Here is a list of ten grunge bands that I feel are the most important of the genre. Rather than subjectively rank them in order of who I think is “best”, I decided to order the bands chronologically by date formed, starting with the earliest. I felt this would better show the development of the sound, the growth of the genre, and the intermingled lineages of some of its key performers. Keep in mind however that the majority of these bands (and the Scene itself) did not really enter into mainstream commercial awareness until 1991, after grunge exploded in popularity with the surprising success of… well, read the list…
Like the other locals mentioned in the intro, this is another early Seattle area band considered to be one of the forbearers of grunge. Though admittedly not a true grunge band, I’m bending my own rule here to give Malfunkshun the opening spot on this list (instead of the Melvins) as a tribute to its founding member, vocalist Andrew Wood, who is an important figure in the history of the genre. Formed by Andrew and his brother Kevin, Malfunkshun was known for their dynamic and psychedelic stage shows. Sporting makeup and a kind of glam style, the band members took on alter-ego stage personas when performing. Though plenty of recorded material and demos do exist, they never did release an album while together; in fact Sub Pop reportedly didn’t want to sign them because they “weren’t grunge enough”. However they did contribute a couple of songs to the 1986 Deep Six compilation album. By 1987, Andrew began jamming and collaborating with several members of the next band on this list, which would lead to much greater things down the road.
Formed in 1984 by vocalist Mark Arm, guitarist Steve Turner, bassist Jeff Ament, and drummer Alex Shumway, Green River is credited as being one of the originators of the sound and in fact is now widely regarded as being the first true grunge band. Guitarists Stone Gossard and Bruce Fairweather joined later (Fairweather replacing the departed Turner). The band contributed two cuts to the Deep Six compilation album, but even before that, in 1985 they released an EP Come on Down on little-known Homestead Records, which many claim as being the first grunge record. It didn’t sell all that well, but their steady gigging in and around Seattle was gaining them in local popularity. Their second EP Dry as a Bone in 1987 gave them the distinction of being the first band to release a record on the Sub Pop label. Later that year, as work commenced on their 1988 debut LP Rehab Doll, the band was beginning to unravel due to differences of opinion on the band’s musical direction. Though never achieving commercial success outside of Seattle, upon disbanding, several of its members went on to form the backbones of later, more successful bands on this list, and achieved worldwide acclaim.
Soundgarden was formed in 1984 by vocalist Chris Cornell, guitarist Kim Thayil, and bassist Hiro Yamamoto (Yamamoto was replaced in 1990 by Ben Shephard). Cornell also originally played drums, however drummer Scott Sundquist joined in 1985 (later replaced by Matt Cameron), allowing Cornell to focus on singing. This was a good thing, as I consider Cornell’s powerful and wide ranging vocals to be among the best set of pipes in rock. His Zeppelin-influenced swagger and style has been favorably compared to that of Robert Plant. Overall, Soundgarden has been described as being one of the more complex in the genre in terms of musicianship and song composition.
Signed to Sub Pop in 1987, Soundgarden released a couple of EPs, which drew the attention of other major labels. But in 1988 they chose to release their debut LP Ultramega OK under the production of the lesser-known SST Records. Even so, this album garnered Soundgarden a Grammy nomination. After this success, Soundgarden became the first grunge band to join a major label when they signed with A&M Records in 1989, to release their second album Louder Than Love, which charted to 108 on the Billboard 200. This lead to their breakout mainstream success with the release of the 1991 album Badmotorfinger, which also received much critical aclaim, another Grammy nomination, and went platinum. Their best acheivement came with their follow-up 4th album Superunknown in 1994, which released at number one on the charts, won two Grammys, and was certified five times platinum, earning Soundgarden the distinction of being one of grunge’s “Big Four” supergroups.
Skin Yard is another early pioneer of the grunge movement and probably one of the more under appreciated bands. They contributed two songs to the 1986 Deep Six compilation album as well as several LPs during the course of their run. Although they never achieved mainstream commercial success, they were a big influence on their contemporaries. Founding member and guitarist Jack Endino produced Skin Yard’s debut album, and later became a well-regarded and highly sought-after sound engineer, producing several milestone records for other bands on this list. His “stripped down” recording practices are seen as a defining characteristic of the grunge sound. Drummer Matt Cameron was also a member of Skin Yard, before achieving fame and fortune with the previously mentioned Soundgarden.
