Tunes Du Jour Presents 1995

If you were paying attention to music in 1995, you probably noticed something a little odd: the word “alternative” had started to mean almost nothing, because it had come to mean almost everything. A year earlier, the death of Kurt Cobain had cast a long shadow over rock music, but rather than stalling out, the genre fractured and expanded in every direction. Weezer were writing nerdy, hook-driven power pop. Foo Fighters were delivering straightforward hard rock. Hole were confrontational and raw. Radiohead were drifting somewhere cerebral and unsettling. Garbage were threading industrial textures through pop songwriting. Veruca Salt and Elastica were sharp and guitar-driven in entirely different ways. What united all of them under one label was more a matter of attitude and distribution than any shared sound. “Alternative” had become a marketing category, and in becoming one, it quietly swallowed whole.

Across the Atlantic, British music was having one of its more confident years. In their home country the year prior, Oasis released “Live Forever” and soon carried themselves like they were already the biggest band in the world — and for a stretch, they weren’t wrong. Blur’s “Country House” was cheeky and sardonic, all music-hall bounce and art-school wink. Pulp’s “Disco 2000” was Jarvis Cocker doing what he did best: writing working-class character studies with a disco pulse underneath. Supergrass and Elastica added urgency and speed. But the British presence in 1995 wasn’t limited to guitar bands — Take That had “Back for Good,” one of the cleaner pop songs of the decade, and it charted everywhere. The UK wasn’t just making noise in rock circles; it was competitive across the board.

The year also belonged, in large part, to women making unambiguous statements. Alanis Morissette’s “You Oughta Know” arrived like something had finally been let out of a locked room — angry, specific, and entirely unconcerned with being likable. PJ Harvey’s “Down by the Water” was quieter but no less unsettling. Björk’s “Army of Me” was a kind of mechanical ultimatum. Des’ree brought warmth and self-possession to “You Gotta Be.” TLC’s “Waterfalls” managed to be simultaneously a pop smash and a genuine cautionary narrative, delivered with enough grace that the message landed without feeling like a lecture. These weren’t novelty moments. They were artists working at full capacity.

Hip-hop and R&B in 1995 were doing something interesting: they were crossing lanes in ways that felt natural rather than forced. Coolio’s “Gangsta’s Paradise” borrowed from Stevie Wonder and landed on a movie soundtrack, but it had weight that outlasted its context. Method Man and Mary J. Blige turned “I’ll Be There for You/You’re All I Need to Get By” into something genuinely tender. Skee-Lo’s “I Wish” was lighter — a little self-deprecating, a little funny — and it stuck anyway.

Meanwhile, Massive Attack’s “Protection” and Portishead’s “Sour Times” were doing something that didn’t fit neatly into any existing box: slow, cinematic, built more from mood than momentum. Trip-hop was the year’s most quietly influential genre, even if most listeners didn’t have a name for it yet.

Some of the year’s most lasting moments came from artists who resisted easy categorization entirely. Nick Cave and Kylie Minogue recorded “Where the Wild Roses Grow” — a murder ballad duet that shouldn’t have worked as well as it did, but did. Jeff Buckley’s “Last Goodbye” was enormous in its emotion without ever tipping into melodrama. McAlmont & Butler made “Yes” feel like a genuine declaration. Pearl Jam’s “Better Man” was a quiet story song buried in an album, yet it became one of their most-loved tracks. In 1995, the mainstream was wide enough to hold all of this at once — the bratty and the mournful, the danceable and the difficult. That’s not always true of a given year in pop music, and it’s worth noticing when it is.

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Queer Music of the 1990s

What makes compiling lists of queer music by decades more challenging as we move forward in time is that the number of songs from which to choose keeps increasing greatly. For today’s playlist, I started with a list of several hundred songs by out LGBTQ+ acts or with LGBTQ+ subject matter, from which I whittled it down to the 30 tunes below. I second guess myself a lot. Should three of the first four songs be by straight-identifying acts? Should I include a lightweight novelty number over something by Maria McKee? (I decided yes, though I love Maria.) I didn’t necessarily choose my favorites. Instead I went for songs/acts that were on some level trailblazers. Here they be:

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Your (Almost) Daily Playlist (5-2-20)

Here in California, our governor has ordered all beaches to remain closed to curtail the spread of the coronavirus. Orange County Supervisor Don Wagner disagrees, arguing that going to a beach is good for one’s health. Said Wagner “Medical professionals tell us the importance of fresh air and sunlight in fighting infectious diseases.” Mr. Wagner believes that air and sunlight cannot be found anywhere in Orange County except on crowded beaches. He seems smart.

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters said Joe Biden “has no appeal to anybody.” Interesting. Biden has no appeal to anybody, and yet he received more votes than all of the other candidates vying to be the Democratic nominee for president of the United States. Someone needs some education. Perhaps Waters should run for office. I suggest Orange County Supervisor.

Today’s playlist is inspired by the May 2 birthdays of Lily Allen, Foreigner’s Lou Gramm, Lesley Gore, Hot Hot Heat’s Steve Bays, The Vaccines’ Justin Hayward-Young, Shannon, Kevin Morby, Little Sister’s Vet Stewart, Engelbert Humperdinck, Link Wray, David McAlmont, Blow Monkeys’ Dr. Robert, and Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart.