Page 252 of 271

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sat Jan 30, 2010 5:42 pm
by Nix
Drewsov wrote:
Nix wrote:Ah.

Gonna preorder FFXIII? <_<
Maybe. I was given the opportunity the other day... and chose to preorder Splinter Cell Conviction instead. It's just that Splinter Cell is more important to me. And also, I want FFXIII on the PS3. XD
Ah. Conviction is a good choice, yeah.

What makes SC more important to you, out of curiosity? Good memories of the past games or something?

Or is it that Conviction just looks freaking amazing? <_<

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sun Jan 31, 2010 2:16 am
by Chozon1
Drewsov wrote:And then get the 360 version. :)
But is the X-Box ending different than the Gamecube ending?

'Cause the ending...ticked me off. It was cool, but made Sam into a murderer rather than a good guy who looked like a murderer.

Plus...I LIKED HISHAM. >_<

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Wed Feb 03, 2010 8:14 pm
by Strider
Favorite grunge band?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Fri Feb 05, 2010 9:31 am
by Drewsov
Chozon1 wrote:
Drewsov wrote:And then get the 360 version. :)
But is the X-Box ending different than the Gamecube ending?

'Cause the ending...ticked me off. It was cool, but made Sam into a murderer rather than a good guy who looked like a murderer.

Plus...I LIKED HISHAM. >_<
Well... no, it's not different. The 360 ending is. AND you can choose to save Hisham on the 360/PS3 versions. So there's that, for what it's worth.
Strider wrote:Favorite grunge band?
It's a tie between Pearl Jam and Screaming Trees. I can't choose between Pearl Jam's Ten and Screaming Trees' Sweet Oblivion for my favorite album... so that'll have to do ya. ;)

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sat Feb 06, 2010 10:22 pm
by Chozon1
Grunge?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sat Feb 06, 2010 11:12 pm
by Drewsov
Chozon1 wrote:Grunge?
If you're asking if I love it, then yes. It immensely influenced my musical tastes in high school, and still does to some degree, though I've generally long since moved past listening to the genre with any sort of regularity.

If you're asking what it is, grunge as a form came out of the late-80s Seattle music scene. Bands such as Green River, Mother Love Bone and Skin Yard really kicked off the sound. Nirvana was a major group in the scene, largely bringing popularity to it and to alt-rock as a style about a year after the release of their second full length (and major label debut), Nevermind (released in 1991). Kurt Cobain's death in 1994 would lead to the formation of a major post-grunge/alt-rock band called Foo Fighters, helmed by Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl.

Pearl Jam - formed from the ashes of Mother Love Bone, and the death of that band's lead singer, Andrew Wood - became a band when Soundgarden lead singer (and former roommate of Andrew Wood) Chris Cornell put together a tribute band called Temple of the Dog, which featured two members of Mother Love Bone, Jeff Ament and Stone Gossard, as well as the then-drummer for Soundgarden, Matt Cameron (who later became the drummer for Pearl Jam after Soundgarden's dissolution), and an unknown Eddie Vedder, who would within the next year become the lead singer for Pearl Jam. Their debut album, Ten, surpassed Nevermind in sales and brought a style of arena rock to the grunge scene which literally defined the sound of grunge for years to come.

Soundgarden brought the grinding pulse of grunge together with the banshee howl of Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath, steeping their music in a dark, rain drenched vision colored with feedback, fuzz bass and guitar distortion. Albums such as Badmotorfinger and Superunknown saw the band moving away from the metal that had influenced them as younger musicians and finding a voice for themselves amid the crowd.

Alice in Chains - eternally marked by the death of lead singer Layne Staley in 2000 - first found success with their self-titled debut, but came across as more or less middling until their masterwork, 1992's Dirt, a concept album about heroin addiction and the pitfalls of that lifestyle. Their sound was more based in metal than Soundgarden's and used two part harmonies with Staley and guitarist Jerry Cantrell.

And the Screaming Trees, a lesser known band based about 100 miles outside of Seattle, brought the psychedelic roots rock of the Doors with the sound of grunge and the grizzled, smoke-cured voice of Mark Lanegan to create something all their own.

All of the bands crossed and mingled with each other, occasionally forming one-off supergroups and recording, as is the case with the band Mad Season, which formed with members from Alice in Chains, Soundgarden and Screaming Trees and released only one album.

Grunge's sound was defined by a slow, plodding feel, as well as distortion and fuzz. However, it was the individual influences that each band brought to the fold that ultimately shaped how the bands sounded, which ultimately means that grunge as a whole contained more inventiveness than most music today does. These bands weren't copying one another, but rather playing off of each other and creating their own sound.

Their music constitutes what has become, for me, the greatest era of music.

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sun Feb 07, 2010 8:50 pm
by Strider
Wow, I feel like I just read a professional biography of grunge music. :shock:

She said I was still alive. I asked if I deserved to be.

Is that the question? And if so... if so... who answers?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Sun Feb 07, 2010 10:26 pm
by Drewsov
Strider wrote:Wow, I feel like I just read a professional biography of grunge music. :shock:

She said I was still alive. I asked if I deserved to be.

Is that the question? And if so... if so... who answers?
Not Eddie Vedder, that's for sure. ;)

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 4:19 am
by Chozon1
I knew very little about grunge music. XD I knew it was a semi uprising against music that had come before...According to my guitar teacher. But he has weird ideas.

But...I was just asking about "grunge"...grime?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 9:07 am
by Drewsov
Chozon1 wrote:I knew very little about grunge music. XD I knew it was a semi uprising against music that had come before...According to my guitar teacher. But he has weird ideas.

But...I was just asking about "grunge"...grime?
It was kind of an uprising against the music that had come before: specifically, hair metal. In fact, grunge more or less killed off hair metal in popular circles (which I regard as a good thing; others regard it as a... not so good thing).

And I hate dealing with grime. -_-

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 2:19 pm
by Deepfreeze32
Uhm, I noticed a few......'errors' in your bit on Alice in Chains.

First, Staley died in April 2002.

Secondly, their self-titled album was not their first, it was their third. Facelift was their first, and yes, it was met with mixed reviews.



Sorry, shame on me?

I just thought that the facts should be cleared up......


/leaves thread in fear of getting yelled at.

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 9:21 pm
by Strider
Most frightening thing that's ever happened to you?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 10:05 pm
by Drewsov
Deepfreeze32 wrote:Uhm, I noticed a few......'errors' in your bit on Alice in Chains.

First, Staley died in April 2002.

Secondly, their self-titled album was not their first, it was their third. Facelift was their first, and yes, it was met with mixed reviews.



Sorry, shame on me?

I just thought that the facts should be cleared up......


/leaves thread in fear of getting yelled at.
Not going to yell at you.

Alice in Chains is far from my focus in that genre... and I was writing that in a rush, so I basically didn't double-check anything. ;)

But he's right. Alice in Chains' self-titled came out after their Jar of Flies EP, and was more typical sounding, compared to previous outings.
Strider wrote:Most frightening thing that's ever happened to you?
Staying in a pretty much haunted house by myself in winter of 2008.

Yup.

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 12:56 am
by Chozon1
What's the most frightening thing involving lemons you've ever eaten?

Re: Ask Drew.

Posted: Tue Feb 09, 2010 1:28 am
by Orodrist
Drewsov wrote:
Strider wrote:Most frightening thing that's ever happened to you?
Staying in a pretty much haunted house by myself in winter of 2008.

Yup.
Oh come on, you ain't going to just leave it at that are you?