Alice In Chains was started when struggling local musicians, vocalist Layne Staley and guitarist Jerry Cantrell hooked up and began working together. Cantrell brought in a couple of his former bandmates in bassist Mike Starr and drummer Sean Kinney, and AIC began gigging around the Seattle club circuit. More of a straight-forward heavy-metal band initially, they were signed by Columbia in 1989 and promoted as such, releasing the 1990 EP We Die Young, which became a minor hit through frequent airplay on metal radio stations. In the summer of that year, the LP Facelift was released, which actually went gold by the end of the year.
By the time AIC was ready to release their second LP Dirt in 1992, the Scene was dramatically different, thanks to the meteoric rise of the next band on this list. Achieving platinum status by the end of the year (quadruple platinum to-date), Dirt is arguably AIC’s best effort. It featured five top 30 singles, and garnered several awards, including one for the song Would (a piece dedicated to Andrew Wood) which was included on the movie Singles sound-track.
If this list were ranked in order of “importance”, Nirvana would be the unquestioned number 1, since it was their breakthrough 1991 album Nevermind and single Smells like Teen Spirit that blew the roof off the genre and made them the biggest and most talked-about rock band in America. The magnitude of their unexpected success paved the way to mainstream notoriety for practically every other active band on this list.
The most iconic figure of the entire genre is founding member, guitarist and singer Kurt Cobain. Heavily influenced by the local punk and burgeoning grunge scene, Cobain befriended and even roadied occasionally for the Melvins and was a big fan of Mudhoney. Inspired, he joined fellow Melvins fan, bassist Krist Novoselic to start a band. A revolving door of drummers ended when Dave Grohl finally rounded out the trio, but not before Nirvana’s low-budget debut album Bleach was released by Sub Pop in 1989. A rather nondescript record, it might’ve been easily forgotten if not for Nirvana’s later monumental success. Having said that, original pressings of the “iceberg” colored vinyl version of Bleach is the holy grail for Sub Pop collectors, with pristine examples fetching over $1000 today. To this day, Kurt Cobain remains the genre’s most recognizable yet enigmatic and martyred figure.
Mother Love Bone came to be as a result the blossoming musical relationship of Malfunkshun’s Andrew Wood and Green River’s Stone Gossard, Bruce Fairweather, and Jeff Ament (see items 9 & 10). Along with drummer Greg Gilmore (formerly of Ten Minute Warning and Skin Yard), they immediately hit the Seattle club scene. Wood’s talent was undeniable, and his lyrical brilliance and flamboyantly charismatic style as a performer brought much attention to the band. In early 1989 MLB signed with Mercury Records (PolyGram) and released a debut EP Shine, which featured their epic masterpiece Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns, a song that also made it onto the Singles film soundtrack. The record sold well and with the band steadily gaining in popularity, later that year they began recording their debut full-length album, to be entitled Apple. This band was poised to break out and make it big, but on March 19,1990, mere days before Apple was set to release, Wood died of a heroin overdose at the age of 24. The album was released posthumously and was well received, but Mother Love Bone was no more and the premature loss of Wood forever changed the course of grunge history.
TAD was founded in 1988 by 300 lb. frontman Tad Doyle and his former Bundle of Hiss bandmate Kurt Danielson. Not pretty-boys by any means, they truly epitomized the look of the Grunge scene: gritty, flannel shirt, torn jeans, and lumberjack boot wearing backwoods hicks. One of their music videos was even banned by MTV because, allegedly, they were deemed “too ugly”. They are one of the early bands signed to Sub Pop, releasing their debut album God’s Balls in 1989 and follow-ups Salt Lick in 1990 and arguably their best musical effort 8-Way Santa in 1991. Typical of TAD’s devil-may-care attitude, that album led to a lawsuit over a questionable cover photo, which they’d found at a garage sale and used without permission. Still, fueled by a growing cult following, they were signed by Warner Bros. subsidiary Giant, released Inhaler in 1993, and embarked on tour as supporting act to Soundgarden. Inexplicably they could not achieve big time success, and coupled with controversy over an ill-advised promotional poster featuring then-President Bill Clinton smoking a joint, Giant dropped them from their ranks. TAD limped along for a few more years, eventually releasing two more albums, but unfortunately never emerged as anything more than an obscure footnote in grunge history.
