Who is the best 90's artiste

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Who is the best 90's artiste

Post  Admin on Fri Sep 30, 2011 8:16 pm

Tell us who and why?

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Re: Who is the best 90's artiste

Post  Admin on Fri Sep 30, 2011 8:21 pm

I would say shabba ranks because he had more international success than other artistes of that era.

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Re: Who is the best 90's artiste

Post  Tyee17 on Tue Nov 08, 2011 11:25 pm

Admin wrote:Tell us who and why?


hi, what i would say What characterized music in the 90s depends on who you were, and where you lived. The number of cultural tribes that splintered into even more diverse subcultures is too vast to succinctly summarize in a nutshell. To Stefan in Chicago, the 90s meant Madonna, TLC, Spice Girls, and the house and techno he danced to at raves. To Jolene in Nashville, the 90s were all about Shania Twain, Billy Ray Cyrus and Garth Brooks. John in Milwaukee grew up on Motley Crue and Ratt, but was introduced to Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Alice In Chains, Faith No More and Tool, and never looked back. Shelly in Fargo had no use for Nirvana, and preferred Metallica, Guns 'n' Roses, and AC/DC, who she saw with her dad shortly before he left home with a girlfriend barely older than her. Angelina, while at college in Oberlin, liked PJ Harvey, Hole, Babes In Toyland and had her mind blown by a live performance by Diamanda Galas, while her roommate Rachel preferred Alanis Morrisette, The Cranberries and Garbage, and was acutely disturbed by Angelina’s new Diamanda poster, which looked like something out of a horror movie. George sang in a Yale vocal group and listened to Dave Matthews Band, Hootie & The Blowfish and Red Hot Chili Peppers, while his hippie roommate Kyle listened to Primus and Phish, and had his own jamband, Pigpile. Kyle “freaked” when he first heard Radiohead and started introducing covers into his band’s repertoire, to the protest of his bandmates. Thor (not his given name) in Santa Cruz like to blast Butthole Surfers, NoMeansNo and Operation Ivy while he skated, and went to local punk and hardcore shows, while his friend Scratch listened to The Beastie Boys, Ministry and The Prodigy. Jason in Cleveland also listened to Ministry and Nine Inch Nails, but drifted to other industrial acts like KMFDM, Skinny Puppy and Front 242 when he felt they were getting too popular. His first wooed his goth girlfriend Misty, who was into The Mission, Black Tape For A Blue Girl and Dead Can Dance, by making her a mix tape that had turned her onto The Swans and Miranda Sex Garden. Michael in Brooklyn, barely 14, worshipped The Notorious B.I.G., Nas and Jay-Z, and had just started working up the nerve to pick up the mic at some local house parties. Roger was deep in Oakland hip-hop scene, but was hungry for something new. He befriended a German housewife named Mary through an Internet discussion group, who sent him tapes introducing him to Einsturzende Neubauten, Godflesh and Scorn, while he reciprocated with selections by Pharcyde, Blackalicious, and Jurassic 5. To friends and family of twin brothers Troy and Travis in Miami, they both listened to the same music – frighteningly extreme death metal. But the brothers insisted their tastes hardly overlapped. Travis followed homegrown heroes like Morbid Angel, Deicide and Obituary, while Troy argued the superiority of Swedish bands Entombed, Opeth and At The Gates.
If you have any doubt so kinda mention in your post...

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