There was an excellent and ambitious art pop record that came out in 1994 called "Flowermouth" by a band called No-Man. You guys should give it a listen one time.
@Tkivo16 күн бұрын
Describing Marilyn Manson as a cartoon version of Nine Inch Nails is spot on.
@undergroundmusictapes11 күн бұрын
If we look at it that way, then NIN is a cartoon version of Ministry and Skinny Puppy.
@electricwhiterabbit16 күн бұрын
Glad to hear they talked about Bark Psychosis. Love that band.
@stevep758216 күн бұрын
The Downward Spiral was not only my favorite record of 1994, but my favorite album of the 90’s and still one of my favorite records of all time. Pretty Hate Machine and Broken were building towards something spectacular from Reznor. But, nothing prepared me for the labyrinthine odyssey of brilliance of that album. There were so many layers and the production was so immaculate that I will still hear something new in the mix to this day if I’m listening with headphones. The Downward Spiral and The Fragile are one of the best one two punches any artist has ever recorded. It truly is of the most elaborately produced records ever made.
@soaribb3215 күн бұрын
That's so true, some of the best albums ever made.
@JeffCooper1053816 күн бұрын
The Jeff Buckley album is an absolute mainstay here. I can remember being in NYC at a U2 gig at The Giants Stadium in 1997 (The Lemon tour IIRC) where Bono announced from the stage he had been lost. Unbelievable.
@Ryanux17 күн бұрын
1994 is my favourite musical year of all, incredible set of legendary albums
@samuelking87916 күн бұрын
Albums on my bingo card: Shudder to Think- Pony Express Record dEUS: Worst Case Scenario Ween: Chocolate and Cheese Lush: Split Lisa Germano: Geek the Girl Low: I Could Live in Hope Soundgarden: Superunknown Frank Black: Teenager of the Year Portishead: Dummy Future Sound of London: Lifeforms Unwound: New Plastic Ideas
@phelipao8816 күн бұрын
I'm always dreaming about a collaboration between Steven Wilson and Trent Reznor. Just imagine such great artists, composers, and producers joining forces to create something new. They have something in common about the sound design and especially the way they approach the songs, very "cinematic" I would say.
@djerdap16 күн бұрын
I have a sense you might be skeptical about the Seattle scene of the early 90s, but 1994 was possibly the pinnacle of that movement. Vitalogy, Jar of Flies and Superunknown are outstanding records. I hope you give them their due!
@squareinsquare207815 күн бұрын
Start listening to NIN around the time of Broken. Downward Spiral had a profound effect on me as 15 year old, what an album. I discovered Dubnobasswithmyheadman around '96, it blew my mind, along with Insides from Orbital. It was the most amazing time for music.
@StonedJesus14 күн бұрын
top-10: Nirvana - Unplugged in New York Dream Theater - Awake Jeff Buckley - Grace Collage - Moonshine Shadowland - Through the Looking Glass Bark Psychosis - Hex Portishead - Dummy Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds - Let Love In Low - I Could Live in Hope Drive Like Jehu - Yank Crime honourable mentions: Citizen Cain, Marillion, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Morrissey, Warren G, The Prodigy, Alice In Chains, Mayhem, Godflesh, Codeine, Tiamat, Offspring, Cranberries...
@douglasstruthers830715 күн бұрын
Another great episode. It was at this time (1994) that I really began slipping away from listening to entire albums. Thanks for putting me on to Bates & Harris' MURDER BALLADS.
@peterfieldscovers94414 күн бұрын
Jeff Buckley - Grace The Divine Comedy - Promenade Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral Alice in Chains - Jar of Flies Soundgarden - Superunknown Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds - Let Love In John Cale and Bob Neuwirth - Last Day on Earth Sonic Youth - Experimental Jet Set, Trash and No Star Portishead - Dummy Pink Floyd - The Division Bell
@kdcndw116 күн бұрын
My favorite album from this year by a mile is Global Communication's 7614. A ambient techno masterwork. Other records: Saint Etienne's Tiger Bay and The God Machine's One Last Laugh In A Place Of Dying are underrated albums released in 1994.