After the disbanding of Green River in 1988, Mark Arm and Steve Turner bounced around for a bit until getting serious about forming another band. Ex- Bundle of Hiss drummer Dan Peters was recruited, as was Matt Lukin, former bassist for the Melvins, and the group went about recording their debut EP Superfuzz Bigmuff on the Sub Pop label. The record featured the single Touch Me I’m Sick, which is regarded as one of grunge’s all-time classic songs. The tune received lots of college radio airplay, prompting Sub Pop to promote Mudhoney as their flagship band. Ironically, this home-spun media hype earned them greater attention overseas and in 1989 they embarked on a European tour, playing mostly dates in Germany and later in the U.K., as their EP climbed the British charts. Later in the year they released their eponymous LP Mudhoney to moderate success, and Every Good Boy deserves Fudge in 1991. By that time, grunge was a industry phenomenon, but unfortunately for Mudhoney, they weren’t the catalysts, and barely were the beneficiaries of this steadily growing popular musical movement.
Pearl Jam is here at number one only due to chronology, however they are certainly no slouches; along with the afore-mentioned Nirvana, Soundgarden, and Alice In Chains, Pearl Jam is considered to be a member of the “Big Four” of grunge royalty.
Formed from the remnants of Mother Love Bone, guitarist Stone Gossard and bassist Jeff Ament recruited local lead guitarist Mike McCreedy to join them, and a San Diego surfer they’d heard about named Eddie Vedder was brought in to sing. The band signed with Epic records and released its debut album Ten in August 1991 (a month before Nirvana’s Nevermind). but album sales didn’t take off until a year later. By the second half of 1992 Ten became a breakthrough success for Pearl Jam, achieving certified gold status, reaching number two on the Billboard charts, and featuring three hit singles. It has since become one of the top selling rock albums ever.
Not intended to be an ”official” band per se, Temple of the Dog was formed in 1990 by the still relatively unknown Chris Cornell of Soundgarden as a tribute to his friend and former room-mate Andrew Wood (see items 5 and 10). Having written a couple of songs in Wood’s memory, Reach Down and Say Hello 2 Heaven, Cornell approached Wood’s former MLB bandmates, the still shocked and grieving Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament, with the intent of recording and releasing the material. These sessions were happening simultaneously with the formation of Pearl Jam, as Mike McCreedy and newcomer Eddie Vedder also joined in the collaboration. Soundgarden (and later Pearl Jam) drummer Matt Cameron rounded out the line-up. The effort produced enough material to fill an album, and in April 1991 Temple of the Dog was released by A&M, to modest sales. That probably would’ve been the end of it had not both Soundgarden and Pearl Jam later achieved major success, which prompted A&M to re-release the album and the single Hunger Strike (a Vedder/Cornell duet). Temple of the Dog became one of the top selling albums of 1992, eventually achieving certified platinum status.
Honorable mentions: Screaming Trees (1985 – 2000), Blood Circus (1988 – 1990), Gruntruck (1989 – 1993), Love Battery (1989 – present), My Sister’s Machine (1989 – 1994), Seaweed (1989 – 2000)




















grunge saved popular music, in 1991 mainstream radio was washed out, full of synthesized beats, hair bands and a wave of rap that sold on shock value alone, grunge was a natural progression because it represented the opposite end of the musical and cultural spectrum, it was bound to appeal, i feel that we’re hovering close to a similiar scenario today and can only hope that a wave of true rock will again sweep across the world, as always, wonderful list…
NIRVANA and COBAIN–Yeah, a drugged out waste of humanity that commits suicide, now there’s someone to follow.
Where’s the love for the Stone Temple Pilots? Scott Weiland is imho the best frontman in music today.
Tad would have been more famous if he was skinny little pretty boy like all the other frontmen. He’s easily one of the more talented musicians on the list.
STP is a good band as well, though they were better earlier in their careers like most grunge bands.
what about the meat puppets? or even Violent femmes? Surely their not confined to grunge, yet they influenced many of the later grunge bands
@Lifeschool (51): Who’s yer fav Maggot?
It’s a toss-up for me, between AIC and MLB, with Soundgarden not far behind. If you couldn’t deduce from my write-ups, I’m a huge Andy Wood fan, though it could be argued that his bands weren’t really “grunge”.
