This Is the Sound: The Best of Alternative Rock
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Randi Reisfeld
Randi Reisfeld and H. B. Gilmour, co-authors of T*Witches series, Oh Baby!, and Making Waves, began working on What the Dog Said several months before the untimely passing of H. B. In her honor, Randi proudly completes this novel about coping with loss and the angels who move us forward without letting us forget.
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This Is the Sound - Randi Reisfeld
First Aladdin Paperbacks edition May 1996
Copyright © 1996 by Randi Reisfeld
Aladdin Paperbacks
An imprint of Simon & Schuster
Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form
The text of this book is set in 11-point Typewriter.
Printed and bound in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Reisfeld, Randi.
This is the sound : the best of alternative rock / by Randi Reisfeld.
p. cm.
Includes discographies.
Summary: Identifies today’s top alternative bands, observes what they’re saying, and points out how they’re affecting the present generation.
ISBN 0-689-80670-1
ISBN-13: 978-0-689-80670-4
eISBN-13: 978-1-439-12163-4
1. Rock groups—Juvenile literature. 2. Rock music—History and criticism—Juvenile literature.
[1. Rock groups. 2. Musicians. 3. Rock music—History and criticism.] I. Title.
ML3929.R45 1996
781.66—dc20 95-43927
CONTENTS
Introduction
BELLY: The Well-Crafted—and Crafty—Verse of Alternative
the cranberries: The Sweet-Tart of Alternative
Green Day: The Pop-Punk of Alternative
Juliana Hatfield. The Angst of Alternative
Hole: The Pissed-Off Sound of Alternative
Live: The Spiritual Voice of Alternative
Nine Inch Nails: The Perverse of Alternative
Pearl Jam. The Rebellion of Alternative
Smashing Pumpkins. The Psychedelia of Alternative
The Future of Alternative
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The author gratefully thanks …
For tireless research, legwork, and facilitating: Janet Macoska
For sharing information and sources: Michael P. Shea, Alternative Press magazine; Marina Zogdi, Metal Edge magazine
For information, insights, and vital points of view: Scott Reisfeld, Stefanie Reisfeld, Lee Meyer, Lisa Alpern, Mindy Sonshine, Danny Mucciolo
For the idea: Julia Sibert, Aladdin Paperbacks
For support, understanding, love, and dinner: Marvin and Peabo
PHOTO CREDITS
Photographs by Chris Toliver pages 3, 6, 10, 14, 48, 50, 51, 53, 54, 55, 56, 65, 66, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 74, 76, 78, 81, 84, 88, 91, 98, 99, 100, 103, 131, 132, 134, 138, 141, 142.
Photographs by Marko Shark pages 11, 13, 22, 28, 29, 52, 53, 54, 55, 58, 60.
Photographs by Michelle Taylor pages 9 and 62.
Photographs by George DeSota pages 21 and 26.
Photographs by Frank Busaca pages 83, 87, 106, 122, 126.
Photographs by Eddie Malluk pages 37, 38, 39, 40, 42, 43, 45, 110, 113, 114, 115, 117, 118, 119, 123, 125.
Photograph page 12 © 1994 Sire Records Company/Steven DiRado.
Photograph page 18 © 1994 Island Records/Andy Earl.
Photograph page 34 © 1994 Reprise Records/Michael Muller.
Photograph page 95 © 1994 Nothing/TVT/Interscope Records, Inc./Joseph Cultice.
Photographs pages 128 and 136 © 1993 Virgin Records/Lisa Johnson.
INTRODUCTION
Devout fans of alternative music rebuke the label. They’re against pigeonholing and aghast that music journalists, who should know better, continue to do so. There’s too much variety and too much substance within those musical and lyrical folds. Still, the music had to be called something, and in its infancy, it was an alternative to the mainstream of music that filled the airwaves and the glossy images on the MTV screen. For the growing generation that embraces it, alternative is music that invigorates, cuts close to the bone, stimulates the brain and the body, warms the soul, and touches the heart.
