'80s Hair Bands in the Grungy '90s (Mötley Crüe, Skid Row, Poison, Warrant, Bon Jovi, Def Leppard)

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @Benny5000
    @Benny5000 Год назад +879

    You gotta appreciate how Ozzy adapted to every genre of rock for decades. He outlasted everyone while making huge changes to the sound.

    • @mrsomeone846
      @mrsomeone846 Год назад +66

      I’d never thought of that before reading, but damn are you right!
      Specially when you consider Paranoid, Blizzard of Oz and No More Tears are from 70, 80 and 91🤯

    • @kellykerr5225
      @kellykerr5225 Год назад +26

      I don’t know if he adapted or if we did. I think he remained his authentic self the whole time. I 100% believe in self improvement so long as you’re still the same person at heart. Look at p!nk. She just keeps getting more successful and she’s never changed for anyone. She’s very inspiring for women any way. I watch a lot of concerts on RUclips and some of them have almost all male audiences and others almost all female. I like a performance by Metallica and I saw zero females in the audience. I was dangerous for sure. People get so excited they just shove forward. Most bands stop the show to help.

    • @thelolguy007
      @thelolguy007 Год назад +30

      Yeah and ripped off the musicians who wrote his songs, revived his career and helped him succeed

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +11

      @@thelolguy007 This is true. Bob Daisley saved his arse.

    • @thelolguy007
      @thelolguy007 Год назад +10

      @@kospandx and how did he repay him? By ‘NOT’ paying him royalties and getting in studio musicians to re-record the parts so he wouldn’t have to pay the royalties in the future

  • @robdixson196
    @robdixson196 Год назад +507

    There is nothing more out of style than recently out of style. The 90's were brutal for hair bands.

    • @ericvonharding3421
      @ericvonharding3421 Год назад +33

      Even GNR lost a chunk of their cool factor. Use Your Illusion survived because of their extraordinary large fanbase waiting for a proper Appetite follow-up.

    • @tomasom4497
      @tomasom4497 Год назад +15

      I never liked hair bands. Punk and hard core metal only. I loved when grunge came along.

    • @HamzaAgha-b6l
      @HamzaAgha-b6l Год назад +16

      Not as brutal as dating apps are to men

    • @ericvonharding3421
      @ericvonharding3421 Год назад +28

      @@HamzaAgha-b6l Way to connect 90s rock music with an incel perspective

    • @DJ_Force
      @DJ_Force Год назад

      I don't think Nirvana killed Glam metal, I think Dr. Dre did. After the Satanic paranoia faded in the US and the plethora of power ballads from supposedly heavy metal bands, rock was no longer dangerous.
      Then, in 1992 the LA riots plus the release of danceable Gangsta rap made Hip-Hop both fun for kids and scary for parents. That's the recipe for popular music.

  • @kirakirakuromi
    @kirakirakuromi Год назад +278

    A video going through 90s bands trying to survive in the 2000s would be really interesting

    • @graffiti9145
      @graffiti9145 Год назад +76

      2000s bands surviving in the 2010s would be cool too, considering rock wasn't very popular in the 10s

    • @chrissantos5580
      @chrissantos5580 Год назад +6

      Hey grandpa rock was still a thing in the 2000s

    • @blakchristianbale
      @blakchristianbale Год назад +24

      I mean if you’re talking grunge bands that’s kinda tricky since most of the big ones split before the 90s ended. You’ve basically only got Pearl Jam and that bizarre dance pop album from Chris Cornell
      Edit: I completely forgot that Chris Cornell had Audioslave in the 2000s

    • @benjamink7105
      @benjamink7105 Год назад +13

      90s bands couldn't even survive the 90s lmao.
      A lot of sophomore albums slumped, bands were dropped by majors as quickly as they'd been signed (see: Local H with Pack up the Cats). The grunge/alternative bubble burst somewhere toward the end of 1996.

    • @Mirokuofnite
      @Mirokuofnite Год назад +17

      When Kurt died, grunge died. It did linger a couple of years later, but post-grunge, nu metal, and pop punk was the next wave for the second half of the decade.
      Post-grunge carried the self-pity but lacked any soul and was cookie cutter Pearl Jam knockoffs.

  • @Skycladatdusk78
    @Skycladatdusk78 Год назад +339

    1991 and 1992 are two of my favorite music years, mostly in part because both metal and grunge could be successful and co-exist, rather than just having to be alternative rock from 1993 onwards.

    • @piero50eas
      @piero50eas Год назад +3

      Agreed

    • @sonusworld666
      @sonusworld666 Год назад +17

      93 was still ok it all went downhill mid 94 onwards- Post Cobain’s death

    • @leetorry
      @leetorry Год назад

      My man what the fuck are you talking about, 1990 to 1995 was some of the greatest years in metal. Death metal and black metal ruled, doom metal was getting its laurels, alt metal was a thing.

    • @coyotebillkc9185
      @coyotebillkc9185 Год назад +24

      In 91-92 Alice in Chains would be played on both Headbangers Ball and 120 Minutes.

    • @sonusworld666
      @sonusworld666 Год назад +3

      @@coyotebillkc9185 Sure but they were the closest thing to Metal - What say you?

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 Год назад +36

    I do remember that almost everyone had Skid Row's 'Slave To The Grind' CD despite it being the height of grunge back in high school. It was such a heavy hitter it was totally legit.

  • @arturovillalobos336
    @arturovillalobos336 Год назад +268

    We can't deny that Bon Jovi's "It's my life" became a worldwide hit. My conclusion: They grew in their own pop rock style.

    • @mikesteelheart
      @mikesteelheart Год назад +30

      But it does suck lol.

    • @diegorivas1991
      @diegorivas1991 Год назад +19

      But came way after grunge at it's peak.
      In the case of Bon Jovi a fair comparission is with Keep The Faith from 1992 and These Days from 1995.

    • @jsan3743
      @jsan3743 Год назад +20

      They adapted by appealing to the older generation, not the raging youth of the 90s

    • @Ivantheterrible81280
      @Ivantheterrible81280 Год назад +11

      Grew? Bon Jovi copied every trend that came out. Musically and visually.

    • @mikesteelheart
      @mikesteelheart Год назад +4

      "It's My Life" is just watering down a mid tempo hair band song as far down to adult contemporary mainstream as possible for $$$. Don't get me wrong; I actually love tons of top 40 pop hits but songs like that are the worst of both worlds and just annoying.... Def Leppard did the same thing after Hysteria in the 90's...

  • @D5301
    @D5301 Год назад +17

    Once Steve Clark died in early ‘91, Def Leppard was never the same. Adrenalize (which I’m pretty sure is the last 80’s Hair/Glam Metal album to go #1 on the Billboard 200 in 1992) was the finish line for them.
    I wonder how the 90’s would’ve went for them if he didn’t die and it’s crazy how he didn’t even live to see the grunge takeover, he died while they were still on top.

