I moved to Seattle when I was 15 right after the end of grunge. Sound Garden had broken up, AIC hadn't played a show in years and Kurt had died 3 years before. At that time the kids in Seattle did everything they could to distance themselves from grunge, and so everyone was listening to rap music at that point.
this makes sense. seattle was so inundated with people chasing the grunge sound, bands, record companies, fans, etc that who wouldn't be sick of it. they'd been listening to the precursers of grunge music for years by 1992. also, sounds like you are talking about around 1997 and people were over the grunge thing most places by then, not just in seattle.
Somebody once said to me: Grunge is a vague term, not genre specific. For example; Nirvana is Punk grunge Alice in Chains is Metal grunge Pearl Jam is Blues grunge. A truly clever observation
@@musicofnoise He definitely was inspirational to some Grunge bands, most of all Pearl Jam. If you’re not familiar, check out his Mirror Ball album. Pearl Jam is basically the band on the album.
Mother Love Bone and Soundgarden were the two biggest bands on the scene before it broke. They were the first two to have major label record deals. Kurt is mentioned first because Nirvana blew up and broke the scene to the mainstream. Like it or not all the other bands followed behind them and benefitted from Kurt’s success
@@Spooky_515 erm, AIC blew up before Soundgarden. Soundgarden may have had a deal but their first record didn’t have the success of Facelift. Also, AIC is so much better leaps and bounds!
@@HildeAzul Alice In Chains didn’t blow up first. They had a video on mtv that didn’t get over until after the grunge explosion. Wiki claims it was the first to go platinum but there’s no date listed so I’m not buying it. It was certified gold September 11 1991. Thats like a year after initial release. Gold is good but not super successful for rock bands of that era. Nevermind dropped September 24th ‘91 and was platinum by November. That’s blowing up. When an album is certified it’s easy to find the date in which it happened. Both Soundgarden and Alice In Chains were initially in the shadow Of Nirvana and Pearl Jam and were never as big as either of those two.
@@Spooky_515 you have no idea what you are even talking about. One video? Facelift was Gold before PJ and Nirvana hit the National scene. They were the first of the Seattle bands to blow up 100%. Not to mention the most talented.
I'm 45 year's old and I got to see Alice in chains and Soundgarden back in the day... I didn't get a chance to see nirvana___ the grunge sub pop sound still rules 👍🏻🎸🕯️
I'm a 53 yr old Texan raised up in SLC,Utah and Homedale,Idaho... Just up the road of Boise , and man i had the honor and privilege to have not only lived and attended and saw all the now iconic bands from 80s ,90s and early 2000s Seattle underground scene but also attended other metal shows from now iconic bands like Metallica, Testament , Slayer , Venom , King Diamond etc etc .... can't believe my Buddys ,myself and lots of other fans got to help out all these bands by buying their homemade merch and sometimes helped them out unload their gear before and after a show ... Still have lots of flyers from SLC, UTAH'S SPEEDWAY CAFE when nirvana, Soundgarden, smashing trees , pearl jam and lots of other Seattle bands played up there when I was a kid .... 😊
It deserves a whole ass biography show with each season or episode it talks about a different band or different Washington bands etc that would be great
my whole view on grunge came from something noel gallahger said in the 90s, “ that cobain guy, biggest rockstar in the world sitting in his mansion high on smack , WTF are you sad about mate?” and it hit me . he was right
Haven't watched it yet BUT I sure hope they mention the late great Andy Wood, who NEVER gets any credit for being one of the pioneers who also died way too young (24.)
I really appreciate your contribution. I must say that it takes me back to my decade of choice, and to some of my most precious memories, as when I bought Nirvana's Bleach or Nevermind and I first heard them. Gives me chills. Also to when I went to Nirvana or Pearl Jam's gigs. Or when Kurt, Scott, Chris, Layne... passed away, some of the gloomiest, mournful times I've lived. Anyway, I haven't stopped listening to grunge - and metal - ever since.🤘
I never really called it Grunge. I used to call it Alternative. I remember my friend who had a degree in accounting said She was getting a job for a new company called Starbucks. How time flies. I want to go back to the 90's.
@@OGGOAT23 That's why teenagers in the early 90s were drawn to the Seattle sound. The hybrid sound, which wasn't much different from what they were already listening to. (Most likely Skid Row and Metallica). And the Seattle hype machine were equating it with the R.E.M.'s and the Depeche Modes of the world. These flannel wearing teenagers didn't know about Pixies, Dinosaur Jr. and Sonic Youth. AND THEY' ARE STILL TRYING TO TAKE CREDIT FOR THE SO-CALLED 90S ALTERNATIVE REVOLUTION IN 2023. IT STARTED IN THE EARLY 80S.!
I was in my mid 20's when I discovered grunge in the summer of 1989 with Mudhoney which I watched on Much Music TV. To me grunge and alternative rock was like a breath of fresh air. I went to the Lollapalooza shows in Vancouver BC I saw Alice In Chains, Sound Garden, Pearl Jam, Ministry . moshing in the pit. I felt excitement and cool vibes with Nirvana's Never Mind album. However with their follow up album Inutero I felt sadness and a growing sense of impending demise. I thought Kurt's days were numbered, especially after hearing the song All Apologies, and tragically, I was right. After Kurt Cobain's suicide in April 1994. The cool and fun aspect of Seattle grunge was no longer there.
Sub Pop was very important too because it was an underground independent record label that had a mail order catalog and a singles club that created an independent market. They were great at marketing.
And just remember Nirvana took Sonic Youths advice to heart, hence jumping to a major label with stipulations. When it comes to this whole game distribution really is an important part of it. And having control over your own product recording wise, makes sense. Too many artists are still stuck in litigation hell because of the fine print and legal jargon that was never fully explained over said contracts.....Dodgy industry, always has been , especially when huge amounts of money s at stake.
I joined the navy in 92… got sent to Bremerton wa. I would get a pint of jack, buy a large soda from subway, ice half soda and get on the fairy to Seattle. Buzzed up when I hit the dock, only 18 yrs old….. seemed like a big adventure, I miss those days
Thank you for sharing that! I really really appreciate that! I would love to have experienced that feeling you had, I bet it was ineffably phenomenal!!! Too bad I was one years old back in those days
@@struthersboyz4990 Hahaha 😆 my bad man at least you got to experience such a time in place as that. I would give anything to have been in your shoes, without a doubt. Ps you're not old until you're 90 and once one gets there then yeah that's pretty damn old lol
Every generation thinks the same way then adulting begins at some point. Given the latest voting stats, our greatest contribution will be the kids we raised.
It really was the last generation that wasn’t chained to a cell phone and actually had original thoughts and you can definitely tell the difference in the music
Going through the TV Guide (for Perth, Australia) and saw I'd JUST missed this episode on telly by 10 minutes😕. Got on UA-cam hoping it's here and...voila!! Here I am. Thank fuck for the OPs of uploaders of these gems👌🏻. Been waiting for this ep for a while and would've been PISSED to've missed out seeing it. The brutal honesty, rawness and angst of AIC, Nirvana, Soundgarden, Stone Temple Pilots, Jane's Addiction, Mad Season etc etc (and nu/alt metal's Ministry, NIN) gave a lot of us angry teens an outlet and wouldn't be here without them. I know the struggles of heroin addiction and depression so these bands really made me feel less alone and for that, I can NOT thank them enough 💜🤘🏻.
@@Shagamaw-100 that's very true, and so have millions of other people that weren't mentioned in this documentary about Seattle because they weren't from there.