Alternative music is honest, and an honest reaction to the mindless, media-over-message music from such stars
as Madonna and Bon Jovi. Instead, alternative music addresses the alienation and reflects the concerns, experiences, and fears of a new generation, playing an emotional sound track to their lives. It isn’t, after all, a hap-hap-happy world out there: Alternative music reflects that reality. There are few silly love songs found in alt catalogues; instead, they dive into much deeper emotional waters, expressing powerful feelings of despair, lust, and confusion. In doing so, alternative music provides refuge, solace, and inspiration. It’s music with a message and it’s being heard and made all over the world.
The music that speaks to the vast population of echo-boomers (children of the ’60s baby boomers) has roots that grew from two directions. From the east spawned the dreamy, poetic, insightful R.E.M., led by Michael Stipe; while Seattle spewed forth the punky, angry, angst-ridden Nirvana, whose leader, the late Kurt Cobain, became alternative’s first icon. Both seminal groups had powerful, poetic messages, both began on small, independent homegrown labels at a time when the majors had all but closed their doors—and ears—to anything new and different. The success of both groups kicked open the door for the stampede of new voices that followed.
Who listens to alternative? While fans are everywhere, they do share certain characteristics. More often than not, they’re educated, introspective, sensitive. Alternative is music for today’s thinking teenagers, collegiates, and those who may be older, but can still be touched by the turn of a lyric or moved by the crash of a guitar.
The purveyors of alternative music are becoming what they are: rock heroes and, for the first time in musical history, heroines. For there are just as many women rocking just as hard as the guys—and those who front many of these bands are on the forefront creatively; they’re neither puppets nor window dressing, but the force behind the scenes and out front, too.
Who today’s top alternative bands are, what they’re saying, and how they’re affecting this generation is what’s in the pages of this book. This is the sound of today’s music. A growing legion of talented musicians are making it: These are the bands who make it best.
Belly: THE WELL-CRAFTED—AND CRAFTY VERSE OF ALTERNATIVE
AWARDS & REWARDS
Grammy nominations: 1993 Best New Artist: 1994 Best Alternative Album
Star sold upwards of 800,000 copies in the U.S., achieving Gold Record status; it reigned as the number one album on the college charts.
Feed the Tree,
Star’s stellar single, went to number 1.
Belly
ABOUT THEIR NAME
Belly was christened so by its leader, Tanya Donelly, simply because it’s one of her favorite words. And because it’s pretty and ugly at the same time.
That contradiction has been a metaphor for everything Belly ever since.
PRELUDE
They didn’t set out to, but Boston-based Belly helped drop-kick alternative music squarely into the mainstream. At a time when few outside the college radio scene had heard of Tanya Donelly or Belly, the ‘hooky/haunting Feed the Tree
fed the airwaves and settled in the musical consciousness of the sing-along world. Didn’t matter that the words weren’t readily transparent—was Take your hat off, boy, when you’re talkin’ to me
a retro feminist manifesto? Listeners were drawn into the song by the swirling rhythms, delivered in the lead singer’s charged, yet baby-doll, voice, and the insistent beat. They stuck around to hear more.
More arrived in the form of Belly’s no-less-oblique follow-up, Gepetto
—metaphorically about Pinocchio’s master—which proved that the group was no one-hit wonder. Belly was bulging with promise. Star, the CD that had spawned those singles, soared to the top of the college record charts and stayed for an amazing nine weeks. By the end of 1993, Belly was firmly implanted as the cool new group of the ’90s.
Of course, being cool
had never been a priority of Belly’s. Nor was new
really part of the equation: The seeds of Belly had been planted long ago.
HERSTORY
Tanya Donelly is the high priestess—and beast-ess,
if you will—of this Belly. Without negating the crucial contributions of band mates Chris, Tom, and Gail, it is Tanya’s poetically charged lyrics that have shaped the band; and her (yes) pop-friendly music that drives it still. Belly’s story is Tanya’s.