    • @xennial80sxberner
      @xennial80sxberner Год назад

      Yeah I love Adrenalize and see it as pure 80s arena/hair metal in the Hysteria style. Maybe "make love like a man" was the one sorta 90s sounding track.
      Never thought how their trajectory could have been way different if Steve Clark lived. Maybe their 90s output would have been closer to Euphoria (99), like just a slightly edgier and more modern 80s sound

    • @bswihart1
      @bswihart1 4 месяца назад

      He was a riff machine and would have been fine if he could have gotten sober who knows? I wonder what Van Halen would have been if Dave never left and got into the 90s

  • @coyotebillkc9185
    @coyotebillkc9185 Год назад +76

    I was never a fan of Poison but really, they tried changing their sound and direction before Grunge broke big. They seemed to be influenced more by the Black Crowes than Nirvana. So much so that I remember seeing an ad in the early 90's for something called "The Southern Rock Festival" and Poison was the headliner. With Lynyrd Skynyrd playing right before them.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +9

      Yes! I have been saying for years that I think Poison would have gone down an Americana route if Grunge had never happened. There was always a bit of country to the sound of their ballads, which I suspect helped ease rock audiences into Garth Brooks, who broke big the same year as Nirvana.

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +2

      That’s sad that Skynyrd had to play before a band like that. At least they’ve had a better legacy.

    • @LemmyLawless
      @LemmyLawless Год назад

      Native Tongue... my favourite Poison album with no doubt!!

    • @wildspowell196
      @wildspowell196 Год назад +1

      Get this… Bret is from Pennsylvania, but if you hear him talk, he has a straight up southern accent. I’m from SC and he sounds like he could be from right down the road. I always though poison had kind of a blue collar/southern thing going on, in the modern day more than ever.

    • @markmccleary7276
      @markmccleary7276 Год назад

      @@LemmyLawless I agree that No Doubt was a huge 90s band, but I don't think Gwen sang on any Poison albums. =o)

  • @lorenzosandoval7328
    @lorenzosandoval7328 Год назад +17

    W.A.S.P. deserves an award for their catalogue alone, they tried getting heavier and deeper with their songs back in 1989, then did a concept album, then a queen inspired album, and finally of all the bands trying to fit in with grunge, wasp took the industrial metal route and made some of the darkest music at the time. All of this during the 90s which basically made fun of people like him.

  • @rjc7289
    @rjc7289 Год назад +93

    Honorable mention of strong 90's albums by 80's bands...
    Dog Eat Dog -- Warrant
    Dysfunctional -- Dokken
    Carnival Of Souls -- Kiss
    Show Business -- Kix
    3 -- Firehouse
    Still Climbing -- Cinderella
    Waiting For The Punchline -- Extreme
    Collage -- Ratt
    Louder Than Hell -- Manowar
    Crack A Smile -- Poison
    Hear In The Now Frontier -- Queensryche
    Still Not Black Enough -- W.A.S.P.
    Let It Rock -- Great White
    Za Za -- Bulletboys

    • @magicstuff
      @magicstuff Год назад +14

      Warrant's Dog Eat Dog is severely underrated. I think it slipped by a lot of folks at the time.

    • @bb-gc2tx
      @bb-gc2tx Год назад +4

      tell the truth billy squier from 1993 is an incredible album

    • @NRobertAlexander
      @NRobertAlexander Год назад +12

      @@magicstuff Dog Eat Dog is the best Warrant album if you ask me. A more mature and slightly heavier take on the 80's heavy metal sound, but still respecting the band's roots and not taking the pretentious grunge route.

    • @PaboritongAwitinniBoyKarne17
      @PaboritongAwitinniBoyKarne17 Год назад +1

      Firehouse 3rd album is very banger..

    • @flacorocks2513
      @flacorocks2513 Год назад +3

      I can't agree with this list enough. Although Ultraphobic caught me off guard, I slowly loved it. Belly to Belly not so much.

  • @victormauss5536
    @victormauss5536 Год назад +3

    I had always rally wondered about this. Thanks for making a majustic video on it

  • @thehalcyonflight
    @thehalcyonflight Год назад +31

    As a Boyband connesieur/historian, I often compare the late 90s/early 00s boyband craze to that of the 80s/ really early 90s hair mania. The parallels are really uncanny.

    • @XxLIVRAxX
      @XxLIVRAxX Год назад +4

      Looks like Kpop occupies that space

    • @davequiquegg
      @davequiquegg Год назад +2

      there was also landfill amounts of boy bands in the 00's in the UK until One Direction decimated them and the girl groups simultaneously. There's definitely a comparison there. Also indie acts before the Arctic Monkeys ended all that with their debut. Both the boy bands and indie landfill occupy a nostalgia place and only play their hits whenever they tour just like the 80's hair metal bands.

    • @thehalcyonflight
      @thehalcyonflight Год назад

      @davequiquegg oh I know...
      Boyzone
      East 17
      Code Red
      Take That
      5ive
      911
      Westlife.... just to name a few.

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +6

      Comparing hair bands to boy bands is kinda vague. Because hair bands actually had talent and made somewhat quality music. A more accurate comparison would be comparing boy bands to pop punk and emo bands. Both styles of music are extremely overrated teenybopper crap. The parallels are uncanny.

    • @thehalcyonflight
      @thehalcyonflight Год назад +5

      @carpenoctem775 well the comparison has more to do with the meteoric rise and fall and in the height, the manufacturing of it all.
      Emo/pop punk had a gradual rise, stuck around for quite a while and even inspired what music would sound like roughly around the late 00s.

  • @jaymz010
    @jaymz010 Год назад +40

    Oh that period of hard rock - Post-Nirvana/Pre-Korn. I call it...
    WAYNE’S WORLD ROCK 😄
    The movie Airheads exemplified that period

  • @JP-ou6ss
    @JP-ou6ss Год назад +47

    I am a massive 80s hard rock fan, and even I am in doubt whether Bon Jovi became even better in the 90s. I love me a good ballad, and Bed of Roses, Always, This Ain't a Love Song are just gold. I even enjoy their 2000s stuff a lot. They truly trascended time.

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +3

      They matured musically and lyrically better than most of their peers. That’s why they’re still on top and stayed culturally relevant for a longer period of time.

  • @anamaria-girllover
    @anamaria-girllover Год назад +12

    i always wondered how that transition happened. i feel like everyone associates that big, long hair with the 80s. and then it just immediately disappeared in the 90s. trends are weird

  • @kylereece1979
    @kylereece1979 Год назад +47

    Awesome video. Bon Jovi were the real ones that seamlessly stormed into success in the 90s via the Keep the Faith album. I dont know exactly how it fared in America overall, but in Europe they actually became even bigger than before. MTV Europe rotated the 'Jovi all the time and over here in general, they were side to side with Grunge, and the likes of Guns n Roses in terms of continuous popularity. Im Irish, and remember hard rock like Bon Jovi not getting sidelined by Grunge on MTV here. It was a huge mixed bag of everything.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +3

      I don't think grunge was nearly as big a phenomenon in Europe as in the States. Around my parts it felt less like grunge replaced metal than metal simply disappearing just as I got into it for no apparent reason. Apparently they did sell enough records to chart fairly highly, but I have no idea who were buying them.

    • @AnthonySforza
      @AnthonySforza Год назад +3

      Actually, Jon himself admitted that Always was their top selling single. Which was what, 93-94? However, while MTV played their songs a lot in the US, Im struggling to recall anything coming out after 96.
      As, in 2000 when It's My Life came out, I recall thinking it had been a while since Bon Jovi put anything out. Annnnnd you could not ESCAPE that song at all that summer. It was everywhere.

    • @markwilliamsmusic2987
      @markwilliamsmusic2987 Год назад +2

      ​@@AnthonySforzathey took a break after these days Sambora and Jon put out solo stuff they came back with Real Life and after the Crush album !

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +3

      That’s what I said on my last post. They were the biggest band from that scene to survive and become bigger, especially internationally, in terms of album sales and stadium tours. Many of their peers tried to follow, some succeeded, most failed. They stayed culturally relevant for a longer time too, whereas most of their peers faded into nostalgia. For example, Def Leppard, Motley Crue, and poison did a stadium tour together in recent years, but could only do so billed as co-headliners. Bon Jovi have been headlining their own stadium tours globally for over 3 decades.
      Edit: Sorry if that was a little long. lol

    • @Chelaxim
      @Chelaxim Год назад

      ​@@AnthonySforzaWho says you can't go home from 2005 and Who says you can't go home from 2016.
      Is most grunge singers didn't even get to live to see 2016 let alone have a hit.
      Bon Jovi,Madonna,U2 and Duran Duran are the quadfecta of Gen X artists who stayed relevant the longest.

  • @haberak3310
    @haberak3310 Год назад +11

    I'm gonna be honest, 80s rock/metal bands transitioning into the 90s is probably my favorite genre of music. There is just something unendingly interesting about listening to the sounds of someone who was riding the waves like a master trying to adjust to changing tides. I stand by Keep the Faith and These Days being overall better albums than New Jersey and Slippery, even if there are a couple singles out of the 80s albums that I prefer over the majority of both albums (namely Wanted and Lay Your Hands on Me, but they still don't match the best songs on the 90s albums imo).

  • @ChannelBerpindah
    @ChannelBerpindah Год назад +2

    Genius video man. Very rarely touched topic, people always talk about how grunge killed hair bands but none talked about what happened to most of the hair bands trying to survive the 90s.

  • @wasauchimmer4010
    @wasauchimmer4010 Год назад +5

    Super interesting topic. Some bands sure got it and sounded alright. Very cool and well-done video!

  • @sonusworld666
    @sonusworld666 Год назад +62

    Skid Row broke out of the glam phase with Slave to the Grind - I mean that one was Super Heavy . Much Heavier and more Metallic than their self titled first one

    • @sonusworld666
      @sonusworld666 Год назад +1

      @mikedavis8008 Absolutely 🤘🤘

    • @N_0968
      @N_0968 Год назад +2

      It’s such a good album.

    • @crushingalldeceivers
      @crushingalldeceivers Год назад +4

      But the glam album had better songs.

    • @sonusworld666
      @sonusworld666 Год назад +3

      @@crushingalldeceivers are you serious?? The heavier album was more Realistic in terms of both the music and lyrics

    • @username-mf4mu
      @username-mf4mu Год назад +6

      Yeah great album fucking love the last track wasted time such a catchy riff and vocals

  • @orangecounty2033
    @orangecounty2033 Год назад +5

    Everyone says rock changed in 91-92 when Nevermind hit, and it did, ... but if you were paying attention hair metal was in its last throes in 89-90. Mainstream rock stations were still playing Crue, Poison & Ratt but every city had an alternative station that was playing NIN Pretty Hate Machine, Janes Addiction, the Cure Disintegration , etc.
    I remember hearing The Mountain Song in a bar and going 'omg wtf is this', and bought Nothings Shocking in 89 ... Gish came out 6 months before Nevermind but only college rock stations played SP... The music industry got smart , everyone was begging for a big change 🎶🎸

  • @williamg8832
    @williamg8832 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great Video! I grew up in the 80s with all those Hair Metal Bands (Or during that time was just Rock Bands) and by the time the 90s came around I had completely forgotten about them at that point. So many great bands to emerge from the 90s; who had time for the bands anymore. Thank you again for posting.....

  • @dubstep2496
    @dubstep2496 Год назад +4

    “Don’t think there’s alot to go back for the poison album” That album is incredible.

  • @kospandx
    @kospandx Год назад +31

    Whilst it isn't mentioned here, it should be added that Vince Neil released what is arguably the best album to spring out of the Mötley Crüe family tree right in the middle of grunge, viz., his first solo album, Exposed. It is musically a far richer album than anything he had tried before, and the material is thoroughly strong (half of it was written to be a follow-up to Ozzy's The Ultimate Sin). It did decently well, but really deserves to be heard by more. It also makes absolutely no concessions to grunge.

    • @firesideshats
      @firesideshats Год назад

      Yeah but that because its lead single was on encino man.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +1

      @@firesideshats That may have had some effect, but Vince's name and the strength of the album itself should have been enough to draw many listeners in by themselves, even in 1993.

    • @tonyponchopeters
      @tonyponchopeters Год назад +3

      Exposes is an Amazing album!

    • @aelfredrex8354
      @aelfredrex8354 Год назад +1

      A Stevie Stevens project with Vince on vocals, really.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +1

      @@aelfredrex8354 Well, Soussan came with half of the songs, but if it IS a Stevens project, it certainly blows Atomic Playboy out of the water.

  • @titowrestling
    @titowrestling Год назад +12

    Bon Jovi coming back with “It’s My Life” was a big success, though.

    • @Carina-23
      @Carina-23 7 месяцев назад

      Bon Jovi has been able to keep their fan base and bring in new fans over the years. They haven't necessarily changed

  • @Warstub
    @Warstub Год назад +34

    I Saw Red is such a great song. And Jani Lane's songs on Warrant's debut are a showcase of excellent songwriting.

    • @facerip2222
      @facerip2222 Год назад +5

      Uncle Tom's Cabin is my jam off of that album. For those slow ballady songs, I am often not in the mood for the slowness of them, they just make me feel sad. But Uncle Tom's Cabin has so much electric energy, it gives me goosebumps. I love the music video for that song too.

