These are the records—by Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Hole, PJ Harvey, Melvins, and more—that defined the decade’s most influential genre.
From Lauryn Hill to Radiohead, My Bloody Valentine to Janet Jackson, Nirvana to Wu-Tang Clan, and so many more, these are the albums that changed music forever.
The tracks that defined the ’90s, including Björk, Biggie, Mariah, Bikini Kill, Aaliyah, 2Pac, and many, many more.
Read this 1996 Details profile of the Soundgarden frontman, published online for the first time.
Remembering the late rocker and his undervalued versatility.
In his recent grunge oral history, Mark Yarm chronicles the flannel-friendly Seattle scene through its famed stars and unsung heroes. Matthew Perpetua talks to him about that era's sexual politics, drug culture, and legacy.
Goofy, offensive, amateurish, and puzzling-- these are the worst album covers of 2010.
We cap our five-feature celebration of Sub Pop's first 20 years with a look at some records and artifacts from the label's history that, while they didn't make the cut in last week's Sub Pop 20, still mean something to at least one of our staffers.
We continue our celebration of two decades of Sub Pop with 20 of our staff's favorite albums from the Seattle label.
Mark Arm (Mudhoney, Green River) has been involved with Sub Pop since before there was a Sub Pop, and he has recorded for the label now for all of its 20 years. We spoke to him about his longtime association with the Pac NW imprint and what Bruce Pavitt and Jonathan Poneman's brainchild has meant to the Seattle scene.