Back then no music spoke to me like grunge did. As soon as I heard them on John peel I was instantly a fan I was like whoa who an wat is this...spent most of the 90s moshing in a mosh pit or gurning in a rave.... good times. Bleach an incestercide are still my go to albums. Nothing like them before or since hit me as hard
I loved that era in time. And being from NYC made it all the more exciting. I hung out with Layne from AIC when he was in NY in '93 if memory serves me right. We had our own vibrant Heroin scene gaining ground as well, sadly to say. I was a victim of it. Hence...Layne. Met people from a ton of other bands and even had a brief affair with a female artist i will respectfully leave nameless. And though i could definitely see the "Seattle" influence on clothing and culture, It was different for me and all the people i knew. Firstly, we had a distinctly NY attitude to us and secondly, I grew up as a teen in the 80's on Long Island. Everyone i knew dressed like that. My entire wardrobe was flannel, work boots & combat boots, army pants, faded levis, concert t shirts and a leather jacket. Lol. So when the world went "seattle", most of us felt like people were finally getting with the program, lmao. We always dressed that way. Lol. Maybe it comes from living by the ocean. They did. We did. Like gloomy weather clothes. Lol. Great music. Came and went way too quick thanks to those corporate blood suckers. They ruin everything. When madonna got into it with her label i knew it was finished. Looking back, I think the 90's were great. To hell with the 60's. They only had a few years at the tail end of that decade. We had the whole thing. And it was fun. We truly were the last free people of America. And with the new millennium came this cubicle existence we endure today. Great doc. !!!
Actually parts of Long Island are NYC. Brooklyn and queens are geographically located on Long Island. I live 15 minutes outside of the borough of queens on Long Island. When I cross into queens I’m still on Long Island. 😸
No man - it wasn't the ocean, and it wasn't just the cool coastal cities. Flannels, T-shirts, ripped up jeans and leather came out of 70s/80s Punk and Hardcore and there were scenes of people throughout the country who wore this stuff.
Deer Park Strong Island 💪⚡⚡🔥🇧🇪🇮🇪🇵🇱🏴⚔️🇺🇸✝️ Hung out at Sundance in Bayshore saw many bands there before they went big slayer was totally insane 120 degrees inside Southside hospital was very busy great times NYHC Hammerheads Cheers Stage Door !!!!! Many cool clubs
I remember when I first started trying to write song, which were ok, I'd had a boom box with a built in mic that would record to tape. I'd lock myself in my room,the world away and just jam. I loved it.
The band Heart got its start from Seattle Washington. Ann and Nancy were the two talented sisters who everyone is familiar with. These two sisters became great friends with Alice N Chains and other similar bands during the 90' era who were from the Seattle and Washington state area. I loved the thundering sound of those early so called "Grunge" bands. My favorite top three bands not in any particular order, are Nirvana, Alice N Chains and Pearl Jam.
You don’t even understand how much I appreciate you posting this. This was the only place I could find this show in Canada, nvm this particular episode. THANK YOU 🖤🖤❤️🖤🖤. P.S. I am forever grateful to you Sub Pop for giving these amazing bands a chance to show the world how great they are. 🖤❤️
So many scenes missed out in this documentary . If your gonna bring up grunge you need to bring up SST , Discord , Bad Brains ,Fugazi , Hardcore scene all the people that were doing it before them. The diy Movement helped these guys.
jack endino is in every grunge documentary hahaha I guess how can he not be right. the timing was perfect for this music explosion. what a time to be a teenager. I'm a proud gen X'er
Endino deserves to be recognized because he was the first to record Nirvana and produced their first album. That was very important. Also, their first single Love Buzz.
@@OGGOAT23 this documentary isn’t bad it’s good but I wish they focused more on the other bands in Seattle Pearl Jam Soundgarden and AIC ( my fav grunge band) gets a mention that’s all I love nirvana but in grunge documentaries it’s focused heavily on nirvana and leaves out the other great bands in Seattle
The 90a were incredible musically. It was when you still had to have actual talent and creativity. We also had a plethora of different kinds of music rather than one repetitive sound. Nirvana was and is still incredible. Kurts death was shocking but not really. He really was just so clearly not well,despite his immense talent. I will never forget when they launched into Rape Me on live tv during the MTV video awards and Nova threw his guitar in the air only to have it come straight back down and split his wig wide open on live tv. They had been SPECIFICALLY TOLD by MTV that they could NOT perform Rape Me and so of course that's exactjy what they did. This was back when there was still spontaneity and true artistry and talent involved in the music industry. It is actually A JOKE now. Just a joke. Artists are not artists. Watching a certain actors kid taking guitar lessons and discussing whether or not she appears "believable" as a rock musician just made my stomach fall out at the bottom,gave me a hopeless feeling,the feeling that I needed to build up my library of 50s 60s 70s 80s and 90s music because there's nothing else coming along to trump those artists,true artists.
@@daniellewatson8352 I was a little kid but I remember them very well. I still remember the day Elvis Presley died,the Steelers and Terry Bradshaw winning all those superbowls,the Pirates winning the pennant,all of it. The 70s were indeed a groovy decade
When Cobain looked out into the audience he said he saw the people who wanted to beat him up in high school. Most people in his same position look out and see Ticket sales and the people who help pay their bills and launch their careers. Part of Sub Pop's original business plan should have arranged to have an in-house shrink to help with bandmembers with psychological problems. Many of these rockers from Seattle were depressed because of the constant gloomy weather. Just like Motown had a finishing school for there acts, it's more than apparent Sub Pop really needed a shrink to help people like Kurt Cobain.
the reason Sonic Youth claimed they went with a major label initially is because they offered health insurance, unlike indies. most could barely manage to pay their artists' royalties, let alone have an in-house shrink. turns out the music industry was just a massively exploitative machine that chewed up artists and spat them out. *artists* - as opposed to (aspiring?) pop stars.
oh god no. "hey young man with mistrust of mainstream authority figures, to sign with our label, you need to see a psychiatrist." and this was the 80s and 90s, when people believed therapy was for people in Manhattan and LA and everyone else should suck it up.
"In his dreadful lassitude and objectless rage, Cobain seemed to have give wearied voice to the despondency of the generation that had come after history, whose every move was anticipated, tracked, bought and sold before it had even happened. Cobain knew he was just another piece of spectacle, that nothing runs better on MTV than a protest against MTV; knew that his every move was a cliché scripted in advance, knew that even realising it is a cliché. The impasse that paralysed Cobain in precisely the one that Fredric Jameson described: like postmodern culture in general, Cobain found himself in ‘a world in which stylistic innovation is no longer possible, where all that is left is to imitate dead styles in the imaginary museum’." - Mark Fisher," Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?"
Back then,as teen,I was jalous about the 60s 70s...to me we were on the end of a era. But,with grunge..rave..free speech libertarian culture...dystopian future warning... The 90s were really the last free analogic era,the 00s were already more Orwellian,but not yet full alienated like today.
@@miketomlin6040 No...who burned books...cancel...use nov langue...is soooo easy to call someone a 'fascist'.... I grew up in eastern europe 80/90s...I was a immigrant..antifa...but I quickly understood...some people will use your 'kindness..empathy' as a Pavlovian reflex...to push an agenda. Animals farm...The killing fiels...Brazil...The last supper are about this 'Milgram' hate of others.
@@miketomlin6040 It's literally Biden making things orwellian increasingly in America. You can't just throw that word around. It actually means something. It means big government becoming so much a part of the life of every individual and every level of society that we can't even think for ourselves. That is objectively the democratic party. Who wants to police pronouns and fundamental rights and wants to prop up a fake president who can't even stand without special shoes to hold him up. He has handlers. He's clearly not the guy running the show. And you still say it's Trump who makes things orwellian? I'm curious if people ever paid attention or if you just say things.
