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Best Seattle 90s group

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Comments

  • RaceBannon
    RaceBannon Member, Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 115,822 Founders Club
    Neil Young

    Godfather of Grunge, honorary Seattleite
  • dnc
    dnc Member Posts: 56,855
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,808 Founders Club
    Nirvana

    What do you buttfucks know about Seattle scene. Pup was in mosh pits at "off ramp" and 'rock candy' for your 'poll' bands. Where's mudhoney, supersuckers, goodness as a few examples...wheres all the other bands during that era you left out your captain obvious poll? Nobody here saw chains, SG, Nirvana (who stunk) bac k in late 80's early 90's, or all the prime "grunge" (hate that term), it was fucking killer music. Nirvana was ok at best. Chains was, is and will always be Seattles best band. It Aint even fucking close.

    Whoever polled nirvana is a fucking typical seattle transplant goof. .whoever bashed Heart is said typical transplant who knows ZILCH about Seattle music history.
    They fucking rocked when they werent harmonizing dog and butterfly for the snowflakes like yourselves. Ann Wilson f-ing rocked. Roger Fisher too. Quick guys, google seattle bands and educate yourselves so you sound like u know what youre talking about. Dont try and be hip like Pup, you nerdy fucks all listen to Drake on replay

    I've moshed at the Rock Candy and polled Nirvana. So fucking what.
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,808 Founders Club
    Nirvana

    Despite being in HS during the peak years of the Seattle grunge era, this a rock and roll debate where I am not very emotionally invested. When you're a kid with limited disposable income, buying the cassettes and CD's of these groups just wasn't as high of a priority as getting all the Stones, Zep, Hendrix, Doors, Floyd, albums, so I just kind of skipped over this period of music. But I didn't grow up in WA either so I think that's part of it as well. In hindsight, I think there was a lot of quality music here, some of which holds up pretty well 25 years later, especially In Utero, MTV Live and Vitalogy. I think No Code while have a good amount of filler, has a few killer trackers.

    It's sacrilege to "real" music lovers, but 90's rock > 70's.
    I must never judge.