Btw I mentioned Malfunkshun didn’t release an album, but fyi Stone Gossard later produced and posthumously released most of their recorded demo material on an album called Return to Olympus. I highly recommend it if you are at all a fan. Kevin Wood is totally unheralded but just kicks ass on guitar.
hmmm… i must really not know very much about grunge AT ALL.
i only know three of these bands.
Stone Temple Pilots is not grunge. I will kick whoever says this in the shins repeatedly. However I do like them, so to each their own. But they are not grunge!
The term “grunge” was first penned by Mark Arm almost a decade before the release of Nevermind. I dont agree that grunge is a genre of music, rather a term related to a “music scene” since all of these bands had different styles and sounds.
I’m surprised nobody has mentioned Jane’s Addiction. Would they be considered grunge?
#70: I think grunge is a genre. As Wikipedia can put it better than I can:
Grunge is a subgenre of alternative rock, Inspired by hardcore punk, heavy metal and indie rock, grunge is generally characterized by heavily distorted electric guitars, contrasting song dynamics, and apathetic or angst-filled lyrics. The grunge aesthetic is stripped-down compared to other forms of rock music, and many grunge musicians were noted for their unkempt appearances and rejection of theatrics.
I also don’t think Stone Temple Pilots are grunge.
^ Why would Jane’s Addiction be considered grunge?
Could you picture Curt Cobain or Layne Stanley singing “Been Caught Sealing”?
-__-
@calm incense (73): lol… I’m sorry Spocker (I have all their albums BTW)
ive said it b4 and ill say it again….i dunno why pple bash others bout their musical tastes…if i feel like litining to led zep, its on…if its stp,theyre on…little early extreme, hell yeah…godsmack, there ya go …so many close minded pple only listening to 1 style and are afraid to evolve..cmon pple
I’m not sure if they fall into the “grunge” catagory but I’ll throw them out there anyways since they’re my favorite band: Fugazi anyone? They kind of paved the way for bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam to take off in the early 90s. Even if they aren’t specifically a “grunge” band, I still think they deserve a mention since the whole genre is partly an offshoot of the hardcore punk genre. Bands like Minor Threat (another great Ian Mackaye band), Fugazi, and Black Flag really pushed the envelope in the mid 80s to broaden the hardcore genre so bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam could make it big time by the time 1990 rolled around.
Wow, great list! I’m glad to see that it’s not in order of personal preference or importance – that always starts needless arguments. At least 5 on the list are on my playlist constantly. I do disagree with the statement that grunge is a genre. AIC is definetely more metal as opposed to say Nirvana which is sort of punk. The way I’ve heard it used usually is just as the general term for bands from seattle from the late 80s to the early 90s. I guess I might be wrong though…
Here a noteable fact, Kurt Cobain was found on April 8, 1994, Layne Staley was found on April 5, 2002 (just three days short of the eighth anniversary). I thought that was pretty spooky.
@the william g (20):
“the william g
June 17th, 2009 at 4:34 am
crap list. grunge is crap made by yanks for yanks, screw it man.
- real canadian”.
Yes, Canadians Bryan Adams and Celine Dion are sooo much better. :-/
Another noteable fact that most people probably know already: Kurt Cobain died at age 27. The same age as Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Brian Jones (founder and guitarist of the Rolling Stones).
I only recognized 4 of the bands on this list. Then again, I’m 20, and I’ve never been a fan of any of these groups except for Nirvana. Never had the chance to get stoned and attend a concert, either…
Damn.
Good list, though. Whenever I see a list of top anything musical groups, I usually go invest time into at least checking out how they sound. Thank you for giving me something to do for the next couple hours.
And Lifeschool:
I don’t mean to be a dick. I see the connection between the two, kind of, but how in the hell is that spooky?
What about the Melvins? Or Sonic Youth? or the Wipers?
garbage… you forgot them
Nirvana #5 and Pearl Jam #1? you’re insane.
I used to be so obsessed with Grunge. I still have so much Grunge music (though a lot of it is on cassette tapes so I don’t listen to it much now.) Mudhoney was my favorite band for years. Great list!
what about the meat puppets?
and why is nirvana #5?
Alice in Chains have reformed (albeit with a new frontman) so you can’t really say they stopped being around in 1992. I saw this year in Australia and they were GREAT.
falc, Nirvana are #5 cause it’s CHRONOLOGICAL.
“Nirvana #5 and Pearl Jam #1? you’re insane.”
“why is nirvana #5?”
Hey everyone, let’s laugh at the retards.
@ Arkz:
Garbage isn’t grunge. More like pop-rock…with balls.
Anyone who complains about Nirvana being 5th is an idiot who does not read the top. Also Pearl Jam sucks so much ass its not even funny
Anyone who says Pearl Jam sucks so much ass its not even funny is an idiot who sucks so much ass it’s not even funny.
haha i wasnt suggesting coheed and cambria for THIS list.
just simply stating/screaming that they are awesome…(and better than pearl jam)
SWEET list! This is right up my alley. Thanks for including some of the older bands that started in the 80′s as well. I understand why you wanted to write so much lol!
GREAT list Maggot, thanks.
Personally, it’s a toss up between PJ and AIC for me; however, with Layne Staley gone, AIC is not AIC anymore.
I think Layne’s voice was better than Chris Cornell’s, to be honest; he had far better range and emotion. His harmonies with Jerry Cantrell are spine-tingling to this day. My faves are Heaven Beside You, Man in the Box (thanks for the vid) No Excuses, Rooster and Would?.
What an awful, tragic fate for Layne…so sad.
I happen to love Ed Ved’s voice, and he’s a cool dude too, PJ has put out some really good music.
By the way, I fit none of the criteria for “liking grunge” up there.
grunge… mehh
ok list but i must say some of these bands arent grunge. where the hell is silverchair surely they should get a mention for releasing a no1 hit whilst still in highschool.
@JustKar (94): I think Layne’s voice was better than Chris Cornell’s, to be honest
lol, oh man I said exactly that in my original submission, but it got edited out. I totally agree with you, I purposely picked that particular clip because it’s a great portrayal of his talant. If you are interested, there’s a whole series of YouTube vids from the same gig as this Man/Box clip. I almost went with Bleed the Freak, which is my personal fave.
I think the list should go other way around, Malfunkshun at #1 and Pearl Jam #10 that would be better
In the Bible it can be read:
“He who does not enjoy the sounds of Pearl Jam is in fact an idiot!” – book of grunge, chapter: no music taste.
100!
Pearl Jam’s first 6 albums are the best. The last few (I lost count) not so good, sadly.
@Travis (99): im not so sure about that one… haha
#75 The Other Darren…
…i’m sure i’m not the only one who doesn’t have a fuggin’ CLUE what you said…SAVE THE ABBREVIATIONS FOR TEXT MESSAGING!
Hunger Strike… What a song…
Yes a good list! I love Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains
Pearl Jam had their moments, but they shouldnt even be mentioned in the same breath as Alice in Chains and Nirvana.
One of the best list in a while ! My hat off to you Maggot. Research outstanding.A few of these bands i`ve neverheard of but will soon.
Gen Tits – Don`t be hating on P. Jam. When is your new list coming out ?
Nirvana is the best IMHO.
@Maggot (97):
..and JFrater edited it out? For shame! J/K
Cornell does have a great voice, but the difference is, I could listen to Layne all day, and Cornell’s voice gets…well, boring.
I think I’ve seen every AIC vid on YouTube…for me, the MTV Unplugged from ’96 is the most moving.
I believe Pearl Jam is the best on this list because of their longevity and popularity. I know Cobain and Staley died which cut the careers of their bands short. PJ is still around making music. Granted it’s not as good as their earlier stuff.
I have to give a shot outs to Chris Cornell and Dave Grohl. No mattter what band they are in they find success.
Actually when Soundgarden signed to SST it probally made more sense. SST was more established, had a better stable or at least history of punk/aternative bands, had signed bands from all over the country and was clearly moving into an experimental rock direction as far as new material. Just saying.
PS I love PAW – although they may fall into “post grunge”.
Good list
@JustKar (107): I could listen to Layne all day
Yeah, I had gone on about how his emotionally deep and soulful, yet bleak and depressing lyrical themes were unfortunately indicative of his spiraling heroin addiction. But very moving, I’ve gotten goosebumps listening to the guy.
Where is Screaming Trees? Nirvana ripped these guys off terribly, there would be no Nirvana were it not for Screaming Trees…
perhaps the best list evar.
every band listened to and loved and the music shaped me.
i am so sad for the 00 generation.
listened to the radio lately? thought not.
@The Sea Captain (111): Where is Screaming Trees?
In the “honorable mention” area.