@@miketomlin6040 Consider the blatant and awkward shove of all things woke in our faces in modern entertainment. You gonna tell me Netflix making everything gay and trans all the sudden isn't political propaganda? You gonna tell me it's coincidence they started doing that when the libs started pushing for social and political dominance? It's propaganda. Thankfully the people are fighting back and bankrupting companies going along with it. You'd probably call THAT orwellian or fascist. All this woke crap is the equivalent of WAR IS PEACE. Blasting us with messages that aren't truth and are based in lies to twist our minds up so we won't be free. But you'd say Trump is making it orwellian.
Seattle once a working class barley on the map city. 300 a month rent. Now maybe 1,200 a month low paying jobs. Literally have to be almost a millionaire to live in Seattle now. It's a real shame.
I was in middle school when he killed himself. I remember it so well. Happened so quick. Here I am years later living in Seattle and the ghost of 80" and 90"s still linger.
So if there was a Grunge Hangover, how come there hasn't been a commercial pop and hip-hop hangover? I'm not seeing any backlash towards the mainstream. Not only does this concern me, I also find this very sad.
@@stephenmac23 he's right most rap is just trash an nothing like it was...wave sum guns talking about killing ops an selling drugs standard trash. Name any rappers that could make a whole album for 600bucks that still stands the test of time 20y later today.
Not different of a lot of towns in the province of Québec. Not only the long cold winters, but even when it's not the winter, It is often windy and the wind is often cold. And statistically, it's a province with a good portion of the population that drinks a lot of alcohol. 😂 When I was a teenager, I often attended music bands practices.
When I was in Hollywood in 1988 a kid stopped me on Melrose Ave., back then a very grungy street, and told me I should move to Seattle--that everybody was moving up there for a new scene. But I had just gotten to L.A., and I was really digging the old movie theatres and buildings and what-not. Turns out the "New Scene" was Grunge. I liked a lot of the music that came out during the '90s, but I'm so glad I missed the scene.
The audio on this sounds like it was recorded from one of those battery powered portable TV's, with the microphone like 6ft away , in a truck stop. Fitting given the subject matter, I suppose..
This was nationwide for that matter in those days. People were tired of the hair bands. Kids were getting together and forming bands from the skate culture.
The amazing thing is that there was an underground scene that they believed in but their were no hits at first. Suddenly, Nirvana showed up and Cobain was writing these brilliant songs. Almost overnight the Seattle scene exploded! And the attention was all on Seattle from the whole world. Then they had Subpop bands tour Europe and the UK. They became popular. Aberdeen was and is a craphole. No wonder Cobain was depressed and had to escape. It was Cobains genius songwriting gift that pushed everything over the top.
The worst thing to happen to music is rap music going mainstream it killed all of the good music that was out and most of these lame kids now have no idea what freedom of expression is
You're mad because another type of music came along, yet you say you value freedom of expression. Keep in mind the music you're supporting has often led to addiction and suicide. It's not actually a good thing. You just think it sounds better. Music in general is about sex drugs and rock n roll, regardless of genre or how good it is. Rap isn't any worse than grunge. What are the fruits of grunge? Depression. Suicide. Drugs. Rebellion. Nothing good.
@@godwarrior3403 you should reread the OP. He was only talking about rap going mainstream..nothing about grunge..yeah I know the op is off topic for the video, but such is the comment section across all social media.
I'm 53 and from Detroit and no matter how dirty I thought I was as a gear head/punk/classic country music lover/ and what we now call classic rock growing up in the 80s as a teenager, I had no idea where I fit. I can go 10 different ways with this conversation but I wanna say this... Sub Pop was huge for breaking this "scene" but we here in the midwest would have never heard it if not for the few "sell outs" early on. It's sad to say but just the way it is. The cassette player in my 1970 442 got replaced with an Alpine cd player and I was rushing thru so called grunge in the 90s as I had become 21 in 1990 and it just fit. I was never trying to impress anybody. I can say this much about those times in the 90s which so many people like to refer to as good times, for me i had a constant worry about the future and I found opioids helped in short term. Obviously that plan was flawed.
Nobody even mentioned Scott Weiland's untimely death in December of 2015 on this video. Stone Temple Pilots were headliners in the 90s as well. I saw them on MTV constantly back in the early 90s. Seattle or not, need to give credit where credit is due.The sound is 'purple'...ya dig...
You make a good point. Scott W. really was an amazing talent. Excellent singer, great frontman. It will always be heartbreaking Scott died on his tour bus in Minnesota 2015. RIP Scott.
SST the Black Flag record label put out Sound Gardens 1st record out..SST was the pattern most D I Y record label used SST put out first record for a bunch of bands, Sonic Youth, Husker Du, the Dicks, Subhumans, Dinosaur Jr, Bad Brains and alot more. SST deserves alot more credit.....we need an informed documentary on SST Records.....!
Heroin sweetened rebellion against maturity, againt responsibility for the consequences of own behavior, against the demands of adult life, surely had to end with a terrifying sense of emptiness and necessity of self-destruction. As someone sang unconsciously but prophetically "one who doesn't care is one who shouldn't be..."
Why the flannel shirts you ask? In Seattle it's cold and rainy about 75% of the year. One shirt isn't enough. You have to be wearing at least a long sleeve flannel also and maybe a coat if you want to stay warm and kinda dry in this rainy city!
A lot like those of us in DC bands in the late 70s and early 80s. Our sound never became entirely socially acceptable from a mass market perspective. We never in a million years thought anyone would care about our music. I guess we were sort of right.
@@foxxy46213 my point was, if you like 'em, keep wearin' em. you seem sad that they aren't in fashion anymore. but that doesn't mean you can't wear them if you want to.
I was strung out on junk and playing in a hardcore band at the time, one day our guitarist came to rehersal with a copy of Smells like teen spirit......i knew at that point everything was going to change in the music scene that day when i heard it.
The Seattle Sound was the soundtrack of my 20's. Playin in bands in Sydney, thru the early 90's at Erskineville & Newtown; pubs like Station Hotel, The Vic on the Park & The Sandringham (The Sando). Practice at Zen Studio at St.Peters, smashed off our heads on cheap beer pot & smack unless I was at work under-the-weather hung-over or hanging-out. Sydney 1990's = cigs were $15, $2.50 a beer, $90 q/oz for slow.. 🎸Far too much rock n' roll is woefully insufficient, grossly inadequate & nowhere near enough - saw Nirvana when they came to Australia @Selina's Coogee Bay, off-tap🤘 The death of Kurt Cobain was horrifying, but when the 6pm news said Chris Cornell died & I had to be convinced Cornell was dead & this wasn't my mates idea of a disgusting joke, it wasn't a joke, I lost my sh*t big-time when Cornell left us - just totally sickening. Same sickened feeling lately with drum monster Taylor Hawkins, all gone far too soon, RIP 3 heroes.
@@mattgilbert7347 The guitar shops in Annandale Camperdown & Glebe then were wicked. Was a total hoot seeing The Craven Fops at the Annandale one time I recall.🥳
I was kneecapped by Chris' death. Pissed off that he left us. Baffled that all that ridiculous talent wasn't enough to make him want to stay. We all would have killed to have a quarter of his gifts. I thought he was going to walk this road with us. Showing us how to get old. He had the face of an angel and was the object of my all my angsty lust.
22:59 Kurdt and Krist found out that SUB-POP were going to set up a distribution deal with a major. They sat and talked and said "why dont we just cut out the middle man if they're going to be linking up with a major?" And yes, kurdt and Krist knew that the nee songs they were writing were going to be better than before. They would've never guessed or couldve dreamt that they would've hit the level they did. No one could've with what SLTS and the Nevermind LP did.
Embrace your grief for there your soul will grow. Karl Jung When we are at rock bottom, the sooner we see that grief and pain as a gift, there’s no place to go but up.
they're also constantly talking about this as a 1990s thing when Soundgarden had already released multiple albums in the 1980s, including the relatively popular Louder than Love in 1989, before anyone had ever heard of Nirvana.
Its funny, the Melvins never get mentioned in documentaries like this, same with Mudhoney and Dinosaur jr. The Melvins helped start Nirvana, and were big influences on many bands at the time. And those 3 bands are some of the only bands from that period still touring and putting out albums to this day that have never stopped. Im also pretty sure Mudhoney was only mentioned in this documentary because they were signed to subpop... i have so much respect for those bands, they always stuck to their own guns, just like Sonic Youth. To me, those 4 bands are the true successful ones in the end. Oh and Smashing pumpkins too
I grew up on Grunge as a teen and I wore flannel and jeans all the freakin time. And I have to say this whole music movement was deeply rooted in poor surfer culture. We loved the rush of catching the next best wave and Nirvana had that vibe as so did Pearl Jam. What stood out to me in those years was this idea that it was American to not be some pretentious sellout corporate rock group but instead be Indy. Also punk played into it some but as Kurt called it “New Wave” this reveals the inner workings of Grunge. It was that throwback to being a poor ass surfer kid who might have a group of friends that rocked out in a garage and did drugs. We were the cool kids, doing the surfer thing and our music spoke to the angst of being forced to conform and we weren’t having it. We had a secret weapon that was toppling the charts and our sound was unique and it defined our need to do something that no other band was doing, break the rules and just be your ugly self.
Heroin was really popular in Seattle during that period for some reason... The rockstars used it yeah but a lot of the scene ppl were heavy into it too... Idk why but hey it is wht it was...
Haha. I remember my mom showing me an article in a Boise newspaper showing all of these supposed grunge terms from the Northwest. I couldn't believe what I was reading. I had to explain to my mom that I had never even heard most of those terms.
What is up with how glitchy this video is? Like people still talking while the visual is moving on and it clips back to them for less than a second and then some things are the same speed and fine. Who edited this??
I don't really think the sound was that new,we used to use the term grunge in the mid eighties, it was basically sludgey rock, we had a great alternative rock scene in Melbourne in the eighties, and Mudhoney have admitted being influenced by Australian bands like the Scientists. I guess what I'm saying is it didn't come out of nowhere, there was a long history of alternative rock before grunge.
I was in HS 89 to 93 and grunge was it, even in Tennessee. I was gifted a tape of Bleach on my 17th birthday and it totally blew my mind. I was particularly into Soundgarden, Ultramega OK being my favorite, although I sufficiently wore out Louder Than Love. What a great time it was. So much flannel, so much love.
I moved to Seattle when I was 15 right after the end of grunge. Sound Garden had broken up, AIC hadn't played a show in years and Kurt had died 3 years before. At that time the kids in Seattle did everything they could to distance themselves from grunge, and so everyone was listening to rap music at that point.
Why do you call Federal Way 'Seattle'?
awesome early c profile pic that alone tells me your cool asf
this makes sense. seattle was so inundated with people chasing the grunge sound, bands, record companies, fans, etc that who wouldn't be sick of it. they'd been listening to the precursers of grunge music for years by 1992. also, sounds like you are talking about around 1997 and people were over the grunge thing most places by then, not just in seattle.
Wow that's crazy
I've never given up on Grunge or the Alternative sound of the 90s. I never will. It was a special time, despite the darkness within.
Somebody once said to me:
Grunge is a vague term, not genre specific. For example;
Nirvana is Punk grunge
Alice in Chains is Metal grunge
Pearl Jam is Blues grunge.
A truly clever observation
I think Grunge should be considered more of a musical movement like the British Invasion was...tied to a time and place.
I think Neil young is grunge
@@musicofnoise He definitely was inspirational to some Grunge bands, most of all Pearl Jam. If you’re not familiar, check out his Mirror Ball album. Pearl Jam is basically the band on the album.
Yeah it was a bit vague really, the bands were fairly different
STP & Bush = pop grunge
Kurt Cobain is always the first mentioned of the Seattle scene. AIC dominated the scene before Nirvana was even known.
Mother Love Bone and Soundgarden were the two biggest bands on the scene before it broke. They were the first two to have major label record deals. Kurt is mentioned first because Nirvana blew up and broke the scene to the mainstream. Like it or not all the other bands followed behind them and benefitted from Kurt’s success
Aic started as a glam band so you have no idea what u speak of champ.
@@Spooky_515 erm, AIC blew up before Soundgarden. Soundgarden may have had a deal but their first record didn’t have the success of Facelift. Also, AIC is so much better leaps and bounds!
@@HildeAzul Alice In Chains didn’t blow up first. They had a video on mtv that didn’t get over until after the grunge explosion. Wiki claims it was the first to go platinum but there’s no date listed so I’m not buying it. It was certified gold September 11 1991. Thats like a year after initial release. Gold is good but not super successful for rock bands of that era. Nevermind dropped September 24th ‘91 and was platinum by November. That’s blowing up. When an album is certified it’s easy to find the date in which it happened. Both Soundgarden and Alice In Chains were initially in the shadow Of Nirvana and Pearl Jam and were never as big as either of those two.
@@Spooky_515 you have no idea what you are even talking about. One video? Facelift was Gold before PJ and Nirvana hit the National scene. They were the first of the Seattle bands to blow up 100%. Not to mention the most talented.
Rain keeps kids in garages and basements. Same as England
It was a magical time something that many of us haven't felt sense and possibly never will 😢
I'm 45 year's old and I got to see Alice in chains and Soundgarden back in the day... I didn't get a chance to see nirvana___ the grunge sub pop sound still rules 👍🏻🎸🕯️
I've seen Mudhoney Soundgarden and Mark Lanegan live
I’m happy to say I got to see Meat Puppets open for Stone Temple Pilots back in the day during the Purple tour.
Awesome! I always wanted to see Soundgarden! I was fortunate to see Nirvana New Years Eve 93'. Your correct, still rules!
@@OGGOAT23 Another awesome artist...unbelievable! R.I.P 'Dark Mark'🕊️
Come on dude, Let's go back! I'm 47 and wish I'd been able to see any of that.
I'm a 53 yr old Texan raised up in SLC,Utah and Homedale,Idaho... Just up the road of Boise , and man i had the honor and privilege to have not only lived and attended and saw all the now iconic bands from 80s ,90s and early 2000s Seattle underground scene but also attended other metal shows from now iconic bands like Metallica, Testament , Slayer , Venom , King Diamond etc etc .... can't believe my Buddys ,myself and lots of other fans got to help out all these bands by buying their homemade merch and sometimes helped them out unload their gear before and after a show ... Still have lots of flyers from SLC, UTAH'S SPEEDWAY CAFE when nirvana, Soundgarden, smashing trees , pearl jam and lots of other Seattle bands played up there when I was a kid .... 😊
smashing pumpkins and screaming trees. nice try
Do you have duplicates bro?
Grunge scene deserves a 10 part documentary...from the Fastbacks 10 Minute Warning U Men till Soundgarden breaking up..it would get crazy views
It deserves a whole ass biography show with each season or episode it talks about a different band or different Washington bands etc that would be great
It didn’t really go away. It just moved to the right.
That’s a great idea actually. Get all the big names of the scene and all the footage and audio clips possible. Who would host/narrate?
Duff was in fastbacks, 10 min W and the fartz
@@Spooky_515 TAD is my pick
Around 5 minutes bro says rent was around $300 a month lol good fucking times 😂
my whole view on grunge came from something noel gallahger said in the 90s, “ that cobain guy, biggest rockstar in the world sitting in his mansion high on smack , WTF are you sad about mate?” and it hit me . he was right
@JoMomma YUP. noel g had it spot on the whole grunge thing was a bit cringy
Haven't watched it yet BUT I sure hope they mention the late great Andy Wood, who NEVER gets any credit for being one of the pioneers who also died way too young (24.)
❤️❤️
And Shannon Hoon
Ya your right no Andrew wood he was one of the greats same as mark lanagan
@@Djjfjfjfkdkssl BM no grunge miss...
Very lame! No Andy at all
I really appreciate your contribution. I must say that it takes me back to my decade of choice, and to some of my most precious memories, as when I bought Nirvana's Bleach or Nevermind and I first heard them. Gives me chills. Also to when I went to Nirvana or Pearl Jam's gigs. Or when Kurt, Scott, Chris, Layne... passed away, some of the gloomiest, mournful times I've lived. Anyway, I haven't stopped listening to grunge - and metal - ever since.🤘
I never really called it Grunge. I used to call it Alternative. I remember my friend who had a degree in accounting said She was getting a job for a new company called Starbucks. How time flies. I want to go back to the 90's.
I’d go back to the 90’s in a hot second
Alternative is REM haha Grunge is heavy punk metal hard rock
@@OGGOAT23 That's why teenagers in the early 90s were drawn to the Seattle sound. The hybrid sound, which wasn't much different from what they were already listening to. (Most likely Skid Row and Metallica). And the Seattle hype machine were equating it with the R.E.M.'s and the Depeche Modes of the world. These flannel wearing teenagers didn't know about Pixies, Dinosaur Jr. and Sonic Youth. AND THEY' ARE STILL TRYING TO TAKE CREDIT FOR THE SO-CALLED 90S ALTERNATIVE REVOLUTION IN 2023. IT STARTED IN THE EARLY 80S.!
@@OGGOAT23 HAHAHA is right!! We were listening to "Grunge" in 1982.
We called it punk. The term “grunge” made us in Tempe AZ cringe.
I was in my mid 20's when I discovered grunge in the summer of 1989 with Mudhoney which I watched on Much Music TV. To me grunge and alternative rock was like a breath of fresh air. I went to the Lollapalooza shows in Vancouver BC I saw Alice In Chains, Sound Garden, Pearl Jam, Ministry . moshing in the pit. I felt excitement and cool vibes with Nirvana's Never Mind album. However with their follow up album Inutero I felt sadness and a growing sense of impending demise. I thought Kurt's days were numbered, especially after hearing the song All Apologies, and tragically, I was right. After Kurt Cobain's suicide in April 1994. The cool and fun aspect of Seattle grunge was no longer there.
I became an adult in 1994. It took me years to build my own authentic, DIY life.
Sub Pop was very important too because it was an underground independent record label that had a mail order catalog and a singles club that created an independent market. They were great at marketing.
And just remember Nirvana took Sonic Youths advice to heart, hence jumping to a major label with stipulations. When it comes to this whole game distribution really is an important part of it. And having control over your own product recording wise, makes sense. Too many artists are still stuck in litigation hell because of the fine print and legal jargon that was never fully explained over said contracts.....Dodgy industry, always has been , especially when huge amounts of money s at stake.
I joined the navy in 92… got sent to Bremerton wa. I would get a pint of jack, buy a large soda from subway, ice half soda and get on the fairy to Seattle. Buzzed up when I hit the dock, only 18 yrs old….. seemed like a big adventure, I miss those days
Thank you for sharing that! I really really appreciate that! I would love to have experienced that feeling you had, I bet it was ineffably phenomenal!!! Too bad I was one years old back in those days
@@nylontusk1289 sure….. thanks for making me feel like an old man!!! LOL
@@struthersboyz4990 Hahaha 😆 my bad man at least you got to experience such a time in place as that. I would give anything to have been in your shoes, without a doubt. Ps you're not old until you're 90 and once one gets there then yeah that's pretty damn old lol
@@nylontusk1289 no doubt brother
I've ridden that fairy, I bet you were pretty lit. It's a relatively long ride.
The 90's when we all thought what we were doing mattered.
Every generation thinks the same way then adulting begins at some point. Given the latest voting stats, our greatest contribution will be the kids we raised.
It all matters. And it all, always matters.
It really was the last generation that wasn’t chained to a cell phone and actually had original thoughts and you can definitely tell the difference in the music
Yeah because what we’re doing now is so much better. This is the most angry., divisive era of my lifetime
Or that we could lives that were beyond the traditional expectations.
Going through the TV Guide (for Perth, Australia) and saw I'd JUST missed this episode on telly by 10 minutes😕. Got on UA-cam hoping it's here and...voila!! Here I am. Thank fuck for the OPs of uploaders of these gems👌🏻. Been waiting for this ep for a while and would've been PISSED to've missed out seeing it. The brutal honesty, rawness and angst of AIC, Nirvana, Soundgarden, Stone Temple Pilots, Jane's Addiction, Mad Season etc etc (and nu/alt metal's Ministry, NIN) gave a lot of us angry teens an outlet and wouldn't be here without them. I know the struggles of heroin addiction and depression so these bands really made me feel less alone and for that, I can NOT thank them enough 💜🤘🏻.
Which Aussie channel was it on?
That's right we weren't ALONE
I think KC was murdered. He's the only 1 who doesn't get radio royalties. Courtney does, DG & KN do, so does the label.
Kristen Pfaff's death could have been mentioned also.
I say that he was absolutely murdered!! NOT a suicide. He was worth more dead, than alive....to a certain someone.
@@Mraquanetchris neither of them were murdered, these silly conpsy th's are ruining their legacies.
Pfaff relapsed and ODed by too large a dose.
When you talk about heroin and the scene Andrew Wood, Kurt Cobain, and Layne Staley were the biggest casualties of it.
Scott Weiland as well.
@@Shagamaw-100 scott was not from seattle and therefore is not included in a documentary about seattle....
@@leinonibishop9480, I was talking about heroin. Scott suffered from heroin addiction.
@@Shagamaw-100 that's very true, and so have millions of other people that weren't mentioned in this documentary about Seattle because they weren't from there.
@@leinonibishop9480 Then why didn't you mention Cobain? He was never from Seattle.
Back then no music spoke to me like grunge did. As soon as I heard them on John peel I was instantly a fan I was like whoa who an wat is this...spent most of the 90s moshing in a mosh pit or gurning in a rave.... good times. Bleach an incestercide are still my go to albums. Nothing like them before or since hit me as hard
Did you ever listen to Urusei Yatsura? From Scotland 😊
I loved that era in time. And being from NYC made it all the more exciting. I hung out with Layne from AIC when he was in NY in '93 if memory serves me right. We had our own vibrant Heroin scene gaining ground as well, sadly to say. I was a victim of it. Hence...Layne. Met people from a ton of other bands and even had a brief affair with a female artist i will respectfully leave nameless. And though i could definitely see the "Seattle" influence on clothing and culture, It was different for me and all the people i knew. Firstly, we had a distinctly NY attitude to us and secondly, I grew up as a teen in the 80's on Long Island. Everyone i knew dressed like that. My entire wardrobe was flannel, work boots & combat boots, army pants, faded levis, concert t shirts and a leather jacket. Lol. So when the world went "seattle", most of us felt like people were finally getting with the program, lmao. We always dressed that way. Lol. Maybe it comes from living by the ocean. They did. We did. Like gloomy weather clothes. Lol. Great music. Came and went way too quick thanks to those corporate blood suckers. They ruin everything. When madonna got into it with her label i knew it was finished. Looking back, I think the 90's were great. To hell with the 60's. They only had a few years at the tail end of that decade. We had the whole thing. And it was fun. We truly were the last free people of America. And with the new millennium came this cubicle existence we endure today. Great doc. !!!
