The 90s are often looked upon as the peak of alternative rock. It was played all the time on channels such as MTV, bands like the Smashing Pumpkins and Nirvana sold millions of records, and, above all, it produced a lot of great music. Around 1997, and continuing through about 2001, these bands gradually broke up. For instance, Nirvana, of course, broke up in 1994 following Kurt Cobain's death, and the Pumpkins broke up in 2000.
The 90s were dead; the music was looked back upon with nostalgia, but there was excitement about what the new millenium would bring.
The hard-rocking free world was not ready for what would come. Rap and hip-hop dominated, with rock relegated to almost a novelty act on popular music radio and TV. A few leftover bands stayed successful, but there was not much to be happy about.
To remedy this, many 90s bands reunited (or, in a few cases, redid their image and/or sound), thinking the rock world would like nothing better. After the initial excitement, though, it was realized that this was clearly a bad idea. The Smashing Pumpkins announced they were reuniting. . .without guitarist James Iha. Oasis, who was really only a Beatles cover band in the first place, has never had a permanent lineup besides Liam and Noel Gallagher, but they seemed to lose their touch for writing great songs, 90s-style, such as "Wonderwall" or "Don't Look Back in Anger." Weezer, a power-pop powerhouse in the mid-90s, disappeared from 1996 through 2000. They appeared on the Warped Tour in 2000, and were given a great response. So frontman Rivers Cuomo, author of such catchy hits "Buddy Holly" and "Undone-The Sweater Song," as well as 8-minute epic "Only in Dreams" and the low-down punk of
Pinkerton, sat down to write a new album. He only ended up coming up with one new song, but managed to divide it into ten parts and made it into the bland
Weezer (The Green Album). He branched out into metal with 2002's
Maladroit, with less-than-great results. Finally, in 2005, Weezer released
Make Believe, the biggest proof that bands from the 90s should stay in the 90s. Bad melodies, terrible lyrics, the album showed that the generation has grown into plain old 35-to-40-year-old men, and just doesn't have that magic for composing anymore. Rock, by which I mean
good rock (more on that in my next entry), looks to be relegated to the internet and to fans who search for it for awhile.