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The 90s Album Exchange - Post one of your favorite albums from the 90s

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Barely makes the 90's cutoff
 

Mr Nash

square pies = communism
Artist: Redd Kross
Album: Phaseshifter
Genre: Rock
Year: 1993





Artist: The Dandy Warhols
Album: The Dandy Warhols Come Down...
Genre: Rock
Year: 1997



Artist: Pavement
Album: Wowee Zowee
Genre: Alt Rock
Year: 1995



 

bender

What time is it?
Artist: Mogwai
Album: Come On Die Young
Year: 1999
Genre: Rock



Mogwai are a pretty far cry from the music I grew up with as they aren't super technical nor are they like the heavier stuff I listened to during my formative years, but there is something calming about their relentless beats and rhythms and the stories their songs tell without much, if any, vocals. Of the bands I love, their catalog is probably the most consistent and it's easy to recommend any album.
 

Mr Nash

square pies = communism
Wanted to do one more post focused on electronic music of the 90s I enjoy.

Artist: Aphex Twin
Album: Selected Ambient Works 85-92
Year: 1992



Artist: Future Sound of London
Album: Accelerator
Year: 1991



Artist: Future Sound of London
Album: Lifeforms
Year: 1994



Artist: Fluke
Album: Risotto
Year: 1997



Artist: Boards of Canada
Album: Music Has the Right to Children
Year: 1998

 
Mogwai are a pretty far cry from the music I grew up with as they aren't super technical nor are they like the heavier stuff I listened to during my formative years, but there is something calming about their relentless beats and rhythms and the stories their songs tell without much, if any, vocals. Of the bands I love, their catalog is probably the most consistent and it's easy to recommend any album.
Good one! Mogwai are part of my holy trinity of bands no amount of time passing can dull my enthusiasm for. (One other is tool, the third is harder to be certain about , it could be three or four bands/artists but that didn't fit the snappy phrase) I love this album, though i prefer the Government Commissions version of CODY... Christmas Steps is awesome.. probably prefer Young Team, but that's a pretty mainstream opinion i guess :p what may be less predictable is that i think their best album overall is Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will... In my mind at least that's their best.
 

bender

What time is it?
Good one! Mogwai are part of my holy trinity of bands no amount of time passing can dull my enthusiasm for. (One other is tool, the third is harder to be certain about , it could be three or four bands/artists but that didn't fit the snappy phrase) I love this album, though i prefer the Government Commissions version of CODY... Christmas Steps is awesome.. probably prefer Young Team, but that's a pretty mainstream opinion i guess :p what may be less predictable is that i think their best album overall is Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will... In my mind at least that's their best.

Mainstream for Mogwai is still pretty niche. I'd still pick Happy Songs for Happy People but it's a tough choice, Rock Action is so fucking good. If you can go see them live, I highly recommend it. New Album this year too, I think.

Never really listened to Fugazi but I should remedy that. Flea often speaks glowingly of them.

That backdoor knocking thread (not what I expected) actually reminded me of the 1994 Toadies Album Rubberneck.



Quirkier than most music I listen too but it's a fun album.
 
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Someone else linked this song on another thread a few months ago and I'm still wild about the super subtle face and voice control this girl employs.. towards the end it gets as close to genuinely bewitching as anything I've ever seen, when her hair starts reflecting the lighting~

 
Artist: Acid Bath
Album: When The Kite Strings Pop
Year: 1994
Genre: Sludge
Maybe try this if you enjoy: Eyehategod etc
After this album, maybe try: figuring out why it's impossible to find a high quality recording on youtube.
Acid_Bath_-_When_The_Kite_String_Pops.jpg


Acid Bath - The Blue. Live at a bingo parlour in South Carolina.


Fun fact. The album artwork is by John Wayne Gacy. Notable naughty boy.
 

Naibel

Member
Blur
Modern Life Is Rubbish
1993 - Britpop

Their underrated second LP, ditching the baggy/madchester sound of before with something more akin to "The Kinks". One of the earlier Britpop albums. Not perfect by any means, lots of filler, but the best songs here are among Blur's best.

