Roadkill
Austin Music Hall, Wed. Nov 15th
Fri., Nov. 10, 1995
With the influences of these seminal bands now glowing in full color on MTV, the underground of yesterday has become the mainstream of today, and with an indie label on every corner, it's become increasingly hard to make sense of today's underground music and what influence it might have on the future.
"It's hard to come out with something startlingly original anymore." says Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley. "We're so post post everything."
As a contingent of mostly middle-class white kids, the current movement seems to be toward jazz, spacey lounge music, or the seemingly incompetent lo-fi, with bands like Denison/Kimball Trio, Stereolab, and Guided by Voices leading the way.
"I think a lot of underground bands are reacting against what happened with Nirvana and Pearl Jam," says Shelley. "Because I know when I was a kid, I didn't want to be associated with Kansas or Foreigner."
The textural blast that Sonic Youth packs has influenced an incalculable number of bands over the past 10 years, and Shelley sees this influence.
"Even when Fugazi came out, it was such a different thing than Minor Threat," says Shelley. "I really dug it because I was into the new approach they were taking, but as far as our influence goes, I wish people would get over it.
"The most interesting aspect of what we do is putting together new music and recording a new album. We do it for ourselves, we don't think about radio format, or the record company, or anything." says Shelley. "We've never even given the record company demos." As far as "The Year That Punk Broke" goes, "It felt great. I thought it was hilarious that a band [Nirvana] a lot of our peers liked was a number one band," says Shelley. "Because I think they scared the hair metal bands away." -- Taylor Holland