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The
Best CDs of the 1990s
by Sam Smith
11.1.99
Below
is my Best CDs of the 1990s list. I never kidded myself for
a second that I could produce a definitive review - if I can't
even convince myself that the list is as good as I'd like
it, I can hardly fault others for disagreeing here and there,
can I?
In the end I wound up deciding on a Top 25 list, and I also
offered comments on 25 more honorable mentions. The whole
thing, top to bottom, is something like 10 pages worth of
reviewing, analysis, and self-defense. I even employed multiple
methodologies. First, I tried laying it out by a "connoisseurship"
model - that is, I made my own estimates based on my own sense
of how things qualitatively met the criteria I established
for the project. Then I played a little game where I weighted
each criterion and then rated each entry mathematically, thereby
generating a quantitative estimate. This had the effect of
making me seriously reconsider my initial rankings (for instance,
it forced me to give Pearl Jam more credit than I really wanted
to - see below for more on that).
Then I sent the list to some friends whose opinions I respect
and invited criticism (which I got, in spades - thanks, Greg).
That forced some more noodling. Then I set about writing and
justifying my picks, and that ALSO led to some revision (if
I have a hard time justifying its place in the Top 25, that
could mean I'm over-relying on my "like" reflex).
Anyway, I spent some time on it. I figure that even if people
think my picks are nuts, at least they can't call me lazy.
One last note. This list is what I'll call "artist-centric."
I have always resisted the one-hit-wondermongering of corporate
radio, believing that we're better served by focusing on the
longer and deeper contexts of artists who have proven to have
some longevity. I've said a number of times that if I were
to become a radio programmer I would never play a one-hit
wonder - if the artist can't generate at least two or three
things worthy of airplay we should play something else instead.
For this reason, the Top 25 + 25 here features 50 different
artists, even though I could easily have made a case for multiple
entries by some artists.
So, with this all said, here's my Best of the 1990s. A brief
list of who's included is followed by explanations and details.
Nirvana
- Nevermind :|: U2 - Achtung, Baby! :|: REM
- Automatic for the People :|: Sarah McLachlan -
Fumbling Toward Ecstasy :|: Tori Amos - Little
Earthquakes :|: White Zombie - Astro Creep:|: 2000
:|: Catherine Wheel - Ferment :|: Pearl Jam - Ten
:|: Liz Phair - Exile in Guyville :|: Green Day -
Dookie :|: Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral
:|: Peter Gabriel - Us :|: The Verve - Storm in
Heaven :|: Godspeed You Black Emperor! - F#A#Infinity
:|: World Party - Goodbye Jumbo :|: Graham Parker
- The Last Rock n' Roll Tour :|: Lush - Lovelife
:|: Sugar - Copper Blue :|: Metallica - Metallica
:|: Bad Religion - Recipe for Hate :|: Fish - Sunsets
on Empire :|: Delerium - Karma :|: Apples (in
Stereo) - Funtricknoisemaker :|: Garbage - Garbage
:|: Van Morrison - Hymns to the Silence
1.
Nirvana, Nevermind (1991)
I've
actually heard a couple of famous hairspray metal bands from
the late 80s say that Nirvana killed their careers, and for
this we're eternally grateful. I won't engage in too much
"voice of a generation" hyperbole about Kurt Cobain, but this
much seems clear: he was a (the?) central figure in one of
the decade's major musical transformations and looking back
across the years it's hard to identify any single artist whose
arc better reflected the decade's hip dip into the pre-Millennial
darkness. His music itself - a boot in the teeth for an American
musical scene grown stale waiting for the next big thing -
helped open the door for bands like Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains,
Stone Temple Pilots and Soundgarden, each of whom would make
their own significant contributions to the soundtrack of the
decade. While Cobain's suicide was perhaps stupid and contagious,
it provided a tragic symmetry that makes perfect sense in
retrospect.
2.
