Grunge (sometimes referred
to as the Seattle sound) is a subgenre of alternative rock that emerged during the
mid-1980s in the American state of Washington
, particularly in the Seattle
area.
Inspired by
hardcore punk,
heavy metal and
indie rock, grunge is generally characterized by
heavily
distorted electric guitars, contrasting song
dynamics, and apathetic or angst-filled
lyrics. The grunge aesthetic is stripped-down compared to other
forms of rock music, and many grunge musicians were noted for their
unkempt appearances and rejection of theatrics.
The early grunge movement coalesced around Seattle
independent record label Sub Pop in the late 1980s. Grunge became
commercially successful in the first half of the 1990s, due mainly
to the release of
Nirvana's
Nevermind and
Pearl Jam's
Ten. The success of these bands
boosted the popularity of alternative rock and made grunge the most
popular form of hard rock music at the time. However, many grunge
bands were uncomfortable with this popularity. Although most grunge
bands had disbanded or faded from view by the late 1990s, their
influence continues to impact modern rock music.
Origin of the term
The word
grunge is believed to be a
back-formation from the US slang adjective
grungy, which originated in about 1965 as a
slang term for "dirty" or "filthy."
Mark Arm, the vocalist for the Seattle band
Green River—and later
Mudhoney—is generally credited as being the first
to use the term
grunge to describe this sort of music. Arm
first used the term in 1981, when he wrote a letter under his given
name Mark McLaughlin to the Seattle
zine,
Desperate Times, criticizing his band Mr. Epp and the
Calculations as "Pure grunge! Pure noise! Pure shit!" Clark
Humphrey, editor of
Desperate Times, cites this as the
earliest use of the term to refer to a Seattle band, and mentions
that
Bruce Pavitt of Sub Pop
popularized the term as a musical label in 1987–88, using it on
several occasions to describe Green River. Arm said years later,
"Obviously, I didn't make [grunge] up. I got it from someone else.
The term was already being thrown around in Australia in the
mid-'80s to describe bands like
King
Snake Roost,
The Scientists,
Salamander Jim, and
Beasts of
Bourbon." Arm used grunge as a descriptive term rather than a
genre term, but it eventually came to describe the punk/metal
hybrid sound of the Seattle music scene.
Characteristics
Grunge is generally characterized by a sludgy guitar sound that
uses a high level of distortion,
fuzz and
feedback effects. Grunge fuses
elements of hardcore punk and heavy metal, although some bands
performed with more emphasis on one or the other. The music shares
with punk a raw sound and similar lyrical concerns. However, it
also involves much slower
tempos,
dissonant harmonies, and more
complex instrumentation – which is reminiscent of heavy metal. Some
individuals associated with the development of grunge, including
Sub Pop producer
Jack Endino and the
Melvins, explained grunge's incorporation of
heavy rock influences such as
Kiss as
"musical provocation." Grunge artists considered these bands
"cheesy" but nonetheless enjoyed them;
Buzz
Osborne of the Melvins described it as an attempt to see what
ridiculous things bands could do and get away with. In the early
1990s, Nirvana's signature "stop-start" song format became a genre
convention.
Themes
Lyrics are typically
angst-filled, often
addressing themes such as social alienation, apathy, confinement,
and a desire for freedom. A number of factors influenced the focus
on such subject matter. Many grunge musicians displayed a general
disenchantment with the state of society, as well as a discomfort
with social prejudices. Such themes bear similarities to those
addressed by punk rock musicians and the perceptions of
Generation X. Music critic
Simon Reynolds said in 1992 that "there's a
feeling of burnout in the culture at large. Kids are depressed
about the future." However, not all grunge songs dealt with these
issues.
Nirvana's satirical "
In Bloom" is a notable example of more humorous
writing. Several other grunge songs are filled with either a dark
or fun sense of humor—
Mudhoney's "
Touch Me I'm Sick" or
Tad's "Stumblin' Man"—though this often went
unnoticed by the general public at the time. Humor in grunge often
satirized glam metal—for example,
Soundgarden's "Big Dumb Sex"—and other forms of
popular rock music during the 1980s.
Presentation and fashion
Grunge concerts were known for being straightforward, high-energy
performances. Grunge bands rejected the complex and high budget
presentations of many musical genres, including the use of complex
light arrays, pyrotechnics, and other visual effects unrelated to
playing the music. Stage acting was generally avoided. Instead the
bands presented themselves as no different from minor local bands.
Jack Endino said in the 1996 documentary
Hype! that
Seattle bands were inconsistent live performers, since their
primary objective was not to be entertainers, but simply to "rock
out."
Clothing commonly worn by grunge musicians in Washington consisted
of
thrift store items and the typical
outdoor clothing (most notably
flannel
shirts) of the region, as well as a general unkempt appearance. The
style did not evolve out of a conscious attempt to create an
appealing fashion; music journalist
Charles R. Cross said, "Kurt Cobain was just too lazy
to shampoo," and Sub Pop's Jonathan Poneman said, "This [clothing]
is cheap, it's durable, and it's kind of timeless. It also runs
against the grain of the whole flashy aesthetic that existed in the
80's."
History
Roots and influences
Grunge's sound partly results from Seattle's isolation from other
music scenes. As Sub Pop's Jonathan Poneman noted, "Seattle was a
perfect example of a secondary city with an active music scene that
was completely ignored by an American media fixated on Los Angeles
and New York." Mark Arm claimed that the isolation meant, "this one
corner of the map was being really inbred and ripping off each
other's ideas." Grunge evolved from the local punk rock scene, and
was inspired by bands such as
The Fartz,
The U-Men,
10
Minute Warning,
The Accüsed and
the
Fastbacks. Additionally, the slow,
heavy, and sludgy style of the
Melvins was a
significant influence on the grunge sound.
Outside the Pacific Northwest, a number of artists and music scenes
influenced grunge. Alternative rock bands from the Northeastern
United States, including
Sonic Youth,
Pixies, and
Dinosaur
Jr., are important influences on the genre. Through their
patronage of Seattle bands, Sonic Youth "inadvertently nurtured"
the grunge scene, and reinforced the fiercely independent attitudes
of its musicians. The influence of the Pixies on Nirvana was noted
by
Kurt Cobain, who commented in a
Rolling Stone interview that he "connected with the band
so heavily that I should be in that band." Nirvana's use of the
Pixies' "soft verse, hard chorus" popularized this stylistic
approach in both grunge and other alternative rock subgenres.
Aside from the genre's punk and alternative rock roots, many grunge
bands were equally influenced by heavy metal of the early 1970s.
Clinton Heylin, author of
Babylon's Burning: From Punk to
Grunge, cited
Black Sabbath as
"perhaps the most ubiquitous pre-punk influence on the northwest
scene." Black Sabbath played a role in shaping the grunge sound,
through their own records and the records they inspired. The
influence of
Led Zeppelin is also
evident, particularly in the work of Soundgarden, whom
Q
magazine noted were "in thrall to '70s rock, but contemptuous of
the genre's overt sexism and machismo." The Los Angeles hardcore
punk band
Black Flag's 1984 record
My War, where the band combined
heavy metal with their traditional sound, made a strong impact in
Seattle. Mudhoney's
Steve
Turner commented, "A lot of other people around the country
hated the fact that Black Flag slowed down ... but up here it was
really great ... we were like 'Yay!' They were weird and fucked-up
sounding." Turner explained grunge's integration of metal
influences, noting, "Hard rock and metal was never that much of an
enemy of punk like it was for other scenes. Here, it was like,
'There's only twenty people here, you can't really find a group to
hate.'" Bands began to mix metal and punk in the Seattle music
scene around 1984, with much of the credit for this fusion going to
The U-Men.
The raw, distorted and feedback-intensive sound of some
noise rock bands had an influence on grunge.
Among them
are Wisconsin's Killdozer, and most
notably San
Francisco
's Flipper, a band known for its slowed-down and
murky "noise punk." The
Butthole
Surfers' mix of punk, heavy metal and noise rock was a major
influence, particularly on the early work of Soundgarden.
Soundgarden and other early grunge bands were influenced by British
post-punk bands such as
Gang of
Four and
Bauhaus, which were
popular in the early 1980s Seattle scene. After
Neil Young played a few concerts with Pearl Jam
and recorded the album
Mirror Ball with them,
some members of the media gave Young the title "Godfather of
Grunge." This was grounded on his work with his band
Crazy Horse and his regular use of
distorted guitar, most notably on the album
Rust Never Sleeps. A similarly
influential, yet often overlooked, album is
Neurotica by
Redd
Kross, about which the co-founder of Sub Pop said,
"
Neurotica was a life changer for me and for a lot of
people in the Seattle music community."
