Every Billboard Modern Rock/Alternative #1 Single (Part 2: The 1990s)

Discussion in 'Music Corner' started by Parachute Woman, Feb 6, 2019.

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  1. Cheevyjames

    Cheevyjames Forum Resident

    Location:
    Graham, NC
    Blind Melon - No Rain

    I always liked the guitar playing on here. The music has good vibe - happy, groovy. My problem was always Hoon's voice; it still grates on me. It's always been the barrier to the band's music for me. I'm half and half for this one. It's cool to see the 90's jam band culture get some rep on this chart.

    Nirvana - Heart Shaped Box

    I appreciate the growth from the Nevermind songs to the ones on In Utero. This song still had the "quiet verse/loud chorus" aspect like Teen Spirit, but it's step up compositionally. That said, it's a lot darker and isn't remotely as fun as Teen Spirit was. Even the "grunge" on this song was turned up to 11. The guitars on the chorus sound really ugly. Sounds more like an honest representation of Nirvana than the slick Nevermind. I like this song and I certainly appreciate the more honest and pissed off approach.

    Cannonball by the Breeders didn't hit #1? Judging by how often I heard that song on the radio and MTV, that's a major shock. Same for Cracker's Low. Pearl Jam's Go - damn good song and Vs. is my favorite PJ album. I still put Indifference on repeat quite often.
     
  2. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    The final #1 of the year:
    89. "Into Your Arms" - The Lemonheads

    #1 for 9 weeks tying U2's record at the time for most weeks #1 on this chart.

    [​IMG]

    "Into Your Arms" is a song by Australian duo Love Positions covered by alternative rock band The Lemonheads. The song is included on the 1993 album Come on Feel the Lemonheads. It reached number one on Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart in November 1993. It remained at number one for nine weeks, a record at the time that they shared with U2; the record was later broken by Oasis, Marcy Playground, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Foo Fighters. The song reached number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100, the Lemonheads' only appearance on this chart. The song also charted in Australia, Canada, and the UK; in the latter country, it was a top 20 hit.

    Top 10 for the week November 6, 1993.

    1. “Into Your Arms” – The Lemonheads
    2. “Heart-Shaped Box” – Nirvana
    3. “Low” – Cracker
    4. “Cannonball” – The Breeders
    5. “Lemon” – U2
    6. “Linger” – The Cranberries
    7. “The Gift” – INXS
    8. “Sodajerk” – Buffalo Tom
    9. “Slackjawed” – The Connells
    10. “Laid” - James

    "Into Your Arms" was written by Robyn St. Clare. She made the first recording in 1989 as part of Love Positions with Nic Dalton.
     
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  3. bvb1123

    bvb1123 Rock and Roll Martian

    Location:
    Cincinnati Ohio
    "Into Your Arms" is not only my favorite song by The Lemonheads but one of my top 10 of that era. I just love everything about the song. So imminently catchy.
    Of the ones I haven't mentioned I think "Linger" is a very good song. Overplayed at the time but nowadays I enjoy hearing it occasionally.
    And "Laid" is another awesome song from the era. Probably in my top 20 of early 90s alternative songs.
     
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  4. BZync

    BZync Senior Member

    Location:
    Los Angeles
    Heart Shaped Box - In Utero wasn't quite as "poppy" overall as Nevermind. Its strange to refer to Nirvana as pop music, but Cobain wrote tightly structured, catchy songs - pop songs. It was really the arrangement and attitude that made them punk or grunge. Even so, In Utero had its share of very well written, hooky songs. Heart Shaped Box has got a beautiful melody. While the chorus is super catchy, the verse is wonderfully melodic. On a personal note - in January of 1994 Southern California suffered a fairly substantial earthquake. I was living within three miles of every declared "epicenter" (it changed repeatedly). In the immediate aftermath, my wife and I took to singing "Hey! Wait! We had a big earthquake!". So this song has an odd association for me.

    Cannonball
    - This song has aged beautifully. A tight, punk pop song, well performed. Still happy when it comes up on shuffle. In a general sense, I feel like the female artists from the 90's sound better to me now than the male artists.

