Ah, the 90s. That magical decade of grunge, flannel and other things we here at The Hard Times donât remember, due to a crippling keyboard cleaner addiction. But still, the â90s was truly a decade of the highs and lows of pop-culture. One that gave us âFriendsâ or, depending on your taste⊠gave us âFriends.â
It may seem impossible to think that 1993 was thirty years ago, but with a renaissance in â90s culture booming among Gen-Z (and a possible âKing of the Hillâ reboot on the way), it seems appropriate to turn back the clock a little bit and take a listen to these alt-rock albums that are turning thirty this year.
The Breeders âLast Splashâ
The Breeders are pure â90s goodness. Kim Deal from the Pixies? Check. Tanya Donelly from Belly? Check. Kinda. Sheâs a minimal presence on this album, appearing only on the tie-in EP. But still, this second album by The Breeders combines grunge, punk, garage rock and surf rock, as well as Dealâs icy and detached vocal delivery in an absolutely exquisite way.
Pearl Jam âVs.â
Itâs interesting to consider that this album came out the same year as âIn Utero.â Like the Nirvana album, this is pure grunge chaos with Eddie Vedder at times doing more wailing than singing, on songs like âAnimal.â But where âIn Uteroâ is pure anarchy, screaming and misery, âVs.â is an exercise in control and style, with songs like the more mellow âDaughter,â showing an enormous ability to bend style and create a diverse and engaging listening experience.
Morphine âCure For Painâ
There is something vaguely evil (in a good way) about the slinky, bass-driven, jazz-rock conjured here. Mark Sandmanâs writing and playing are enticing and coldly detached, while the music itself carries almost a jam-band like spirit. Itâs not hard to see why a song like âBuenaâ left the imprint it did, with its effortless cool, but even for the deep cuts, this album is well-worth revisiting. Side note: how cool of a last name is âSandmanâ though? Itâs like getting a new license plate that randomly says â666 420.â
Beck âGolden Feelingsâ
Yes, itâs finally happened. The debut album by anti-folk troubadour, erstwhile Scientologist and one-time âFuturamaâ guest-star Beck has finally turned 30. Really, âGolden Feelingsâ feels as much like a musical shitpost as it does an actual album, with Beckâs distorted vocals and warped playing. Itâs astonishing, listening to it, how in just a few years, Beck was able to go from the bizarre sound on songs like âThe Fucked Up Bluesâ to the rollicking, rock of âMidnite Vultures,â but Beck has always been a musical chameleon.
Melissa Etheridge âYes I Amâ
Oh sure, to some of you, itâs just âthat CD that Mom has in her car,â but on listening to Melissa Etheridgeâs âYes I Am,â itâs not hard to imagine why this blues-rock album had the impact that it did, with singles like âCome to My Window,â âIf I Wanted Toâ and âIâm the Only Oneâ becoming her signature song, and the album itself has come to be remembered as Etheridgeâs âcoming out album.â On top of all that, it sounds fantastic and is well worth more modern attention.
Björk âDebutâ
Icelandic singer-songwriter, Björk has had an incredible and varied career. Her songs contain the same weird, dreamy, experimental spirit of Kate Bush or Tori Amos and her song âVenus As a Boyâ is probably one of the best to come out of this year. (Remember when it was in âLĂ©on: The Professional?â Wasnât that a great movie?) But ultimately, whether sheâs acting for Lars Von Trier or Robert Eggers or being played by Winona Ryder pissing off Alex Tribeck, everything stems from this international debut, an album so sophisticated and wide-reaching itâs almost shattering to remember her only prior releases were as a member of a jazz combo and as a child artist releasing novelty songs.
Nirvana âIn Uteroâ
On Nirvanaâs third and final album, itâs impossible not to hear the pain and self-destructiveness that plagued the final months of Kurt Cobainâs life. The original title, after all, was âI Hate Myself and I Want to Die.â As far as the bandâs grunge sound goes, this is the grungiest, with distorted, reverb-heavy guitars and vocal performance from Cobain that feels more like tortured wailing than singing. This is something that feels horrific at first, but becomes oddly soothing the longer one listens.
Belly âStarâ
Eerie, jangly, abrasive and oddly soothing, âStarâ – the first album by the Tanya Donelly fronted band Belly – is a truly indispensable â90s relic. On this record, Belly truly feels like a slightly harder, drone-heavy, American answer of the witchy jangle pop of the Cranberries, with Donnellyâs distinct, often detached vocals perfectly countering hard-driving guitar. With odd song structures and strange lyrics, Star isnât necessarily easy to get into. The album, and the band that made it, seem overlooked today, which is both odd and a little sad, since both âStarâ and Belly were nominated for Grammys. Standout songs include singles âFeed the Treeâ and âSlow Dog,â as well as the witchy âLow Red Moon.â This album is well worth your time, especially in one sitting on a cold, overcast afternoon.