Long Island isn’t nyc bub
Actually parts of Long Island are NYC. Brooklyn and queens are geographically located on Long Island. I live 15 minutes outside of the borough of queens on Long Island. When I cross into queens I’m still on Long Island. 😸
Are you having another heroin dream?
No man - it wasn't the ocean, and it wasn't just the cool coastal cities. Flannels, T-shirts, ripped up jeans and leather came out of 70s/80s Punk and Hardcore and there were scenes of people throughout the country who wore this stuff.
Deer Park Strong Island 💪⚡⚡🔥🇧🇪🇮🇪🇵🇱🏴⚔️🇺🇸✝️ Hung out at Sundance in Bayshore saw many bands there before they went big slayer was totally insane 120 degrees inside Southside hospital was very busy great times NYHC Hammerheads Cheers Stage Door !!!!! Many cool clubs
Seattle Rock Rules
I remember when I first started trying to write song, which were ok, I'd had a boom box with a built in mic that would record to tape. I'd lock myself in my room,the world away and just jam. I loved it.
One of the biggest impacts ever in music with the least number of bands to expose what was happening.
The band Heart got its start from Seattle Washington.
Ann and Nancy were the two talented sisters who everyone is familiar with.
These two sisters became great friends with Alice N Chains and other similar bands during the 90' era who were from the Seattle and Washington state area.
I loved the thundering sound of those early so called "Grunge" bands.
My favorite top three bands not in any particular order, are Nirvana, Alice N Chains and Pearl Jam.
Don't forget Roger Fisher from Heart
Heart is Canadian
@@gabrieldindayal3629 Some early Bandmembers were Canadian, but the core group were from USA
You don’t even understand how much I appreciate you posting this. This was the only place I could find this show in Canada, nvm this particular episode. THANK YOU 🖤🖤❤️🖤🖤. P.S. I am forever grateful to you Sub Pop for giving these amazing bands a chance to show the world how great they are. 🖤❤️
You're Welcome 🤗
Dope and depression. Grunge came and went, and those two things were part of the reason.
Thanks for choosing the Peter Bagge comic-panel as clip-cover. I have always been a big fan of his art, especially of the Kurts 😂❤
I have a Buddy Tattoo, most proud.
So many scenes missed out in this documentary . If your gonna bring up grunge you need to bring up SST , Discord , Bad Brains ,Fugazi , Hardcore scene all the people that were doing it before them. The diy Movement helped these guys.
This isn’t the story of those bands. And I’d say the single most influential band on Seattle was Hüsker dü. My two cents
jack endino is in every grunge documentary hahaha I guess how can he not be right. the timing was perfect for this music explosion. what a time to be a teenager. I'm a proud gen X'er
Endino deserves to be recognized because he was the first to record Nirvana and produced their first album. That was very important. Also, their first single Love Buzz.
Jack Endino is Grunge
90's - The Genesis of Grunge Rock - soul's "true music".
Grunge Rock is a language. The embodiment of purest form of art and expression.
I wish those bands were still around.. I've seen Mudhoney and Soundgarden live, but that's about it
@@OGGOAT23 this documentary isn’t bad it’s good but I wish they focused more on the other bands in Seattle Pearl Jam Soundgarden and AIC ( my fav grunge band) gets a mention that’s all I love nirvana but in grunge documentaries it’s focused heavily on nirvana and leaves out the other great bands in Seattle
@@MrJJr-lw9zq there are documentaries focusing on those bands..not too many about sub pop though they really were the pioneer grunge label at time
@@OGGOAT23 had a chance to see Nirvana and got into the fight over a female and didn’t go. Ugh 😩
@@MrJJr-lw9zq Pearl jam rocks, but they ain't grunge
The 90a were incredible musically. It was when you still had to have actual talent and creativity. We also had a plethora of different kinds of music rather than one repetitive sound. Nirvana was and is still incredible. Kurts death was shocking but not really. He really was just so clearly not well,despite his immense talent. I will never forget when they launched into Rape Me on live tv during the MTV video awards and Nova threw his guitar in the air only to have it come straight back down and split his wig wide open on live tv. They had been SPECIFICALLY TOLD by MTV that they could NOT perform Rape Me and so of course that's exactjy what they did. This was back when there was still spontaneity and true artistry and talent involved in the music industry. It is actually A JOKE now. Just a joke. Artists are not artists. Watching a certain actors kid taking guitar lessons and discussing whether or not she appears "believable" as a rock musician just made my stomach fall out at the bottom,gave me a hopeless feeling,the feeling that I needed to build up my library of 50s 60s 70s 80s and 90s music because there's nothing else coming along to trump those artists,true artists.
I think he hit his head on SNL not the MTV awards.
@@smelltheglove2038 nope Google it friend
70’s were a great time to be alive.
@@daniellewatson8352 I was a little kid but I remember them very well. I still remember the day Elvis Presley died,the Steelers and Terry Bradshaw winning all those superbowls,the Pirates winning the pennant,all of it. The 70s were indeed a groovy decade
@@smelltheglove2038 no it was the mtv awards! I remember Dana Carvey came onstage after and was like “did you see that dude knocked himself out?!”
Thanks for the upload.
Cold dark and dreary music from a city, cold dark and dreary. Beautiful and tragic. How i loved it.
Seattle is a completely different city now. It was a great place to be in the 1990s.
that peter bagge cartoon brought me here
When Cobain looked out into the audience he said he saw the people who wanted to beat him up in high school.
Most people in his same position look out and see Ticket sales and the people who help pay their bills and launch their careers.
Part of Sub Pop's original business plan should have arranged to have an in-house shrink to help with bandmembers with psychological problems.
Many of these rockers from Seattle were depressed because of the constant gloomy weather.
Just like Motown had a finishing school for there acts, it's more than apparent Sub Pop really needed a shrink to help people like Kurt Cobain.
It's what happens when you steal Boston hooks
the reason Sonic Youth claimed they went with a major label initially is because they offered health insurance, unlike indies.
most could barely manage to pay their artists' royalties, let alone have an in-house shrink. turns out the music industry was just a massively exploitative machine that chewed up artists and spat them out. *artists* - as opposed to (aspiring?) pop stars.
oh god no. "hey young man with mistrust of mainstream authority figures, to sign with our label, you need to see a psychiatrist." and this was the 80s and 90s, when people believed therapy was for people in Manhattan and LA and everyone else should suck it up.
@@perfectallycromulent Maybe we need to set up a Go Fund me account for your dire need of serious mental health care..
@@Mraquanetchris obviously you dont play guitar.
I was there man! You forgot to mention all the acid..
LSD acid or something else 😊
"In his dreadful lassitude and objectless rage, Cobain seemed to have give wearied voice to the despondency of the generation that had come after history, whose every move was anticipated, tracked, bought and sold before it had even happened. Cobain knew he was just another piece of spectacle, that nothing runs better on MTV than a protest against MTV; knew that his every move was a cliché scripted in advance, knew that even realising it is a cliché. The impasse that paralysed Cobain in precisely the one that Fredric Jameson described: like postmodern culture in general, Cobain found himself in ‘a world in which stylistic innovation is no longer possible, where all that is left is to imitate dead styles in the imaginary museum’."
- Mark Fisher," Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?"
America makes the best tools, cool cars, fantastic movies, amazing music but holy crap they can’t make a decent documentary.
😆
In Australia grunge was the in thing until about 98-99. It was a big thing here all through the 90s.
no it wasn't. you just weren't cool.
Argument could be made that DZ Deathrays and Violent Soho are Aussie grunge bands now.
Back then,as teen,I was jalous about the 60s 70s...to me we were on the end of a era.
But,with grunge..rave..free speech libertarian culture...dystopian future warning...
The 90s were really the last free analogic era,the 00s were already more Orwellian,but not yet full alienated like today.