    Lemon / Numb
    - Lemon is okay but nothing particularly special. Numb, on the other hand, is a very cool recording. It has a slightly sinister vibe. Its very unique. Well done.

    Everything In The World - Some Fantastic Place is a wonderful and tragically overlooked album. Everything In The World is a good, poppy single. I've never heard it on the radio and was surprised when it showed up on this list.

    Into Your Arms - this is another song that has aged well, mostly because it doesn't sound typical of what I think of the 90s. Its got a classic feel to it.

    Linger - I remember being very impressed by the singles from this album. Linger is one of the best songs of 1993. Classic hit single.

    Laid - James was a great band. Say something, How Was It For you & Laid were a fantastic pop trifecta.
     
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  5. Retro Hound

    Retro Hound Forum Resident

    Location:
    Pittsburg, KS
    “Into Your Arms” – The Lemonheads seems OK, but not worth 9 weeks at #1. I don't really even remember the song. bvb1123 finds it in his top 10 of the era, so perhaps I just need to listen to it more.

    “The Gift” – INXS - Didn't like it much at first, but then I started doing other stuff while it played and I got into the groove, but it doesn't need to be a 5+ minute song. Don't really remember this one either.

    “Slackjawed” – The Connells - I do remember this one.

    I'm kind of amazed at what I remember and what I don't. I think if it wasn't on the rock stations I probably didn't hear it at this point. I got married and we've never had cable or satellite TV so we didn't have MTV. Living in a small Midwestern town, even though there was a mid-sized university there, I think I missed out on a lot of what was popular around the country. Plus, as I said, I just got married and had other things on my mind.
     
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  6. Planbee

    Planbee Negative Nellie

    Location:
    Chicago
    The INXS song clocks in at only 4:04. Maybe the video adds extra time. Good tune. You can make a darn good CD-R (yeah, I know, the early 2000s called--haha) from all their hits/radio tracks starting with "The One Thing" and "Don't Change" wrapping up with "Elegantly Wasted."

     
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  7. Cheevyjames

    Cheevyjames Forum Resident

    Location:
    Graham, NC
    The Lemonheads - Into Your Arms

    9 weeks? It's an enjoyable song, nice and happy, but there's not a lot of substance to it. There are other Lemonheads songs I enjoy more (esp. Rudderless from the previous album) so it's strange to me how this really caught the attention of everyone back in late 1993. I don't remember it at all, but that says more about me and what I was (or wasn't) listening to during my senior year of high school. It's a fine song, nothing earth-shattering.
     
  8. robcar

    robcar Forum Resident

    Location:
    Denver, CO
    "Into Your Arms" is a great song. I had no idea it was a cover until much later. Probably the last thing I really liked by The Lemonheads.

    "Heart-Shaped Box" is a classic, of course.

    I was always surprised that "Low" became Cracker's biggest hit. To my ears, they had several other songs that were catchier and seemed more likely to grab the attention of the mass public. I like "Low", but I don't consider it even close to being one of Cracker's definitive songs.

    I absolutely adore "Lemon" and would place it among my Top 5 U2 songs. I think it's simply brilliant.

    "Sodajerk" is a great, great song, with the pulsating drums and the twin acoustic and electric guitars creating that ringing, chiming sound. Just ear candy for me.

    I also liked "Slackjawed" and went out and bought The Connells' Ring album because of it. A very solid album with a handful of brilliant tracks; too bad the band never did anything else as good afterward.

    James' "Laid" is the second Britpop tune to invade the Top 10 of this chart. I'm guessing it remains their best-known song in the U.S., although I like a lot of their other material more.
     
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  9. Retro Hound

    Retro Hound Forum Resident

    Location:
    Pittsburg, KS
    Here's the one I pulled up, it clocks in at 5:11
     
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  10. John54

    John54 Senior Member

    Location:
    Burlington, ON
    They did plenty as good before that however!
     
