I love it. Having grown up in the late 60's and early 70s, my taste in music is somewhat jaded to that genre. But I do love a lot of 80's music like Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, etc. Thanks for the laughs. Cheers
I'm a nineties kid (the first cassettes in the neighborhood boombox were Dookie and Nevermind), and saying it wasn't formulaic betrays a serious lack of thinking. Personally, I loved being able to play root notes along with Bush songs while learning the bass. Nostalgia has a huge grip on me (I listened to frickin Better Than Ezra a few days ago), but failing to recognize formulas, trends and influences does a disservice to oneself. Does this get 10/10 fricheks? Yeeeeeeeah
@@TomFrichek I look at Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, that era are the ones who actually set the formula that many after them copied.....I still don't think that's a bad thing: for example, Stone Temple Pilots wasn't an originator but IMO they did that 90s thing the best and better than almost everybody.....as always, thanks for watching and I'm still trying to find out where I can cash in all these Fricheks I've accumulated
Can't tell if you're joking, but I'll bite. Nirvana recorded their first album in 1988 for $600... No corporate $$ involved. Nevermind was released in 1991, In Utero in 1993. Nirvana was wildly popular by 1993 and so were a host of other artists you mention. Cobain played solos, McCready played solos, Kim Thayil played solos, Jerry Cantrell played solos, Billy Corgan played solos. In Bloom is not a pop formula. Black Hole Sun is not pop formula. Would is not pop formula. If you're talking about what came after these bands, I contend they're two completely different times. Early 90s vs mid 90s is huge with the mid 90s doing their best to cop the early 90s and failing miserably (Creed, Silverchair, et. al.).
I feel sad for those women who can't grow beards 😢. The pain they surely endure both physically and every time they look at themselves in the mirror, face full of metal🤘, just to look beautiful should be commemorated and respected.
@fclefjefff4041 if you would've sat through the last two minutes of this goofy shit, I said that at the end.....besides, this is satire....thanks for attempting to watch anyway 😆
Badlands!! Yeeeeahhhh!
One of my favorite bands from that era!
Mine as well. Killer band!
Morrison and a Pirate 😂😂 Great stuff Spaz !
yeeeeeeeeeeeah!
What the hell was this video.... :D I love everything about it.
@@Flexflexible 😆 thanks
formulas rule OK! gotta have a recipe book...
True!
HONEST AND FUNNY AS ALWAYS!!
I love it. Having grown up in the late 60's and early 70s, my taste in music is somewhat jaded to that genre. But I do love a lot of 80's music like Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, etc. Thanks for the laughs. Cheers
...so much truth!
To the point and hilarious! Another great video, thanks.
Your resemble Bas Rutten so much, it's uncanny. You're Bass Rutten lol
I literally scrolled down to the comments just to see if anyone else had noticed.
The vocal style was heavily influenced by Eddie Vedder. I have heard it referred to as yalling. Like the singers are referred to as yallers.
𝐲𝐞𝐞𝐞𝐞𝐞
𝐲𝐞𝐞𝐞𝐞𝐞
And let’s not forget that a $20 flannel shirt wound up selling for $250 because of the Seattle formula.
@@TheAxe4Ever Tru dat!
That was awesome. Come by the shop we got some Spectors in very cool and some cool Danelectros too.
okie dokie....will do
I'm a nineties kid (the first cassettes in the neighborhood boombox were Dookie and Nevermind), and saying it wasn't formulaic betrays a serious lack of thinking. Personally, I loved being able to play root notes along with Bush songs while learning the bass. Nostalgia has a huge grip on me (I listened to frickin Better Than Ezra a few days ago), but failing to recognize formulas, trends and influences does a disservice to oneself.
Does this get 10/10 fricheks? Yeeeeeeeah
@@TomFrichek I look at Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, that era are the ones who actually set the formula that many after them copied.....I still don't think that's a bad thing: for example, Stone Temple Pilots wasn't an originator but IMO they did that 90s thing the best and better than almost everybody.....as always, thanks for watching and I'm still trying to find out where I can cash in all these Fricheks I've accumulated
Instructional, as always
@@mikeshvedov6981 lol
Did you ever put a Creed Cassette in a Teddy Ruxpin?
@@danieldurham7474 lol no
Can't tell if you're joking, but I'll bite. Nirvana recorded their first album in 1988 for $600... No corporate $$ involved. Nevermind was released in 1991, In Utero in 1993. Nirvana was wildly popular by 1993 and so were a host of other artists you mention. Cobain played solos, McCready played solos, Kim Thayil played solos, Jerry Cantrell played solos, Billy Corgan played solos. In Bloom is not a pop formula. Black Hole Sun is not pop formula. Would is not pop formula. If you're talking about what came after these bands, I contend they're two completely different times. Early 90s vs mid 90s is huge with the mid 90s doing their best to cop the early 90s and failing miserably (Creed, Silverchair, et. al.).
thanks for watching! definitely mid 90s and after...i thought i had indirectly implied that in the video :)
😂 funny video. It's wrong on literally every single point, but it's hilarious if you're an old boomer. Kinda sad honestly.
Im not a Boomer 🙂
I feel sad for those women who can't grow beards 😢. The pain they surely endure both physically and every time they look at themselves in the mirror, face full of metal🤘, just to look beautiful should be commemorated and respected.
I managed to sit through about two minutes of this goofy shit. 😆 Grow up and learn to just enjoy the music you enjoy.
@fclefjefff4041 if you would've sat through the last two minutes of this goofy shit, I said that at the end.....besides, this is satire....thanks for attempting to watch anyway 😆
yeeeeeeeeeeeah!