Orwellian is apt for Trump, Putin, ...type neo fascist regimes. But plenty of Orwellian regimes around priot to these recent manifestations of 1984.
@@miketomlin6040 No...who burned books...cancel...use nov langue...is soooo easy to call someone a 'fascist'....
I grew up in eastern europe 80/90s...I was a immigrant..antifa...but I quickly understood...some people will use your 'kindness..empathy' as a Pavlovian reflex...to push an agenda.
Animals farm...The killing fiels...Brazil...The last supper are about this 'Milgram' hate of others.
@@miketomlin6040 It's literally Biden making things orwellian increasingly in America. You can't just throw that word around. It actually means something. It means big government becoming so much a part of the life of every individual and every level of society that we can't even think for ourselves. That is objectively the democratic party. Who wants to police pronouns and fundamental rights and wants to prop up a fake president who can't even stand without special shoes to hold him up. He has handlers. He's clearly not the guy running the show. And you still say it's Trump who makes things orwellian? I'm curious if people ever paid attention or if you just say things.
@@miketomlin6040 Consider the blatant and awkward shove of all things woke in our faces in modern entertainment. You gonna tell me Netflix making everything gay and trans all the sudden isn't political propaganda? You gonna tell me it's coincidence they started doing that when the libs started pushing for social and political dominance? It's propaganda. Thankfully the people are fighting back and bankrupting companies going along with it. You'd probably call THAT orwellian or fascist. All this woke crap is the equivalent of WAR IS PEACE. Blasting us with messages that aren't truth and are based in lies to twist our minds up so we won't be free. But you'd say Trump is making it orwellian.
Just discovered your channel and I like it!! Imma definitely check more videos out!✌
Thanks
Seattle once a working class barley on the map city. 300 a month rent.
Now maybe 1,200 a month low paying jobs. Literally have to be almost a millionaire to live in Seattle now. It's a real shame.
Well the whole tech boom in seattle also happened in the 90s.
I was in middle school when he killed himself. I remember it so well. Happened so quick. Here I am years later living in Seattle and the ghost of 80" and 90"s still linger.
It was a sign of things to come, the slide down to hell that Portland and Seattle have experienced lately.
Lol I had that pete bagge/subpop T and one that matched that said "I scream you scream we all scream for a major label record contract"
did you record this with a potatoe?
So if there was a Grunge Hangover, how come there hasn't been a commercial pop and hip-hop hangover? I'm not seeing any backlash towards the mainstream. Not only does this concern me, I also find this very sad.
Pop and rap (trap) simple stupid music sells
What’s come of hip hop is the worst.. it was better off dying out instead of being the status quo
@@reefk8876 yea… OK BOOMER
@@stephenmac23 I’m no boomer. Trash is trash. But thanks for that.
@@stephenmac23 he's right most rap is just trash an nothing like it was...wave sum guns talking about killing ops an selling drugs standard trash. Name any rappers that could make a whole album for 600bucks that still stands the test of time 20y later today.
Not different of a lot of towns in the province of Québec. Not only the long cold winters, but even when it's not the winter, It is often windy and the wind is often cold. And statistically, it's a province with a good portion of the population that drinks a lot of alcohol. 😂 When I was a teenager, I often attended music bands practices.
When I was in Hollywood in 1988 a kid stopped me on Melrose Ave., back then a very grungy street, and told me I should move to Seattle--that everybody was moving up there for a new scene. But I had just gotten to L.A., and I was really digging the old movie theatres and buildings and what-not. Turns out the "New Scene" was Grunge. I liked a lot of the music that came out during the '90s, but I'm so glad I missed the scene.
The audio on this sounds like it was recorded from one of those battery powered portable TV's, with the microphone like 6ft away , in a truck stop. Fitting given the subject matter, I suppose..
Heroin took 10 of my friends in the mid nineties. 30 years later it still hurts 🥺
The obvious point is there were more grungers than just in Seattle.
Love the Peter Bagge cover art
HELP What song is being played in the background (s1e5) @ 39:45??
Bead anal melody by beads
Just realized I left my flannel in Seattle.
The best music scene in the 90’s ever exists🤘
90s fullstop
This was nationwide for that matter in those days. People were tired of the hair bands. Kids were getting together and forming bands from the skate culture.
The amazing thing is that there was an
underground scene that they believed in but their were no hits at first. Suddenly, Nirvana showed up and Cobain was writing these brilliant songs. Almost overnight the Seattle scene exploded! And the attention was all on Seattle from the whole world. Then they had Subpop bands tour Europe and the UK. They became popular.
Aberdeen was and is a craphole. No wonder Cobain was depressed and had to escape. It was Cobains genius songwriting gift that pushed everything over the top.
what song was that playing starting around 10:15?
Anyone know the name of the song @10:17 ? Would really like to know that riff is stuck in my head!
I ask the same question ❓ lol
Hunted Down?
Damn good documentary I enjoy this Alice in chains Soundgarden and Nirvana those are my three favorite bands from that era! 🤘🥁😩🥁
Watching from Greece.hi everybody.
Great documentary.
The worst thing to happen to music is rap music going mainstream it killed all of the good music that was out and most of these lame kids now have no idea what freedom of expression is
You're mad because another type of music came along, yet you say you value freedom of expression. Keep in mind the music you're supporting has often led to addiction and suicide. It's not actually a good thing. You just think it sounds better. Music in general is about sex drugs and rock n roll, regardless of genre or how good it is. Rap isn't any worse than grunge. What are the fruits of grunge? Depression. Suicide. Drugs. Rebellion. Nothing good.
@@godwarrior3403 you should reread the OP. He was only talking about rap going mainstream..nothing about grunge..yeah I know the op is off topic for the video, but such is the comment section across all social media.
I'm 53 and from Detroit and no matter how dirty I thought I was as a gear head/punk/classic country music lover/ and what we now call classic rock growing up in the 80s as a teenager, I had no idea where I fit. I can go 10 different ways with this conversation but I wanna say this...
Sub Pop was huge for breaking this "scene" but we here in the midwest would have never heard it if not for the few "sell outs" early on. It's sad to say but just the way it is.
The cassette player in my 1970 442 got replaced with an Alpine cd player and I was rushing thru so called grunge in the 90s as I had become 21 in 1990 and it just fit. I was never trying to impress anybody.
I can say this much about those times in the 90s which so many people like to refer to as good times, for me i had a constant worry about the future and I found opioids helped in short term. Obviously that plan was flawed.
Nobody even mentioned Scott Weiland's untimely death in December of 2015 on this video. Stone Temple Pilots were headliners in the 90s as well. I saw them on MTV constantly back in the early 90s. Seattle or not, need to give credit where credit is due.The sound is 'purple'...ya dig...
You make a good point.
Scott W. really was an amazing talent.
Excellent singer, great frontman.
It will always be heartbreaking Scott died on his tour bus in Minnesota 2015.
RIP Scott.
Can’t start talking about bands outside of Seattle if you’re doing a doc on the Seattle scene lol then it just becomes a 90’s rock doc
SST the Black Flag record label put out Sound Gardens 1st record out..SST was the pattern most D I Y record label used SST put out first record for a bunch of bands, Sonic Youth, Husker Du, the Dicks, Subhumans, Dinosaur Jr, Bad Brains and alot more. SST deserves alot more credit.....we need an informed documentary on SST Records.....!
The awful audio and video quality make this feel a little more 90s than it should. Thanks for posting. :)
Heroin sweetened rebellion against maturity, againt responsibility for the consequences of own behavior, against the demands of adult life, surely had to end with a terrifying sense of emptiness and necessity of self-destruction. As someone sang unconsciously but prophetically "one who doesn't care is one who shouldn't be..."