If biology is destiny, Tanya’s might have been predicted by the time, place, and parentage into which she was born. The 1960s were in full kaleidoscopic throttle. It was a time of sharp societal divisions. There were those who fought hard to maintain the status quo, and those who fought just as hard against it. Tanya’s folks were part of the free-flowing, free-loving rebellious scene; hippies who traveled among an irreverent crowd.
Tanya’s earliest memories come from her first four years spent on the road with her parents. Unencumbered by structure or convention, her imagination ran vividly wild. I remember little snatches of that trip,
she says now. I remember lilies of the valley in Arizona. I also had a lot of weird thoughts; I imagined I saw animals that couldn’t have been there. At night we’d sleep outside sometimes, and my brother and I would sit there and make things up. ‘There’s a tiger outside the tent! There are gorillas standing on the fire escape! There are giraffes out in the hallway.’
When she was four, her parents settled—in a fashion—in the trippy town of Newport, Rhode Island, an artists colony alive with creativity and all manner of music.
As a tiny tyke, Tanya was dressed for the part. I looked like a little hippie with fringes and moccasins and ponchos and flowers in my hair,
she recalls.
That may have been cool at home, but it was a no-go at school. When she got there, Tanya, who’d spent her life thus far among adults, was suddenly thrust among so many kids. I was totally stressed out by it. I just wanted to be invisible,
she remembers. It didn’t help that she was immediately ostracized by her kiddie classmates for dressing different; being different. She reacted not by changing her style, but by vomiting. Her teachers reacted by sending Tanya to the back of the room. It was fine by me,
Tanya shrugs. I wanted to be back there.
In spite of her problems at school, Tanya has rich memories of growing up. I don’t feel wounded by my childhood. I grew up loved and secure. I feel lucky to have been raised in an environment that allowed me the freedom to figure out what I wanted to do. My parents always listened, and left me alone to make my own decisions.
Among the defining moments of Tanya’s childhood was meeting kindred spirit Kristin Hersh. The girls immediately entered into the time-honored contract of best-friendship.
If Kristin was the more outgoing one, the natural leader, she was also the more eccentric. The tinier and more earthbound Tanya hung back a bit. Still, they shared everything, including—a few years later, when Tanya’s dad married Kristin’s mom—parents and a bedroom.
As they got older, the now official stepsisters got more involved in music. They were influenced by some of the hard-edged ’70s groups like the Pretenders and the Velvet Underground. Their common obsession, however, was the Beatles. They were why I wanted a guitar,
Tanya has said. Indeed, the girls didn’t so much want to meet the band as be the band. So, they formed one. They were only acting naturally. As Tanya puts it, Where we lived, everybody played an instrument. When I was a kid, you couldn’t swing a dead cat without hitting a band.
Signing up for music lessons wasn’t on the agenda; girls doing it for themselveswas. With Beatles songbooks on their knees, Tanya and Kristin set out to teach themselves guitar and songwriting. We started playing together and we did it from a real personal perspective,
Tanya has explained. We didn’t know how to play, because we didn’t listen to anybody else. So we kind of learned together. We thought the point was to be as interesting as possible and not to follow strict rules.
That, of course, has made all the difference.
THROWING MUSES
The band they formed in 1981 was Throwing Muses. The girls were fifteen. Whether either Tanya or Kristin had the foresight to know it, Throwing Muses would far outlast their own teen years. Kristin was the undisputed star—the lead singer and most prolific songwriter. That was okay by Tanya, who wasn’t emotionally, physically, or mentally ready to take charge. Being the guitar player was enough to fulfill her.
Armed with some original, edgy—though often imperceptible—songs, Throwing Muses began by touring local clubs around the northeast. True, their earliest gigs were often populated by parents and friends, but slowly their reputation