Showing posts with label Less Than Jake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Less Than Jake. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

An Ear For An Era: 1998

Wow, 1998 was a good one! Maybe I can call it my personal 1997 (going by that oft discussed theory of the '7s). A great concentration of my favorite albums of the 90s occurred in 1998 so I'm going to focus on those. A banner year in music...for the underground at least. I'm pretty sure there were some pretty terrible things being done to music in the mainstream. In 1998 I was learning to ignore that and dove in to some great things that many people didn't know about.

We'll go by the general order in which I discovered things. Which means we'll start out with ska/punk. Battle Hymns by Suicide Machines was my first "punk" album when I actually knew what punk was (meaning not counting The Offspring or Green Day). I went from skapunk to wanting to get some "pure punk" and even though there is ska on Battle Hymns it seemed close enough at the time. The longest track on the album is 2:19. Just an album full of short bursts of energy. Politics and punk and a tiny bit of ska but not as much as their previous album. I remember seeing them on the Fourth of July 1998. It was high energy show and the singer handed me his Gatorade to pass around. Then we took the bus to City Park to watch fireworks. Good year, that.

The very first time I went to a record store the day an album came out was for Less Than Jake's Hello Rockview. I probably took the bus because there was a bus stop right by Rocks Off Records. Or maybe it was when Tribal Rites had a record store. That was on the same block. But buses were free for minors like myself so I loved taking that bus downtown. On a Tuesday I showed up after school. I had to ask about it because it wasn't on the shelf. The guy said they just got these boxes in. He opened one up and there it was! I was probably the first person in Fort Collins to buy Hello Rockview! Buying albums the day they came out became quite a hobby for me over the years that I still follow pretty regularly (the last year or two I've slowed down on that just because this project means I can't really listen to it for a week or two anyway). However, I remember the music being fairly disappointing. I liked the energy but the production just seemed like overkill to me. The horns seemed almost synthesized. I know I'm in the minority about this album and it's a fan favorite but it was really the beginning of the end for me and skapunk. It's funny that most of my favorite ska/punk albums are from the years leading up to me listening to it, and then when I was into it most of the stuff that came out was inferior to the glorious 1994-1996 stuff.

One major exception to this was Slow Gherkin. Shed Some Skin may have been the last great skapunk album. Not that that genre fits it particularly well. More like a mix of two-tone ska and Weezer-esque rock. Whatever you call it, I loved it and I still love it; it's much more consistent than their debut. They figured out their sound here and put so much passion into it. Later I wanted to use the title track as my "personal" high school graduation song because the class' song was something stupid. In retrospect, it'd serve better as a high school reunion song because it's about going away and growing up and coming back. Anyway, this album was also the general timeline of the most unbelievable memory of any show I've ever been to. I was at this one with my friends this time, and we spent some time haggling with the band on the price of the CDs at the show (which in retrospect was kind of mean of us, sure we could get them cheaper from Asian Man but the band needs help on the road NOW!) and then while they were playing the craziest thing EVER EVER EVER happened to me. It seems like a dream. We were on the right side of the stage, front row, right in front of the valve trombonist. I think his name was Matt. During an instrumental break he actually HANDED THE TROMBONE TO ME. I picked it up and I PLAYED WITH SLOW GHERKIN! I HAD A SOLO! WHAT?!?!?!?! Thinking back, I kind of wonder if that was on purpose or he was just putting it down and I took it from him. But how would I assume he was handing it to me unless he was being obvious about it? He had to have been. I don't remember if I'd talked to him about trombone before the show, but how else did this happen? How else would he know I kind of knew how to play? Was it a dream? I believe it really actually happened.

And back to punk rock. I know I'm not being fair but that first Dropkick Murphys album Do or Die holds a special place in my heart more than anything they've done since. I didn't even drink back then and I loved these drinking anthems! The deep appreciation to the hard working union man, fighting against oppression and incorrect assumptions, and just being rowdy. Here is my favorite drinking song.

The Dropkick Murphys "Barroom Hero"

Refused put out their final statement in The Shape of Punk to Come and lived up to the audacious title. The use of electronic beats, jazz, and a whole lot of other things serves well to further intensify the hardcore punk that screams out of the speakers from behind every corner. It's like a good horror movie where the moments of calm are there to build tension and make the jump scenes that much more effective. And the whole thing turns on a dime, shifting rhythms and hitting harder than anything.