U2, Achtung, Baby! (1991)
By
the end of the 1980s U2 felt it had exhausted the creative
possibilities of its "old" sound, a conviction that resulted
in the much-hated Rattle & Hum (but what do I know?
- I LIKED R&H). When that journey failed to produce
a fresh direction for the band they almost called it quits.
But in giving it one more try they tripped across a big new
sound and successfully remade themselves into the brilliantly
ironic anti-U2 of ZooTV fame (which still stands as the best
concert I have ever seen, by the way). Achtung, Baby!
struck many as a sell-out, a renunciation of the political
fervency that propelled the band to glory a decade earlier,
but nothing could have been further from the truth. The values
were still there, but they had turned inward in a sometimes
scathing process of self-examination - Bono and company were
all too aware of how big they had gotten and they were clearly
disturbed by how little their "new" (Joshua Tree) audience
understood about the media culture that had spawned them all.
So they embraced the misperception and confronted the industry,
the media hype, the image from the inside. Perhaps some critics
would have been more satisfied if they had donated all their
money to Greenpeace and launched a quiet little acoustic coffeehouse
tour instead, but a close reading of Achtung, Baby!
and the ZooTV tour will reveal it for a brutal and ironic
critique of Big Music, Inc. And unlike some others who badmouthed
the establishment, at least U2 had the decency to admit their
part in it. Love them or hate them, but give them credit for
being willing to walk away before becoming a stale derivative
milking the old formula for all it was worth.
3.
REM, Automatic for the People (1992)
Prior to releasing Automatic REM had slipped into the
doldrums and fans had reason to wonder if they'd ever emerge
again. Green and Out of Time had been lackluster
efforts despite the commercial success of songs like "Stand,"
"Shiny Happy People," and their biggest hit to date, "Losing
My Religion." But on AftP the band left their comparatively
up mood behind and waded unafraid into the darkness. The disc
is most remarkable for the wrenching beauty it finds in aging,
pain, death and loneliness, as songs like "Everybody Hurts"
and "Drive" lure the listener into a melancholy catharsis
of release and affirmation. "Nightswimming" is simply one
of the most beautiful songs I have ever heard, and the video
for "Man on the Moon" is as profound a celebration of ordinary
people as we are like to see. I'm still not sure I think Automatic
is a better effort than Reckoning, but it's easily
the best thing since.
4.
Sarah McLachlan, Fumbling Toward Ecstasy (1994)
One of the most important themes of the decade is the
increased autonomy of female performers. While women still
don't have the power they should have, their standing in the
industry is substantially better than what it was ten years
ago, and Sarah McLachlan deserves significant credit. Fumbling
was the CD that took her career over the top and which provided
her the platform from which to launch the Lilith Fair project,
which helped dozens of female artists reach out to a larger
audience than they could have found otherwise. And the CD
itself would be worthy of inclusion here on its own merits
(especially if we factor in The Freedom Sessions, a
marvelous extension of Fumbling). McLachlan's music
is deceptively sweet, but there's an uneasy darkness in songs
like "Possession," which many radio listeners took for a passionate
love song. It's not. And of course it helps to have a voice
like hers, too - McLachlan is one of the most emotive and
intuitive vocalists performing today, and she could probably
melt an audience singing a note to the power company.
5.
Tori Amos, Little Earthquakes (1991)
If McLachlan constructed a stage for women in the 90s, Tori
Amos built a confessional. Spare and haunting, her music helped
create a much needed safe space for the popular examination
of dirty little secrets like rape and domestic abuse. Little
Earthquakes, her breakthrough CD, wasn't much concerned
in soothing or comforting the listener, especially in songs
like the confrontational a capella rendition of "Me and a
Gun," which recounted her own real-life rape. Amos made it
personal - she gave rape a name and a face and a voice that
were far more difficult to ignore than the "objective" stories
and statistics her listeners saw in their newspapers. A number
of artists followed her lead (with varying levels of honesty,
credibility and commercial success, admittedly) and in doing
so cemented her status as one of the most influential figures
of the decade.