Early development

A seminal release in the development
of grunge was 1986's
Deep
Six compilation, released by
C/Z
Records (later reissued on A&M). The record featured
multiple tracks by six bands: Green River, Soundgarden, Melvins,
Malfunkshun,
Skin
Yard, and The U-Men. For many of them it was their first
appearance on record. The artists had "a mostly heavy, aggressive
sound that melded the slower tempos of heavy metal with the
intensity of hardcore." As Jack Endino recalled, "People just said,
'Well, what kind of music is this? This isn't metal, it's not punk,
What is it?' [...] People went 'Eureka! These bands all have
something in common.'"
Later that year
Bruce Pavitt released
the
Sub Pop 100 compilation and
Green River's
Dry As a Bone
EP as part of his new label, Sub Pop. An early Sub Pop catalog
described the Green River EP as "ultra-loose GRUNGE that destroyed
the morals of a generation." Sub Pop's Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan
Poneman, inspired by other regional music scenes in music history,
worked to ensure that their label projected a "Seattle sound,"
reinforced by a similar style of production and album packaging.
While music writer
Michael Azerrad
acknowledged that early grunge bands like Mudhoney, Soundgarden,
and Tad had disparate sounds, he noted "to the objective observer,
there were some distinct similarities." Early grunge concerts were
sparsely attended (many by fewer than a dozen people) but Sub Pop
photographer
Charles
Peterson's pictures helped create the impression that such
concerts were major events. Mudhoney, which was formed by former
members of Green River, served as the flagship band of Sub Pop
during their entire time with the label and spearheaded the Seattle
grunge movement. Other record labels in the Pacific Northwest that
helped promote grunge included C/Z Records,
Estrus Records, EMpTy Records and PopLlama
Records.
Grunge attracted media attention in the United Kingdom after Pavitt
and Poneman asked journalist
Everett
True from the British magazine
Melody Maker to write an article on the
local music scene. This exposure helped to make grunge known
outside of the local area during the late 1980s and drew more
people to local shows. The appeal of grunge to the music press was
that it "promised the return to a notion of a regional, authorial
vision for American rock." Grunge's popularity in the
underground music scene was such that
bands began to move to Seattle and approximate the look and sound
of the original grunge bands. Mudhoney's Steve Turner said, "It was
really bad. Pretend bands were popping up here, things weren't
coming from where we were coming from." As a reaction, many grunge
bands diversified their sound, with Nirvana and Tad in particular
creating more melodic songs. Dawn Anderson of the Seattle fanzine
Backlash recalled that by 1990 many locals had tired of the hype
surrounding the Seattle scene and hoped that media exposure had
dissipated.
Mainstream success
Grunge bands had made inroads to the musical mainstream in the late
1980s. Soundgarden was the first grunge band to sign to a major
label when they joined the roster of
A&M Records in 1989. Soundgarden, along
with other major label signings
Alice in
Chains and
Screaming Trees,
performed "okay" with their initial major label releases, according
to Jack Endino.
Nirvana, originally from Aberdeen,
Washington
, was also courted by major labels, finally signing
with Geffen Records in 1990.
In September 1991, the band released its major label debut,
Nevermind. The album was at best
hoped to be a minor success on par with Sonic Youth's
Goo, which Geffen had released a year
previous. It was the release of the album's first single "
Smells Like Teen Spirit" that
"marked the instigation of the grunge music phenomenon". Due to
constant airplay of the song's music video on
MTV,
Nevermind was selling 400,000 copies a
week by Christmas 1991. In January 1992,
Nevermind
replaced
pop superstar
Michael Jackson's
Dangerous at number one on the
Billboard 200.
The success of
Nevermind surprised the music industry.
Nevermind not only popularized grunge, but also
established "the cultural and commercial viability of alternative
rock in general." Michael Azerrad asserted that
Nevermind
symbolized "a sea-change in rock music" in which the
glam metal that had dominated rock music at that
time fell out of favor in the face of music that was authentic and
culturally relevant. Other grunge bands subsequently replicated
Nirvana's success. Pearl Jam, which featured former
Mother Love Bone members
Jeff Ament and
Stone
Gossard, had released its debut album
Ten in August 1991, a month
before
Nevermind, but album sales only picked up a year
later. By the second half of 1992
Ten became a
breakthrough success, being certified gold and reaching number two
on the
Billboard charts. Soundgarden's album
Badmotorfinger and Alice in Chains'
Dirt, along with the
Temple of the Dog album
collaboration featuring members of Pearl Jam and Soundgarden, were
also among the 100 top selling albums of 1992.