Refused "The Deadly Rhythm"

Oh, what's that? My favorite album or at least nearly my favorite album of all time? Broken Star by The Broadways. No question about it. Now. How do I explain this? The Broadways took highly political subject matter and made it highly personal. Three distinctive voices with three perspectives, different styles of lyrics, brought together in such a cohesive, infectious way. The music itself was deep, complex, comforting, and aggravating all at the same time. Brendan's overtly political listen-to-what-I-just-read-about style, Dan's lamenting of a world that has gone the way of commercialism, and Chris' personal struggles to deal with such a place. It's an unspoken narrative. It's three overlapping parts that tell an overall story of this world and how we deal with it and where it's been and where it's going. Without trying. It's a bunch of punk rock songs. But it's bigger, so much bigger than all this...here's the one song that combines each vocalist/lyricist to hopefully kind of demonstrate what I'm talking about. But to really get it, you need to listen to this record. Over and over again.

The Broadways "I Hear Things Are Just as Bad Down in Lake Erie"

I admit that I didn't get Alkaline Trio's debut LP Goddamnit in 1998 when it came out. This was a time when mailorder from Asian Man Records was one of my favorite things in the world but the curse word in the title made it hard to navigate sneaking it by my parents. The funny thing now is that when the 10 year anniversary remaster came out they got it for me for my birthday without me even mentioning wanting it. But here's my history with Alkaline Trio way back then. They were on a tour with MU330 and stopped by Fort Collins. Even back then I was going to shows by myself because I didn't have any friends there and while I was waiting for the show to start some dudes invited me to play pool with them. I was pretty terrible but what do they expect, asking some kid? But it was fun. I ended up losing by scratching on an 8 ball shot. Anyway, while all that was going on apparently Alkaline Trio was playing and I totally missed it. I would soon regret that (but I was there to see MU330 anyway). When their second album came out I got that and then came back around to Goddamnit. And then that became one of my favorite albums ever. Heart-on-your-sleeve punk rock got me through some tough times and I go back every once in a while. I really love this early Alkaline Trio stuff for its insane drum fills, clever lyrics, repeating motifs, and extended codas. It's a good formula that served them well.

Alkaline Trio "San Francisco"

Jets to Brazil's debut album Orange Rhyming Dictionary kind of cleaned the slate of any sour impressions people had of the last Jawbreaker album because while it had some similarities (particularly Blake's cleaned up vocals), the passionate lyrics and just plain beautiful songs opened up a whole new world of possibilities. This is not Jawbreaker. This is nothing like Jawbreaker. This is a new project and it has pretty songs.

I think I discovered Neutral Milk Hotel in college when I pretty much discovered every indie rock band. Because of music downloading sites. I forget what the one was called that I used, but one night I just went through the first 20 pages or so of most popular "indie" bands and downloaded a song by each of them. "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea" became a favorite. It took me a while to actually acquire the album (also called In the Aeroplane Over the Sea) but it was easy to listen to that one on repeat. Kind of a precursor to some other now very successful indie bands, particularly The Decemberists. Literary, passionate, easy, catchy.

I have no segue to switch over to hip hop.

I shamefully haven't listened to Aquemini by Outkast nearly enough to say much about it, but it is quite an incredible album. They pretty much could do no wrong. Moment of Truth is another great Gang Starr album and includes my introduction to them, "You Know My Steez." Thanks to my friend with a very extensive hip hop knowledge I discovered one of my favorite MCs. I remember Hello Nasty by The Beastie Boys had some fun videos and got a lot of praise. I didn't pay much attention to that at the time but it is yet another great one by them. One girl that liked the same ska bands as me insisted that Lauryn Hill was better than I was giving hip hop credit for. But I just would not listen, even though I think it contradicted every argument I had about hip hop being bad. But ok, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is a pretty great album, I'll give you that finally after all these years.

And one of my favorite hip hop albums of all time, probably my favorite hip hop album of the 90s, came out in 1998. It took me a while to come around to these guys but everything about Black Star is amazing. Hi-Tek's (and others') beats, Talib Kweli's and Mos Def's next-next-next-level flows and wordplay, the energy and the love, it all comes together in such a ridiculously good way.

Black Star "Definition"


Other things:

  • Mutations by Beck was another good one by Beck.
  • Massive Attack, Fatboy Slim, and Air were pretty good there too.
  • The two songs I have off Deserter's Songs by Mercury Rev are fantastic and I wish I had the full album!
  • It's a bit rough listening to a full 25 song album by Wesley Willis but I made it through! The highlight of course was "Cut The Mullet."
  • Remember that video for "Rabbit In Your Headlights" by UNKLE featuring Thom Yorke?
  • The soundtrack to Velvet Goldmine is pretty golden. Awesome throwback to the glam era featuring Shudder to Think and Thom Yorke and others!
  • Empty Bottles Broken Hearts by Murder City Devils is very great, but maybe not quite up there with their self-titled album from '97.
  • Featuring "Birds" by Quasi was on my radar to check out for a long time, and then I finally got it and have only listened to it a few times. Turns out I'm not as into them as I thought. Still good though.
  • Jay-Z Vol. 2 ... Hard Knock Life.
  • I used to think End Hits was the last Fugazi album and they had broken up. Or some sort of collection of songs from the end of their tenure and they had broken up. How exciting it was when they put out another album a couple years later! But that seems to have been it.
  • Electro-Shock Blues may be Eels' best album. Very personal. I love that song "Climbing to the Moon."
  • The Ex - Starters Alternators. Still pushing forward 20 years into their career (and this was 16 years ago!)
  • Interesting to hear feuding tracks between Hepcat and Skinnerbox...
  • The Boy With The Arab Strap is another great Belle & Sebastian album guys.
  • Elliott Smith was still good. xo was very good.
  • Early Calexico effort The Black Light has "Trigger" on it so you know they started strong.
  • Pulp. This is Hardcore. I remember the album cover from way before I ever heard the album. Provocative! The album itself? Also provocative! I like Pitchfork's description of it as a "hangover" album after their last one.
Next Time:
We close out the 20th century so let's party! Sigur Ros, Alkaline Trio's amazing EP, Beck goes funky, Built to Spill's maybe best, Dr. Dooom, Slim Shady, The Soft Bulletin, Handsome Boy Modeling School, Hank III, 69 Love Songs, Mos Def solo, The Decline, Out Hud/!!!, Pavement bows out, The Roots, and another classic from "Weird Al" Yankovic.

Monday, August 11, 2014

An Ear For An Era: 1996

Okay. This was a turning point. Well, the music released in 1996 was a turning point for me, even though I personally did not turn until 1997. But I have a lot to say about some of this stuff so we'll just get started.

Reel Big Fish changed my life. Specifically their major label debut Turn the Radio Off. This album changed everything for me. Because while they were very popular at the time, they turned me on to a whole new scene, one based out of the underground, things I could not hear on the radio or MTV. This whole ska craze, silly as it was, completely changed me. All because I played trombone in junior high band and was excited to find the trombone being used in popular rock music. Plus the goofiness made it easy to get into as a 13/14 year old. It taught me to think for myself. It got me into bands that showed me a new way of thinking. And I probably wouldn't have discovered any of this without the success of Reel Big Fish (or maybe The Mighty Mighty Bosstones, but my brother got that CD so I didn't get into them as much). I remember finding them in the "ska" section of Wherehouse Music, one of those big, fairly corporate music stores. I remember looking at other CDs in that section. I got a compilation called Generic Skaca because it had a Reel Big Fish song I hadn't heard before on it, and that introduced me to another 20 or so bands. Ska got me into punk, which got me into "emo" and then "indie" and then everything. And I owe it to this, my favorite album from junior high. I can't speak enough to how much I loved this album. I tried to figure out the horn lines on trombone. I went and saw them at the Ogden Theater and it was the first concert I went to that was my choice and a band I had actually heard (the first show I had gone to that was my choice was our friend's ska band Area 52 in Fort Collins, but I wasn't so familiar with them). I bought the shirt and put it on because I didn't know any better. I still have that shirt. I still wear it sometimes skiing because it's one of my few long sleeved t-shirts. I saw RBF at Warped tour a year or two ago because my sister won tickets and we decided to go for the hell of it. The majority of the songs they played were from this almost 20 year old album because even they know what the people wanted to hear.

Reel Big Fish "Sell Out"

I never got super into Sublime but I did enjoy their popular songs. Like "Wrong Way." Another trombone part I memorized. And "What I Got" reminded me of the junior high dance when it came on in a censored version, how it didn't matter that it was censored because everyone was singing along with all those f words...