Nirvana ripped these guys off terribly, there would be no Nirvana were it not for Screaming Trees…
I hear you, but I think “ripped off terribly” and “there’d be no” is a bit of an exaggeration. The 80’s Seattle music scene was a very isolated situation, as evidenced by the co-mingling movement of musicians from band to band, for example. Everyone was friends with everyone else. They all went to each other’s gigs, etc. (many early shows were sparsely attended), and you can be certain that they all drew influences from each other in varying degrees of manifestation. These are generalized statements, but you get my drift. Cobain was friends with Trees’ frontman Mark Lanegan in those early days, and in fact Cobain participated on Lanegan’s 1990 solo album. Point being, musicians play what they like. Nirvana wasn’t going “well if we copy the Trees, we’ll be famous”. Ripping off is a dubious accusation anyway. Cobain loved the Melvins and even auditioned to join them, so if he was going to “copy” anyone, I’d think it’d be them. But mainly, they were content with basically just being an unknown garage band, like everyone else up there. They didn’t ask to or even want to *be* what Nirvana had become.
Truth be told, I struggled with leaving the Trees off of my list of 10. I even had an entry written up for them and a clip picked out. But at the end of the day, it boiled down to this – 7 bands here are locks IMO, leaving 3 slots to play with. I filled those slots with Malfunkshun, Skin Yard, and TAD. Each one of those three had what I thought were compelling enough reasons to put them on, but that’s not to say the Trees did not. I suppose I could’ve merged Malfunkshun’s details into the MLB entry and in hindsight perhaps I should’ve, but I didn’t. So shoot me.
Sweet list. In answer to #9, I can say yes to both.
And even better! ALICE IN CHAINS!!
Eddie’s voice is just immense!
and his lyrics are amazing especially Alive/Jeremy/Evenflow!
my favourite band
just behind RATM
first time commenter… on my favourite list so far.
i’m 34, born, raised and still live half the world away from Seattle but i believe this was the best era in music ever!!
i listen to other things as well, notably metal but after Chris Cornell did that album with Timbaland, i had to go back and rediscover how good it was back then. Rooster (AIC) still gives me goosebumps and thanx for mentioning TempleOfTheDog in the Bonus. Not a big fan of PJ but i do like Ten and Eddie’s voice.
Great list
in the early 90′s i saw nirvana and pearljam and smashing pumpkins and sonic youth and the melvins and beck and blah blah blah who-else/who-cares (because I was already “after-the-fact” and trailing the comet’s tail, from the point of view of beginnings go) as I always thought it all part of “the scene” and later thought the “grunge thing” as a relative shortlived affair. But I went off to college in a different state far from home and came in contact with hardcore fans of some of these gramps-disgruntled-mtv-bands and passing teenage drool. The continuation of music bonding hit the years of truth bonding (…and coke and pot and beer and *****ing) and individual likeness within the self of others. The extrapolated core of youthful vigor as a target board for discovery. Wince the day the reunited return on the small venue with pyrotechnics and spandex. Wince the large stadiums of doo-wop purple pressed suits on PBS. Oh why not: Wince the janus features of the grateful dead hippy marching for a cause (ie:***** phish). Wince the posers and breakdancers and where’s-the-cool-at- 9to5 hipsters and glitter gigolos and prostitutes of american idol.. and and and.. Wince the GRUNGE MOVEMENT because it never became the BUM MOVEMENT. (joke)
Although , only recently found out that SHOEGAZE may refer to a small portion of the field of low tide fervor that IS a part of grunge. Considered the reinstated zine post-internet emergence of hip fashion magazines and the revitalization of audio cassette self-publishers!
but hey, 80′s pop has wiggled its way back into hip hop, so who’s to say.
saw mudhoney when it was just a russ meyer movie and i didn’t know who russ meyer was. but who’s counting.
let us not forget that there is always counting.
and time with music flows differently in its own way
When was Stone Temple Pilots formed? Good list though.
I’m a huge grunge fan, I agree with most of this list.
I hate how any list of this calibre prompts at least a dozen replies of “WHY DIDN’T YOU INCLUDE XXX??”
Music is a matter of opinion for goodness sake, and this list puts no one in order. I could think of a number of people I’d add, but it’s a great list! Honestly.
Mudhoney have to do it for me everytime. After all, it was Mark Arm who coined the phrase “Grunge” to begin with.