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  11. Fortysomething

    Fortysomething Forum Resident

    Location:
    Californ-i-a
    This may have been covered elsewhere but the results of this chart sometimes struck me as a bit odd. Not saying that in a bad way, but more I guess that I was used to most Billboard charts being driven by sales and then some airplay.

    This must have been more airplay, since not all of these would have even had official singles, necessarily? I think.

    I think that kind of thing can make a situation like the Lemonheads' song being at the top for 2.5 months a bit more common...?
     
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  12. robcar

    robcar Forum Resident

    Location:
    Denver, CO
    I think this was addressed early in the thread, perhaps in the first post. I don’t think this chart factors in sales at all; it’s all airplay by certain types of US radio stations.
     
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  13. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    Yes the chart is strictly airplay. I didn't hear The Lemonheads' song much after 1994 though. So I guess this is ranking day if you want to rank the #1's of the year starting with Peter Gabriel's "Steam". I don't have time now so I'll be back tonight to post the last #1's I didn't do and some of the other tracks you all talked about.

    I wanted to thank all of you great posters for coming back and keeping this thread going and I really hope you stick around for more. If you don't like something speak up, don't be shy, and think you shouldn't write anything. We're here to learn how this chart grew and how the scene ebbed and flowed so if you think a song is weak, that's no problem.
     
  14. Lance LaSalle

    Lance LaSalle Prince of Swollen Sinus

    No Rain -- I always liked this song, particularly the guitar solo. It got overplayed, and it sounded like an instant one-hit wonder -- the Spin Doctors of this year. Not really alternative to me, more like retro seventies with a dash of Grateful Dead, but a good pop song.

    Sister--loved it then. It's OK now. Very simple song that somehow works. Love the line about the Violent Femmes and the Del Fuegos.

    Heart Shaped Box -- of course, an iconic classic: not as instantly stunning as some of the Nevermind stuff, but repeated listens reveal it's depth. Really like it, , every part of it.

    Cannonball -- hook central. Hook after Hook. Hooksville. Can't believe this didn't hit number one! It should have done!

    Go -PJ. A lot of power and drive, but kind of tuneless. Not my thing.

    INto Your Arms --This is more my thing, and I like this song, but it's ordinary: like Sister. I remember it getting a lot of airplay at the time, but didn't realize that it was number 1.

    Linger -- gorgeous pop song. Fun to sing along to. WAs all over the radio.

    Slackjawed -- forgive me but I never liked this one.

    Laid -- This song was huge and I knew a lot of people who liked this. I liked the sound a lot, but the song irritated me. Again, forgive me: it's me, not James.
     
  15. scratchtasia

    scratchtasia Forum Resident

    Location:
    Kansas City, MO
    It's kind of a shock that "Into Your Arms" by the Lemonheads spent nine weeks at number one, but it's a great, jangly pop song that I really love. Perhaps its long run at the top owes something to MTV and Evan Dando's then-burgeoning status as a teen-crush object. Regardless, it's one of my favorite Lemonheads songs.

    I also loved the ultra-catchy "Slackjawed" by the Connells and remember hearing it a lot on the college station where I went to grad school. I bought the album and liked it (especially this song and "'74-'75"), but nothing else I've heard by them has really grabbed me--not that I've really dug deep.

    I didn't remember "The Gift" by INXS, and even after listening to it, it's only vaguely familiar. It sounds like their attempt to get into the darker, grungier sounds of the time. I don't especially care for it, but it's not awful.

    I never cared for the Cranberries, but I'll take "Linger" over most of their songs.
     
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  16. Cheevyjames

    Cheevyjames Forum Resident

    Location:
    Graham, NC
    1993 Thoughts

    At the time it seemed like this was when "alternative culture" really came to be mainstream. These bands were all over the radio and MTV and I remember seeing the bands' T-shirts all around my high school. Hell, I remember my high school had an "alternative dance" that would've been unthinkable just a couple years before. Finally, the freaks and weirdos who had always been scoffed at or often ignored had something they could be proud of. Weird was mainstream. By this time the word "alternative" didn't really apply any more. True, the Hot 100 chart didn't reflect this in its #1's (mostly light R&B), but Alternative music was everywhere in this time period. It was fun to be outside of it and seeing it unfold and then take over.

    My favorite #1 of the year is probably Depeche Mode's Walking in My Shoes, but Juliana Hatfield's My Sister is right on its heels. The only #1 from this year I didn't like was Jesus Jones' The Devil You Know.

    The song I'd pick as a "should've been a #1" is Radiohead's Creep. It perfectly defined the time.
     
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  17. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    87. Blind Melon – No Rain
    Another classic summer song that I have many memories of. The famous bee-girl video became imitated everywhere and the sound is heavenly. Top notch melody, stellar vocal where Shannon Hoon with a slight manipulation so it’s got a psychedelic tinge. The video of Blind Melon out in the field is memorable and I’ve heard this song a couple of hundred times and it’s one of my faves of the 1990’s.

    Bjork – Human Behaviour
    Fine track dipped in electronica and keeping a dark bass n’ drums groove most of the way. Bjork is great as usual vocally. She really stood out even in the alternative scene.

    New Order – World (The Price of Love)
    Pretty good from New Order, a little more aggressive on this single than the better “Regret” but this one’s alright. In a way, it sounds like a few of the electronic alt pop stuff from alternative charts recently.

    Smashing Pumpkins – Cherub Rock
    Excellent aggression and everything’s strong from the hooks on verses and choruses, Corgan’s “who wants that honey/as long as there’s money” memorable line, the great drumming of Jimmy Chamberlain, Corgan’s overall performance including the brief but fine guitar solo and the overall production. One of their best.

    The Breeders – Cannonball
    Though I'm a casual fan, I think they have some quirky cool ideas but they don’t always come together. Here, this is just a nice gathering of unique sonic bits from the intro that sounds nothing like the song to the wobbly guitar lines, Kim’s light singing and heavily filtered singing, the bass/guitar main riff, -all comes together in a nice package.
     
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  18. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    The Ocean Blue – Sublime
    “Sublime” is just alright but nothing too stellar and nothing too new. It’s a bit older sounding for this chart.

    Pearl Jam – Crazy Mary
    Just never really heard this song on radio as so many other PJ songs were being played. Took til the late 90s for me to check it out and I then didn’t know it was a Victoria Williams cover for a long time. Was there an edit cause this one goes almost 6 minutes – still rare for a single. Great refrain, excellent chill but bittersweet mood. I’m big on Pearl Jam so to me, everything they were touching now was hot.

    Catherine Wheel – Crank
    Excellent guitar tone to this band but they do use it a whole lot. Still, this is my favorite song by them – I have a couple of their albums and it’s because I appreciate that particular sound. There’s a drama to this one both vocally and musically that is awesome.

    Cracker – Low
    Always was into this great rocker, but never checked out the group at the time. My friend’s father had it as his own alternative album he owned but it took years for me to check a whole album out from them. That friend of mine introduced me to them and Camper Van Beethoven. Great guitar curls for the rhythm during the cool casual parts and the upbeat chorus is perfect for the 90’s teenager. Of course another big hit from them was “Teen Angst” so maybe they were catering some. There were similar songs in Camper Van Beethoven.

    88. Nirvana – Heart Shaped Box
    Right up my alley and stellar as usual – it had to be as the lead single of the followup to Nevermind. The usual soft/hard dynamics with every part hooky as heck and Cobain in full throttle vocally. He carries a ton of the emotion in his voice and the lyrics are top notch. Some of the best in the land. More ferocious power from the playing.

    The Cranberries – Linger
    I loved “Dreams” which charted earlier in the year and this one was the first one I heard as somehow I missed “Dreams”. “Linger” starts out acoustically before building and I like arrangements such as this. Dolores O’Riordan’s (RIP) singing here keeps close to the song never getting to wild with her vocals like she would do more of in later albums. She’s makes the song like usual with that unusual Irish accented vocal and it’s a great melody though the lyrics are your basic love song.

