An umbrella term used to describe a style of music that
emerged in the late 80's and early 90's. Alternative Rock is usually
characterized by bands who have a non-conformist attitude; hence
"alternative".
It originated with the jangle pop guitar sounds of R.E.M.
and the loud/soft dynamic of the Pixies and gained popularity when Nirvana
brought it into the mainstream with their album Nevermind. Ironically, it
became probably the most popular music of the time period, which was a paradox
of sorts in itself -- although purposely anti-mainstream and "against the
norm", it became commonplace for people to conform to non-conformity.
Today, the term is often thrown around by people who don't
really understand what it means and think that it can be applied to any band of
their choosing. This is not true -- for a band to be truly Alternative, they
have to follow the Alternative mindset; that is, they must either perform in a
style of Alternative Rock already established like Grunge, Brit-pop or be
avant-grade and completely throw what it considered usual or average out the
window.
The name is often wrongly associated with "Modern
Rock". This is wrong because whereas Alternative Rock is a genre and
follows a specific style, Modern Rock is a radio format and simply refers
recent bands.
Note: discrepancies
with categorizing bands as "Alternative Rock" come from the fact that
most Alternative bands fit easily into an Alternative Rock sub-genre (Nirvana -
Grunge, Modest Mouse - Indie) and can be classified as either the subgenre or
"Alternative Rock" in general; if a band covers more than one
style instead of sticking to one in particular, they are usually just called
"Alternative Rock".
It was ironic that Alternative Rock became as popular as it
did, considering its entire purpose was to be the opposite of what everyone
wanted to hear.
No comments:
Post a Comment