    • @jasonlawson01
      @jasonlawson01 Год назад +8

      The bitter pill. Thin Disguise. I saw Red. Letter to a friend. Stronger Now. All my bridges are burning. Blind Faith. Jani was a great song writer. Very honest sounding voice aswell. Miss that guy

    • @ms85129
      @ms85129 Год назад

      @@jasonlawson01 Mr. Rainmaker, also quite well imo :D

    • @Carina-23
      @Carina-23 7 месяцев назад

      Totally agree but sadly people think of the Cherry Pie song when they think of Warrant and Jani Lane hated that song but of course the greedy music executives begged for a big sound cheesy instant hit and there it was but yes Jani Lane was a great singer/ songwriter

  • @joesmith8725
    @joesmith8725 Год назад +7

    I hate how a lot of videos separate by decades. When they all pretty much coexisted with each other. I was there those years. They all overlapped decades,
    Glam/hair rock you had it started in the '70s, rolled over into the '80s and '90s. Popular ALL 3 decades. Just that popularity wavered off during the mid '90s. Mainstream kind of rock. Hard rock blues based.
    "Grunge" , a silly term pushed by the national media, was/is basically garage rock, punk rock with heavier distorted guitars and slower tempo. Also existed already , late '70s, '80s as underground music in certain scenes, played just on college radio, independent/alternative radio stations and late night videos on MTV. Harder to see and hear these kind of bands. The alt rock explosion during the late '80s and early '90s helped propel bands like these into mainstream. So, alt/indie rock which was mainly underground during the '70s and '80s, exploded into mainstream during the '90s , '00s. Overlap. Lot of good alt rock. The ones that were labeled grunge tends to be more whiney, emo, depressing. Gets boring after awhile.
    But, you also had more upbeat , energetic rock like punk, ska, etc and multiple punk subgenres. And Metal. Nu metal, rap metal, multiple metal subgenres, etc. All also coexisted back then overlapping decades and recent years. And also other good fun genres coming out back then multiple decades, rap, funk, R&B, etc.

  • @angryagain3801
    @angryagain3801 Год назад +12

    Some of my favorite albuims by these "hair bands" came out of the 90's
    Motley made two great albums
    Warrant delivered Ultraphobic & I loved that.
    Skid Row's Subhuman Race is killer.
    Even Dokken got back together, Dysfunctuional isn't my favorite Dokken album but it was refreshing to hear in 1995.
    Def Leppard's Slang is really good as is Bon Jovi's These Days.
    I just wish these albums received some airplay so the masses heard them.

  • @michaeldoyle189
    @michaeldoyle189 Год назад +124

    Skid Row Subhuman Race was a solid album. Skid Row was more of a metal band than most of the other bands that were their contemporaries. Which is surprising since they were late to the scene. But they also fell victim to the rocker followed by ballad formula. And frankly, they did the ballad as good, if not better, than the rest. The power ballad definitely had an element of cheese. But Skid Row seemed to do it with less cheese than the others.

    • @rahimmaarof9930
      @rahimmaarof9930 Год назад +5

      Agreed

    • @endezeichengrimm
      @endezeichengrimm Год назад +10

      It IS a solid album. I still play it to this day. Subhuman race is a masterpiece.

    • @SuperStrik9
      @SuperStrik9 Год назад +9

      Skid Row definitely fared better than most. I remember they toured with Pantera in 1992.

    • @benjaminreagle460
      @benjaminreagle460 Год назад +11

      I agree, Skid Row was right there with GnR. Dirty hard rock. Not hair metal.

    • @MikeSoutham
      @MikeSoutham Год назад +1

      100%

  • @mlanzara9215
    @mlanzara9215 Год назад +1

    This video was awesome! I would love to see a video about the transition for bands from the 70s to the 80s as there were some big changes then as well

  • @tommynoble3428
    @tommynoble3428 Год назад +10

    Poison/Richie Kotzen's Until You Suffer Some (Fire and Ice) is a great freaking song. Native Tongue is a criminally underrated and underappreciated album.

  • @Arual-0-laura
    @Arual-0-laura Год назад +4

    Kurt was so epic

  • @mysterio7807
    @mysterio7807 Год назад +61

    Bon Jovi's These Days is very adult. If this album were written by someone else, it'd be considered a masterpiece.

    • @TheDouglasSeth
      @TheDouglasSeth Год назад +5

      I prefer These Days over any 80's Bon Jovi. Great CD. I have said many times, if it was anyone else who made that CD, it would have been much bigger!

    • @1985cactus
      @1985cactus Год назад +2

      You use that word masterpiece but I don't think you know what it means.

    • @kalterkakaozumfruhstuck1515
      @kalterkakaozumfruhstuck1515 Год назад +3

      Ironically, he doesn't mention the grunge songs from Bon Jovi's These Days album, such as - Hey God - or - My guitar lies bleeding in my arms. unbelievable

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +2

      It was probably their most introspective album lyrically.

    • @RespectTheMusic
      @RespectTheMusic Год назад +2

      I agree 1000 percent with you. As a guitarist I love and have researched a lot of the guitar legends such as EVH, Brian May and so on. I feel like Ritchie was one of the most UNDERRATED guitarists of all time. You’re never gonna see him on a top 10 list and I feel like a big part of that is because Richies best playing (in my opinion) was on their more 90s albums. The man was a blues guy, and you can really see him embracing that on the These days album specifically. Me and a friend of mine whose also a guitarist talk about the album all the time and we both feel that it just came out at a time when eyes were not directed towards Bon Jovi. Also I feel like it’s one of those albums where his playing was well placed and blended on most of the songs. So his playing was not as noticeable to people who don’t have an ear for music and have a hard time distinguishing and picking out each individual instrument. Then let’s not even get started on Jon’s voice (the perfect blend of rasp, toughness and sweetness).With all this being said I’m with you! It’s a true masterpiece! I could talk about this album all day, so imma end with this… These days (masterpiece of a album), Dry County from Keep the faith album… Phenomenal guitar solo!!!! Or solos if you wanna take into account that he starts with a bluesy solo that he could have ended on but instead chooses to ride into another more classic Bon Jovi shredder solo! 🤯

  • @BVRNERMVSIC
    @BVRNERMVSIC Год назад +3

    "Grunge" (specifically talking about seattle bands) by itself was short-lived, from 1991 to roughly 1993 (the chicago bull years), it quickly got absorbed into the greater Alt bubble

    • @gamzillio
      @gamzillio 3 месяца назад

      Short lived? It started in the mid-80s. It's not just Nirvana.

  • @michaelmblog
    @michaelmblog Год назад +9

    Ultimately, for my money, the 80s rock bands' music has aged better than 90s grunge. When you've had a beer or two and are having fun, do you want to hear Motley Crue or do you want to feel bad for yourself and listen to Pearl Jam?

    • @latentsea
      @latentsea 4 месяца назад +1

      Depends on the beers. If they are coors or bud, or whatever is on tap Motley Crue. If it’s craft brew, with some fancy cheese, than Pearl Jam.

    • @RobertVincentMusic
      @RobertVincentMusic 3 месяца назад +2

      I much prefer Pearl Jam. Motley Crue sucks.

    • @vinnie9458
      @vinnie9458 2 месяца назад

      Bro there's a lot of heavy rocking out grunge songs

  • @bradencockrell1018
    @bradencockrell1018 Год назад +36

    Cinderella & Great White are two bands that put music out in the grunge era 90s… they didn’t cave and just did what they always did which is hard rock infused w blues. That’s what sold millions of records in the 80s and early 90s and they didn’t waver just because it wasn’t “in” anymore. Two of the best bands ever in my opinion.

