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View Poll Results: Best band: 90s Seattle Era
Nirvana 47 31.13%
Alice In Chains 40 26.49%
Soundgarden 15 9.93%
Pearl Jam 18 11.92%
Stone Temple Pilots 6 3.97%
Mudhoney 6 3.97%
Other 17 11.26%
Tad 2 1.32%
Voters: 151. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 04-01-2012, 03:35 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Seriously? Aic stadium rock? That's ridiculous. Maybe some of their material. Layne staley was actually in favor of taking the band in a more underground direction. It was Jerry who wanted to move it towards the mainstream. I can see how you can the post-layne AIC a stadium rock band, but other than that I don't understand at all. If any of these bands are stadium rock, it's pearl jam and stp.

Ever heard of mad season? Is that stadium rock? I'd be really surprised if someone said so. That band showed Laynes underground sound a little more.

By the way, im a huge folk fan, it's one of my favorite types of music and I do praise aic's acoustic material, it's really great. AIC is a fairly diverse band, I think. Take their first album, "facelift", it's a pretty heavy album. Then take a song like "don't follow", which is pretty folky - a darker, heavier folk sound. And then there's the song "swing on this", which has a somewhat jazzy bass line and guitar solo. They were the most diverse of any of the bands.
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Old 04-02-2012, 09:27 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blastingas10 View Post
AIC is a fairly diverse band, I think. Take their first album, "facelift", it's a pretty heavy album. Then take a song like "don't follow", which is pretty folky - a darker, heavier folk sound. And then there's the song "swing on this", which has a somewhat jazzy bass line and guitar solo. They were the most diverse of any of the bands.
How do you figure?

Led Zeppelin is a fairly diverse band, I think. Take their first album, "Led Zeppelin 1", it's a pretty heavy album. Then take a song like "Black Mountainside", which is pretty folky - a darker, heavier folk sound. And then there's the song "How Many More Times", which has a somewhat jazzy base line and guitar solo. They were the most diverse of any of the bands.



Really though, how original or diverse does that REALLY seem?

Compare that to something like Ultramega OK by Soundgarden. Quite frankly one of the most amazing full length debuts I've ever heard. Diversity? You've got songs in time signatures that have rarely been heard in the mainstream ever. Almost as many bass leads are there are guitar solos and subliminal subversion with purposely reversed 'evil' tracks (which AiC replicated years later on Dirt while completely missing the joke).

The followup 'Louder than Love' refined the debut into an ever darker and more cohesive disc. Rather than sounding familiar the cleaner production allows the instrumentation to create even more challenging rhythms and lets the band focus the darkness of its mood even more. All while still managing to stick a hilarious dig at the typical mainstream rock acts of the day who's main focus seemed to be trying to find the most obvious ways to indirectly say exactly what Cornell screams throughout the chorus of Big Dumb Sex.

Badmotorfinger sees a new bass player entering the fold and rather than having the band adopt a more traditional style like its contemporaries, Ben Shepherd established a playing style even more unique than Hiro Yamamoto's where he spends the majority of the time playing higher register notes on the bass throughout the entirety of songs. Thereby creating a rather unique aural dynamic where the melodic rhythm of the bass takes sonic precedence over the guitar within the scope of band, counter to the traditional roles of the instrument within their setting but still maintaining that impression by not actually adopting a lead role.

Superunknown was a mainstream smash success. After a decade of busting your ass, would you still really want to work for peanuts? If anything I've always felt Superunknown was a revisit to their debut. Same moods, ideas, just more experience and knowledge leading to a wider array of tricks and techniques to recreate a superior representation of their origin.

Down on the Upside showcases a tired band going through the motions as lead by a single creative individual testing the waters to his own solo career. Unfortunate but hardly unexpected.



I'm not really sure what I'm getting at here besides the fact that I greatly prefer Soundgarden over the rest. That, and diversity as measured by deviating from the mainstream by the same rate as a predecessor did in the past isn't really diverse.
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Old 04-07-2012, 02:59 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Of course AiC was stadium rock... they opened for KISS!

Quote:
The final shows to feature Layne Staley in Alice In Chains were the four support shows that the band accepted on the KISS reunion tour. Stone Temple Pilots had to drop out due to Scott Weiland’s own struggles with addiction, so Alice got the offer. Jerry and Sean were huge KISS fans, and after first saying no to the shows, Staley relented and agreed.

GrungeReport.net » Blog Archive » REMEMBERING LAYNE STALEY PART 6: THE FINAL YEARS
Really though I don't understand this 'hatred' for stadium rock, seems to me some guys just want to keep their indie cred or something... when in fact some of the most independent artists are really into stadium rock, and totally admit to it and even cover their songs!





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