@MashLimit16 күн бұрын
I agree with you about Tiger Bay. Also, Mars Audiac Quintet by Stereolab is an amazing album.
@yogbarog10016 күн бұрын
Cherry Bomb - Electronics for Dogs, up there with the best but wildly unknown
@coolhandluke-12317 күн бұрын
1993 and 1994 were two of the strongest years for Hip Hop albums ever. Nas, Biggie, Wu-Tang, Tribe, De La Soul, Snoop, Gang Starr. A time when sampling and hip hop production became an art form, and the popularity soared.
@starwarsunfiltered784816 күн бұрын
I didn't really hear the full albums from those years, but I completely agree. MTV was my drug in junior high and the music videos by Dre and Snoop Dogg (from The Chronic and Doggystyle) are some of my most nostalgic things to listen to from those years, and I am as white as they come, despite being from southern California where their music originated. 😅
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
@@starwarsunfiltered7848 i bought every hiphop album released in 1993
@GoneButNotGone17 күн бұрын
Even if you don’t connect with that Aphex Twin album (I very much do), its influence on what came after ripples far into the future and will continue to. He is such gifted, inventive, imaginative sound savant. Every ambient album I love that came after, I hear Aphex Twin’s influence. And a lot of other genres, same. Even the tracks I don’t like, I feel oddly captivated by. Some of the more melodic beatless tracks still take my breath away in a way that Eno’s An Ending (Ascent) still does.
@TtableWhey14 күн бұрын
Divine Comedy's "Promenade" is phenomenal. Brilliant songs, lyrics, vocals, orchestration. Orbital's "Snivilisation" is worthy of discussion. Almost a complete change of style from brilliant heavy dancetronica? to something much more cerebral.
@Norbert.Giesow16 күн бұрын
Soundgarden "Superunknown"
@c-eproductions396316 күн бұрын
Finally someone said it. Can't believe Steve didn't talk about Soundgarden.
@Norbert.Giesow16 күн бұрын
@@c-eproductions3963 Yes, it was mentioned, I only heard it after my comment...hope "Superunknown" gets a detailed review.
@bowness116 күн бұрын
@@Norbert.Giesow It is discussed in a later 1994 episode.
@user-bt2od3yw1b6 күн бұрын
Love the 90's episodes. Always find something interesting out of these ones, usually out of Stevens interest in electronic music from this period
@johnbinstead854417 күн бұрын
I still love Underworlds first 2 albums before they transitioned into the band they became. Under the Radar was huge in Australia
@isashax16 күн бұрын
I was quite detached from music in the 90s, so don't know many of these albums. I did discover The Divine Comedy just a few years ago, for example. Good to hear them included, Neil is a genious!
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
why were u detached? doing a stretch for robbery?
@markgatland97716 күн бұрын
I think I have more 1994 in my collection over any other year. I was 21 years old, working in music shops in London, playing in bands and so much pivotal music for me was put out that year, which are still some of my favourite all-time albums. Underworld's 'Dubnobass...' is a stunner, (nice to get Rupert Hine in again 😉), 'Grace' by Jeff Buckley will never, ever age, (I still remember seeing him play the title track on 'The Late Show' on BBC2), but the album I'm taking to the grave with me is 'Hex' by Bark Psychosis. They were local boys to the band I was in, (from Ilford), and we rehearsed in the same studio complex in a run-down pre-Olympics building in Stratford. I had the pleasure of sitting in one night as I was working there part time and having not heard Talk Talk at that point they changed my worldview on how music could be. It really was that life changing ❤️. Also, as an aside, when the band broke up, Graham Sutton went on to produce some groundbreaking Jungle and Drum'n'Bass under the name of Boymerang which is definitely worth checking out
@BlackMonoSU1013 күн бұрын
Nice choices. I bought those albums by Jeff Buckley, NIN and Underworld. However the greatest release of 1994 was "One Last Laugh in a Place of Dying" by The God Machine. Possibly my favorite album of all time.