    • @username-mf4mu
      @username-mf4mu Год назад +4

      Great white released hooked in 91. Desert moon would’ve been a hit in the 80s for sure

    • @julienverveer748
      @julienverveer748 Год назад +1

      Didn't take long before Cinderella fell down too though. Don't get me wrong, they're one of my favorite bands ever but

    • @revivedfears
      @revivedfears Год назад +4

      Cinderella are so much better than they get credit for. Their TERRIBLE name is what puts people off them

    • @nicholasgood9608
      @nicholasgood9608 11 месяцев назад

      Wish more people listened to those bands, they are some of the best of that era (and all time) IMO

  • @tedbertier9454
    @tedbertier9454 Год назад +12

    "It's like a mullet became self-aware and adapted itself into a superior coif." This is perhaps the funniest thing I've heard all year. Well done.

  • @javi__...
    @javi__... Год назад +21

    These hair metal bands were in a weird bind. It was too soon for 80s nostalgia and they didnt fit in with a more serious sound. Meanwhile all those punk and alternative bands that were ignored in the 80s suddenly had a new following.

    • @gx1tar1er
      @gx1tar1er Год назад +9

      also alternative/indie bands music in the 80's have aged better than a lot of 80's hair/glam. A lot of these are left to the past.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Год назад +4

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@gx1tar1erThats a preference and a preference that isn’t the general consensus at that. Most of the public would disagree with you, but you are entitled to your own opinion. It’s just an opinion, and it’s not objective especially since most of the public would tend to disagree with you. When people thinks 80s rock, they think glam and hair metal. Alternative/Indie is 90s/modern aged rock

  • @John-pc3cx
    @John-pc3cx Год назад

    You have a great sense of humor about these bands. Nailed the Bon Jovi part.

  • @jumariduqueza3726
    @jumariduqueza3726 Год назад +9

    Bon Jovi survive the 90s they still sell millions of album in the US andmore popular in Asia and europe in the 90s.

  • @Dominicesquire
    @Dominicesquire Год назад

    Really surprised that you’ve only got 800 subs. Glad that I was recommended this video. Subscribed!

  • @javierortiz82
    @javierortiz82 Год назад +13

    Bon Jovi's These Days is probably their best album. Kind of gritty, adult contemporary, very introspective and sometimes even reflecting of internal conflicts, their musicianship peaked there. Richie's bluesy style ruled all over the album, I think it features some of the heaviest plays by Tico. And what about the production qualities?, I mean, listen closely to the classical parts in This Ain't A Love Song. That song is amazing.
    It's a shame the album didn't sell as well, which prompted them to a more popy sound in Crush, which has been a defining album for their style in the last quarter of a century.

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 Год назад +2

      These Days was their last great album.

  • @countMonteTristo
    @countMonteTristo Год назад

    Great work on this, really nicely put together, and funny too

  • @Eric_In_SF
    @Eric_In_SF Год назад +10

    The 90s weren’t grungy. It just so happens. Grunge was the most main stream so everybody who wasn’t even born, yet has distorted reality that the entire era was pure grunge. The 90s were super eclectic and bizarre. You had bands like Jane’s Addiction and Primus that were like super far out there and you had crazy comedy bands like B-52’s or Primus again. Then you had alternative hip-hop, like Digable, planets and tribe, all the way to things like Swedish retro euro pop like the cardigans and even far out bands like the Squirrel Nut Zippers playing 1920s hot jazz going main stream. Then you had hard-core punk and Pop punk like Green Day and NOFX. You had the beastie boys doing crazy hip-hop, and then then you had British Pop like blur and oasis and 1 million other mellow dancy bands like happy Mondays and then you had stuff like Ned’s atomic dustbin and back. It was like every genre and everything. It was just fun and cool worked. The 90s were all about alternatives, and every alternative could go main stream in a heartbeat.

    • @MetrohamComicMedia
      @MetrohamComicMedia Год назад +2

      Ye it seemed the 90s had a lot going for it with music

    • @carpenoctem775
      @carpenoctem775 9 месяцев назад +1

      Honorable mention. Early alt and nu metal like KoЯn, deftones, rage, tool. And goth industrial, NIN, Type O, Rammstein.

  • @shouldvebeenonthealbum
    @shouldvebeenonthealbum Год назад +3

    Great video!! I just happened to stumble upon it but have immediately subscribed. As a lover of 80s hard rock, and owner of
    most of these albums too, I reckon you’ve given a very fair assessment. Great work all round and I’m looking forward to the second part of this! Keep up the great work!

  • @gileadbot19
    @gileadbot19 Год назад +13

    Dude, I was lucky enough to see the Crue with Warrant in February of 92. I was only 14 and Dr Feelgood had come out a couple years prior and I was absolutely in love with the whole album.
    They had the dopest laser light hologram of the crazy doctor from the cd/cassette inserts Introducing them.
    The kicker is my parents fuckin took us to the show(literally watching the entirety of both bands)which we got tickets from them for xmas. It was insane.

  • @luislanga
    @luislanga Год назад +6

    Great video. It always bugged me how the 80s guys tried to save themselves when the new thing hit. It's not like OG car manufacturers moving to electric cars or businesses moving to online shops or whatever, it's the guys admitting they were never the cool transgressors that don't care about anything they tried to show they were, their personalities were just a product of their management/marketing team lol.

  • @SHOUTband
    @SHOUTband Год назад +17

    i have to say i never saw Skid row as a "Hair Metal band" they were always very heavy but i guess the ballads made them be thrown into the Glam Metal side.

    • @SHOUTband
      @SHOUTband Год назад

      @@bozhno yes i agree.

    • @FighterBJ
      @FighterBJ Год назад +1

      That and their association with Bon Jovi in the late 1980s is my guess why they remain hair metal in our memories.

  • @baron_von_brunk
    @baron_von_brunk 6 месяцев назад +2

    I've got a suggestion for a video: how about '70s hard rock bands adapting to the '80s. For starters, there's Aerosmith - originally their songs were heavy and gritty, but by the '80s they completely got onboard with power ballads written by Desmond Child, just in time for the MTV era. AC/DC with Bon Scott were also very gritty, rough, and blues-inspired - but in the '80s with Brian Johnson on lead, they were a total arena rock band. I'd also include Heart with their heavier stuff like "Barracuda" vs. their power ballads like "Alone" - and of course we can't forget KISS without their makeup.

  • @stonerdemon
    @stonerdemon Год назад +3

    Harem Scarem, Vicious Rumors, Badlands, Kix, Crimson Glory, Lynch Mob... The great hair bands of the 90's that almost no one remembers.

  • @MrPapaj82
    @MrPapaj82 11 месяцев назад

    I binged a few videos of your videos and I love it. Your bit about Bon Jovi was amazing and hilarious. Subscribed.

  • @freedomisslavery6840
    @freedomisslavery6840 Год назад +8

    Winger and Warrant made their two best and heaviest albums in the 90s with 'Pull' and 'Dog Eat Dog'. Both awesome albums.

    • @crisgadelhart
      @crisgadelhart Год назад +1

      Winger is criminally underrated. Great musicians, great songs. Sure deserved better.

    • @mildred714
      @mildred714 Год назад

      Hahahah

    • @LemmyLawless
      @LemmyLawless Год назад

      Down incognito, I really love that song

  • @Atlas_Mohler
    @Atlas_Mohler Год назад

    Love this video idea!! I’d like to see the same with other decades!!