Suede
Dog Man Star
1994 - Glam/Progressive Rock

Suede, one of the pioneers of Bripop, getting rid of that label, and going for a more grandiose, somber, more experimental sound. Nobody cared about that LP at the time, but it is now considered to be the band's best.

The Verve
A Northern Soul
1995 - Britpop

Before getting big with Urban Hymns, they made this transitional effort between Shoegaze and Britpop. It's a very moody album, with a psychedelic sound. It does not have the immediate impact their next album has, and it suffers from being a tad too long, but it certainly grows on you as time goes on. This one song is foreshadowing "Bittersweet Symphony" in its grandioseness.

Sorry if I had to pick 3 LPs instead of only one, but they are a bit inseperable to me. Those 3 albums kickstarted my love for Britpop and British indie in general.
 
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Longcat

Member
I was first gonna post The Cure - Bloodflowers, but noticed it was actually from 2000. Same thing with my next choice Dune - History.

So I looked around in my collection and found this old gem. Remember one-hit-wonder band Babylon Zoo and their first album The Boy with the X-Ray Eyes? I bought it back in the mid 90s, but didn't really appreciate it fully until many years later, and it's now one of my favorite 90s albums. So many bangers.

 
There are sooo many all time great albums released in the 90’s it’s hard to choose..😄 But I think this is a solid pick for soundtracks: Some great bands of the decade with songs that still hold up pretty damn well !
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Album: Mellon Collie and The Infinite Sadness
Band: The Smashing Pumpkins
1995



Surprised I was the first to mention it. I listed to this album for several years, well into the 00s. It's a 2-cd album with lots of variety.

---

Album: Zaireeka
Band: The Flaming Lips
1997



A fun experimental album that I played until the CDs wore out.
 
When I think of the 90s, this is the album that defined it for me.

Artist: Various Artists
Album: The Crow Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Year: 1994
Genre: Alternative rock / Industrial
Maybe try this if you enjoy: Stone Temple Pilots, Nine Inch Nails, The Cure
After this album, maybe try: n/a (you've reached the pinnacle of 90's music and you won't find anything better)

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This soundtrack was legendary in my circles growing up. We used to carry the CD from mate's house to mate's house, and we used to say that if we'd get hit by car on the way, we'd throw the album to safety, shouting "Save The Crow!"

The 90s really were the final good decade.

Regarding OP. Post number 13 is the correct answer.
 
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Nemesisuuu

Member
Artist: Fear Factory
Album: Demanufacture
Year: 1995
Genre: Industrial Metal



Artist: Death in June
Album: But, What Ends When the Symbols Shatter?
Year: 1992
Genre: Neofolk



Artist: Neurosis
Album: Times of Grace
Year: 1999
Genre: Post/Sludge Metal



Artist: Botch
Album: We Are the Romans
Year: 1999
Genre: Metalcore



Artist: Discordance Axis
Album: The Inalienable Dreamless
Year: 1997
Genre: Grindcore

 
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ILLtown

Member
Catherine Wheel - Ferment

Genre: Shoegaze/Alternative Rock
Released: 1992

This is one of those albums that probably flew under a lot of people's radars at the time, cos it didn't achieve a huge amount of commercial success. They never had a single in the UK charts, but "Black Metallic" achieved some success in the US. Featuring the production work of Tim Friese-Greene, who did a ton of work with Talk Talk, another band I love.







 
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#Phonepunk#

Banned
Album: Dots and Loops
Artist: Stereolab
Genre: Indie Pop
Released: 1993


this is probably my favorite Stereolab record. just an awesome retro sci fi lounge pop album from the masters. like a cozy rainy day inside of a spaceship. they have a great discography but this one really stands out as a creative peak.

cool retro 60s via 90s music video:


my favorite song, the closing track:
 
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ILLtown

Member
Hard Knocks - School of Hard Knocks

Genre: Hip-Hop
Released: 1991

This album didn't get a great deal of promo from their label when it came out, and as a result, it didn't sell well. AFAIK, Hard Knocks ended up getting dropped, and this album, and the 3 12" singles featuring tracks from it, are all they ever put out. I think it's one of the most slept-on hip-hop albums of all time.

