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Step back in time to the heart of the 1990s, the last great decade of rock music. We’re your weekly time machine to the era of grunge, alternative, indie rock, emo, Brit-pop, shoegaze, power pop, and post-punk. Our journey includes in-depth album reviews, insider interviews with key figures, and comprehensive cultural discussions. ’Dig Me Out: 90s Rock’ offers a deep dive into the music that defined a generation, providing a diverse range of sounds and stories that continue to influence artists today. What sets our podcast apart is our community of passionate listeners. You choose the artists, albums, and topics we explore, making ’Dig Me Out: 90s Rock’ a truly collaborative experience. Join us as we celebrate the unparalleled creativity and cultural significance of 90s music. If you’re a Nirvana, Built to Spill, Elastica, or Radiohead fan or fascinated with how the 90s impacted the sound of your favorite 80s artists, ’Dig Me Out: 90s Rock’ is your go-to podcast. Subscribe now and become part of a community that adores the last great decade of rock music. Let’s relive the 90s together!
Episodes
Tuesday Mar 14, 2023
Filter - Title of Record | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Mar 14, 2023
Tuesday Mar 14, 2023
Sophomore albums can be a difficult proposition. The standard refrain is you get a lifetime to make the first one and a few months to make the follow-up. In the case of Filter, it took a little longer, four years to be exact. Title of Record came out in 1999 in a much different musical landscape than their 1995 debut Short Bus. Luckily, their hard rock sound, with a touch of industrial, fit in well with the end of the decade, and they struck literal gold with the atypical single "Take A Picture." Even with an entirely new backing band and the loss of his songwriting counterpart, Richard Patrick separated himself further from the Nine Inch Nails comparisons by embracing a big rock sound with a few interesting diversions.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Welcome To The Fold
26:02 - The Best Things
32:24 - Cancer
37:56 - Take A Picture
Outro - It's Gonna Kill Me
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Mar 07, 2023
The Gits - Frenching The Bully | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Mar 07, 2023
Tuesday Mar 07, 2023
Blessed with fire and passion on display through her voice and lyrics, the murder of Mia Zapata robbed the world of her potential. With The Gits, she and guitarist Joe Spleen, bass player Matt Dresdner, and drummer Steve Moriarty made grunge mixed with hardcore punk on their 1992 album Frenching The Bully. With only four years together, the debut record displays potential in the same way Bleach gives hints of what Nirvana was to become on the released but unfinished follow-up album Enter: The Conquering Chicken.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Another Shot of Whiskey
17:18 - Spear and Magic Helmet
23:08 - It All Dies Anyway
27:39 - Insecurities
Outro - Absynthe
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Thursday Mar 02, 2023
Dominique Durand and Andy Chase of Ivy | 90s Artist Interview
Thursday Mar 02, 2023
Thursday Mar 02, 2023
There was never a question that Ivy would make it, though they did so with many strokes of luck, good fortune, and heart ache along the way. With talented songwriters Andy Chase and Adam Schlesinger writing sophisticated pop songs showcasing their love of ‘80s and ‘90s UK music, the only thing missing was a voice to go with the sounds. Chase’s girlfriend at the time (now wife), Dominique Durand, had moved to New York City from Paris to study fashion. While growing up in a house full of music journalists in France, Durand enjoyed the lifestyle and the personalities but never entertained the thought of taking center stage until she was reluctantly talked into it by Chase and Schlesinger. And the industry took notice. In the bumpy times of the mid-90s where labels were signing every band with a pulse, and subsequently dropping the ones that didn’t meet sales targets, Ivy was the type of band to earn glowing reviews that didn’t always translate to units shifted. 1995’s debut Realistic was released by Seed Records. 1997’s critically-acclaimed Apartment Life was originally put out by Atlantic Records and reissued the following year by 550 Music after Atlantic unceremoniously dropped the band while they were in the middle of a tour. Since that time, Ivy has released music on Nettwerk, Minty Fresh and, now, Bar-None, who is releasing Apartment Life on vinyl for the first time. For Chase and Durand, it’s been a bittersweet few years as the rights to Apartment Life came back to the band shortly after Schlesinger passed away from Covid complications in 2020.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - The Best Thing
5:55 - I've Got A Feeling
Outro - This Is The Day
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Feb 28, 2023
Lowcraft - Manticore | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Feb 28, 2023
Tuesday Feb 28, 2023
Aside from Suede and Spacehog, few bands in the 90s embraced the glam sound as wholly as Lowcraft. Except Lowcraft wasn't from the UK, instead claiming Portland, Oregon in the U.S. as their home. The one and only album, 1999's Manticore, is baked with the sound and feel of Marc Bolan and T. Rex, David Bowie, and Mott the Hoople. How exactly? Can certain guitar chords and riffs sound glam? Sure, but it helps if there is a big vocal from the likes of lead singer Nathan Khyber. But like many 90s albums, the extended runtime of the compact disc gives time for songs to go on too long, and what should have been a tight forty-four-minute LP turns ends up a flabby fifty-seven minutes.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - An Inch Away From Heaven
13:32 - Transcendental Meltdown
19:21 - Pornstar
31:15 - One of Us
Outro - Happy in My Pants
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Feb 21, 2023
Red Lorry Yellow Lorry - Blasting Off | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Feb 21, 2023
Tuesday Feb 21, 2023