    89. “Into Your Arms”
    Well it’s solid light alt. rock -some of which would later be tossed into the post-grunge category but this is a good example of light alt rock in the early 90’s. It’s not really a huge blockbuster song, just your basic stuff. The melody is above average but the performance is unnuanced. I always mildly liked it.
     
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  19. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    Ranking of 1993 #1’s

    1. No Rain – Blind Melon (A)
    2. Heart-Shaped Box – Nirvana (A)
    3. Pets – Porno For Pyros (A-)
    4. Soul to Squeeze – Red Hot Chili Peppers (A-)
    5. Regret – New Order (B+)
    6. Feed the Tree – Belly (B+)
    7. Break It Down Again – Tears For Fears (B)
    8. Into Your Arms – The Lemonheads (B-)
    9. My Sister – The Juliana Hatfield 3 (B-)
    10. Not Sleeping Around – Ned’s Atomic Dustbin (B-)
    11. I Feel You – Depeche Mode (B-)
    12. Walking In My Shoes – Depeche Mode (B-)
    13. The Devil You Know – Jesus Jones (C+)
    14. Steam – Peter Gabriel (C)

    1993 definitely was the turning point for this chart to move on from the originators of alternative in the 1980's and into some more rock and less dance alt pop. A lot of electronica leaves and guitars begin to reign. While Nirvana didn't have massive impact on this chart they did on the mainstream rock chart. But the guitars do represent the overall impact of Nirvana on all music so this chart had to get updated eventually.
     
    Last edited: May 11, 2019
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  20. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    1994
    Top 10 for the week of the year: January 1st, 1994
    [​IMG]

    1. “Into Your Arms” – The Lemonheads
    2. “Found Out About You” – Gin Blossoms
    3. “Daughter”/”Yellow Ledbetter” – Pearl Jam
    4. “Purple Haze” – The Cure
    5. “Kite” – Nick Heyward
    6. “Today” – Smashing Pumpkins
    7. “Laid” – James
    8. “All Apologies” – Nirvana
    9. “Photograph” – R.E.M. (Natalie Merchant)
    10. “Rubberband Girl” – Kate Bush
     
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  21. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    90. "Daughter"/"Yellow Ledbetter" by Pearl Jam

    #1 for 1 week starting the week January 8, 1994.
    [​IMG]
    "Daughter" is a song by the American rock band Pearl Jam, released in 1993 as the second single from the band's second studio album, Vs. (1993). Although credited to all members of Pearl Jam, it features lyrics written by vocalist Eddie Vedder and music primarily written by guitarist Stone Gossard.

    The song topped both the Album Rock and Modern Rock Billboard charts, spending a total of eight weeks at number one on the former chart. "Daughter" eventually peaked at number 28 on the Top 40 Mainstream chart, becoming the band's first Top 40 single. Outside the United States, the song reached number 16 in Canada and is Pearl Jam's highest-charting single in Ireland, reaching number four and becoming their second top 10 single. "Daughter" also reached number 11 in New Zealand and number 18 in Australia and the United Kingdom.

    Eddie Vedder said about the song "Daughter":

    "The child in that song obviously has a learning difficulty, and it's only in the last few years that they've actually been able to diagnose these learning disabilities, that before were looked at as misbehavior; as just outright rebelliousness, but no one knew what it was. These kids, because they seemed unable or reluctant to learn, they'd end up getting the sh-t beaten outta them. The song ends, you know, with this idea of the shades going down—so that the neighbors can't see what happens next. What hurts about **** like that is that it ends up defining people's lives. They have to live with that abuse for the rest of their lives. Good, creative people are just f---ing destroyed."[5]