Chumps on Parade was my favorite MU330 album for a long time. They matured quite a bit after this, so it's the more "fun" one featuring plenty of goofy songs like "Rok" and "La," good sing-along songs. It starts with back-to-back punk rock songs under a minute thirty, which really reminds me of seeing them live. They would just bring the energy! And Gerry would bust out the chainsaw and go crazy. I remember talking to Gerry at the Starlight in Fort Collins after a show while waiting for my mom to pick me up. What a crazy thrill that was. He was my favorite since he was in both Skankin' Pickle and MU330, two of my all time favorite ska bands. And Skankin' Pickle called it quits here! The Green Album was their last one! A good mix of goofy and inventive as always. Lots of cover songs on here too. Their cover of "Special Brew" was why I got into Bad Manners once upon a time.

Slapstick was another lightning-in-a-bottle band on the Dill/Asian Man roster that my friends and I got obsessed with. They didn't last long, but what they created was very memorable. Today they're probably more famous for the bands its members would go on to create/join, but the fact that so much talent was condensed into this one skapunk band is pretty remarkable. Brendan's lyrics were a great summation of what it feels like to grow up in Chicago (I assume). Songs about losing friends, riding the bus, and not wanting to grow up really hit home for me (particularly the non-Chicago specific portions). And talking to homeless people. I think Slapstick is the reason my friend and I talked to homeless people in high school. We created some great memories doing that, and somehow managed to not be murdered.

And Less Than Jake! Losing Streak was a big hit for me and my friends. Just a ton of energy and what felt like brilliant lyrics at the time. One of my favorite live bands at the time as well. And I remember when Greased came out (an EP of cover songs from Grease) I looked everywhere for it and finally found it on a field trip to Denver (I think we went to go watch a performance of Macbeth or something for AP English) at Virgin Records or some such big CD store.

Chim Chim's Badass Revenge is the first Fishbone album I got and might still be my favorite. Just the anger and energy it puts off are so cool. Pure funky skapunk or whatever you want to call the genre. Lots of toilet humor because they just didn't care about that anymore. And this song was probably my first instance of appreciating a rap (outside of Weird Al and Simpsons of course):

Fishbone featuring Busta Rhymes "Psychologically Overcast"

Remember that whole swing craze that came about around the same time as the ska craze? I was into Squirrel Nut Zippers because of the use of horns again. My friends and I took swing lessons and I can still do the Charleston. But Hot! is a very enjoyable album even today. That's the timelessness of jazz, folks. Even if there was a weird boom in popularity in the mid 90s, that stuff still sounds good today. I remember hearing the song "Hell" on 93.3 which was the alternative or whatever station and the DJ came back on air saying "as in...what the Hell was that?" and I was annoyed that he seemed put off by it because I dug it so much.

I wonder if I had heard Neutral Milk Hotel's On Avery Island at the time if I would have appreciated it because of its use of horns. And the fact that it has a song called "April 8th" and my birthday is April 7th. Probably not. It's a bit on the mature side of things. It would have been badass of me to get into NMH back then though.

Now that that detour is done, let's get to punk, which should probably be right next to the ska but I had to talk about those in that order. The Descendents' kind of reunion or something album Everything Sucks was another favorite. It was funny that Reel Big Fish and The Descendents both had songs called "Everything Sucks" the same year. And they both had albums with that name. But yeah, this is what got me into The Descendents, even though it didn't take me long to get into their back catalog as a result. It's a good thing they didn't mature too much for this album. There are a couple thoughtful songs but most of them are short and silly. And "I'm The One" is a trademark Descendents pop punk girl song that I love.

The Suicide Machines were probably my favorite punk band for a while there, mostly because they incorporated a lot of ska. Destruction By Definition will always hold a place in my heart because of how earnest it is and the crazy levels of energy it has.

And now let's talk about Weird Al again. Bad Hair Day was another one I got when it was new, as all of his albums will be from here on out. "The Alternative Polka" was, despite the fact that I watched MTV and tried to figure out what to like, my introduction to lots of the popular songs of the day. My friend and I made a music video for "Gump" but got in trouble for using my brother's dart gun even though it wasn't loaded. But obviously I get why it was a stupid idea. I also remember watching some New Year's Eve coverage and Weird Al was performing that song and it cut away to The Presidents of the United States of America showing them all stoked on the song, dancing and singing along. I think even now they might still end "Lump" with the "And that's all I have to say about that" line in live performances. Such a stark contrast to Coolio's reaction to "Amish Paradise."