PJ Harvey âRid of Meâ
PJ Harvey is the coolest. Like Tom Waits or Leonard Cohen, she seems almost to be a genre in and of herself, where each of her albums feel strikingly different from each other, each imbued with their own artistic personas, but each one feeling like they could only be made by her.âRid of Meâ Harveyâs sophomore album, is different even by her standards. This is evident in the songs with âMan-Size Sextetâ sounding like a lost Bernard Herrmann score, and an eerie re-working of Bob Dylanâs âHighway 61 Revisted,â as well as the almost over-the-top âRub âtil It Bleeds.â These are droning, deranged, sexual songs that are pure PJ Harvey and show an artist with a fearlessness to rival her true talent.
Counting Crows âAugust and Everything Afterâ
The most interesting thing about getting into Counting Crows is realizing that the best part of any of their songs is Adam Duritzâs heroic, belting voice, while the worst part is Adam Durtizâs freakish, caterwalling seal-bark. Often, these two versions of Duritz co-exist within the same song. Sometimes they happen at the exact same moment. Duritzâs ability to bring us into his world is best felt in the first three songs, âRound Here,â âOmahaâ and âMr. Jones.â His delivery on âAnna Beginsâ has, at points in my life, actually made me tear up. On the whole, âAugust and Everything Afterâ is ghostly, strangely uplifting and relentlessly nostalgic. A perfect early Fall album.
Uncle Tupelo âAnodyneâ
The fourth and final album by the Illinois-based Roots Rock/Alt-Country band is, in many ways, an oddity in their discography. With Jeff Tweedy as one of Uncle Tupeloâs co-frontmen, the band spent the first chunk of their career making more or less straight punk music, with country/folk inflections. Its opener, âSlate,â is a fiddle-driven tune that feels almost aggressively nostalgic, while tracks like âThe Long Cutâ feel like the perfect accompaniment for a country road trip. Ultimately, though it does drag at points, tracks like âNew Madridâ and âGive Me Back the Key to My Heartâ are worth every slow moment. âAnodyneâ is a brilliant slice of alt-country/roots rock, a great swan song for Jay Farrer and Jeff Tweedyâs creative partnership and a great intro piece to a band that was often so much more punk than expected.
Mazzy Star âSo Tonight That I Might Seeâ
In many ways, the sophomore album by California-based dream-pop/psych rock duo Mazzy Star has a lot in common with âBlacklistedâ by Neko Case, despite the almost decade in between their release. Both are psychedelic and reverb-heavy, both conjure up not just country and rock images, but an oddly chaotic desert-like sonic landscape. âSo Tonight That I Might Seeâ feels like the soundtrack to an unmade David Lynch film. A noirish, luxurious album of midnight images that calls to mind lonely nights out in the desert, with scorpions and tarantulas on the prowl and forgotten corners of U.S. states youâve never been to.
Aimee Mann âWhateverâ
Aimee Mann is one of the few artists that seems genuinely impossible to dislike once youâve given her a fair chance. Like Tom Waits by way of Daria, Mannâs lyrics often balance extreme darkness (see âHome by Now,â âJust Like Anyoneâ or âPhilly Drinksâ) with extreme, acerbic, deadpan humor. âWhateverâ is Mannâs solo debut, and a supremely confident debut album for an artist who has always stayed true to her style and convictions, even as her sound has evolved drastically over the years.
Liz Phair âExile in Guyvilleâ
Thereâs no doubt this album rocked a lot of dorm rooms at Wellesley when it first debuted, with opener â6â1â and lead single âNever Saidâ serving up shredding guitar and a blunt delivery that permeates through the album. Songs like âHelp Me Mary,â âGirls! Girls! Girls!,â âDivorce Songâ and âJohnny Sunshineâ pack the album with strangely catchy bops, while âDance of the Seven Veils,â âFuck and Runâ and especially âFlower,â pack the album with a raw, almost supernaturally frank sexuality. âExile in Guyvilleâ is a perfect mixture of Riot Grrrl, Grunge and Punk Rock, as well as something uniquely original that only a first-time artist with no more fucks to give could muster.
Radiohead âPablo Honeyâ
From its opener âYou,â this debut by English male-manipulator – I mean – rock band Radiohead is crunchy, staticky and almost industrial. Thom Yorkeâs vocals feel more like a rigid and fragile Jeff Buckley than the âghost of Victorian boy who was drowned in a well by his governessâ tones they would become by the time he made the âSuspiriaâ soundtrack, or even âOK Computer.â On the whole, while the album isnât as polished as later outputs by the group, there is a lot here, with break-out single âCreep,â feeling like a festering, oozing send-up to Leonard Cohenâs song âThe Future,â while âHow Do You?â plays like a lost track off of âZiggy Stardustâ if Ziggy had been really into paint thinner. (I mean that in a good way.)
The Cranberries âEverybody Else is Doing It, So Why Canât We?â
Quite simply one of the greatest albums of all time, the debut by the Irish alt-rock band The Cranberries produced two all time hits in âDreamsâ and âLinger,â as well as a minor masterpiece in âSunday,â which seems to be gaining new life on TikTok. Throughout their career, the jangly sounds of the Cranberries remained consistent even as Dolores OâRiordan nuanced her punk-infused âangry Irish womanâ persona. As such, even though they never made a bad album, itâs forgivable and understandable to think of this one as their best. Even the deep cuts, songs like âI Still Do,â âWaltzing Back,â âPrettyâ and âWantedâ shimmer.