6.
White Zombie, Astro Creep: 2000 (1995)
Metal was in crisis early in the decade: hairspray was dead,
Metallica's most innovative days were behind them, and rebellious
rage had been appropriated by industrial artists like Nine
Inch Nails. Enter White Zombie. The band helped revise metal
for the 90s by importing rawer grunge sensibilities and hip-hop/techno-minded
sampling and sequencing techniques, but they did so without
sacrificing the genre's fun side. After the success of La
Sexorcisto: Devil Music, Vol. 1, some critics accused
the band of playing it safe on Astro Creep, which was
dismissed as camp and placed alongside other famous "tongue-in-cheek
heavy metal bands" like Alice Cooper and Kiss (All-Music Guide).
But that's too simplistic. Sure, Rob Zombie loves comic-book
horror, but Astro Creep: 2000 played with deeper themes,
focusing on the role of technology in the dehumanization (posthumanization?)
of the culture. Without presuming too much about what Zombie
was thinking, it seems that "Electric Head" is a manifestation
of what Andrew Ross has termed the "technocolonization" of
the human body: the cyberpunk classic Blade Runner
is referenced directly ("I am the Nexus One/I want more life
fucker/I ain't done") and the landscape of the horror depicted
is technological, not fantastic. While it's unlikely Zombie
intended Astro Creep as a treatise on the subject,
we shouldn't dismiss these themes too quickly.
7.
Catherine Wheel, Ferment (1992)
Maybe
it's just me, but the single most innovative and interesting
development of the 1990s was the emergence of "dreampop" (or
"shoegazing," as some prefer to call it), an atmospheric pop/rock
style that relies heavily on sonic textures and ethereal melodies
(and which usually eschews synthesizers in favor of processed
and distorted guitars). Ferment, the debut CD from
Britain's Catherine Wheel, stands as one of the landmarks
of the genre, and has been especially important for subsequent
bands working the "noisy" side of the dreampop street (other
bands, such as Lush and Cocteau Twins, are far less dissonant
in their approach). While "Black Metallic" received minor
airplay in the U.S., the release garnered the band a solid
following in the U.K. For the record, this is one of those
cases where I was really torn - a lot of people would argue
that the follow-up, Chrome, was better, and I could
also make a case for their most recent (Adam and Eve),
but in the end it was the breakthrough/innovative consideration
that moved me toward Ferment for this list.
8.
Pearl Jam, Ten (1991)
I've never seen a band devote so much energy to avoiding greatness.
Ten was brilliant by any standard, but Pearl Jam's
subsequent work has been a masturbatory crusade of pointlessness.
Still, no matter what I might think of their more recent work,
the simple fact is that their debut succeeded as a great rock
album in its own right, and it exerted a powerful influence
on that which followed. It's hard to imagine how different
the 1990s might have been musically without the one-two punch
of Nevermind and Ten.
9.
Liz Phair, Exile in Guyville (1993)
I suspect that 20 years from now we'll look back and conclude
that Phair's third CD, whitechocolatespaceegg (1998)
was her best effort of the 90s. However, Exile (allegedly
a track-by-track rebuttal to the Rolling Stones' classic Exile
on Main Street) was a breakout indie-rock success that
set the critics a-gushing and struck yet another blow for
women artists struggling to gain autonomy in the recording
industry. It was also a strong moral boost for independent
labels. As the big labels grew less and less concerned with
developing new talent, indies like Matador (which has released
all three of Phair's CDs to date) became ever more important
for younger artists, especially those who showed too little
commercial promise to interest the majors.
10.
Green Day, Dookie (1994)
Although Punk never really went away, Green Day led a major
comeback for the style in the middle of the decade. They weren't
doing anything especially new or complicated (if you think
about it, no punk band ever did anything new or complicated),
but strong songwriting and entertaining performances added
up to huge commercial success, and in the process opened the
door for more critic-friendly artists like Rancid. Of course,
Green Day was accused of selling out and of not being "real
punk" by lots of self-serious types who apparently never paid
any attention to The Ramones or Sex Pistols. In a lively Denver
concert, Billie Joe came clean: "We're not punk rockers. We
do melodic California pop."
11.
Nine Inch Nails, The Downward Spiral (1994)
The Downward Spiral probably won't be remembered as
Trent Reznor's best work - that distinction will be reserved
for 1989's Pretty Hate Machine - but it was nonetheless
a substantial achievement. While it was less aggressive (and
dare I say more reflective?) than PHM, it was no less
dark or intense, and if self-loathing and nihilism can be
more mature, that's what Spiral was.
12. Peter Gabriel, Us (1992)
PG spent most of the decade focusing on his record label,
which is devoted to promoting "World Music," but he did manage
to find the time to record Us, an up-close study of
the dynamics of love and sex. Its thematic unity and depth
is striking, and the songs are often suffused with the kind
of good-natured humor we usually find present in successful
relationships. Us isn't Gabriel's greatest album -
that would be his third self-titled ("Games Without Frontiers")
- or his most commercially successful (So), but he's
so essentially brilliant that even his average efforts are
better than most artists' best.
13. The Verve, Storm in Heaven (1993)
The
hugely successful Urban Hymns (1997) is regarded as
The Verve's highwater mark, but on SiH we see a far
more interesting and innovative band producing perhaps the
decade's single best-kept secret (at least in the U.S.) Whereas
Hymns has much in common with Brit-Pop acts like Radiohead
and Oasis, SiH owed more to shoegazing pioneers My
Bloody Valentine. Somehow it manages to be big, loud and dissonant
at the same time it's dreamy and melodic. When I did my Best
of 1997 list I admitted that I'd probably have rated Urban
Hymns a lot higher if I'd never heard Storm in Heaven.
That's still true.
14. Godspeed You Black Emperor!, F#A#Infinity (1999)
It's hard to explain Godspeed You Black Emperor! The All-Music
Guide says they're "as much avant-classical as they are rock
& roll, and the band has a achieved a true synthesis of the
two forms, expanding them to new boundaries"; that's as good
a description as any, I guess. F#A#Infinity paints
a bleak picture of our culture as postapocalyptic landscape
- a spoken-word segment says, "We are trapped in the
belly of this horrible machine, and the machine is bleeding
to death." With luck this will become one of the most influential
works of the next ten years.
15. World Party, Goodbye Jumbo (1990)
Karl Wallinger's sense of rock's history is never more evident
than on Goodbye Jumbo, which playfully plunders and juxtaposes
artists as diverse as John Lennon and Supertramp, Queen and
Prince, ELO and the Marvellettes, weaving it all into a clever
and challenging comment on everything from social activism
to personal loss. Some day I'd like to hand a copy of the
CD to a rock history class and tell them that their final
exam assignment is to identify every musical and lyrical reference
on it. This was my #1 for 1990.
16. Graham Parker, The Last Rock n' Roll Tour (1997)
Most icons of the British New Wave did their best work in
the late 70s, but Graham Parker has been the most notable
exception. While CDs like Struck by Lightning (1991)
acknowledged that he wasn't a kid anymore ("and the words
came out/Not twist and shout/'Cause that's not what a grown
man writes about"), Parker managed to maintain the edge that
powered early successes like Howlin' Wind and Squeezing
Out Sparks. On the 1997 Acid Bubblegum tour Parker
was backed by The Figgs, and the results were stunning. As
good as Parker's studio work can be, nothing quite matches
the verve of his live shows. This CD is a must-own.
17. Lush, Lovelife (1996)
Lush produced four full-length CDs this decade, and I could
have made a case for including three of them in this list.
