The original grunge-sound is for me the garage sound from Sub Pop's
Reciprocal Recordings studio where the early records of Nirvana (Bleach),
Soundgarden (Screaming Life), Mudhoney and some Green River albums were
recorded. All these have a rather similar but still distinctive sound.
In the mid- and late Eighties there was a large concentration of bands
like Green River, Soundgarden, the Melvins, Nirvana, TAD and so on, which
formed the music scene of Seattle. There was a whole subculture and its
bands had a previously unknown sound in their music. This sound was supported
by Sub Pop, a local record label. Its founders Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan
Poneman wanted this sound to be consistent and so they always recorded
under the same circumstances: they always used producer Jack Endino and
recorded in their Reciprocal Recordings studio. The bands certainly didn't
all sound completely alike. But there was definitely a house sound to Sup
Pop largely due to Endino's work at the Reciprocal Recordings studio. That's
why the music has rather a garage sound than a studio sound. Reciprocal
Recordings was not a very sophisticated studio and therefore the music
was bound to sound crude. In fact some drugs and the cheap beer of Seattle
might have helped to produce such a sludgy dirty sound.
On the cover of my Green River "Dry As A Bone/Rehab Doll" CD there
is a sticker on which is written: "Seattle's legendary godheads who are
now Mudhoney and Pearl Jam". And in fact Green River have a real original
grungy sound. The music is dirty, smudgy and rough and so is Mark Arm's
voice. Mudhoney still make music which is very similar to the one of Green
River and they can really identify with the word "grunge". One of their
band members once said: "We're the only grunge band left in '95. No one
else will take that word 'grunge' but we will" and that's right. Bands
like Pearl Jam, Nirvana or Soundgarden don't want to be called grunge bands.
If it's the garage sound that makes up a grunge band then I think they
aren't because they have the more modern grunge sound. Although Nirvana
and Soundgarden produced their first albums with Sub Pop and therefore
once had the original sound.
The modern grunge sound is much cleaner and much more commercial than
the original one. There has been a development which went away from the
more punk-like old grunge sound to a more rock-like one. Pearl Jam for
example never sounded as dirty as Green River did. Most new grunge bands
like Silverchair and Bush sound like Pearl Jam or like Nirvana's Nevermind.
As this modern sound was much more commercial than the original one it
also got much more successful and so the modern one is the sound we all
know from MTV. When someone talks about grunge music today he usually thinks
of this sound and not of the original one. It's sad but true: grunge has
become a vogue word and has thus been alienated from its original meaning.
Nirvana began as a small hardcore-punk band which is audible on their first album Bleach. In the time of their great success with Nevermind they left behind the hardcore part of their music and concentrated on a punk-grunge mixture. This made them popular so they kept this style on their third album, In Utero, but they got a little more distorted what their record company first didn't like. But as the public loved the new record it was all right for them and the rise of Nirvana went on. Sadly the story of Nirvana ends here abruptly with the death of Kurt Cobain. The Nirvana MTV Unplugged In New York is their last legacy. Courtney Love said that the new Nirvana album would have been very much like this special with lots of acoustic material but now we'll never get to know it. Later a live album called "From the Muddy Banks of Whiskah" was released but didn't get much attention anymore.
Pearl Jam had a very clean heavy metal-rock sound on their first album Ten. There were surely some dirty guitar riffs in between but the majority was clean. On Vs. they kept the rock sound but more and more left behind their heavy metal side in favour of some more punk-like songs and on Vitalogy they added some experimental material. There is for example a song called Bugs on which Eddie Vedder plays accordion. But there is also a hint to what they did on their next album which they produced together with Eddie Vedder's idol Neil Young. It was called Mirrorball and had a really old rock sound with a hammond organ in the background. A short time later they released an EP called Merkinball which was supposed to accompany Mirrorball as is written on the back of the CD cover. Before they released their next CD No Code Eddie Vedder made two songs for the Soundtrack of the film "Dead Man Walking" together with a pakistani called Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. These songs are very oriental and so are some songs or at least parts of songs on No Code. Their newest album is called "Yield" and was released in 1998.
Soundgarden have perhaps undergone the longest development. They began as a Sub Pop act with a garage sound but already with some heavy metal and hard rock elements. On their third newest album Badmotorfinger you can hear some fast speed metal and some slow dragging songs with murderous riffs. Then on their album Superunknown they made some experiments with oriental sounds and they worked further on this tendency on their current album Down On The Upside. Sadly they disbanded in 1997 with one last greatest hits album called "A-Sides" as their last legacy.
The Stone Temple Pilots are or at least have been the most disputed grunge band being from Los Angeles and so not belonging to Seattle's community of bands. Their first album Core appeared shortly after Nirvana's Nevermind and Pearl Jam's Ten and it sounded like a copy of some songs from these albums. Purple, their second CD had audible similarities with some older rock bands like Led Zeppelin. But in the meantime the new Stone Temple Pilots album "Tiny Music ..." is available and they finally have found their own style. Their new record has got a very obvious blues- or jazz-touch.
Alice In Chainsfall a bit out of the grunge society. They are of course from Seattle but they have neither produced a record with Sub Pop nor has any member of them played in a Sub Pop band. They never had a very grungy sound but rather a hard rock or heavy metal one. Their development gets obvious in two EPs they have released. The "SAP"and the "Jar Of Flies"-EP are completely different from all their other albums. Phil Alexander, an editor of the music magazine "Kerrang!" wrote about it : "It is their [Alice In Chains'] most intimate moment. This [...] is Alice In Chains at their purest. Listen without prejudice". The two EPs have some very acoustic songs on them also with some jazzy parts and even a gospel- or spiritual-like song.
All in all we can say that there is something that all the "old" grunge
bands like Alice In Chains, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden have in common. After
their music got copied by so many bands they seem to have tried to get
away from their grunge image and develop their own distinctive style. This
way their new albums all have some experimental elements. These developments
become obvious through the instruments the bands use. Pearl Jam used a
hammond organ on their EP Merkinball, the Stone Temple Pilots had a muted
trumpet on the song Adhesive from their new album Tiny Music... and on
Soundgarden's Down On The Upside the song Ty Cobb begins with a short passage
with Mandolin and Mandola.
After all I must say that when you listen to one of the albums mentioned
above not all the songs are the same. On almost every one there is a ballad
and a fast song and a heavy one and so on.
In the following graphic I've tried to make clear the relationships between the bands: