Re: pearl jam and the 80s
Posted: Mon September 16, 2013 6:34 pm
not a comparisonBurtReynolds wrote:and who could forget about the ska explosion! changed music forever.
not a comparisonBurtReynolds wrote:and who could forget about the ska explosion! changed music forever.
How are we even comparing The Prodigy's legacy to ska? They practically invented rave in the 80s, and then fell into the alternative dance / breakbeat / dnb scene in the 90s.Lounge Lizard wrote:not a comparisonBurtReynolds wrote:and who could forget about the ska explosion! changed music forever.
i wasn't really. i just thought it was funny.harmless wrote:How are we even comparing The Prodigy's legacy to ska? They practically invented rave in the 80s, and then fell into the alternative dance / breakbeat / dnb scene in the 90s.Lounge Lizard wrote:not a comparisonBurtReynolds wrote:and who could forget about the ska explosion! changed music forever.
You're forgiven.BurtReynolds wrote:i wasn't really. i just thought it was funny.harmless wrote:How are we even comparing The Prodigy's legacy to ska? They practically invented rave in the 80s, and then fell into the alternative dance / breakbeat / dnb scene in the 90s.Lounge Lizard wrote:not a comparisonBurtReynolds wrote:and who could forget about the ska explosion! changed music forever.
Dividing it all up like that doesn't present a very accurate picture....not the least because it doesn't acknowledge how huge rap and soul-influenced pop and country music were at the peak of this "alternative music revolution" malarkey.BurtReynolds wrote:I always thought of the 90s as 3 different parts: first grunge, then gangsta rap, and lastly britney spears/backstreet boys crap.
Inexplicably, the country-pop stuff turned out to have a far more reaching impact on the state of popular music.stip wrote:that's true, but none of these were pacakaged as a totalizing cultural phenomena like grunge was. Well, no, the rap stuff was as well. But again that's not relevant for this particular thread.
It even made it's way in the LTRP thread.McParadigm wrote:Inexplicably, the country-pop stuff turned out to have a far more reaching impact on the state of popular music.stip wrote:that's true, but none of these were pacakaged as a totalizing cultural phenomena like grunge was. Well, no, the rap stuff was as well. But again that's not relevant for this particular thread.