In a sense they always seemed to be two different bands -
one a pure practitioner of Cocteau Twins-style dreampop, the
other a more straight-ahead Power Pop combo (put another way,
they alternated between the "dream" and the "pop" moreso than
any of their shoegazing contemporaries). I settled on Lovelife
because this was where the pop side was most fully realized
("Ladykillers," a hilarious slam at meat-market pick-up artists,
is one of the finest singles of the decade). Lovelife
was Lush's last studio release (the band split after drummer
Chris Acland's 1996 suicide).
18. Enigma, MCMXC A.D. (1990)
This disc first gained attention for its seductive fusion
of Gregorian chants and dance music. However, its greatest
strength lies in the unity of its narrative, which brilliantly
traces a spiritual path from sexual degeneracy ("Sadeness")
through responsibility ("Mea Culpa") and finally into redemption
("The Rivers of Belief"). That this can be accomplished so
powerfully primarily through sampling techniques makes it
all the more remarkable.
19. Metallica, Metallica (1991)
Most of the band's pioneering moments were behind them by
the turn of the decade, and "The Black Album" doesn't do a
lot in the way of innovation. Instead, they worked on developing
shorter, simpler, more conventional song structures and largely
parted ways with their speed metal past. The mainstream was
impressed, to the tune of over seven million copies in the
U.S. alone. Some might have smelled a sell-out, but the sheer
quality of the songs and performances short-circuited most
criticism. Sadly, Metallica's subsequent efforts failed on
both commercial and artistic criteria.
20. Bad Religion, Recipe for Hate (1993)
While Green Day was having fun with Punk, Bad Religion was
taking a more serious and socially-aware approach, using the
genre to lash out against all the usual suspects. Recipe landed
especially hard on organized religion as the wicked-yet-catchy
"American Jesus" even scored airtime on MTV.
21. Fish, Sunsets on Empire (1997)
Progressive (Prog-Rock) might be a dead issue for all but
its cult followers, but that hasn't stopped former the Marillion
frontman from producing a series of vital and intelligent
CDs. Sunsets is almost disturbing in its willingness
to question conventional wisdom - the horrors of war and life
on the fringe become personal, denying the listener an easy
retreat into political correctness.
22. Delerium, Karma (1997)
Delerium
is one of several aliases under which the highly prolific
Bill Leeb and Rhys Fulber (Frontline Assembly, Intermix, Synaesthesia,
Noise Unit) operate. These projects exhibit none of the aggressiveness
of the duo's better-known Frontline Assembly CDs, instead
relying on lush techno/ambient soundscapes and trance-influenced
rhythms. Karma features guest vocals from Sarah McLachlan,
Jacqui Hunt from Single Gun Theory, Kirsty Thirsk of Rose
Chronicles and Lisa Gerrard of Dead Can Dance. The McLachlan
track ("Silence") makes me long for an extended collaboration
with Leeb and Fulber.
23. The Apples (in Stereo), Funtricknoisemaker (1995)
Power Pop, the seemingly forgotten style pioneered by The
Beatles, Badfinger, Raspberries and Big Star, made a major
comeback in the 90s. While the renaissance took many forms,
the lo-fi approach of the Elephant 6 circle (Apples, Neutral
Milk Hotel, Olivia Tremor Control, Dressy Bessy) and the huge
L.A. pop underground (an ever-shifting scene comprising literally
dozens of bands) seemed to garner the greatest critical praise.
Funtricknoisemaker, the first full-length effort from
Denver's Apples, is a joyous, slightly campy hook-fest that
recalls the early days of The Beatles, but avoids the derivativeness
that characterizes many of the genre's lesser talents.
24. Garbage, Garbage (1995)
Before Garbage Butch Vig was famous mostly as the brilliant
producer behind Smashing Pumpkins, Sonic Youth, and Nirvana,
but when he found Shirley Manson his newly-formed band really
clicked (despite the fact that Manson's creative input was
limited by her late arrival on the scene). You can tell that
there are a lot of producers involved in the project - the
sound is unusually slick (and stands in stark contrast to
the comparative rawness of Vig's work with Nirvana), but the
polish is offset by a driving sonic depth that distinguishes
Garbage from its "alternative" contemporaries. The star of
the show is clearly Manson, a natural frontwoman whose versatile
voice and dynamic presence recall Janis Joplin and a young
Grace Slick.