@LilHaseProductions16 күн бұрын
Änglagård Epilog is probably my favorite album of this year and possibly that era. This part of the 90s was a fantastic time for highly technical, dark swedish progressive/folk. Listen to the mix on Skogsranden about 2-3 minutes in when the drum and band joins the flutes. Seminal album in Swedish prog.
@georgiostemirsidis196616 күн бұрын
Phenomenal album! I'd be surprised if Steven isn't familiar with it. The musicianship is next-level!
@LilHaseProductions16 күн бұрын
@@georgiostemirsidis1966 It's possible they aren't aware. The vinyl and CD for Anglagard or Landberk early 90s stuff is really rare these days, especially back then in UK. Very limited prints.
@dennisjohnson287015 күн бұрын
I have Epilog on vinyl, but find Hybris to be easier to get into. Hybris would be a great candidate for a 45RPM vinyl reissue, with one song per side. The more introverted Epilog deserves a revisit from time to time as well.
@LilHaseProductions15 күн бұрын
@@dennisjohnson2870 That's a great record to have. The rarest album I have from that era is Riktigt Äkta by Landberk. I'm from NZ but a massive swedish prog fan (if that is even really a label), especially the 'dark folk' era with the waltzes and mellotrons. Not exactly rare but it is to me. Took me a long time to get into Hybris, but Epilog hit almost instantly for me. I think the master is fantastic on that, the percussion is great on both albums but on Epilog it has such a warm tone when he hits those toms/cowbell etc. I couldn't rate Epilog higher enough.
@georgiostemirsidis196615 күн бұрын
@@LilHaseProductions Änglagård, Landberk, Paatos and Anekdoten are fantastic underrated bands from Sweden, and I have no idea where to find any copies of their albums.
@kenmeyerjr5716 күн бұрын
I love this podcast soooo much.
@Telekon1516 күн бұрын
Warning, long post below: Great first episode of a fantastic year for music. When I looked at the list of albums I've heard from 1994, I was amazed at how many are amongst my favourite albums of all-time. A lot of significant albums here; Korn's debut beginning the nu-metal genre, pop-punk breaking into the mainstream with Dookie and Smash plus the beginning of Gary Numan's industrial phase of his career and a return to form after the disappointment of Machine & Soul. I'm expecting discussion of the albums from the big 4 of Britpop (Oasis, Blur, Suede and Pulp). My favourite albums from the year (excluding Steven and Tim's work): The Almighty - Crank Apollo 440 - Millennium Fever Bush - Sixteen Stone The Charlatans - Up to Our Hips Covenant - Dreams of a Cryotank Flying Saucer Attack - Flying Saucer Attack The Future Sound of London - Lifeforms Green Day - Dookie Headswim - Flood Kerbdog - Kerbdog Killing Joke - Pandemonium Korn - Korn Kyuss - Welcome to Sky Valley Lightning Seeds - Jollification Live - Throwing Copper Manic Street Preachers - The Holy Bible Nine Inch Nails - The Downward Spiral Gary Numan - Sacrifice Oasis - Definitely Maybe Offspring - Smash Pink Floyd - The Division Bell Pop Will Eat Itself - Dos Dedos Mis Amigos REM - Monster (I'd love to hear your thoughts on this one Tim) Senser - Stacked Up Shed Seven - Change Giver Soundgarden - Superunknown Stabbing Westward - Ungod Therapy? - Troublegum Underworld - Dubnobasswithmyheadman Weezer - Blue Album Some other albums that deserve a mention or discussion: Chumbawamba - Anarchy Echobelly - Everyone's Got One Everything but the Girl - Amplified Heart Front Line Assembly - Millennium The Future Sound of London - ISDN James - Wah Wah (An Eno production - drinking game favourite!) Kitchens of Distinction - Cowboys and Aliens Lush - Split Luscious Jackson - Natural Ingredients Massive Attack - Protection Nirvana - MTV Unplugged in New York Pavement - Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain Pearl Jam - Vitalogy Portishead - Dummy Stiltskin - The Mind's Eye The Stone Roses - Second Coming (despite Steven's dislike of the debut, I think this album took the band in an interesting direction) I think Alice in Chains - Jar of Flies is worth mentioning as well with it featuring some of their best work including the stunning Nutshell.
@robertozoffoli988017 күн бұрын
Paul McCartney II deserves to be mentioned in each video
@BBlooger16 күн бұрын
This was very cool.
@idontlikestarwars17 күн бұрын
I love this series.
@Emlizardo17 күн бұрын
Beck, Mellow Gold, released March 1994. It hit with a Ka-BOOM
@ArthurMol-ib5tg14 күн бұрын
Brave from Marillion was my masterpiece from 1994
@soaribb3215 күн бұрын
26:00 I'd make other connections...TLC were bringing a 70's soul and R&B influence with the new jack swing and boombap production while connecting those with hip hop, I'd compare them to Janet and her pop/R&B/hip hop crossover smash the year before.
@chrisknowlton946015 күн бұрын
1994 was a major year for ambient and one of the genius artists of this year was PETE NAMLOOK, and his amazing Fax label is a must for anyone interested in electronica. RIP Peter.
@GordonHighland17 күн бұрын
Jeff Buckley was like Plant & Page in one musician.
@MojoPin198316 күн бұрын
@GordonHighland “He's Plant and Page in one, on a technical level; it's mind-blowing.” - Brad Pitt from the BBC documentary, Jeff Buckley: Everybody Here Wants You (2002)
@drewfarmer478315 күн бұрын
1994 was such a great year for music. Some of my favorites are: The Verve - No Come Down 311 - Grassroots Notorious BIG - Ready To Die Sasha & John Digweed - Renaissance Mix Tom Petty - Wildflowers Pink Floyd - The Division Bell Beastie Boys - Ill Communicaion Mike Oldfield - Songs Of A Distant Earth
@Michel-r6m16 күн бұрын
As for "industrial" I can highly recommend Cleanse Fold & Manipulate (1987) by Skinny Puppy.
@kevincorrigan789316 күн бұрын
Agreed. Better and more interesting than anything NIN ever did.
@GlenPeacock220216 күн бұрын
I would add 'Sometime, Anywhere' by easily the best Australian album band ever, The Church. Not sure Tim and Steven have heard them? 1992's release, 'Priest=Aura" is their masterpiece and 1988's "Starfish" their most popular. Frontman Steve Kilbey poetic and often esoteric lyrics are often effortlessly beautiful and the guitar play between Marty Wilson-Piper and Peter Koppes is both creative, delightful and intoxicating. I strongly recommend them guys. So much more than the huge hit they had with "Under The Milky Way". Still producing great original music 46 years since their birth.
@babylemonade286816 күн бұрын
Don’t forget gold afternoon fix👍
@glyngasson845016 күн бұрын
Members of Underworld (including Karl Hyde) were also in an indie rock band called The Vaseline Tigers in Cardiff (obvious Bowie influence)
@thekeywitness16 күн бұрын
Teasing a discussion about Soundgarden’s Superunknown and then dropping it to talk about NIN. Ouch!
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
superunknown wont get more than 25 seconds of chat, and rightly so
@TractorCountdown16 күн бұрын
I didn't know about the Martyn Bates album - good call.
