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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 Jan 30, 2024
Albums of 1994 | 90s Roundtable
Tuesday Jan 30, 2024
Tuesday Jan 30, 2024
In our latest and final "Albums of..." roundtable, we're tackling what might have been the most prolific year for releases of the entire decade. With the major labels scooping up bands to ride the alternative and grunge wave explosion into mainstream radio and on MTV, 1994 saw not only huge album releases from Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Nine Inch Nails, Alice In Chains, R.E.M. Nirvana, and more, but also the punk explosion thanks to Green Day, The Offspring, Rancid, Bad Religion, and others. This was also the year that across the pond from the US, Britpop topped the charts in the UK thanks to Blur and Oasis, while a new wave of alternative bands shot up the charts like Veruca Salt, Bush, Live, Weezer, Toadies, etc. while the indie underground produced classic records from Pavement, Guided By Voices, Low, Stereolab, Sebadoh, and Superchunk, to name a few. For a big year, we have a big group with a super-sized length. Enjoy!
Songs In This Episode:
Intro - 1994 Medley (Interstate Love Song by Stone Temple Pilots, Loser by Beck, Self Esteem by The Offspring, Buddy Holly by Weezer, I'm Broken by Pantera, March of the Pigs by Nine Inch Nails)
16:05 - Last Goodbye by Jeff Buckley
23:36 - Girls & Boys by Blur
39:10 - Everything Zen by Bush
50:25 - Very Best Years by The Grays
1:07:19 - Suffering by Satchel
1:13:30 - Bernie by Failure
1:30:40 - I Am I by Queensrÿche
1:50:51 - Feel The Pain by Dinosaur Jr.
Outro - Faster by Manic Street Preachers
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Tuesday Jan 23, 2024
Love Nut - ¡Baltimucho! | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 23, 2024
Tuesday Jan 23, 2024
Although only active for a short time in the 1990s, Baltimore, Maryland's Love Nut still managed to bounce from indie to major labels back to the indies over the course of their two albums. Originally recorded for Interscope Records, the band ended up releasing their second and last album on the smaller label Big Deal, meaning more freedom but less budget money for promotion and marketing. Which is a shame, because revisiting ¡Baltimucho! it's clear the band were ripe for discovery with big, hooky power pop choruses that leaned on the 70s glam pop of Sweet as much as Cheap Trick.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Love Found You
15:58 - Everchanging World
21:20 - Bomb Pine
26:48: Everything Is Going Your Way
34:48 - Crop Duster
Outro - Stolen Picture
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Tuesday Jan 16, 2024
The Verve - A Northern Soul | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 16, 2024
Tuesday Jan 16, 2024
While Britpop bands like Oasis and Blur aped the sounds of British invasion bands like The Beatles and The Kinks, other UK bands explored less radio-friendly material. In the case of The Verve, long psychedelic jams improvised in the studio established the sound of the band on their 1993 debut album A Storm in Heaven. For their long-play 1995 follow-up, A Northern Soul, the band entered the studio with more composed ideas that edged away from formless psychedelia to incorporate more defined verses and choruses, and even an acoustic ballad on par with Wonderwall.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - A New Decade
16:50 - On Your Own
19:12 - Life's An Ocean
21:58 - So It Goes
31:57 - History
Outro - A Northern Soul
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Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
Fountains of Wayne - Utopia Parkway | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
Tuesday Jan 09, 2024
Nailing down what exactly is "power pop" can be frustrating (we did a whole roundtable on it!), but the "power" end of it is usually found in the guitar section. From the big riffs of Cheap Trick's Rick Nielsen to Robert Quine's excited guitar leads on Matthew Sweet albums, just because it's "pop" doesn't mean it doesn't rock. For their second album, Fountains of Wayne duo Adam Schlesinger and Chris Collingwood recruited former Belltower guitarist Joey Porter and former Poises drummer Brian Young to complete the foursome. Two veteran players mean a tightened rhythm section and a bigger guitar sound that allows the band to expand their sound, touching not only on power pop from the 70s, 80s, and 90s, but elements of Britpop, psychedelia, and Queen grandiosity.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Red Dragon Tattoo
13:00 - Utopia Parkway
17:48 - Lost In Space
25:45 - Denise
Outro - A Fine Day For A Parade
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Tuesday Jan 02, 2024
Ben Folds Five - Ben Folds Five | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Jan 02, 2024
Tuesday Jan 02, 2024
It's hard to imagine a piano-led trio playing power-pop and 70s singer-songwriter influenced songs making headway in the sea of sorrow that was the first half of the 90s. Maybe it's better Ben Folds Five made their debut in 1995, when labels abandoned looking for the next Pearl Jam or Nirvana and went after anyone with a radio-friendly song that could pair with an MTV video. Boasting Billy Joel and Elton John-style piano flourishes over fuzzed out basslines and active drums, the trio move deftly through a dozen tracks of "punk rock for sissies" with smarts and savvy, keeping the songs tight with memorable melodies throughout. Though they would shoot into the mainstream on their follow-up, the self-titled debut effort shows the band had the songwriting chops from the start.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Jackson Cannery
21:55 - The Best Imitation of Myself
38:32 - Video
44:47 - Underground
Outro - Philosophy
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Tuesday Dec 26, 2023
Season Thirteen Review
Tuesday Dec 26, 2023
Tuesday Dec 26, 2023
There is a lot to talk about when we look back on 2023. Albums new and old from 90s and 00s artists blasted from our speakers and headphones everyday. As with our previous year-in-review episodes, we look back at our favorite new album discoveries, most brought to us by our Patreon community, as well as our most enjoyable round table experiences, and our favorite interviews conducted by Chip Midnight. Here's to season fourteen in 2024!
