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Your Pick for Most Overrated Rock Singer of All Time
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It's called Breadcrumb Trail.
And where can Palace Music be found these days?
The "indie" shelves at Ear X-Tacy are where I discovered so many bands I ended up loving. Modest Mouse being one.Comment
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It's called Breadcrumb Trail.
I'm not sure. I used to find their records in the old Ear X-Tacy in Louisville. Had entire section full of Will Oldham projects.
The "indie" shelves at Ear X-Tacy are where I discovered so many bands I ended up loving. Modest Mouse being one.
I used to drive up there once every couple weeks or so. Loved that place. It was always a mystery how they lasted as long as they did in that area.Comment
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Just had to say that.Comment
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I just never got it. I get the dude's production asthetic: the band IS the production, everything else should be shredded. At its core, it's a good idea.
But I've always liked my rock albums more polished. I'll always argue that Butch Vig's "Nevermind" mix is superior in every way to Steve Albini's "In Utero," although the "real" rockers (and Cobain himself) would mock the glossy production on "Nevermind" with every chance they got. I just think studio sheen sounds better on most bands (not all).Comment
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But I've always liked my rock albums more polished. I'll always argue that Butch Vig's "Nevermind" mix is superior in every way to Steve Albini's "In Utero," although the "real" rockers (and Cobain himself) would mock the glossy production on "Nevermind" every chance they get. I just think studio sheen sounds better on most bands (not all).Comment
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Hell, I liked Scott Litt's remixes of the Albini tracks on In Utero better than the originals. And that is NOT a popular opinion.
I was just using the Nirvana records as a mainstream example: obviously, Nirvana was as close to the mainstream as Albini ever got. His best work was done in the trenches with bands that better fit his asthetic -- but seeing as how I never enjoyed his production in general, those bands typically never moved me much.Last edited by KCKUKFan; 06-16-2017, 11:23 AM.Comment
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I agree that the SONGS are better than the ones on Nevermind (although the highs aren't as high). I'm just talking about the production and mix of the record.
Hell, I liked Scott Litt's remixes of the Albini tracks on In Utero better than the originals. And that is NOT a popular opinion.
Side note: If anyone's interested in the whole DIY movement in the late Punk/early Indie rock scene, there's a fantastic book you should read called "Our Band Could Be Your Life" by Michael Azerrad.Comment
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An aside: I always viewed "In Utero" as a hissy-fit from Cobain and not much more. It's a good record, but it's best moments aren't that much different than "Nevermind" - "Serve The Servants," "Frances Farmer," "All Apologies," "Dumb," "Heart-Shaped Box." It's abrasive, sludgy noise songs were more misses than hits; "Milk It," "Scentless Apprentice," "Very Ape," "Tourettes," "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" were all more loose sketches than fully-formed songs. It's like he wanted to make an all-out "F you" noise record to the posers and fake fans, but either didn't know how (hence hiring Albini) or he just didn't have his heart in it.
Kurt Cobain always had his heart in the melodies -- he was much more sentimental in his musical senses than most people understood. He wanted so badly to make a Pixies record with Beatles melodies. "Nevermind" was the closest he ever got, although that record was flawed.
I think most people (not all) view "In Utero" as better than it really is because it was Cobain's last sound-off before he sprung his mortal coil. To say nothing of the funereal tone of many of the tracks.
"Unplugged From New York" is how Nirvana was supposed to sound. Their best record, and it's not really close.Last edited by KCKUKFan; 06-16-2017, 11:34 AM.Comment
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I'm still picking "In Utero" every day of the week. IMO, that's exactly what that band was meant to sound like.
Side note: If anyone's interested in the whole DIY movement in the late Punk/early Indie rock scene, there's a fantastic book you should read called "Our Band Could Be Your Life" by Michael Azerrad.Comment
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An aside: I always viewed "In Utero" was a hissy-fit from Cobain and not much more. It's a good record, but it's best moments aren't that much different than "Nevermind" - "Serve The Servants," "Frances Farmer," "All Apologies," "Dumb," "Heart-Shaped Box." It's abrasive, sludgy noise songs were more misses than hits; "Milk It," "Scentless Apprentice," "Tourettes," "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" were all more loose sketches than fully-formed songs.
Kurt Cobain always had his heart in the melodies -- he was much more sentimental in his musical senses than most people understood. He was just pissy that he was a big superstar and he hired Steve Albini to flip off his poser fanbase. It was a real high school rebel move, and kind of lame in retrospect.
And yeah, I understand the sentimentality you're taking about. You see some of Nirvana's greatest strengths in the pop sensibilities scattered throughout their catalog. They were influenced just as heavily by The Beatles as they were The Melvins. But I'll always believe that the Albini hire was a good move.Comment
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Speaking of Scott Litt, anybody here dig R.E.M.
Obviously, they're a revered band, but I also think they're greatly underrated. They cranked out a staggering number of great albums in a row. One of the best bands of their era that kind of gets forgotten in the ether.Comment
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Your Pick for Most Overrated Rock Singer of All Time
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