I felt that. I entered adulthood involuntarily in 1994.
I was hanging with Vertical After out of Vancouver back in early 90s
Totally forgot to mention the Melvins
Since I lived in Phoenix and Tempe, Az, we had rage, isolation, and a sense of hopelessness. But it started in the 80s, and earlier.
Why the flannel shirts you ask? In Seattle it's cold and rainy about 75% of the year. One shirt isn't enough. You have to be wearing at least a long sleeve flannel also and maybe a coat if you want to stay warm and kinda dry in this rainy city!
A lot like those of us in DC bands in the late 70s and early 80s. Our sound never became entirely socially acceptable from a mass market perspective. We never in a million years thought anyone would care about our music. I guess we were sort of right.
Isn't Dave Grohl from DC?
Nowadays it's worse, with fentanyl replacing heroin.
Dam I had so many plaid shirts back then.. actually really comfortable an warm, don't see them any more
people that live in cold mountainous areas have always worn them and always will. trend or no trend, they are practical.
@@leinonibishop9480 yeah they are the only place I see them now on shows like bush hunters an things. I always liked em
@@foxxy46213 my point was, if you like 'em, keep wearin' em. you seem sad that they aren't in fashion anymore. but that doesn't mean you can't wear them if you want to.
@@leinonibishop9480 if I could find any I'd be wearing em...I don't give 2 craps Wats fashionable no more lol
@@foxxy46213 thrift stores and goodwill still have lots of them, or if you want new check your ranch stores, cabellas, etc
I was strung out on junk and playing in a hardcore band at the time, one day our guitarist came to rehersal with a copy of Smells like teen spirit......i knew at that point everything was going to change in the music scene that day when i heard it.
The Seattle Sound was the soundtrack of my 20's.
Playin in bands in Sydney,
thru the early 90's at Erskineville & Newtown; pubs like Station Hotel,
The Vic on the Park
& The Sandringham
(The Sando). Practice at Zen Studio at St.Peters, smashed off our heads on cheap beer pot & smack unless I was at work under-the-weather hung-over or hanging-out. Sydney 1990's = cigs were $15, $2.50 a beer, $90 q/oz for slow..
🎸Far too much rock n' roll is woefully insufficient, grossly inadequate & nowhere near enough - saw Nirvana when they came to Australia @Selina's Coogee Bay, off-tap🤘
The death of Kurt Cobain was horrifying, but when the 6pm news said Chris Cornell died & I had to be convinced Cornell was dead & this wasn't my mates idea of a disgusting joke, it wasn't a joke, I lost my sh*t big-time when Cornell left us - just totally sickening. Same sickened feeling lately with drum monster Taylor Hawkins, all gone far too soon, RIP 3 heroes.
I was at all those places in Sinny during the early 90s. Annandale Hotel was another hangout.
@@mattgilbert7347 The guitar shops in Annandale Camperdown & Glebe then were wicked. Was a total hoot seeing The Craven Fops at the Annandale one time I recall.🥳
I was kneecapped by Chris' death. Pissed off that he left us. Baffled that all that ridiculous talent wasn't enough to make him want to stay. We all would have killed to have a quarter of his gifts.
I thought he was going to walk this road with us. Showing us how to get old.
He had the face of an angel and was the object of my all my angsty lust.
22:59
Kurdt and Krist found out that SUB-POP were going to set up a distribution deal with a major. They sat and talked and said "why dont we just cut out the middle man if they're going to be linking up with a major?"
And yes, kurdt and Krist knew that the nee songs they were writing were going to be better than before.
They would've never guessed or couldve dreamt that they would've hit the level they did.
No one could've with what SLTS and the Nevermind LP did.
I remember Kurt saying in interviews that they wanted to be the biggest band in the world. Be careful what you wish for.
the saddest part of this is these 4 stars taught thousands that heroin led to success. which did lead to spikes in the drug and ultimately death.
Embrace your grief
for there your soul will grow.
Karl Jung
When we are at rock bottom, the sooner we see that grief and pain as a gift, there’s no place to go but up.
The grunge scene of Seattle and no mention of the Melvins? I always thought they were pioneers.
Aberdeen is a long way from Seattle. Its not really true to call nirvana a Seattle band either tbh, although they at least lived there later on
they're also constantly talking about this as a 1990s thing when Soundgarden had already released multiple albums in the 1980s, including the relatively popular Louder than Love in 1989, before anyone had ever heard of Nirvana.
Its funny, the Melvins never get mentioned in documentaries like this, same with Mudhoney and Dinosaur jr. The Melvins helped start Nirvana, and were big influences on many bands at the time. And those 3 bands are some of the only bands from that period still touring and putting out albums to this day that have never stopped. Im also pretty sure Mudhoney was only mentioned in this documentary because they were signed to subpop... i have so much respect for those bands, they always stuck to their own guns, just like Sonic Youth. To me, those 4 bands are the true successful ones in the end. Oh and Smashing pumpkins too
The song that starts at 10:17 kinda sounds familiar anyone know.if it's an actual song
Soundgarden hunted down
I grew up on Grunge as a teen and I wore flannel and jeans all the freakin time. And I have to say this whole music movement was deeply rooted in poor surfer culture. We loved the rush of catching the next best wave and Nirvana had that vibe as so did Pearl Jam. What stood out to me in those years was this idea that it was American to not be some pretentious sellout corporate rock group but instead be Indy. Also punk played into it some but as Kurt called it “New Wave” this reveals the inner workings of Grunge. It was that throwback to being a poor ass surfer kid who might have a group of friends that rocked out in a garage and did drugs. We were the cool kids, doing the surfer thing and our music spoke to the angst of being forced to conform and we weren’t having it. We had a secret weapon that was toppling the charts and our sound was unique and it defined our need to do something that no other band was doing, break the rules and just be your ugly self.
Thanks for this. You put into words what I couldn't.
Seattle, portland and SF
The 80s rocked
Tad was assume
I lived near top hat records on 12th
Nirvana was the outcome but there was alot of bands who started that never made it but were the inventors of grunge.
Like whom?
Heroin was really popular in Seattle during that period for some reason... The rockstars used it yeah but a lot of the scene ppl were heavy into it too... Idk why but hey it is wht it was...
You would think a video about music would have better sound quality.
For some reason🥴 only one of the most addictive drugs around
It helps with songwriting, and helps feel better. Then they are addicted and it kills them.
Nirvana has always been my favorite but Alice in chains was the absolute best of seattle
Oooooh the memories this brought up 👍
Haha. I remember my mom showing me an article in a Boise newspaper showing all of these supposed grunge terms from the Northwest. I couldn't believe what I was reading. I had to explain to my mom that I had never even heard most of those terms.
It was a joke. NYT grew into an even bigger joke, printing bs.
What is up with how glitchy this video is? Like people still talking while the visual is moving on and it clips back to them for less than a second and then some things are the same speed and fine. Who edited this??
I just found Soundgarden’s 1989 set in Houston on UA-cam.
First ever sludge Seattle band was a awesome Bam Bam!!!!
Rock in power brother Layne
I don't really think the sound was that new,we used to use the term grunge in the mid eighties, it was basically sludgey rock, we had a great alternative rock scene in Melbourne in the eighties, and Mudhoney have admitted being influenced by Australian bands like the Scientists. I guess what I'm saying is it didn't come out of nowhere, there was a long history of alternative rock before grunge.
Nu Metal took over from Grunge in the late 90s.
nu metal bands are cringe
I was in HS 89 to 93 and grunge was it, even in Tennessee. I was gifted a tape of Bleach on my 17th birthday and it totally blew my mind. I was particularly into Soundgarden, Ultramega OK being my favorite, although I sufficiently wore out Louder Than Love. What a great time it was. So much flannel, so much love.