  • @psychopoison
    @psychopoison Год назад +20

    Winger - Pull is just one of the most underrate albums of all times, its a masterpiece

    • @Roger8176
      @Roger8176 Год назад +1

      Pull is fucking awesome! Probably best album of '93. Anybody who laughs at Winger should listen to Junkyard Dog.

    • @AnthonySforza
      @AnthonySforza Год назад +1

      Hahaha, I remember hearing In Cognito for the first time, like "Wait... the DJ said this was new Winger?" Love that song.

    • @jonathanhughes2199
      @jonathanhughes2199 Год назад +2

      OK Stewart

    • @colinclement2752
      @colinclement2752 Год назад

      Shut up Stewart

    • @y_s4021
      @y_s4021 Год назад +2

      Honestly, I think I like today's heavier Winger way more than their prime. One of my favorite bands actually. They made so many cool songs after they went heavy, even their hard rock got better. Kip and Reb Beach are so good.

  • @wedontcookfood
    @wedontcookfood Год назад

    This was a really well produced video and I enjoyed watching it. Keep up the good work and I mean it in the most genuine way!

  • @mrflipperinvader7922
    @mrflipperinvader7922 Год назад +4

    the one band who was very interesting is Firehouse, as in 1994 they had that hit "I Live My Life For You", and it charted high, waaaaay past hair metal's prime days. It was able to enter that adult contemporary vein just like Bon Jovi and the Goo Goo Dolls

  • @Breakbeats92.5
    @Breakbeats92.5 9 месяцев назад +1

    I remember reading a magazine and in an article the writer said, "in 1991 Nirvana released their debut LP Nevermind and hair metal melted overnight." I thought that just about summed it up.

  • @Vinylrebel72
    @Vinylrebel72 Год назад +10

    Motley Crue’s album with John Corabi was a killer record.

    • @BassGuitar4life
      @BassGuitar4life Год назад +2

      Agreed. After Too fast for Love and Shout at the Devil.
      3rd best record.
      Better that everything else they recorded imho.

    • @MrMackmonster
      @MrMackmonster Год назад +1

      Couldnt agree more. It demonstrated that the band was more than just glam.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Год назад

      It’s alright. The Crue is just better sounding when they’re glam/hair metal band

  • @xennial80sxberner
    @xennial80sxberner Год назад +1

    People forget 1992 and early 93 still a lot of hair metal and power ballads, it didn't just fade away the instant "Teen spirit" was released.
    Winger and Warrant had surprisingly heavy albums in 1993 too. I don't see them as grunge (though they were more in league with that style), just gritty hard rock.
    Vince Neil exposed is freaking awesome too, another 93 album that would have been huge if it was 87-91

  • @edgabrielocay3376
    @edgabrielocay3376 Год назад +8

    Bon Jovi still works in the 90s

  • @maxkaffeine4225
    @maxkaffeine4225 Год назад +1

    The "cowboy flair" with which Bon Jovi is credited was actually started in 1984 when Ratt released "Wanted Man." Bon Jovi's "Wanted: Dead or Alive" was released in 1987, but being the quintessential "hair band," Bon Jovi got the credit.

  • @Sandman60077
    @Sandman60077 Год назад +5

    I think Bon Jovi is the only band that made the right decision on how to evolve. As all those other bands tried to stay cool and relevant with metal kids, (which is like when your dad tries to be cool), Bon Jovi targeted middle aged moms. They were the only band smart enough to realize that they weren't going to be accepted by the new generation of music lovers and their best course is to stick with their aging fan base and just write music they'll like.

  • @sarabrown6022
    @sarabrown6022 Год назад

    Thanks for this - it was super interesting. I knew what Crüe had done but it's great to see it in context compared to the other contemporary bands.

  • @55Porter
    @55Porter Год назад +22

    How interesting that all through the 90's a lot of these bands were mocked for having no staying power, and here we are almost 30 years later and many of them are still filling up stadiums because people can't get enough of that nostalgia from their 80's heyday. I don't think too many grunge bands are out there packing 40,000+ seat stadiums like we saw last summer with the Motley/Leppard/Poison tour. Of course Bon Jovi still packs 'em in too. It's funny how things work out over the long term.

    • @bb-gc2tx
      @bb-gc2tx Год назад +20

      80s bands lost the battle but won the war

    • @AnthonySforza
      @AnthonySforza Год назад +7

      It also doesnt help that music today objectively sucks, en masse. So people began looking backward. What's really cool, is that obscure bands or the late 80s/Early 90s, like Roxy Blue, Wildside, Vain, Britney Foxx, etc etc, who never got the time of day, are actually having their own moments in the sun, finally.
      Where Bobby Blotzer was talking about Ratt's catalog being "En fuego" as he put it, where it took ten years for Detonator to go gold, then just hovered there, but then after the insurance commercial, took less than two years to go from just over gold, to platinum.

    • @Undying3001
      @Undying3001 Год назад

      Yeah who the fuck even cares about Pearl Jam, Peppers, Stone Temple Pilots, and all the other dated 90s trend bands anymore?

    • @Beeraltar
      @Beeraltar Год назад +7

      Well alot of the big grunge bands can't tour for obvious reasons.

    • @bb-gc2tx
      @bb-gc2tx Год назад +12

      @@Beeraltar grunge and nostalgia dont mix very well. it would be kinda of odd seing a 48 yr old wearing a zero t shirt and talking about how much he hates his parents 🤣

  • @SuiGenerisMan
    @SuiGenerisMan Год назад

    I have always thought this subject would make a great video, over a decade, Thank you!

  • @bruceburnett1584
    @bruceburnett1584 Год назад +2

    I talked to Janie not long before he was gone, and he told me he absolutely HATED "Cherry Pie"...RIP Janie

  • @aquascenic5751
    @aquascenic5751 Год назад

    Great video! Really enjoyed it

  • @iamthem.a.n.middleagednerd1053
    @iamthem.a.n.middleagednerd1053 Год назад +9

    '94 Motley Crue is a 7/10
    Subhuman Race is an 8/10
    Native Tongue is a 7/10
    I really dig them all

  • @StevenPD
    @StevenPD 5 месяцев назад +2

    The 90's were the best of times and the worst of times. The good, the bad and the ugly made it a wild time to be a teenager.

  • @captaincaptain2128
    @captaincaptain2128 Год назад +3

    Def Leppard has never made a bad album. Ever. Hell, their latest Drastic Symphonies is a masterpiece.

  • @ByTorSnowDog65098
    @ByTorSnowDog65098 Год назад +2

    I was a teen all through the 80s and when the 90s came I was disillusioned by my favorite bands chasing new sounds. Now that I'm 50, I find I listen to the 90s output pretty frequently. It has just enough maturity in it (especially Def Leppard's Slang and Winger's Pull) to hold my interest with my much broader musical tastes now.

