Smells Like Teen Spirit – Being a Teenager in the 90’s

I’m pretty sure that every decade has its own guidelines to growing up. Being a teenager in the 80’s must have been very different to being a teenager in the 90’s. But what about it was different, was it just the clothes and music? Or is every teen the same no matter what the decade.

I don’t know but i was a teenager in the 90’s. In 1990 I turned 12 and developed an obsession with Twin Peaks. It was a weird start to my teen life but it shaped me in ways I couldn’t see at the time. I was able to embrace my love of the weird. David Lynch and his strange camera angles and beautiful 50’s femme fatales were pure poetry to me and still are to this day. However its fair to say that accepting the weirdness of yourself does not signal an easy start to teenage life.

        

The 90’s was all about good music to me, the early 90’s was the birth of grunge and suddenly there was something in between death metal and bon jovi. I loved Pearl jam, Alice in Chains, Screaming Trees and all those other amazing bands that burst out of Seattle. I can recall coming home from school, shutting my bedroom door and playing Smells like Teen Spirit very loud whilst jumping up and down around my bedroom. It was the biggest release of tension I got all day.

Some other great bands came into the limelight in the 90’s also, the Britpop explosion happened and dark but lovely alternative bands like Echobelly, Garbage, Smashing Pumpkins, The Cranberries, Manic Street Preachers,Grant Lee Buffalo, Belly, 10,000 Maniacs, Pixies and so many more filled the airwaves with lively but sad songs. REM had a resurgence with the release of ‘Out of Time’ and suddenly all the people who hadn’t ever heard of them were out at HMV buying their back catalogue.

The 90’s grunge era that i fell into was kind to my parents pockets aswell because i only ever wanted clothes from charity shops and dressed mostly like a boy. Needless to say i didn’t actually draw much male attention until i was 16. My wardrobe consisted of one knee length tie died tassle skirt, jeans with turn ups, camouflage trousers, a pair of cherry red DM’s, a pair of Purple converse my sister gave me and an array of band t-shirts for pearl jam, the Doors, The Smiths the Velvet underground and Neil Young. I also owned a levi’s lumberjack shirt and several pairs of stripey tights.  I wore clothes so baggy that I was able to share most of my wardrobe with my big brother. Seems like these days its more about how tight your jeans can be.

There was a group of girls at school who liked the same stuff as me and we all ended up at the same pubs and bars, totally underage but so excited that we could dance to Primal Scream and The Stone Roses instead of the latest pop chart music that was on offer at the other mainstream clubs. Most of the people who went to the pubs and clubs we went to were much older but we all co-existed somehow. It was funny how by the time I was 20 I was shocked to see 15 year old’s drinking at the same pub i had been drinking at since I was that age. I always had a word with myself to remind me they were no different to me. But I understood how adults must have viewed us gangs of teenage girls in DM boots wearing black cherry lipstick and counting out pennies for our pints of cider clutching fake ID’s.

I recently watched the pilot episode of 1994 TV series ‘My So Called Life’ which at the time was my favourite show, and even now i can see why i liked it so much. The lead character Angela Chase is in pursuit of something, fun, love, freedom, she is envious of the freedom Ann Frank found through her incarceration and she longs for the day she no longer has to conform and go to school. To express herself she ends up alienating her oldest friends and family. The whole angst revolving around how people just don’t understand.

I think alot of us teenage girls were like her, some of us did dye our hair mahogany red while others chose to stifle their real urges and conform to the norm by wearing trainers and belcher chains.

But it doesn’t matter if its belcher chains or blackberry’s, today’s teenagers must face the same horrors we did. The agony of whether to give in and like Justin Beiber, or whether to say no and go buy the new Foo Fighters CD. What a difference it will make to their lives to decide not to choose to just fit in.

There has been an ‘alternative’ since the 60’s, every era had its dark side of music, what was once protest songs by intelligent hippies, is now something else entirely.

I guess the 90’s indie/grunge thing made me feel like I fit somewhere, there we were, all us teenagers full of questions unanswered and wanting to express ourselves but no knowing how. And along came people like Frank Black and Kurt Cobain and reminded us it was ok not to fit.

The 90’s playlist is endless and so may bands being listened to came from other era’s but here is a mixtape of some of what I was listening to.

