For example, a band like Joy Division. Two masterpiece albums in the form of Unknown Pleasures and Closer, and the untimely death of Ian Curtis cut it all short. They were even heading into the direction that New Order eventually went in, and it would have been interesting to see what Ian Curtis would have done if they fully made the leap into electronic music while he was still alive.

    • FuryQuaker@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I dunno man. I love Nirvana and they broke through just as I became a teenager.

      But I think they would have become lame eventually. The greatest thing about Nirvana was their resistance to the mainstream, they youthful energy and great melodies. I don’t think it would’ve been pretty when Kurt turned 40.

      • fleacircus@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        It’s depressing how difficult it is to imagine an alternative universe where Kurt could have made it to 40 and still been Kurt.

        Maybe somewhere out there was a 90s with better solutions to mental health problems then “just do heroin until you can’t stand it any more then kill yourself” and we’d have a few thousand more artists running around.

        But would it have been enough? I feel like he’d hate the world we built.

        Corporations psychopathically wrung every penny they could from his life, art and obvious misery. They didn’t show the slightest remorse for their part in his tragic, lonely death, instead just revealing in the feed frenzy it caused and the millions it put into their bank accounts.

        But even after watching them feed artists into the woodchipper over and over again, we still didn’t burn it down. We didn’t even get angry. We just let the neoliberalism wash over us, settling into it like a lukewarm bath.

        He couldnt stand racism, homophobia, fundamentalism and toxic masculinity. He was angry, hurt and disillusioned so he wrote poetry and music and put it into the world.

        Now the angry, hurt, dissilussioned kids just make far-right memes because a social media exec decided letting them get groomed was worth it for 14c worth of ad impressions.

        I just don’t see how he could have made it here, watching everything he hated packaged up in plastic and sold to the world, unable to even hide away with his little family because for a few years he was the hot new product.

        • snownyte@kbin.social
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          6 months ago

          But would it have been enough? I feel like he’d hate the world we built.

          He definitely would have. He had a very strong distaste for the system and for him to see the world become this manufactured when he tried being a part of the tide that worked against it. I think he’d honestly be finding a new reason to kill himself over.

      • Usually_Lurker@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I still enjoy Foo Fighters and feel that Dave Grohl has grown up and is still relevant. People change as they get older and some even improve.

      • joshfaulkner@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        But remember, one third of Nirvana in their final incarnation was Dave Grohl. With his talent, image what might have been…

  • SaltyLemon@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    System of a down. I mean they’re not gone but they’ve only produced music for like 6-7 years and nothing since.

    • DeusHircus@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      I think they’re pretty much gone, they’ve said they can barely work together due to creative differences. They released 2 singles out of the blue 3 years ago in support of Armenia and I thought there was a chance of a reunion, but I highly doubt it

    • XYZinferno@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Man, I absolutely love System of a Down. At the very least, I’m happy that those 6-7 years produced so many bangers

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Just enjoy what they made without giving in to record companies and turning to shit, only playing what they wanted.

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      1 year ago

      Fuck, that was so tragic. Would it have changed his life if he had lived a couple more months? Would he have cleaned up and gotten his shit together? We’ll never know. The news really cast a pall over that year, especially for those who already knew of Sublime. It just felt so unfair, man. We had finally come to accept Kurt’s death, were still mourning Shannon’s passing, and now Brad, who never got to reap the fruits of his labor, was gone. He left us a gift, and I mean one hell of a gift because it’s a freaking beautiful album, but it’s hard to not wonder “what if?”

      Like Kurt and Shannon, he was just so wonderfully talented and beloved, the world suddenly felt very cold and slightly less bright in his absence. Just so unfair. Pour one out for Brad, he is still sorely missed.

      • Kaliax@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Well said. I also think people would dig more of their catalog/non mainstream recordings. Brad’s voice was magic imo.

        • Tankaus@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Pure gold, without a doubt. I’ve seem them with Rome and while I do like his style, it’s just not the same. I was supposed to see them right before Brad’s passing.

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        Hard to say whether it would have changed anything. He was in a vicious cycle that’s claimed many before and since, but it would have been nice to at least have him see the magic he brought into the world.

  • puncmunc@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The death of Mark Sandman (such a great name) on stage, 24 years ago, brought an end to Morphine. No other band can match the imagery and atmosphere of Noir as well as they could. You could also feel the evolution of their sound from their last album The Night.

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      1 year ago

      Re-listening to their albums got me through some angsty sleepless nights in the first lockdown. I love his voice. And I think he would have carried on making great music even if it wasn’t with Morphine.

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    1 year ago

    I always liked the band Jellyfish.

    I just took a gander over to Wikipedia to learn why they broke up. It was there where I read one of the best break up write ups ever:

    “During the tour for Spilt Milk, Sturmer and Manning grew increasingly distant as friends. On their return home, the two songwriters independently wrote material for a third album, provisionally titled Nausea Trois. By then, they were drifting apart musically. Manning remembered that, prior, they would bond over albums such as Paul McCartney’s Ram or the Zombies’ Odessey and Oracle; however, “it was clear that none of that was happening anymore.” He said that he was “rediscovering my love of […] high-energy, fun melodic pop with attitude. And Andy was Leonard Cohen. That was it.” When Sturmer presented him a country ballad song, he accordingly “left in tears because I had zero interest in recording it.” Sturmer felt that Manning had outgrown the partnership, and for his part, was fearful that Manning’s new songs would likely inspire journalists to persistently compare the band to Alice Cooper.”

    Really paints a picture!

    They were a good band while it lasted.

    https://youtu.be/RTrfvwpX9g0

    Also…In 2004 or 2005, Coachella organizers invited Manning to reunite Jellyfish for a one-off performance at the festival. Manning advised the organizers to consult Sturmer first. Sturmer, through his lawyer, responded he would not accept the offer regardless of any amount of money involved.

    Woah!!

  • Boozilla@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Traveling Wilburys. I know a supergroup of old guys is kind of cheating as an answer to your question. But it’s a shame they weren’t able to record more.

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    1 year ago

    Juice WRLD. Was introduced to his music about a year after he died, and was bummed there wouldn’t be any new songs from him.

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    1 year ago

    Frightened Rabbit. Good body of work still but would have loved to see them keep going. Their music really hit close to home. Plus I only learned of them several months after Scott Hutchison’s suicide. What could’ve been.