 
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Artist: Unida
Album: Coping With The Urban Coyote
Year: 1999
Genre: Desert/Stoner Rock
Maybe try this if you enjoy: Queens Of The Stone Age, Kyuss (Unida started by ex-members), Red Fang etc
After this album, maybe try: An album called Space Jumbo Fudge by a band called Sons Of Otis.

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LegendOfKage

Gold Member
great idea for a thread. Transmissions from the Satellite Heart is one of my favorites. actually all the 90s Lips albums are just too good. however my favorite album of the 90s is Fantasma.


this one, damn, this is just too good. Keigo Oyamada was in a 80s Japanese pop band called Flipper's Guitar, who had their own TV show. he went solo and adopted the name Cornelius, as a tribute to the character from Planet of the Apes. his first solo album is standard early 90s Shibuya-Kei pop, his second solo album a weird Beck style sampladelic record of metal and hip hop. his third solo album, Fantasma, released in 1997, is probably one of my favorite of all time. just a crazy genre-hopping album that namechecks The Clash, The Beach Boys, Jesus and Mary Chain, 2001: A Space Odyssey, etc. so many crazy sounds, from psychedelic hip hop to shoegaze. it's an insanely good album. BEST ON HEADPHONES. i discovered him when i went to see the Flaming Lips in 1999, he was on the bill as one of the opening acts. during the solo of one song he played a cover of "Love Me Tender" on a theremin while a video loop of Elvis ran in the background. it was a life-changing experience.

there are a number of music videos made for the album but unfortunately I can't find the one for the major single "Star Fruits Surf Rider". these are cool though, he was projecting these behind him during the show. his band was listening to click tracks so the video and audio were all in sync. BRILLIANT STUFF




From what I've heard so far of the previews, this might be one of the best albums this thread brings to my attention. Thanks for that! Looking forward to listening to the whole thing. Just reading the description reminded me a bit of this album that covers a lot of genres and styles:

Artist: Cibo Matto
Album: Stereo Type A
Year: 1999
Genre: Alternative
Maybe try this if you enjoy: Genre hopping, funky music, Japanese girls rapping, fun.
After this album, maybe try: Sean Lennon, who also appears on this album, and his 1998 album "Into the Sun." Also try the first Cibo Matto album, "Viva! La Woman."

 

Phase

Member
From beginning to end, almost each track a masterpiece of rap... one of the albums I have on cassette, CD, and vinyl:

artist: Group Home
album: Inna City Life
year: 1995/96
genre: hip hop
also hear: Gang Starr (original crew), Das EFX, EPMD, KRS-One, Black Moon




Fuck yeah let's go. Still have the CD. Just dug it out cause of this post.
 

Kagey K

Banned
REM Monster



Took them from wierd 80s B52 wannabes into full fledged rockstars.

Bang and Blame and What’s the Frequency Kenneth being the standout hits.
 
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Artist: Garbage
Album: Version 2.0
Year: 1998
Genre: Alternative Rock

220px-Garbage_-_Version_2.0.png




I came to post that, you beat me to it. I think it's the first CD I bought brand new and full price. I remember listening to it through demo headsets in a shop, loved every single song of the album and just decided I had to buy it.

I was also going to add this. Incredible album, still something I listen to regularly even today.

They also reformed a few years back, and have both been making good new material and doing 20th anniversary tours, so I got to hear both their first album and Version 2.0 live in full, plus all B sides and unreleased tracks, which was utterly fantastic.

Sadly the lead singer, Shirley Manson, has found religion in the Cult of Woke, tends to go on long anti trump and generaly anti science, bigoted rants and even once at a live show started drunkenly crying and screaming at a black member of the audience, about how beautiful they were because of their skin colour, and how sorry she was for being white.

Admittedly she seems to have got a bit better in the last few months, after a far left Twitter mob went for her during the whole JK Rowling TERF nonsense, but still, one to definitely try and seperate the art from the artist these days.

Garbage are still easily my favourite band ever though.

I highly recommend looking up their Free Record Day collaborations too. Some really off the wall and fun little oddities there where you can tell they and the people they were working with were having fun with it.
 
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