Guest godthedog Report post Posted May 23, 2002 what is everybody's favorite year of music & why? i'll start: i know most music critics point to 1967, but i don't think anything will ever top 1994. i'd been listening to rock music on-and-off for a couple years, but that was the year i became a hardcore corporate-hating alternative fan. probably a quarter of my entire cd collection is from 94. other than personal reasons, just look at the sheer musical output. three great, knock-you-on-your-ass classic albums were released: 'grace' by jeff buckley, 'superunknown' by soundgarden, and nirvana unplugged in new york. it's a miracle year when one classic is released, & i don't think 3 had been released in one year since the sixties. the amount of really good albums (some of which a lot of people consider great, and i won't dispute them) was pretty staggering. you had: tori amos, 'under the pink' green day, 'dookie' neil young, 'sleeps with angels' pearl jam, 'vitalogy' portishead, 'dummy' beck, 'mellow gold' tom petty, 'wildflowers' hole, 'live through this' nine inch nails, 'the downward spiral' pulp fiction soundtrack the crow soundtrack by the time you get to the albums that were merely good: sonic youth, 'experimental, jet set, trash & no star' johnny cash, 'american recordings' liz phair, 'whip-smart' r.e.m., 'monster' ween, 'chocolate & cheese' beastie boys, 'ill communication' bad religion, 'stranger than fiction' stone temple pilots, 'purple' you have a long-ass list. and remember what was in rotation on the radio? you had mazzy star, smashing pumpkins, freedy johnston, letters to cleo, they might be giants, the offspring, veruca salt, grant lee buffalo, blur, g love and special sauce, porno for pyros... this was the pinnacle, in my opinion. other opinions? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest redbaron51 Report post Posted May 23, 2002 1973 Best year of music Who: Quadrophinia Pink Floyd: Dark Side of the Moon Genesis: Lambs Lie Down on Broadway (or is it Selling England by the pound) Jethro Tull: Aqualung and the list goes on and on Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest razazteca Report post Posted May 23, 2002 how about 1991: Lalapalooza music concert Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest ant_7000 Report post Posted May 23, 2002 As far as hip hop is concern I think 1988 and 1994 was the best ever. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Report post Posted May 24, 2002 what is everybody's favorite year of music & why? i'll start: i know most music critics point to 1967, but i don't think anything will ever top 1994. i'd been listening to rock music on-and-off for a couple years, but that was the year i became a hardcore corporate-hating alternative fan. probably a quarter of my entire cd collection is from 94. other than personal reasons, just look at the sheer musical output. three great, knock-you-on-your-ass classic albums were released: 'grace' by jeff buckley, 'superunknown' by soundgarden, and nirvana unplugged in new york. it's a miracle year when one classic is released, & i don't think 3 had been released in one year since the sixties. the amount of really good albums (some of which a lot of people consider great, and i won't dispute them) was pretty staggering. you had: tori amos, 'under the pink' green day, 'dookie' neil young, 'sleeps with angels' pearl jam, 'vitalogy' portishead, 'dummy' beck, 'mellow gold' tom petty, 'wildflowers' hole, 'live through this' nine inch nails, 'the downward spiral' pulp fiction soundtrack the crow soundtrack by the time you get to the albums that were merely good: sonic youth, 'experimental, jet set, trash & no star' johnny cash, 'american recordings' liz phair, 'whip-smart' r.e.m., 'monster' ween, 'chocolate & cheese' beastie boys, 'ill communication' bad religion, 'stranger than fiction' stone temple pilots, 'purple' you have a long-ass list. and remember what was in rotation on the radio? you had mazzy star, smashing pumpkins, freedy johnston, letters to cleo, they might be giants, the offspring, veruca salt, grant lee buffalo, blur, g love and special sauce, porno for pyros... this was the pinnacle, in my opinion. other opinions? You forgot about Weezer "The Blue Album" and I think "Pinkerton" was around that time also. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest dilk bathoon Report post Posted May 25, 2002 i'm gonna agree with 1994. nothing witty to say. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest godthedog Report post Posted May 25, 2002 yup. i remembered the day after posting this that i'd forgotten about the blue album. but i don't believe 'pinkerton' came out till 1997. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest bdolo Report post Posted May 25, 2002 !994 As far as rap music it is the best year ever. A lot of these titles though were released in late 93 or early 95, so the best spand of rap albums is more like a two year period which is centered in 1994: (late93-early95) Nas:Illmatic B.I.G.- ready to die Mobb Deep- the infamous Wu tang clan- enter the 36 chambers Gangstarr:hard to earn AZ-doe or die Bone-eternal dogg pound-dogg food snoop dogg-doggystyle genius/gza-liquid swords raekwon-only built for cuban linx outkast-southernplayalistcadillacmuzik Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest The Man in Blak Report post Posted May 26, 2002 1994 is probably the best year overall in music, but I think the best year in rock is 1969. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest TheyCallMeMark Report post Posted May 27, 2002 I'm going to go with '92 as my favourite year. It means alot to me as a fan/musician. Beyond the fact that some of my favourite music was famous because of this year, all the imlipactions in it are fascinating, also (death of hair metal...). But mostly because of Nevermind. Not because it as such a great record (which it was), but because of everything that happened because of it. Mother Love Bone/Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, STP, Mudhoney and Alice In Chains (maybe Jane's Addiction, too but I'm not to sure on their time period) weren't really able to get off their feet when it came to it because they were all sort of in-between genres, not really being solidly part of one. The genre's they were advertised udner just weren't taking off for them because people would be dissapointed that it wasn't more like that style. Then Nevermind came out under the heading "Alternative". Of course, like the aformentioned bands Nirvana was a little in-between genres. Alice In Chains immidiatly felt the effects as they jumped aboard the bandwagon, labeled themselves as the now wildly popular alternative rock and started selling like crazy. When Pearl Jam released Ten they slapped the alternative label on it and it flew off the shelves. The Stone Temple Pilots were clumped with grunge rock, later sold as alternative and made good sales also. Anyway; the basic reason is that a very good chunk of my favourite bands were brought out into the light at that time and I might not have heard of them if they hadn't been. The only downfall of this year was Nevermind killed the Guns 'N' Roses freight train of sucsess... But that just makes the year more important... And I don't think any year has been as influential on music in the present, or for the future for reasons I have discussed in the past (death of the guitarist, rise of vocalist) but that's for another time! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest godthedog Report post Posted May 27, 2002 i'll agree that 92 was the year that it really blew up. but it is kind of depressing to think that it would be dead 4 years later, & that becoming so successful is what killed it. oh well. the true alternative stuff (velvet underground, pixies, sonic youth) is still untainted by the masses. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Big McLargeHuge Report post Posted May 29, 2002 I wouldn't really say Nirvana killed GnR. Axl was probably more responsible for that than anyone else. They were biggest band of the time (1992), and it was really only up until the 92 VMAs (late in the year) that the climate Really changed. That was pretty much the moment when the new generation of the Rock bands took over. GnR were fully capable of maintaining their status. It's just that self destruction ruined them and now nobody really cares to pay attention with it being the Axl show. Well, now more than ever before. And I'll concur that 1994 was a brilliant year. Probably the last great year for music in general. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest cobainwasmurdered Report post Posted May 29, 2002 92 or 94. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest gthureson Report post Posted May 30, 2002 1824. The year Ludwig van Beethoven completed and debuted his 9th Symphony. (You know...the one with Ode to Joy.) Hey, in 178 years, ain't nobody gonna remember 'Live Through This' or humming 'Green Day' to themselves. But they'll still be performing the 9th Symphony. It's that. Damn. Good. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest gthureson Report post Posted June 1, 2002 That's right. You can't argue about the choice of Ludwig. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest TheyCallMeMark Report post Posted June 3, 2002 The 9th Symphony really could never stand against the brilliance of "The Messiah"... Which was both more important musically and I feel the arrangement is more interesting. That's my opinion and all... But I feel Handel's little ditty was much more moving to boot! Though Ludwig's entire career probably was better than Handel's I disagree about the 9th Symphony being the best classical arrangement! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Kinetic Report post Posted June 3, 2002 I'd have to go with something in the late 60s. '67, most likely, which is really cliched but ultimately true. The last great year was 2000. A lot of great records were released that year, whereas 2001 was a little on the paltry side. 2002 isn't shaping up to be any better, quite frankly. I'm taking this momentary lull as an opportunity to discover more old music. I'd suggest everyone do the same. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest godthedog Report post Posted June 3, 2002 what came out in 2000? i remember 2000 as a huge disappointment. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Report post Posted June 3, 2002 1978. It was at that moment when many great musicians discovered that their best work was still ahead of them. If it weren't for 1978, Pavement might've never recorded and released Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain sixteen years later. Tom Waits may've never stopped doing his admirable, but not particularly outstanding, bohemian jazz act, thus depriving the world of great albums like Swordfishtrombones, Rain Dogs and Bone Machine. Outkast would have never released the best hip hop album--and one of the best albums of any genre in the '90s--ever, Aquemini. Were it not for 1978, I never would have been born, and those albums would have never been made. After all, what reason would these great records have to exist other than to thrill me and give me endless hours of pleasure? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest bps "The Truth" 21 Report post Posted June 3, 2002 What year did Cobain die..cause that gets my vote. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Report post Posted June 3, 2002 what came out in 2000? i remember 2000 as a huge disappointment. 2000 was a pretty stellar year as far as I'm concerned, with no less than three masterpieces being released: Death Cab for Cutie's We Have the Facts and We're Voting Yes, PJ Harvey's Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea and Outkast's Stankonia. Plus, as an honorable mention, there was Yo La Tengo's And then nothing turned itself inside-out. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Kinetic Report post Posted June 3, 2002 These are 2000 releases that I personally own. I'd consider all to be good: Badly Drawn Boy- The Hour of Bewilderbeast Sleater-Kinney- All Hands on the Bad One Smog- Dongs of Sevotion Clinic- Internal Wrangler Grandaddy- The Sophtware Slump Yo La Tengo- And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out Modest Mouse- The Moon and Antarctica Sigur Ros- Agaetis Byrjun Radiohead- Kid A That's pretty much off the top of my head. There are a lot more, too. Edit---I forgot Outkast. Count that, too. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Report post Posted June 3, 2002 Grandaddy- The Sophtware Slump The Flaming Lips does the Flaming Lips much better than Grandaddy ever could, no matter how hard they try. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Kinetic Report post Posted June 3, 2002 Cobain died in 1994, by the way. 1994 releases that I own and like: Beck- Mellow Gold Beck- One Foot in the Grave Blur- Parklife Jeff Buckley- Grace Built to Spill- There's Nothing Wrong With Love Nirvana- Unplugged Pavement- Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain Liz Phair- Whip Smart Portishead- Dummy Weezer- Weezer (blue) Not bad. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest bps "The Truth" 21 Report post Posted June 3, 2002 then 1994 it is. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Guest Kinetic Report post Posted June 3, 2002 The Flaming Lips does the Flaming Lips much better than Grandaddy ever could, no matter how hard they try. Oh, I agree. I just don't think Sophtware Slump is that bad and I own it, so it's on the list. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites