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  1. #251
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    90's appreciation thrad

    Quote Originally Posted by easyrdr View Post
    My whole life I thought the 90's were the best years of my life, now I find out I was actually just riding the 80's wave. I guess I never really lived in the 90's. Wait, does it count if they released albums in the 90's.........I feel like that would make them 90's bands regardless of when they formed. Man this stuff is getting complicated.
    So Neil Young is a 90s artist? Tom Petty?


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  2. #252
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    Quote Originally Posted by AK47bp View Post
    Many of the 90’s bands formed in the late 80’s and released albums in the 90’s and became popular in the 90’s.

    Those are 90’s bands, not 80’s bands.

    Grateful Dead? Not a 90’s band.

    I listened to more Zeppelin, Marley, Sabbath, Pink Floyd than anything else in the 90’s but it’s definitely not 90’s music.


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    I associate all bands he listed with the mid to late 80s. They released albums in the 90s but that’s not when I first heard and started listening to them


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  3. #253
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    Quote Originally Posted by MagnificentUnicorn View Post
    I associate all bands he listed with the mid to late 80s. They released albums in the 90s but that’s not when I first heard and started listening to them


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    I guess it’s hard to really define with some of these bands.

    Maybe when they hit peak pop culture relevance?

    For example, The Rolling Stones? 60’s band, 70’s band, 80’s band, 90’s band??

    They pumped out albums across half a century but my brain thinks they are late 60’s or 70’s band based on their sound at peak popularity.

    Some of their biggest hits were in the 60’s. Are they still touring?




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  4. #254
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    I spent the '90s working hard, starting a family, making money and building a home. No time for anything else.....at all
    “How does it feel to be the greatest guitarist in the world? I don’t know, go ask Rory Gallagher”. — Jimi Hendrix

  5. #255
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    Quote Originally Posted by schindlerpiste View Post
    I spent the '90s working hard, starting a family, making money and building a home. No time for anything else.....at all
    Sweet


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  6. #256
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    Quote Originally Posted by schindlerpiste View Post
    I spent the '90s working hard, starting a family, making money and building a home. No time for anything else.....at all
    sounds terrible
    I spent the 90s doing a ton of drugs fucking off skiing riding my bike throwing up on main street numerous time being a menace to society thinking I was gods gift to ski town living
    driving around barely 16 drunk as shit falling over trying to pump gas in the middle of the night tripping on acid
    the first time I smoked crack wasn't that fun for twenty minutes is crack an 80s thing or a 90s thing?

    but hey Im paying for it today just put in 8 or so hrs of paper work this weekend glad I got it out of my system when I was in my teens and twenties or I'd be a miserable human being today (oh wait= never mind)

  7. #257
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    I really wanted to post Linkin Park here. Really feels late 90s to me but definitely not on most peoples' radar until early 00s..
    Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!

  8. #258
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    Quote Originally Posted by AK47bp View Post
    I guess it’s hard to really define with some of these bands.

    Maybe when they hit peak pop culture relevance?

    For example, The Rolling Stones? 60’s band, 70’s band, 80’s band, 90’s band??

    They pumped out albums across half a century but my brain thinks they are late 60’s or 70’s band based on their sound at peak popularity.

    Some of their biggest hits were in the 60’s. Are they still touring?




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    Yeah. It is kind of tough to categorize some like that. Aerosmith for example had a helluva good run and was distinctly popular in each decade for very different albums. Same could be said for Michael Jackson or David Bowie. We witnessed a serious evolution with those guys. Some of Bowie's music in the 90s was so kick ass, as he collaborated with Trent Reznor. So he was VERY 90s for a couple albums there.

    Other acts stayed frozen in time which could make them a 60s, 70s, whatever band. Which is fine. Sometimes their fans demanded that. Haha.

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  9. #259
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    Stumbled across this song and it reminded me of this thread.
    Damn shame, throwing away a perfectly good white boy like that

  10. #260
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    Quote Originally Posted by AK47bp View Post
    I guess it’s hard to really define with some of these bands.

    Maybe when they hit peak pop culture relevance?

    For example, The Rolling Stones? 60’s band, 70’s band, 80’s band, 90’s band??

    They pumped out albums across half a century but my brain thinks they are late 60’s or 70’s band based on their sound at peak popularity.

    Some of their biggest hits were in the 60’s. Are they still touring?




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    I can see that perspective, I never really watched MTv or listened to commercial radio from the early 80s on. I was living in the Bay Area from 88 to 03 and by the time a lot of the bands that got their start in the 80s achieved commercial success I had moved on to roots Americana, blues, jazz, country and bluegrass. A bunch of venues with live music any night of the week during that period. I was 20 in 88.