  • @SuperStrik9
    @SuperStrik9 Год назад +20

    Jackyl are a great band. They formed in 1991 so they technically aren't an 80s band but they played some killer southern tinged hard rock. Jackyl's first 2 albums are definitely worth checking out. Headed For Destruction is a badass tune. There's a great version of it from Woodstock 94. Also don't forget Guns N Roses. The Use Your Illusion albums were a massive success and their tour with Metallica in 1992 was selling out stadiums.

    • @MrMackmonster
      @MrMackmonster Год назад +2

      Jackyl was awesome!!!!

    • @y_s4021
      @y_s4021 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the tip! gonna check them out.

    • @SuperStrik9
      @SuperStrik9 Год назад

      @@y_s4021 No problem. 👍

    • @ColtraneTaylor
      @ColtraneTaylor Год назад +1

      Jackyl pees all over GnR.

  • @RocknDanger
    @RocknDanger 6 месяцев назад

    Great video! Really enjoyed it, thanks for sharing.

  • @johnchedsey1306
    @johnchedsey1306 Год назад +3

    Never ever thought I'd hear Warrant and King's X compared in the same sentence, but now I hear it.
    I had a friend take me to a Def Leppard show in 2003 or so. Packed house and they gave the audience exactly what they wanted. I'd say they weathered the 90s fairly well.

  • @rafuxec
    @rafuxec Год назад

    Great video, this subject is hardly covered by other music channels. Made me subscribe.

    • @colerieger7300
      @colerieger7300 Год назад

      Sarcasm is so hard to detect in the written word. If you don't get the joke, almost every human being who has ever written about music has written how Nirvana "killed" Mötley Crüe. Even though Mötley was inactive the entire time grunge was around and in between their self-titled album and Generation Swine, grunge came and went. By the time GS came out, chick rock was dominating the airwaves and Tommy and Pam were all over the media. Swine flopped, but it had little to do with grunge and more to do with writing an album for one singer, having another sing it and trying to be too much at once.

  • @DistantEarlyWarning
    @DistantEarlyWarning Год назад +3

    80s hair bands rule! Idk why they get so much hate from music fans.

    • @MLBlue30
      @MLBlue30 Год назад +4

      It's a cycle, happens to the best of us. Blues, Disco, Metal, Gangsta Rap, etc. One day you are the god of cool, tomorrow you are a joke and have to rely on your second career choice to pay the bills.

    • @MLBlue30
      @MLBlue30 Год назад +3

      Then one day if you wait long enough a new generation discovers you and no one listens to the previous generation bitch about how it sucks because they got old so who cares and the retro sounds refreshing compared to anything new that is pumped out.

    • @LuchaLibertaria
      @LuchaLibertaria Год назад +1

      They are 80s rock bands...."hair metal" is a silly derisive term and one of the reasons why people perceive 80s rock bands in a negative way

  • @JimHawkwind03411
    @JimHawkwind03411 Год назад +1

    According to Warrant frontman Jani Lane, he remembers when he walked into Columbia Records HQ in New York City in 1990, where he found in the main lobby’s wall was a poster promoting their album, “Cherry Pie”.
    Two or three years later, when “Dog Eat Dog”, their upcoming album, was about to be released, Lane visited Columbia Records again, only this time, there’s a poster promoting Alice in Chains’ newest album, “Dirt”.
    Lane literally saw the writing on the wall, except it was a poster.

  • @freaklives
    @freaklives Год назад +13

    Worth mentioning though that these 80s bands may have done weird stuff to fit in in the 90s, but almost all of them are still filling stadiums today. How many 90s bands can you say that about? In fact, apart from Pearl Jam, what 90s bands are still going?

    • @mojohead7954
      @mojohead7954 Год назад +2

      Smashing Pumpkins still puts out albums and tours. Alice in chains doing fine with new singer for past 15 years. Soundgarden reunited in late 2000s, recorded album and toured until Chris Cornell suicide just after their gig in 2017. Stone Temple Pilots also reunited with original singer Scott Weiland in late 2000s but fired him again in 2013 and in 2015 he died from overdose. They are still exist but not as successful

    • @mtc5
      @mtc5 Год назад +4

      most of the bands associated with grunge are no more or went through a hiatus that virtually ended their story as we know, but emerged as something different, not so hungry. I don't blame the bands really. None of the ones that became active again played nostalgia angle unlike KISS or 80's bands.
      - Nirvana: Obviously done with Kurt's suicide. We got Foo Fighters out of it though, which is undoubtably one of the biggest arena band.
      - Alice in Chains: Long hiatus after their frontman Layne, came back years later with high quality albums, but didn't really attempt to grow their audience.
      - Soundgarden: Disbanded before even 90;s were over. Chris Cornell came back with a successful solo album and went on to form Audioslave, which was a massive success and arena band. Soundgarden reformed in 2012 but again, they didn't really attempt to grow their audience or make nostalgia tours.
      - Stone Temple Pilots: Similar to Alice in Chains really, frontman dies, new frontman comes, they don't really play nostalgia angle. But the new frontman dies as well. cursed band really.
      - Smashing Pumpkins: Musically most flexible of these bands, but they couldn't retain the quality songwriting with new songs. Many lineup changes, inconsistent band overall.

    • @blakchristianbale
      @blakchristianbale Год назад

      Tool’s 2019 album went to Number 1 on the pop charts, briefly beating Taylor Swift

    • @BVRNERMVSIC
      @BVRNERMVSIC Год назад

      The biggest 90s bands all lost their frontmen...and AIC is still pulling huge numbers nowadays

  • @jack9nine586
    @jack9nine586 11 месяцев назад

    your content is so awesome glad i found you

  • @nundo7781
    @nundo7781 Год назад +9

    Correction: Mutt Lange wasn't necessary too busy producing Bryan Adams and Shania Twain albums, he was too busy boinking Shania Twain!!! And hell, no sane guy could ever blame him for one minute!!!

  • @bswihart1
    @bswihart1 4 месяца назад

    Well done. Gonna listen to DL High n Dry album and forget about what I’ve just seen again.

  • @bartmitsfer
    @bartmitsfer Год назад +5

    It’s funny. I listened to Hysteria on repeat. 1 of my fav albums but my now fav Def Lep song is AlI want is Everything. Great trip down memory lane from high school to working years for me.

    • @AnthonySforza
      @AnthonySforza Год назад

      Weird he mentioned Adrenalize, but not Retro-Active.

  • @dsvet
    @dsvet Год назад +2

    What stands out is grunge didn't even last a decade. It was just a short fused passing fad. I had Pantera, Dream Theater and Meshuggah to get me through it.

  • @SomeCenturio93
    @SomeCenturio93 Год назад +3

    Thankfully Germany and Scandinavia still continues to thrive with metal and rock today and even new bands in the NWOTHM movement with great potential.

  • @mangogoat4691
    @mangogoat4691 Год назад

    Lovin your content! Fresh stuff!

  • @michaelwills1926
    @michaelwills1926 Год назад +22

    It all makes sense when you figure “hair to grunge” was an ‘implementation’ rather than an organic musical progression. Otherwise, no reason music of all genres couldn’t coexist simultaneously, just like in the 80’s

  • @johnnyblackout
    @johnnyblackout Год назад +1

    Danger Danger - Dawn & Shotgun Messiah's Violent New Breed are other great examples. Good video!