Alive – Pearl Jam

Heaven Beside You– Alice in Chains

Dark Therapy – Echobelly

Motorcycle Emptiness – Manic Street Preachers

Stupid Girl – Garbage

Feed the Tree – Belly

Campfire Song – 10,000 Maniacs

Fuzzy – Grant Lee Buffalo

Monkey Gone to Heaven-The Pixies

Disarm – Smashing Pumpkins

Black Hole Sun – Soundgarden

Linger – The Cranberries

To The End – Blur

Nearly Lost You – Screaming Trees

Plush – Stone Temple Pilots

Heart Shaped Box – Nirvana

Crown of Thorns – Mother Love Bone

Hunger Strike – Temple of The Dog

Live Forever – Oasis

The Art of The Motion Picture Soundtrack

To me soundtracks have always been a huge part of what makes a movie great and unforgettable. I always felt more moved by the music or song that was playing in a scene, and I wonder if I would have cried as much at movies like The English Patient if the music had not been so beautiful. Music Scores have populated my CD collection since I was old enough to save pocket money for them; I recall getting the bus into town just so I could buy the Michael Kamen soundtrack to ‘Robin Hood; Prince of Thieves’, and not long after doing the same to get the soundtrack to ‘Bram Stoker’s Dracula’ by Wojciech Kilar.

Initially my love of soundtrack music was due to having liked the movie, but I was also developing a taste for the composer rather than the movie it went with. I knew the soundtrack to ‘Betty Blue’ long before I was old enough to see it and soon was hunting out other soundtracks by Gabriel Yared such as ‘The Lover’ and years later ‘The English Patient.’ I was also very fond of Eric Serra after having seen ‘The Big Blue’, he went on to do other amazing works such as ‘Leon’ and ‘Goldeneye’. One composer whose soundtracks I loved so much was Vangelis. I had not seen any other movie he had done apart from ‘Blade Runner’ but I soon had a collection of his other soundtracks.

It was rare that I liked a soundtrack that had actual songs as opposed to a score. The first one of these I owned was Dirty Dancing (I still love those fabulous 60’s songs,) shortly followed by the soundtrack to Young Guns 2. I know, shameful, but i was a big Bon Jovi fan when I was a young teenager!. I think the next one i had put on my Christmas list was ‘Until the End of The World.’ An amazing Wim Wender’s film that i did not see for some years after I got the soundtrack.

Since then there have been a plethora of great movie soundtracks, my CD collection is still largely soundtracks and even in this time of MP3 and i-tunes, i still like to own the CD. I could do a huge list of great soundtracks but this blog will not include the music scores, I’ll save those for another time…..

Here’s a list of some favourites, click the movie title to link to viewing the rest of the soundtrack.

 

Until The End of The World

Highlights; Fretless – REM, (I’ll Love you) Til the End of The World – Nick Cave and The Bad Seeds, Days – Elvis Costello

Pulp Fiction

Highlights; Lets Stay Together  – Al Green, Girl You’ll Be A Woman Soon – Urge Overkill, Son of a Preacher Man – Dusty Springfield

Garden State

Highlights; Let Go  – Frou Frou, Caring is Creepy – The Shins, Fair – Remy Zero,

Vanilla Sky

Highlights; Sweetness Follows – REM, Have You Forgotten – Red House Painters, Last Goodbye – Jeff Buckley. And the Sigur Ros Song that is not included on the CD – The Nothing Song.

Goodfellas

Highlights; Rags to Riches – Tony Bennett, Beyond The Sea – Bobby Darin, Stardust – Billy ward and His Dominoes

Cruel Intentions

Highlights; Colourblind – Counting Crows, Ordinary Life – Kristen Barry, Every You and Every Me – Placebo

Magnolia

Highlights; Wise Up, One, Save Me

LA Confidential

Highlights; Ac-cent-tchu-ate The Positive – Johnny Mercer, Wheel of Fotrune – Kay Starr, Hit the Road To Dreamland – Betty Hutton

Catch and Release

Highlights; Razor – Foo Fighters, My Drug Buddy- Lemonheads, There Goes the Fear – Doves

Sleepless in Seattle

Highlights; In the Wee Small Hours – Carly Simon, Bye Bye Blackbird – Joe Cocker, Make Somebody Happy – Jimmy Durante.

The Last Kiss

Highlights; Ride – Carey Brothers, Today’s the Day – Aimee Mann, Warning Sign – Coldplay