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  11. #261
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    Quote Originally Posted by Adolf Allerbush View Post

    Stumbled across this song and it reminded me of this thread.
    Very under-appreciated band.

  12. #262
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    Quote Originally Posted by AK47bp View Post
    The album and movie were both in rotation. Good stuff.







  13. #263
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    Movie soundtracks?

    How about Singles?
    I still call it The Jake.

  14. #264
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    Quote Originally Posted by BmillsSkier View Post
    Movie soundtracks?

    How about Singles?
    Singles would be my vote but the Godzilla soundtrack was on point as well.

    This Rage song is great IMO:



    Also, Tracy Bonham had pipes:


    Quote Originally Posted by SumJongGuy View Post
    Meanwhile in Dallas.. Toadies and Tripping Daisy..



    Loved the Toadies. Tyler was legit:
    Damn shame, throwing away a perfectly good white boy like that

  15. #265
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    Quote Originally Posted by BmillsSkier View Post
    Movie soundtracks?

    How about Singles?
    also

    Name:  Juice_OST.jpeg
Views: 288
Size:  19.9 KB

    which is awesome and shockingly enough doesn't even have Tupac on it

  16. #266
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    Quote Originally Posted by MagnificentUnicorn View Post
    I can see that perspective, I never really watched MTv or listened to commercial radio from the early 80s on. I was living in the Bay Area from 88 to 03 and by the time a lot of the bands that got their start in the 80s achieved commercial success I had moved on to roots Americana, blues, jazz, country and bluegrass. A bunch of venues with live music any night of the week during that period. I was 20 in 88.


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    So close, but I discovered it in the early 90's and it changed everything for me.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streng...Numbers_(band)
    Is it radix panax notoginseng? - splat
    This is like hanging yourself but the rope breaks. - DTM
    Dude Listen to mtm. He's a marriage counselor at burning man. - subtle plague

  17. #267
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    90's appreciation thrad

    Quote Originally Posted by JimmyCarter View Post
    also

    Name:  Juice_OST.jpeg
Views: 288
Size:  19.9 KB

    which is awesome and shockingly enough doesn't even have Tupac on it
    Tupac plays Bishop in Juice. If you want more trivia answers I’ve got enough to go around. Know the Ledge.

    1991
    Uno mas

  18. #268
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doremite View Post
    Tupac plays Bishop in Juice. If you want more trivia answers I’ve got enough to go around. Know the Ledge.

    1991
    Great movie and song

    https://youtu.be/OPkWYTUiPTo

  19. #269
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doremite View Post
    Tupac plays Bishop in Juice. If you want more trivia answers I’ve got enough to go around. Know the Ledge.

    1991
    Talking movie soundtracks here.




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  20. #270
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    Quote Originally Posted by Adolf Allerbush View Post

    Stumbled across this song and it reminded me of this thread.
    Drop D tuning: the sound of the 90s

  21. #271
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    Quote Originally Posted by BmillsSkier View Post
    Movie soundtracks?

    How about Singles?
    Absolutely.

  22. #272
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    Quote Originally Posted by BmillsSkier View Post
    Movie soundtracks?

    How about Singles?
    So good.

    https://youtu.be/N8r_anyZERw


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  23. #273
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    Quote Originally Posted by SumJongGuy View Post
    I really wanted to post Linkin Park here. Really feels late 90s to me but definitely not on most peoples' radar until early 00s..
    Ugh no. I’d put Linkin Park right in there with Limp Bizkit, Smashmouth, Eminiem, Kid Rock (I dislike Eminem and Kid Rock but those Detroit boys can at least lay claim to having some originality).



    The 90s were the decade that proved that white guys shouldn’t rap unless their named Mike, Adam or Ad Rock.

    See also: Snow “Informer” and LFO (Light Funky ones) “summer girls”.

  24. #274
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    I took all of G'love's money that he had on him at my weekly poker game. That wasn't that hard actually, but it paid a few months of bills. Nice guy actually, just not very smart in many senses. But who is laughing now. Ha. I can't even imagine what Vanilla Ice grossed.
    Is it radix panax notoginseng? - splat
    This is like hanging yourself but the rope breaks. - DTM
    Dude Listen to mtm. He's a marriage counselor at burning man. - subtle plague

  25. #275
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    Quote Originally Posted by MakersTeleMark View Post
    I took all of G'love's money that he had on him at my weekly poker game. That wasn't that hard actually, but it paid a few months of bills. Nice guy actually, just not very smart in many senses. But who is laughing now. Ha. I can't even imagine what Vanilla Ice grossed.
    Perfect example of the 90s whack ass white rapper. Son of a banking lawyer, went to babysitting school (Skidmore), grew up in the wealthiest neighborhood of Philly.
    He definitely didn’t come up on the streets.

    I wonder if that was his money you took or his family’s money.

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