    "Daughter" was first performed live at Neil Young's 1992 Bridge School Benefit.[8] It was also played at the band's December 31, 1992 concert at The Academy Theater in New York City, where Vedder introduced the song as "Brother". Both of these performances of the song featured different lyrics than the version that would ultimately wind up on Vs. "Daughter" is played at nearly every Pearl Jam show, almost always with an extension of the ending that could be an improvisation or a segment of another song. This extension is called a "Daughter tag". A different form of extension to the song was first introduced in the band's performance on Saturday Night Live in April 1994, just eight days after the death of Nirvana frontman and grunge pioneer Kurt Cobain. A tribute to Cobain, it is called "Daughter/Hey Hey, My My" by fans, since the extension is from the Neil Young song "Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)", which Cobain's suicide note had quoted. Another popular tag of the song is the "It's Okay" tag, which includes a slow improvisation based on "It's Okay" by garage rock band Dead Moon. Live performances of "Daughter" can be found on the "Dissident"/Live in Atlanta box set, the live album Live on Two Legs, various official bootlegs, the live album Live at Benaroya Hall, the live album Live in NYC 12/31/92, the Live at the Gorge 05/06 box set, and the live album Live at Lollapalooza 2007. Performances of the song are also included on the DVDs Touring Band 2000, Live at the Showbox, and Live at the Garden. The version of the song on Live at Lollapalooza 2007, onto which the band tagged Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)," features Vedder singing the lyrics "George Bush leave this world alone/George Bush find yourself another home". The band discovered that some of the Bush-related lyrics were excised from the AT&T webcast of Lollapalooza 2007, and questioned whether that constituted censorship.[9] AT&T later apologized and blamed the censorship on contractor Davie Brown Entertainment.[10] At the 2014 show in Milan, the band tagged the Disney song "Let It Go" to the end of the song's performance.[11]

    Top 10 for the week of January 8th, 1994

    1. “Daughter”/”Yellow Ledbetter”
    2. “Into Your Arms” – The Lemonheads
    3. “Found Out About You” – Gin Blossoms
    4. “Laid” – James
    5. “Purple Haze” – The Cure
    6. “Kite” – Nick Heyward
    7. “Today” – Smashing Pumpkins
    8. “All Apologies” – Nirvana
    9. “Photograph” – R.E.M. with Natalie Merchant
    10. “Rubberband Girl” – Kate Bush

    I got the music video from the Pearl Jam Vevo channel on YouTube but memorably, they never had a true video for this originally as they were boycotting MTV for overplaying them and underplaying other rock bands. This must have put together decades later.
     
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  22. WilliamWes

    WilliamWes Likes to sing along but he knows not what it means

    Location:
    New York
    "Yellow Ledbetter" by Pearl Jam (sometimes considered a double-A side, sometimes a B-side)
     
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  23. bvb1123

    bvb1123 Rock and Roll Martian

    Location:
    Cincinnati Ohio
    I've already talked about "Into Your Arms" so I'll just mention my favorites from this top 10.
    "Daughter/Yellow Ledbetter" is an awesome double-sided single that I love both songs but I've gotta give YL the edge. Such an awesome song.
    "Today" is still my favorite Smashing Pumpkins song. They had other good songs but to me this was their only great song.
    "All Apologies" is a great song that became even more poignant after Kurt's suicide. I don't listen to it much nowadays but still think it's a terrific, powerful song.
    I should love "Photograph" by Natalie Merchant and R.E.M. because I love both of them but it does nothing for me. It's just ok. Shame they didn't collaborate on more, better songs.
     
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  24. Planbee

    Planbee Negative Nellie

    Location:
    Chicago
    Probably not a rare statement by someone who likes Pearl Jam, but "Yellow Ledbetter" is one of my favorite PJ songs. Even IF I don't know what the hell Vedder is saying half the time. :laugh:
     
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  25. Retro Hound

    Retro Hound Forum Resident

    Location:
    Pittsburg, KS
    “Purple Haze” – The Cure - That was different.

    “Found Out About You” – Gin Blossoms - I remember liking this OK at the time. It still plays on the radio, and it's still just OK, but I can see why it has lasted so long.

    “All Apologies” – Nirvana Good song.

    “Today” – Smashing Pumpkins One of their better songs.

    “Daughter”/”Yellow Ledbetter” – Pearl Jam - I just really like them a lot, I love Eddie Vedder's voice.

    “Photograph” – R.E.M. (Natalie Merchant) Funny, I don't remember this song, but I do like it.
     
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