@jward22662 күн бұрын
Hip Hop was/is massive in my life and I never had any problems listening to it as a young working / lower middle class white kid from Hertfordshire when it came out. I was just always my authentic self with it and listened. Anyway, Illmatic's beats were incredible (from a superhero collection of producers assembled) and arguably Nas has never bettered it in terms of his LP's. If you like Illmatic you'll probably like O.C's Word...Life from 1994. I actually prefer it. 1994 was huge for Hip Hop. Illmatic is arguably the greatest ever hip hop LP and it captured something peak about hip hop's strengthening identity. Digable Planets - Blowout Comb is also another favourite and worth checking from 1994. Especially if you're not hugely into the straight up boom bap sound and want some extra musicality in your ears. Similarly, Boogiemonsters - Riders of the Storm, Dred Scott - Breakin' Combs, Stress: The extinction Agenda - Organized Konfusion and Jeru the Damaja's - The Sun Rises in the East do this. All 1994. One special mention is Outkast's debut, Southernplayalisticcadillacmuzik. It was bringing the Deep South hip hop vibe to many people for the first time. Not many predicated that they would later go on to become the household name they are. Huge year. Yeah, and Richard James is of course a genius. And Grace is one of the most beautiful things you can listen to. No wonder Rufus wrote Memphis Skyline for him.
@Warp_Head16 күн бұрын
Play Aphex SAW I and II at 2x or 4x speed, and you will hear how it was created. Yamaha FM synths playing fairly standard pads, and then slowed down for re-recording.
@johansoderberg654616 күн бұрын
I think the hightight of Underworld is "Beaucup Fish", but Í should give Second Toughest a chance , which I am not as familiar with.
@TtableWhey14 күн бұрын
It's a Trip!
@quantumeseboy17 күн бұрын
RTC is my favorite album of all time.
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
whats rtc?
@PaulEmery-ue8pk13 күн бұрын
would love to hear a show devoted to Depeche Mode.
@Childofbhaal13 күн бұрын
Hearing Steven Wilson talk about Nas Illmatic is not something I expected ever lol
@jaroslawleskiewicz912815 күн бұрын
Reznor talked about Gabriel's III & IV?? What interview?
@sand_swan17 күн бұрын
Was TLC's "Waterfalls" not a hit in the UK ?!... it was absolutely ubiquitous at the time in the US, I would figure even the most casual listener would've been familiar with that track.
@starwarsunfiltered784816 күн бұрын
Right? I had kind of fallen off the MTV wagon from late '94 to early '97, but in the U.S. it was a single (I believe) the following year in 1995.
@simonbarnes830316 күн бұрын
They had several hits in the UK including Waterfalls (4)
@SludgeFactoryBasterd13 күн бұрын
I prefer the original NIN version of Hurt to Cash version as well. Kudos Steven! 😊
@santibanks12 күн бұрын
The analysis on Jeff Buckley and Nirvana misses out on the context of the zeitgeist. Reducing Jeff to bass, guitar, voice, drums is kind of missing the point. It's what he does with that quartet. His song choices (half of the record are covers), the way he sings with so much emotion and depth (highly unusual at that time), and his own writing skills are what makes the end result far better than the sum of its parts. TDS sounds like picking the best elements of Hate Machine and Broken and combining it into something really compelling. It worked as the record highly reflected Trent's own mindset at that time, all the anxiety and depression got channeled into that record. But in the aspect of production and sound design, The Fragile certainly outdid TDS by a mile. That said, a lot of credit should be given to Alan Moulder here too: his recording and mixing skills make those records. The way he seems to find space for all these elements is just incredible.
@bertkarlsson142116 күн бұрын
Epilog by Änglagård is the best album from 1994.
@FranciscoBurrola16 күн бұрын
1994 was a great year for music. I hope they'd mention Wildhoney by Tiamat
@jofa949515 күн бұрын
the audience laughing at TLC's CrazySexyCool says more about them than the album's legacy. It's one of the most influential R&B albums ever with a mix of R&B, hip-hop, funk, and pop. Created timeless classics like Creep, Waterfalls, and Red Light Special. Was awarded by its now legendary production that set a new standard for R&B. Oh and it inspired artists like Beyoncé and Rihanna. Regarding the "I can relate to the lyrics in hip hop": I don't really relate to a lamb lying on Broadway, but I'm still able to enjoy Genesis. Prog rock often has obscure lyrics, yet we still connect with the music. So I'm sure you can relate to hip hop with enough imagination and empathy.