    • @saurondp
      @saurondp Год назад

      Interesting note on that latter band: Bassist Tim Skold of Shotgun Messiah went the industrial route after SM broke up. He toured as a solo artist and was also a member of KMFDM and Marilyn Manson. I like his industrial sound a lot more than anything from Shotgun Messiah.

  • @shaunmarsh7113
    @shaunmarsh7113 Год назад +21

    Def Leppard’s Slang album contained a lot of emotion. It’s like it was meant to happen - and it’s a masterpiece. Work It Out is one of the best songs they ever produced. 🤘

    • @retropyro
      @retropyro Год назад +4

      I'm still pissed they made Move With Me Slowly a Japanese only track for the album and putting out as a B-side. Such a great track.

    • @MithunOnTheNet
      @MithunOnTheNet Год назад +3

      Loved 'Slang'!

    • @ChrisS62976
      @ChrisS62976 Год назад +3

      Slang is extremely underrated…

    • @young-jaechong6045
      @young-jaechong6045 Год назад

      @@retropyroi love absolutely love the groove on this track as well as the guitar solo between Phil and Viv! 🔥🚀

  • @puturro
    @puturro Год назад +2

    Poison's Stay was a hell of a single.
    Bon Jovi were the only ones that were able to dribble the 90s seamlessly.They did grow up, IMO

  • @riffdagg6701
    @riffdagg6701 Год назад +62

    Remember what tenacious d said, " Grunge tried to kill the metal, they failed as they were thrown to the ground. "

    • @daveidmarx8296
      @daveidmarx8296 Год назад +10

      That's pretty fucking laughable. Nevermind and Ten sold 10 and 13 million a piece and are considered all-time classics today. What is the legacy of these hair-bands beyond being a punchline?

    • @stevesleg
      @stevesleg Год назад +2

      @@daveidmarx8296 🤷‍♂️ They obviously never grew up in the era and will never understand when grunge ruled.

    • @G3ARHE4D13
      @G3ARHE4D13 Год назад +8

      Metal will always get me going and I will always be a fan, but grunge will always be in my heart.

    • @kospandx
      @kospandx Год назад +8

      @@daveidmarx8296 Well, Guns N' Roses and the Crue/Def Leppard tours surely have to be some of the most profitable live music circuses these days? Speaking of GNR, I don't think Nevermind has yet managed to outsell Appetite for Destruction, in spite of the former having been pimped more than any other record by music journalists for three solid decades by now.

    • @BriansFunHouse
      @BriansFunHouse Год назад +2

      All forms of music that get popular grows its fairweather fan base. Pop culture works like that. So the metalheads that liked metal cause it was "cool" in the mid- late 80's stopped supporting the bands. It's their fault, not Nirvana's. Also there was a lot of bad metal ballads being forced down our throats at the time. Most of the 90s records by " hair" bands was bands selling out and trying to jump on a bandwagon they were not ready for. The true bands just kept their sound for the most part and kept rocking from their hearts.

  • @marcel1372
    @marcel1372 Год назад

    oh fuck yes this is exactly what I'm looking for . need more stuff like Todd in the shadows or music video time. love to see people go in depth and like actually give a shit when talking about older / less popular acts. so so so tired of 99% of youtube being surface level research reddit wikipedia regurgitation. keep it UP!

  • @acason4
    @acason4 Год назад +12

    The Native Tongue record is actually pretty damn incredible:
    Stay Alive
    Stand
    Until You Suffer Some
    Strike Up The Band
    Theatre Of My Soul
    Ain’t That The Truth
    7 Days Over You
    Also, the Motely Crue self titles isn’t all that great, but the things that are good are as good as anything Crue ever did:
    Hooligan’s Holiday
    Misunderstood
    Uncle Jack
    Welcome To The Numb
    Loveshine

  • @FLtrailblazer
    @FLtrailblazer Год назад

    Great to look back on this

  • @MrNeilphipps
    @MrNeilphipps Год назад +3

    Warrants dog eat dog album in 1992 is badass.

    • @jimcooper1320
      @jimcooper1320 Год назад +1

      Yeah. I don't know how they skipped this album and went to Ultraphobic

  • @darklorddisco
    @darklorddisco Год назад

    9:49 advanced entertainment mullet. You just killed me with that one 😂

  • @eclecticx
    @eclecticx Год назад +14

    Though the 90s had some great music, I never thought Grunge was a part of the great. To me, Grunge sucked. It was depressing and boring. Give me the hard rock bands of the 80s any day, including the hair bands.

  • @salahuddinmuhammad3251
    @salahuddinmuhammad3251 Год назад +1

    The grunge era made the 80's glam groups feel and look silly. Man spoke about how silly it made the scene look.

    • @LuchaLibertaria
      @LuchaLibertaria Год назад

      The aim of 80s glam rock was to have fun - they were not trying to look cool.
      Having said that it was still better than wearing flannel shirts and singing about getting raped by your stepdad.

  • @drexelmarz7144
    @drexelmarz7144 Год назад +4

    What if any of these bands adapted to a Power Metal sound? Which was becoming a huge thing in Europe. That would have been cool!

    • @KaptRocket
      @KaptRocket Год назад +1

      Blind guardian CARRIED the European power metal movement

    • @blakchristianbale
      @blakchristianbale Год назад

      Trouble is they aren’t in Europe

    • @drexelmarz7144
      @drexelmarz7144 Год назад +1

      @@blakchristianbale back in the 90s & early 00s it was a big thing, they even claimed that they viewed grunge as competition on their careers

    • @LuchaLibertaria
      @LuchaLibertaria Год назад +1

      Malmsteen went Power Metal with The Seventh Sign

  • @natt.helland
    @natt.helland Год назад

    Thank u 4 this. 80s glam metal is my obsession

  • @moreblack
    @moreblack Год назад +10

    And yet in 2023, Def Leppard and Crue are playing Wembley Stadium with Van Halen's kid opening. Tide comes in, tide goes out I suppose.Alice or PJ will never ever do that.

    • @kevinrayonflores2212
      @kevinrayonflores2212 Год назад +2

      What do you expect it’s a stacked 80s nostalgia road. Ofc it’s gonna stack when you have the famous bands from the 80s in one card.But younger people (gen z) still talk about nirvana and Alice In Chains. There music is still so relatable decades later. Kurt cobain literally became an icon of rock music.

    • @Wadiyatalkinabeet_
      @Wadiyatalkinabeet_ Год назад +1

      ⁠@@kevinrayonflores2212dk about that, as someone from gen z myself. Me and most of the people I know around my area who are also gen z like 80s hair metal better than 90s alternative rock. My sisters who were born in the early 90s late 80s and there friends are more alternative rock listeners.

    • @CarterHayes77
      @CarterHayes77 Год назад +2

      @@Wadiyatalkinabeet_I think 90s pop culture is way more popular, especially fashion via tiktok, Insta pages like 90s anxiety.