nullnaught says:
It's not the 1990's and i like a lot nirvana's stuff. So that statement confuses me. And me not thinking thier great is just my opinion. That's all.
aha, see you said "i like a lot of nirvana's stuff". as opposed to saying "nirvana is the greatest thing ever to happen to music". i'm just going to go out on a limb and say you aren't a member of gen-x. i barely qualify as gen-x (just a year or two too young), so i wasn't as pop-culture developed in 1990 when "smells like teen spirit" came out. but for people who were... it's a different thing to them.
and back to the who... i like the who. i enjoy the who. but at the same time i know that i will never be able to enjoy them on the same level as my father. and he will never be able to enjoy them on the same level as those who lived through the mods and rockers gang fights in england back when the who was just getting popular and accidentally inciting street violence. music is as much about a time and place as anything else; after all, doesn't music evoke emotion? one of the best concert's i've seen is steve ewing and adam hansbrough (lead singer and lead guitarist of the urge, respectively) doing a live set at this bar called tin can in st louis.
now the urge isn't the greatest '90s band. i think they are damn good, but they're not the best. they were nationally known, but their popularity in their home town was the biggest. but one thing about the urge is that every single st louisian aged 25-40 knows every single urge song by heart. so here i am in this shanty of a bar (an old house converted into a bar that sells beer by the cans) with steve ewing doing an acoustic set of all of their famous urge songs, and everyone in the bar is singing along. every single person.
you just had to be there, man. NOW i'm not saying that you are wrong for not liking the smashing pumpkins as much as i do. i'm aware that they aren't the best band, and not everyone likes them. but i'm just explaining why to some people the smashing pumpkins will always be one of the best bands, ever. and you just had to have lived through the alt. rock explosion of the '90s to really appreciate it.
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as maligned as ava adore and other later albums were, i actually didn't dislike zeitgeist as much as i thought i would. i was surprised, actually, at how much i didn't dislike it. i'm not saying it's good, i'm just saying it could have been waaaaay worse.