Songs In This Episode:
Intro/Outro - Dig Me Out by Sleater-Kinney
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Tuesday Dec 19, 2023
Warrant - Dog Eat Dog | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Dec 19, 2023
Tuesday Dec 19, 2023
The explosion of Nevermind in 1991 pushed Sunset Strip bands that dominated the 1980s off of radio and MTV in favor of Seattle's Big 4 - Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and Alice in Chains. Promotion and marketing budgets dried up, tours saw decreasing attendance, and it left many hair and glam rock bands wondering what to do next. For Warrant, who made a name on power ballads and Cherry Pie, the shifting winds allowed them to explore the songwriting talent of frontman Jani Lane. On 1992's Dog Eat Dog, innuendo is swapped for political and social commentary on "April 2031" while "All the Bridges Are Burning" tackles drug addiction, neither standard fare for LA bands. While there are a few straightforward nods to the first two albums, the band make it clear they were capable of entering Queensryche or other previously unexplored territory with ease, whether their fanbase and radio were ready or not.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Machine Gun
13:06 - April 2031
32:01 - Sad Theresa
41:13 - The Hole In My Wall
57:12 - Inside Out
Outro - Bonfire
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
Pearl Jam - Ten | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
Tuesday Dec 12, 2023
For the next installment of our series looking back at the Diamond selling albums of the 1990s, we're revisiting the 1991 debut album Ten by Pearl Jam. Though it wasn't an immediate smash upon release, Ten built success on the back of singles like "Alive," "Evenflow," and "Jeremy" with heavy support from radio and MTV. Though the band pulled the plug on videos from then until their 1998 album Yield, demand for the band didn't diminish, as the follow-up Vs. became one of the bestselling debut weeks in music history. But Pearl Jam was not without their detractors, criticizing everything from Eddie Vedder's singing style to album production choices, lyrical content, their credibility as "Seattle band," dismissed as nothing more than classic rock, and more. Much has been said and written over the two-plus decades since its release, so is there really much more to explore? Yes, there is. Like, was Jeff Ament's bass playing the secret sauce that drove the Pearl Jam engine? Is the derided reverb-tinged production actually what makes the album special? And in the world of Gen Z and Alpha sporting Nirvana t-shirts, is Pearl Jam relevant to anyone under forty? Or have they become the new Grateful Dead?
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Evenflow
28:49 - Once
38:35 - Yellow Ledbetter
45:07 - Footsteps
45:47 - Times of Trouble (Temple Of The Dog)
55:18 - Alive
1:14:59 - Black (Live, Dissident Single)
Outro - Release
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Tuesday Dec 05, 2023
Sigur Rós - Ágætis byrjun | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Dec 05, 2023
Tuesday Dec 05, 2023
"Ágætis byrjun" by Sigur Rós was released in 1999 but didn't get proper attention until touring with Radiohead in 2000. The Icelandic post-rock band's sophomore album is lead by Jónsi Birgisson's haunting falsetto vocals partially in Hopelandic, a nonsensical language created by the band, is unlike anything from the time period. The album blends ambient, classical, and rock elements, creating a dreamlike and cinematic atmosphere. Each track is like it's own mini-movie, exploring a new sonic landscape that evokes everything from blissful euphoria to introspective melancholy. Hailed as a landmark album that pushed the boundaries of experimental music, the band employ a mix of classical orchestration and modern electronic elements, creating a one-of-a-kind cinematic and atmospheric experience.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Starálfur
21:14 - Svefn-g-englar
25:33 - Hjartað hamast (bamm bamm bamm)
45:06 - Olsen Olsen
Outro - Ný batterí
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Tuesday Nov 28, 2023
Velocity Girl - Copacetic | 90s Album Review
Tuesday Nov 28, 2023
Tuesday Nov 28, 2023
After a string of indie label seven inch releases, Velocity Girl from College Park, Maryland, released their debut album Copacetic on Seattle's legendary Sub Pop records. Taking their name from the Primal Scream track, the band leans into the UK sound of shoegaze with a layer of American indie and noise rock. Lead singer Sarah Shannon's vocal hover above the fray, the anchor in the three-to-four minutes of brittle guitars and thin rhythms that hamper the potential of Copacetic.
This episode is dedicated to Steven Jon, who passed away on November 23rd, 2023. RIP.
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Crazy Town
19:15 - Audrey's Eyes
26:09 - Here Comes
30:49 - Pop Loser
38:29 - A Chang
Outro - Void I: Thousand Year Drift by Hollow Earth
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.