25. Van Morrison, Hymns to the Silence (1991)
Some critics thought Hymns was too sprawling and self-indulgent
for its own good, but there's a compelling power in its spiritual
exploration. For starters, the CD is best appreciated not
as a rock album, but as a meditation. Morrison longs for a
simpler time, remembering the "days before rock and roll"
with a dreamy nostalgia. Even if the memories are a bit rose-tinged,
Hymns to the Silence nonetheless draw us into a safe
harbor of reflection. By any standard, it's the best CD of
the decade for one of the greatest artists of our time.
Honorable Mentions
In alphabetical order:
Aimee Mann, Whatever
Superbly written and beautifully executed. Mann, the former
front for Til Tuesday, overcame the death-kiss of the "critically-acclaimed
singer-songwriter" label and enjoyed modest commercial success
with this release.
Alice in Chains, Jar of Flies
Dirt would be the choice of most critics, and it's
especially hard to accord even honorable mention status on
what was essentially an EP, but this 7-track set represents
the band's best-realized creative moment.
Big Head Todd & the Monsters, Sister Sweetly
Breakout CD for Boulder-based Blues Rock trio. Subsequent
work has been quite ambitious, but hasn't matched either the
popular or critical success of SS. BHTM is another
one of those bands whose studio work will never quite capture
the energy of the live show.
Blues Traveler, Four
A key figure in the rise of roots-rock (Americana, Trad Rock,
Jam Rock, etc.) during the 90s, BT continued to feature superb
musicianship by John Popper and Chan Kinchla. But for all
the irony of "Hook," the CD's catchy backhand at commercial
radio, BT proved to be at its best when focusing on tighter
song constructions. The video for "Runaround" was one of the
true high spots of the decade - that MTV played it proved
either that they were stupid or that they thought their audience
was. We probably shouldn't rule out c) all of the above.
Cracker, Kerosene Hat
KH is the best overall of the four country- and blues-influenced
CDs Cracker has released to date, and also represents the
bands biggest popular success. One wonders if David Lowery
might not be a bit too witty for his own good at times, though....
Dada, Puzzle
Tight, slightly off-center harmonies and intelligent songsmithing
characterize Dada's debut release. Each of their three subsequent
releases have probably deserved a lot better critical and
commercial treatment than they've received - while the band
has yet to produce a knock-your-socks off masterpiece, their
work is so consistently solid that you have to think it's
only a matter of time.
Death
in Vegas, Dead Elvis
A pulsing Trip-Hop/Dub release from U.K club DJ Richard Fearless;
the video for "Dirt" was one of the decade's five
best.
Eels,
Electro-Shock Blues
This is one of the most gut-wrenching, dark, unwelcoming discs
I've ever heard - frontman E uses the band's second release
to work out his grief over the tragic deaths of various friends
and relatives. It manages a stark beauty, but requires a serious
commitment from the listener. Those who give themselves over
to it are treated to one of the real masterpieces of the decade.
The Figgs, Low-Fi at Society High
Neo-New Wave/Punk Pop that draws heavily on The Jam, Elvis
Costello, and especially Graham Parker. In some respects the
follow-up, Banda Macho, was more even and accomplished.
Gin
Blossoms, New Miserable Experience
The Gin Blossoms were a key figure in the aforementioned Power
Pop renaissance of the 90s - the huge success of NME
demonstrated that there was, in fact, an audience interested
in hooky guitar pop.
Indigo Girls, Nomads Indians Saints
This is the best of the duo's 1990s offerings, although it
doesn't quite stand up to their eponymous 1989 release. They
were critical figures in the ascendance of female artists
during the decade, however, since they were already an established
presence before people like McLachlan and Amos and Phair broke
through.
