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Life After Brown
What are you listening to? Part 6
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<blockquote data-quote="sailfish" data-source="post: 5587529" data-attributes="member: 53248"><p>I think it's important to note the difference between what was considered "post-grunge" in the 90's and what was considered "post-grunge" in the 2000's. Musically, 90's post-grunge really was just grunge at heart that got the label affixed to it because it didn't trace it's roots to the the original grunge startup and adopted the sound after grunge's peak in popularity. 2000's post- grunge ("butt rock") maintained a similar song structure but sounded much cleaner and polished and typically "happier" from a lyrical standpoint, sometimes to the point of big hair style lyrics. As the 2000's went on this distinction became even greater. Bush was considered post-grunge but sounded considerably different than what would go on to become bands like Theory of a Deadman and Nickelback.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sailfish, post: 5587529, member: 53248"] I think it's important to note the difference between what was considered "post-grunge" in the 90's and what was considered "post-grunge" in the 2000's. Musically, 90's post-grunge really was just grunge at heart that got the label affixed to it because it didn't trace it's roots to the the original grunge startup and adopted the sound after grunge's peak in popularity. 2000's post- grunge ("butt rock") maintained a similar song structure but sounded much cleaner and polished and typically "happier" from a lyrical standpoint, sometimes to the point of big hair style lyrics. As the 2000's went on this distinction became even greater. Bush was considered post-grunge but sounded considerably different than what would go on to become bands like Theory of a Deadman and Nickelback. [/QUOTE]
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What are you listening to? Part 6
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