With a lower register in the vein of Richard Butler or Ian Astbury, Chris Reed of Red Lorry Yellow Lorry dismissed goth comparison during the 80s and focused on their guitar driven post-punk sound. For the final release, 1991's Blasting Off, the band backing Reed is new, but the sound is familiar thanks to Reed's unique vocals, unfussy songwriting, and precise guitar paying that works in a variety of well chosen effects. The unremarkable rhythm section is the only slight on an album that fans of bands like the Psychedelic Furs, The Mission, or Clan of Xymox probably should check out.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Don't Think About It
15:18 - Train of Hope
23:05 - Talking Back
35:01 - Sea of Tears
Outro - This Is Energy
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Feb 14, 2023
Letters To Cleo - Wholesale Meats and Fish | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Feb 14, 2023
Tuesday Feb 14, 2023
Coming off the hit "Here and Now" from their debut Aurora Gory Alice, Letters To Cleo followed-up with the equally catchy Wholesale Meats and Fish. Lead single "Awake," with it's handclaps and catchy hook by lead singer Kay Hanley, is just one of many power-pop adjacent tunes that lean more towards the noisy side of the genre inhabited by The Posies and Matthew Sweet. But to pin down LTC would be a mistake, as the opening ripper "Demon Rock" demonstrates, or the sixties-infused "Little Rosa" demonstrate. The band packs a nice sonic punch, even when diverging from comfortable sounds for quieter moments that are hit and miss.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Fast Way
14:44 - Demon Rock
21:08 - Little Rosa
27:27 - Acid Jed
32:13 - I Could Sleep (The Wuss Song)
Outro - Awake
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Chad Clark of Smart Went Crazy and Beauty Pill | 90s Artist Interview
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Thursday Feb 09, 2023
Born in NYC but spending his formative years in Washington DC, Chad Clark’s passion for music was born when his dad dropped a pair of headphones on his son’s head and introduced him to the Beatles. In the mid-90s, Clark formed the artsy, indie rock outfit Smart Went Crazy with Abram Goodrich and Hilary Soldati, signed with Dischord Records and released an EP and two full lengths - 1995’s Now We’re Even and 1997’s Con Art. Even before Smart Went Crazy’s ending, Clark was thinking about his next project, Beauty Pill, which he started with Goodrich in 2001 and continues through this day. With members coming and going over the last 20+ years, Beauty Pill’s released two full lengths - 2004’s The Unsustainable Lifestyle and 2015’s Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are - and a handful of EPs, most of which have been critically lauded. Earlier this year, Beauty Pill released a double album, Blue Period, consisting of their Dischord output - The Unsustainable Lifestyle and the You Are Right to Be Afraid EP - as well as previously unreleased outtakes and demos. On this episode, Beauty Pill members past (Ryan Nelson) and present (Erin Nelson), join Clark to talk about the last 25+ years of music.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - A Good Day by Smart Went Crazy
6:39 - Goodnight For Real by Beauty Pill
Outro - Fugue State Companion by Beauty Pill
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Feb 07, 2023
Hole - Live Through This | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Feb 07, 2023
Tuesday Feb 07, 2023
Released in the shadow of her husband's death, Courtney Love and Hole delivered their sophomore album Live Through This in a tsunami of emotional turmoil. Propelled by three hit singles, the album would launch Love into stardom and influence a generation of visceral, outspoken musicians that took inspiration from songs about motherhood, abuse, postpartum depression, and other topics not found on Billboard 200 charting albums. In looking back almost thirty years, the layers of musicianship that might have been glossed over by the larger moment are revealed. Guitarist Eric Erlandson's shifts between vitriolic riffing and crunchy leads to subtle and understated without missing a beat. Speaking of beats, drummer Patty Schemel shines, adding controlled bombast that, paired with bassist Kristen Pfaff, gives the album a tightness without feeling stale or rote.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Miss World
23:54 - Violet
36:38 - Credit in the Straight World
40:00 - Rock Star
Outro - Doll Parts
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Jan 31, 2023
Wünderband by Wünderband | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 31, 2023
Tuesday Jan 31, 2023
We've revisited plenty of albums released on major and independent labels from the 90s, but digging into self-released albums isn't something we've explored much - until now! Take New York City's Wünderband, who self-released their self-titled album in 1997. On the opening track, the band make their sound clear - punchy, catchy power-pop with some twists and turns. From the opening Aimee Mann call-out track "Yes Yes Hey Hey" to the Jellyfish inflected "I Don't Mind," the band sounds right at home alongside fellow 90s three-and-a-half-minute power pop magicians like Fountains of Wayne, Sloan, or The Figgs.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Pinup
13:18 - Yes Yes Hey Hey
21:30 - Mayqueen
25:26 - I Don't Mind
35:46 - Circle and Fall
Outro - Another Guy
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Jan 24, 2023
Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 24, 2023
Tuesday Jan 24, 2023
Badmotorfinger sits in the middle of the Soundgarden discography at an interesting crossroads. With new bass player Ben Shepherd on board, the band expanded upon their Black Sabbath meets Black Flag twist on metal with precision riffs and rhythms that integrate odd time signatures and alternate guitar tunings. While other bands were relegated to in-the-know hardcore fandom, thanks to the once-in-a-generation vocals of Chris Cornell, Soundgarden began their ascent as a commercial entity on MTV and mainstream radio.
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - Outshined
4:39 - Birth Ritual
29:01 - Jesus Christ Pose
36:05 - Somewhere
45:18 - Mind Riot
50:39 - Room A Thousand Years Wide
Outro - Rusty Cage
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.