@soaribb3215 күн бұрын
I see that these guys are out of their depth talking about stuff that's not white rock...
@dennisjohnson287015 күн бұрын
@@soaribb32They see it too, and they have acknowledged it at other times in the podcast.
@TtableWhey14 күн бұрын
This audience isn't really into mainstream pop though.
@derKaiser2815 күн бұрын
Live - Throwing Copper KoRn- KoRn
@Tool-Deftonesfan10115 күн бұрын
Both are great albums. Except KoRn changed my life at a young age.
@NP-ip3nj16 күн бұрын
I'm looking forward to them talking about Edge of Sanity's "Until Eternity Ends" and "Purgatory Afterglow"
@kenmeyerjr5716 күн бұрын
God, buckley was god…and i was lucky enough to see him.
@gonza555584 күн бұрын
I think Buckley's Grace did something different, and that's why the album was so influential (Radiohead, Cornell, Muse, Coldplay). His songs were way darker in comparison with the main 90's rock scene. Grace is also described as "Art Rock" and that fits perfectly with his game changer influence on Radiohead, first in The Bends and then OK Computer. Buckley's songs also has Post-Rock elements. The album itself has the problem of having too much covers. When you listen to Mojo Pin or Dream Brother, you want more of that, but you get "Lilac Wine" or "Corpus Christi Carol". Hallelujah is a masterpiece, but the other two covers are using space. Also, Eternal Life is not that good.
@memopinzon16 күн бұрын
1994 was one of the greatest years ever for music and film.
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
get back in yer box
@Cyrax8972116 күн бұрын
1994 - Lustmord's "The Place Where The Black Stars Hang" -- I thought this one would have been mentioned near the end!
@kennethwilson19842 күн бұрын
To clarify about Buckley, it likely wasn’t drugs but his mental health spiraling. From everything I have read he was never that into drugs, though it could have been a random drunken night at The Bush.
@bobsbigboy_16 күн бұрын
TONIIIIIIIGHT IM A ROCK N ROLL STAAAAAAR
@natalieheron53098 күн бұрын
Anyone know when part 2 will be?
@VladShpiro15 күн бұрын
Part 2 better have Superunknown 6:16
@bowness115 күн бұрын
It does.
@quantumeseboy17 күн бұрын
TLC? Easy! Left Eye.
@norbertovelazquez744115 күн бұрын
Subtitulos por favor
@Norbert.Giesow16 күн бұрын
TLC's Waterfalls was on and off at the time
@The.Last.Guitar.Hero.16 күн бұрын
Was into NIN up until this album then it became the law of diminishing returns when it all started to sound the same
@matiasmoulin212616 күн бұрын
I respectfully disagree. For me Trent is one of a few artists who manages to be relatively fresh to this day. But that's of course relative.
@orangetiny16 күн бұрын
Portishead dummy was surely the album of 1994.... hope there's a part 2 to this conversation because it will be a musical travesty to ignore it...
@drssexy214216 күн бұрын
wake up and get wit the programme dude
@Michel-r6m16 күн бұрын
Got that NiN album as the Jeff Buckley as Dummy. All (at the right time) great albums 👍
@bowness116 күн бұрын
Yes, it is discussed.
@mercedesbeene953616 күн бұрын
Per Jeff: sounds like Reading Festival and I have the recording of Shepherds Bush...have to disagree with the assessment...I will say his friend Chris Dowd, who he invited to do What Will You Say with him, was quite drunk
@bowness116 күн бұрын
Yes, it was the Reading Festival. I'm sure part of my disappointment with the Shepherd's Bush gig was my unrealistic expectation. The Reading show was lean, mean and mesmeric and I was hoping for more of the same. Regardless, he was an amazing vocalist fronting a stunning band on both occasions.
@mercedesbeene953616 күн бұрын
@bowness1 It's understandable: when you witness greatness, you always expect greatness...it also helps to bear in mind that my that point (Shepherds Bush), he'd been touring nearly a year and a half nonstop...but yes, he absolutely was extraordinary, you were very fortunate to have seen him, and twice!
@TheHrondon4813 күн бұрын
The disrespect for Jakob Dylan 😂.
@soaribb3215 күн бұрын
Live Through This by Hole
@WarunkiMedia17 күн бұрын
For a couple of accomplished musicians / musos, I'm always shocked and appalled by your choice of intro theme. Now THAT is "the sound of muzak""! How about a new one for 2025?? 🤷♂ PS. 1994 ruled! Good call 🙌
@Emlizardo17 күн бұрын
I think the theme sounds cool, kind of like an American cop show from the 70s.
@isashax16 күн бұрын
You know that's a song by Steven, right? Eminent Sleaze, from The Future Bites.
@WarunkiMedia16 күн бұрын
@@isashaxdamn, I should have known that since I own the man’s entire extended catalog! Haha… sorry Steven! Carry on 😅
@WarunkiMedia16 күн бұрын
@@Emlizardo exactly… cheesy 70’s sitcom vibes!
@SD-ou3pt16 күн бұрын
Not touching lifeforms by FSOL oh dear
@benw826315 күн бұрын
I loved that when it came out.
@diegrohl16 күн бұрын
what a poor review about Crazy Sexy Cool by TLC :(
@bowness116 күн бұрын
Very true, but we didn't know it. I think it was only brought up due to its massive popularity (that mostly passed us by). A poor reflection on us, no doubt.
@PieCompanyGuitars17 күн бұрын
Doesn't get much more original or influential than Jeff Buckley...
@greggwilson31142 күн бұрын
Innerviews? Ha ha. Stevie Wonder's album was named Innervisions.
@ironpingu630615 күн бұрын
Also worth mentioning Green Days "Dookie", Weezer's "blue album", Killing Joke's "Pandemonium" .. 94 was very enjoyable year for me music-wise.
@boba278316 күн бұрын
I take it Steve has never read the Sandman series ?
@enriquefelixberrio710810 күн бұрын
SUEDE DOG MAN STAR!!!!
@Tool-Deftonesfan10116 күн бұрын
Korn's self-titled debut album is my favourite album of 1994. That album spoke to me in many ways, and it still does.
@kevinmyles636914 күн бұрын
Absolute cornerstone in modern heavy music. They took it to another incredible level! So so damn influential and underrated, neglected in this series obv..
@Tool-Deftonesfan10110 күн бұрын
@@kevinmyles6369 I know right!
@arpitsatyal890016 күн бұрын
man I just love how pretentious Steven is
@stevemuzak852617 күн бұрын
KoRn released debut album in 1994. That album changed the whole metal music world forever.
@merikblackmore16 күн бұрын
& not in a good way
@stuartraybould257416 күн бұрын
Aphex Twin is a beautiful album but it didn't invent anything, it's basically a rip off of Klaus Schulze, years after Klaus Schulze. It's Timewind, it's Mirage, it's X but not as good. Still a beautiful album but not anything new. A bit like the way 76:14 is also a beautiful album influenced by 80s Tangerine Dream but nothing new.
@TtableWhey14 күн бұрын
Aphex Twin's music with percussion(not the really mad percussion) is much more interesting but then again I find most "ambient" music pointless and I think almost anyone could "compose" floaty one-dimensional soundscapes. If I want ambient music I'll lie down beside my tumble dryer.
@bobsbigboy_16 күн бұрын
OASIS - DEFINITELY MAYBE
@welshhammer173315 күн бұрын
I’ll keep this a respectful as I can. I listened for a long time wishing Tim would shut up, hoping he would leave the show. But alas no. So I’ve stopped listening. Perhaps if he had practiced more instead of listening to a load of crap up your ass music, you would be a better musician.
@LuDux15 күн бұрын
So edgy, complaining about autotune
@doggity514917 күн бұрын
Why the hell didnt I know about this happening so close to home :(