But I think that means it's time to talk about The Presidents of the United States of America. I eagerly got their second album II because it came out and my brother had beaten me to the punch of their first album. I loved this one so much. Dancing around my room singing along, no shame. Probably a good transition to ska in that it was very goofy and easy for a 13 year old to get into. Songs about puffy little shoes, volcanoes, and Tiki gods, I was just obsessed with it. I still have the whole thing memorized even though I hadn't listened to it in forever (6 years, if my itunes stats are correct!). I also remember the hidden track was my first encounter with such a thing because I was so confused about it I had to ask my friends if they had that weird track with the kid talking about basketball on their copy, and I might have even asked the band about it in an email (I never heard back though).

Side note: An example of the same practice with less success was Crash Test Dummies' A Worm's Life. I got it because my brother had their popular album and then this one came out. Turned out to be pretty disappointing.

I never got into Weezer until sometime after these two first amazing albums. Somehow I missed them even though I was watching MTV at the time and my friends were getting into them. But Pinkerton is a very special album that I don't really need to elaborate on because I feel like everyone already knows. Everybody knew before I did.  But "El Scorcho" went on many mixtapes anyway. And then "Falling For You" for who is now my wife, because of course it did. 

My first official "guilty pleasure" when I was into ska and punk and whatnot was what I assumed was just pure pop: "Lovefool" by The Cardigans. I didn't realize it was a respectable pop, a Swedish alt-pop sort of thing. It was just so catchy and I was slightly embarrassed that I loved it so much. Eventually I got the CD First Band on the Moon and yeah, it's pretty awesome.

The Cardigans "Lovefool"

I guess that takes me to other such indie minded things. Brainiac (a.k.a. 3RA1N1AC) were as indie minded as you could get I think. About as creative and outside thinking as rock and roll gets. It sucks that their career would be cut off so prematurely after just an EP more, but Hissing Prigs in Static Couture is probably their definitive statement. The levels of distortion on the vocals, the weird effects they put the guitars through, there is really nothing else like this. When I discovered Brainiac (a good 8 or so years later) I remember being disappointed that they weren't more influential, that others hadn't really taken on this sort of sound (Enon did it to a degree, and I do love me some Enon, but that doesn't count since it's the dude from Brainiac). I guess maybe others wouldn't be able to particularly pull it off. Here's a song that to me is a classic dance track, in its own unique way.

3RA1N1AC "Pu55yf00t1n'"

Belle & Sebastian put out a couple in '96. Tigermilk was a fine debut, but If You're Feeling Sinister is just next level. So much heart-on-the-sleeve. So comforting. And heartbreaking at the same time. This might be my favorite Belle & Sebastian track. (Sorry I didn't write much here, it's just getting so long and I'm running out of juice!)

Belle & Sebastian "Seeing Other People"

WHY HIP HOP SUCKS IN '96
I hated hip hop in '96. That hatred would continue for a good 4-5 years. But at this time obviously I didn't know about all the great stuff that was out. I was very closed minded about the stuff too. I wouldn't have appreciated Reasonable Doubt, the fantastic debut of Jay-Z, even though it is of the highest quality. It was just talking and rhyming. For some reason I even made fun of hip hop for having so many tracks featuring other rappers. Like collaboration is anything besides awesome. On some church retreat thing me and the other punk rock kids declared our group "Team Outkazt" (or some such spelling) because we were such outcasts...and then were disappointed that there was already "some rap group" called Outkast and how could someone that does such a popular form of music as rap be an outcast? I really didn't get it. But ATLiens is a beautiful thing that, if I had given it a chance, I would have probably gotten really into it. Not anything like the crap on the radio. Spacey sounds, smart wordplay, delivery that absolutely requires more than what I made fun of. Ah well. Eventually I got it. Similarly spacey and sci-fi based was Dr. Octagonecologyst featuring Dan the Automator and Kool Keith. Hip hop from the future, man! And then The Roots, Illadelph Halflife. Man. This.

The Roots "No Alibi"

Let's see, other hip hop. The Fugees' The Score is pretty brilliant. DJ Shadow's Endtroducing is a whole different thing. Instrumental hip hop. DJ mastery. Even when I got it because I was open minded 10 years later for some sort of anniversary reissue, it took me a while to get into it. But this time it just felt right to listen to it. De La Soul's 1996 album Stakes Is High seems like if I were to open my mind just a hair I would have appreciated it. It's very smart, criticizing the very aspects of mainstream hip hop that I held against the whole genre.

And of course Tupac's All Eyez On Me came out in 1996 shortly before his death. I remember when he died a skater guy in my class who was into hip hop was very upset about it, saying it was like losing a member of his family. I didn't get it then, and while today I'm still not as interested in Tupac as other hip hop, I can recognize the talent and travesty of it all.


Also Noted:
  • Archers of Loaf's All the Nations Airports is another fantastic one from those dudes.
  • The Age of Octeen by Braid. Neat!
  • Odelay! What a hugely influential album. I should give it a full paragraph but this thing is so gigantic and it wasn't that big of a deal to me at the time so I'm just putting it here. I just liked the videos and didn't get the actual album until much later. I wasn't ever really a Beck devotee, just an appreciator late to the party.
  • It Was Written is another quality Nas album...
  • I didn't get the Refused album Songs to Fan The Flames of Discontent until a couple years ago when they did their reunion tour and I only knew the fantastic The Shake of Punk to Come, so I figured I should know more before seeing them live. STFTFOD turned out to be pretty damn spectacular on its own. 
  • The "Sordid Sentinels Edition" of Wowee Zowee by Pavement has some great bonus tracks, including what may be my favorite Pavement song of them all: "Give It A Day."
  • Beautiful Freak by Eels is this old? Damn. Such a good album though. And the song "My Beloved Monster" reminds me of walking my dog around an old apartment complex we used to live in.
  • Experiment Zero was one of my favorite Man or Astroman albums that I only had on vinyl for the longest time.
  • My friend and I used to obnoxiously sing "Popular" by Nada Surf during soccer practice, not really getting the irony of the song and thinking it was stupid but still catchy. Then I got it. Then years later I found out they are actually a very good band! I like the album High/Low quite a bit, it does a really good job creating and retaining energy. I used to think some of those builds should be used by a harder band as a way to bust into something screamy, but now I think it works best as it is.
  • Maniacal Laughter is the other early Bouncing Souls album that is great fun.
  • The Modest Mouse songs from the Building Nothing Out of Something album (a compilation of 7" songs) of 1996 include the ones from one of my favorite 7" records I own: "A Life of Arctic Sounds" b/w "Medication." Two of my favorite Modest Mouse songs for sure.
  • The same year as all that Slapstick I already have a couple Broadways early songs. I'm excited about those ones!
  • "Criminal" by Fiona Apple was another guilty pleasure type of song for me, but I think mostly for its music video. Rawr!
  • Being There shows that Wilco was already very amazing very early on.
  • I need to listen to This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About more. Not my favorite Modest Mouse album but since I so love the surrounding singles I probably just need to give it some more attention.
  • I mildly got into Goldfinger. Mostly for their associations with Reel Big Fish. And the ska songs. And how silly some of the songs were.
  • No Code by Pearl Jam was maybe the last of the pre-ska CDs I got. I got it when it came out and the packaging was really neat but I didn't particularly care for the music that much.
  • Gah and Johnny Cash! American II: Unchained! He was on a hot streak!
  • Double Happiness by Slow Gherkin brought back tons of great memories. Even though I've always thought of the album as sort of a hodgepodge (the next album would be much more cohesive), it is full of great songs that invoke great memories of great friends at a great time in my life.
  • The Welcome To The Dollhouse soundtrack featured Future Bible Heroes! I love that movie. Todd Solondz is brilliant.
Next Time:
1997 was when I actually officially became a ska devotee (all of the 1996 stuff I wrote about I listened to in 1997-1998). So we've got The Bruce Lee Band, Buck-O-Nine, Hippos, The Impossibles, two Link 80 albums, the Bosstones, MU330, Mustard Plug, and more of that.
...And other stuff like Ben Folds Five, Beulah, Blonde Redhead, a Bob Dylan comeback thing, the last EP from Brainiac, Cartoon Planet lunacy, Chemical Brothers, Cornershop, Daft Punk, Elliott Smith, two Hot Water Music albums, Les Savy Fav, Missy Elliott, MTX, Murder City Devils, B.I.G., The Offspring, OOIOO, Sleater-Kinney, Tuesday, Wu-Tang, and a seminal Yo La Tengo album.
Oh, and OK Computer.