Saturday Night Fever's pivotal spot in the seventies notwithstanding, the nineties was the decade in which soundtrack albums really became as important as the visuals they accompanied. Chuck five seconds of a sellable pop song in a film, dump the entire song on a five-inch plastic disc, and a label just might move a metric ton of CDs. If those five seconds belong to an alternative rock group, you might even sell discs to kids who wouldn't be caught dead watching the visuals in question. No joke: Melrose Place may be stupid, but the Melrose Place soundtrack is unironically awesome!
Showing posts with label Radiohead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radiohead. Show all posts
Saturday, June 21, 2025
Review: 30th Anniversary Vinyl Edition of the 'Clueless' Soundtrack
Sunday, April 24, 2022
Review: 'The Light Pours Out of Me: The Authorised Biography of John McGeoch'
Siouxsie Sioux, Howard Devoto, and John Lydon were three of the most high-profile front-people of the post-punk era. They had something else in common. During their most creative periods, John McGeoch was invaluably assisting them on guitar. Side musicians in bands at the popularity level of the Banshees, Magazine, and PiL usually are not the subjects of their own biographies, but McGeoch was more than a side musician. His artful yet subtle colorings were essential to classics such as "Shot by Both Sides", "Happy House", and "Spellbound", and his influence on guitarists without a taste for Clapton's rote blues or Van Halen's showboating is immeasurable. Johnny Marr of The Smiths, John Frusciante of Red Hot Chili Peppers, Jonny Greenwood and Ed O'Brien of Radiohead, and Mark Arm of Mudhoney are among the musicians who praise McGeoch as one of the greatest in The Light Pours Out of Me: The Authorised Biography of John McGeoch.
Monday, March 15, 2021
Review: 'Art Sleeves: Album Covers by Artists'
There have been many collections of album cover images, and the implication of all of them is that the album cover is more than a carrying case for music: it is a self-contained work of art. Specimens such as Peter Blake’s life-size collage for Sgt. Pepper’s or Storm Thorgerson’s striking Dark Side of the Moon prism support that stance, but another collection of such usual suspects would be pointless.
Friday, January 29, 2021
Review: PJ Harvey's 'Is This Desire?' and 'Is This Desire?-Demos'
If there’s any doubt that OK Computer was the most influential album of 1997, just listen to the albums of 1998. With a single flip of the calendar, artists responsible for some of the most organic music of the nineties suddenly adopted Radiohead’s synthesized, sci-fi textures. They still used their guitars, but they tended to costume those guitars in heavy effects or bury them deep in the mix.
Tuesday, January 2, 2018
Psychobabble’s 100 Favorite Songs of the 1990s!
Wow. A list of Psychobabble’s
100 Favorite Songs of the 1990s. That’s so cool. It’s totally not like
everyone else in the entire universe hasn’t already listed their 100 favorite
songs of the nineties. Like anyone cares. Whatever. Lists are wack, but I don’t
know… music is pretty cool. I mean, not when they’re like “Oooh, look at me!
I’m a big rock star! My hair is so big and I screw so many groupies!” That is
so eighties. But when they…I don’t know… kind of don’t care so much, I guess
I’m kinda like, “That’s pretty cool. I don’t care so much either.” It’s like
sometimes I think Kurt Cobain is singing about my life, you know? I don’t know what the fuck Bob Pollard is
singing about half the time, but Guided by Voices rock so hard because Bob is
like a forty-year-old schoolteacher or something, so it’s so ironic that he’s a
rock star. And then there’s all the “Women in Rock” (I put that in quotes to
show what I really think of the
mainstream media’s “labels”) like Liz Phair, Tanya Donelly, Mary Timony,
Juliana Hatfield, PJ Harvey, and like, all the others. They are sincerely hella
cool. Sincerely! I’m not even being ironic about how totally dope they are.
Don’t think I’m not being ironic? Oh well. Whatever. Nevermind. Then here’s your mom’s 100 favorite songs of the
nineties.
100. “Over the
Neptune/Mesh Gear Fox” by Guided by Voices
So we get started the way every party must get started…with
a chant of “GBV! GBV! GBV!” Then Bob Pollard is all like, “Rock and Roll!” Then
he’s like “This song does not rock,” which is so cool, because sincerely
admitting that you rock is so lame! But the real irony is that “Over the
Neptune” really does rock! It rocks like Cheap Trick (and not lame Cheap Trick,
like “The Flame”). Then “Over the Neptune” morphs into “Mesh Gear Fox” like
that cop in T2 morphs into water or
whatever, and guess what…it stops rocking but it remains awesome as Guided by
Voices get all psychedelic. It sounds like your dad’s best records… and Uncle
Bob is like your dad’s only cool friend.
99. “I Wanted to Tell
You” by Matthew Sweet
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
All written content of Psychobabble200.blogspot.com is the property of Mike Segretto and may not be reprinted or reposted without permission.