The popular
breakthrough of these grunge bands prompted Rolling Stone
to nickname Seattle "the new Liverpool
." Major record labels signed most of the
prominent grunge bands in Seattle, while a second influx of bands
moved to the city in hopes of success.
The popularity of grunge resulted in a large interest in the
Seattle music scene's perceived cultural traits. While the Seattle
music scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s in actuality
consisted of various styles and genres of music, its representation
in the media "served to depict Seattle as a music 'community' in
which the focus was upon the ongoing exploration of one musical
idiom, namely grunge." The fashion industry marketed "grunge
fashion" to consumers, charging premium prices for items such as
knit ski hats. Critics asserted that advertising was co-opting
elements of grunge and turning it into a fad.
Entertainment Weekly commented in
a 1993 article, "There hasn't been this kind of exploitation of a
subculture since the media discovered hippies in the '60s"
The New York Times
compared the "grunging of America" to the mass-marketing of punk
rock,
disco, and
hip
hop in previous years. Ironically the
New York Times
was tricked into printing a fake list of slang terms that were
supposedly used in the grunge scene; often referred to as the
grunge speak hoax. This media hype
surrounding grunge was documented in the 1996 documentary
Hype!.
A backlash against grunge began to develop in Seattle; in 1993
Bruce Pavitt said that in the city, "All things grunge are treated
with the utmost cynicism and amusement [. . .] Because the whole
thing is a fabricated movement and always has been." Many grunge
artists were uncomfortable with their success and the resulting
attention it brought. Nirvana's Kurt Cobain told Michael Azerrad,
"Famous is the last thing I wanted to be." Pearl Jam also felt the
burden of success, with much of the attention falling on frontman
Eddie Vedder. Nirvana's follow-up album
In Utero (1993) was an
intentionally abrasive album that Nirvana bassist
Krist Novoselic described as a "wild
aggressive sound, a true alternative record." Nevertheless, upon
its release in September 1993
In Utero topped the
Billboard charts. Pearl Jam also continued to perform well
commercially with its second album,
Vs. (1993). The album sold a record 950,378
copies in its first week of release, topped the
Billboard
charts, and outperformed all other entries in the top ten that week
combined.
Decline of mainstream popularity
A number of factors contributed to grunge's decline in prominence.
During the latter half of the 1990s, grunge was supplanted by
post-grunge, which remained commercially
viable into the start of the 21st century. Post-grunge bands such
as
Candlebox and
Bush emerged soon after grunge's breakthrough.
These artists lacked the underground roots of grunge and were
largely influenced by what grunge had become, namely "a wildly
popular form of inward-looking, serious-minded hard rock."
Post-grunge was a more commercially viable genre that tempered the
distorted guitars of grunge with polished, radio-ready
production.
Conversely, another alternative rock genre,
Britpop, emerged in part as a reaction against the
dominance of grunge in the United Kingdom. In contrast to the
dourness of grunge, Britpop was defined by "youthful exuberance and
desire for recognition." Britpop artists were vocal about their
disdain for grunge. In a 1993
NME
interview,
Damon Albarn of Britpop band
Blur agreed with interviewer
John Harris' assertion that Blur was an
"anti-grunge band," and said, "Well, that's good. If punk was about
getting rid of hippies, then I'm getting rid of grunge."
Noel Gallagher of
Oasis, while a fan of Nirvana, wrote music that
refuted the pessimistic nature of grunge. Gallagher noted in 2006
that the 1994 Oasis single "
Live
Forever" "was written in the middle of grunge and all that, and
I remember Nirvana had a tune called 'I Hate Myself and I Want to
Die,' and I was like . . . 'Well, I'm not fucking having that.' As
much as I fucking like him [Cobain] and all that shit, I'm not
having that. I can't have people like that coming over here, on
smack, fucking saying that they hate
themselves and they wanna die. That's fucking rubbish."
During the mid-1990s many grunge bands broke up or became less
visible. Kurt Cobain, labeled by
Time as "the
John Lennon of the swinging Northwest," appeared
"unusually tortured by success" and struggled with an addiction to
heroin. Rumors surfaced in early 1994 that Cobain suffered a drug
overdose and that Nirvana was breaking up. On April 8, 1994, Cobain
was found dead in his Seattle home from an apparently
self-inflicted gunshot wound; Nirvana summarily disbanded. That
same year Pearl Jam canceled its summer tour in protest of what it
charged as ticket vendor
Ticketmaster's
unfair business practices. Pearl Jam then began a boycott of the
company; however, Pearl Jam's initiative to play only at
non-Ticketmaster venues effectively, with a few exceptions,
prevented the band from playing shows in the United States for the
next three years. In 1996 Alice in Chains gave their final
performances with their ailing estranged lead singer,
Layne Staley, who subsequently died from a
heroin overdose in 2002. That same year Soundgarden and Screaming
Trees released their final studio albums,
Down on the Upside and
Dust, respectively.
