17 September 2010 11:54 (fourteen years ago) link
you're dumb.
― billstevejim, Thursday, 3 February 2011 06:52 (thirteen years ago) link