L7, Hungry for Stink
Riot Grrl bands like L7, Bikini Kill, and Sleater-Kinney are
too in-your-face to ever gain much mainstream attention (which
is precisely how they like it, I'm sure), but L7 has achieved
more notoriety than the rest, in part due to the mild popular
success of "Andres" and "Stuck Here Again" from this CD. A
lot of critics argue that Bricks are Heavy is the better
effort.
Massive Attack, Mezzanine
Thanks to pioneers like Massive Attack Trip-Hop emerged as
one of the more interesting sub-genres of techno. Mezzanine
is packed with narcotic grooves, but it's a little too tense
to shove into the background - it both demands and rewards
your attention, which is the standard by which the best ambient
is judged.
Matthew Sweet, Girlfriend
This retro-70s-sounding disc, thanks largely to the radio
success of the title track, helped fuel the comeback of Power
Pop, although its production aesthetic provides a clear contrast
with the lo-fi movement noted above.
Mono, Formica Blues
1998 found Trip-Hop moving in some odd directions, and bands
like Mono and St. Etienne produced CDs that bordered on mid-1960s
California soundtrack lounge pop (imagine a Herb Alpert comeback,
if you will). This was the best of the lot, although St. Etienne's
Good Humor was also outstanding.
My Bloody Valentine, Loveless
A key influence on the development of dreampop, MBV helped
pioneer the dissonant side of the genre.
New Order, Republic
Wrapping up an arc that began with the post-Punk/proto-Goth
of Joy Division and peaked with the massive success of New
Order's Substance 1987 (which I think is still the
best dance album ever), the group cranks out a thoughtful
dance-pop disc that sounds fresh even as it remains true to
the sound of Substance.
Radiohead, OK Computer
I'm still not sure I get Radiohead - it's way too whiny to
suit me - but in the end I have to acknowledge that just about
everybody I know and trust thinks this CD was a masterwork.
Rancid, Let's Go
This was real punk by any standard you wanted to use. Great
Punk-Pop songs, lots of Clash-influenced playing, and an edge
of seriousness which afforded them an aura of authenticity
that never attached to the more popular Green Day.
Smashing Pumpkins, Siamese Dream
A much more ambitious and expansive sound than we normally
associate with "alternative," SD exhibited the influence of
Prog, dreampop, even metal. A remarkable accomplishment considering
Billy Corgan's bandmates possessed less musical talent than
furniture.
Soundgarden, Superunknown
Kurt Cobain died and Pearl Jam went to hell, leaving Soundgarden
and Stone Temple Pilots as the most prominent purveyors of
grunge from the middle of the decade on. Superunknown was
solid, if not necessarily inspired.
Space Team Electra, The Vortex Flower
The most obscure band on my Best of 1990s, STE produced the
best CD I heard in 1998, a self-released dreampop masterpiece
that assimilates and outstrips influences like the Cocteau
Twins, the Catherine Wheel, and My Bloody Valentine. At the
moment they remain largely unknown outside Denver, but despite
their lack of broader notoriety I simply couldn't leave a
disc as brilliant as The Vortex Flower off the list.
Sugar,
Copper Blue (1992)
Interestingly, Bob Mould's most significant contribution to
the 90s happened in the 80s, as his work with Husker Du
(and later solo projects like Workbook) blazed a trail
for the rise of grunge. It's ironic, then, that his own creative
highwater mark in the decade would come with Sugar, a band
project that tended more toward pop/rock than did his earlier
post-punk efforts (and which provided Mould with his biggest
commercial success to date).
Teenage Fanclub, Bandwagonesque
Yet another important moment in the resurgence of Power Pop,
this was the best Big Star CD of the decade.
Tool, Aenima
Tool brought a heavy dose of the grotesque to metal, providing
a dead-serious counterpoint to the comic book sensibility
of White Zombie. Aenima, while often ugly to contemplate,
was consistently compelling.
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