Soundgarden broke up the following year.
Some grunge bands have continued recording and touring with more
limited success, including, most significantly, Pearl Jam. While in
2006
Rolling Stone writer Brian Hiatt described Pearl Jam
as having "spent much of the past decade deliberately tearing apart
their own fame," he noted the band developed a loyal concert
following akin to that of the
Grateful
Dead. Despite Nirvana's demise, the band has continued to be
successful posthumously. Due to the high sales for Kurt Cobain's
Journals and the band's
best-of compilation
Nirvana
upon their releases in 2002,
The New York Times argued
Nirvana "are having more success now than at any point since Mr.
Cobain's suicide in 1994."
Prominent bands
Seattle area
Outside the Seattle area
See also
Notes
- See Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary, 2007,
"grunge" and Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001, "grunge, grungy".
Access date for both references: October 22, 2007.
- Humphrey, Clark. Loser: The Real Seattle Music Story.
New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1999. ISBN 1-929069-24-3, p. 63
- Heylin, Clinton. Babylon's Burning: From Punk to
Grunge. Conongate, 2007. ISBN 1-84195-879-4, p. 606
- Pray, D., Helvey-Pray Productions (1996). Hype! Republic Pictures.
- Marin, Rick. "Grunge: A Success Story." The New York
Times. November 15, 1992.
- Aston, Martin. "Freak Scene." Q: Nirvana and the Story of
Grunge. December 2005. p. 12
- Wall, Mick. "Northwest Passage." Q: Nirvana and the Story
of Grunge. December 2005. p. 9
- Wall, Mick. "Northwest Passage." Q: Nirvana and the Story
of Grunge. December 2005. p. 8
- Everley, Dave. "Daydream Nation." Q: Nirvana and the Story
of Grunge. December 2005. p. 39
- Fricke, David. "Kurt Cobain: The Rolling Stone Interview."
Rolling
Stone. January 27, 1994
- Heylin, p. 601
- Carden, Andrew. "Black Sabbath." Q: Nirvana and the Story
of Grunge. December 2005. p. 34
- Brannigan, Paul. "Outshined." Q: Nirvana and the Story of
Grunge. December 2005. p. 102
- Azerrad, Michael. Our Band Could Be Your Life: Scenes
from the American Indie Underground, 1981-1991. Boston:
Little Brown and Company, 2001. ISBN 0-316-78753-1, p. 419
- Azerrad (2001), p. 418
- Azerrad (2001), p. 439
- Heylin, p. 600
- McNair, James. "Rust Never Sleeps - Neil Young".
Q: Nirvana and the Story of Grunge. December 2005. p.
36
- Azerrad (2001), p. 420
- Azerrad (2001), pp. 436–37
- Azerrad (2001), p. 421–22
- Azerrad (2001), p. 411
- Lyons, James. Selling Seattle: Representing Contemporary
Urban America. Wallflower, 2004. ISBN 1-903354-96-5, pp.
128–29
- Azerrad (2001), p. 449
- Azerrad (2001), p. 450
- Wice, Nathaniel. "How Nirvana Made It." Spin. April
1992.
- Lyons, p. 120
- "The Billboard 200." Billboard. January 11, 1992.
- Azerrad (1994), p. 229-30
- Pearlman, Nina. "Black Days." Guitar World. December 2002.
- Lyons, p. 136
- Azerrad (2001), p. 452–53
- Lyons, p. 122
- Azerrad, Michael. Come as You Are: The Story of
Nirvana. Doubleday, 1994. ISBN 0-385-47199-8, p. 254
- DeRogatis, Jim. Milk It!: Collected Musings on the
Alternative Music Explosion of the 90's. Cambridge: Da Capo,
2003. ISBN 0-306-81271-1, p. 18
- Harris, John. "A shite sports car and a punk reincarnation."
NME. April 10,
1993
- "Lock the Door". Stop the Clocks [bonus DVD].
Columbia, 2006.
- DeRogatis, p. 65
External links