"Black Hole Sun" won the 1995 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock
Performance, and "Spoonman" won the Grammy for Best Metal Performance.
"Black Hole Sun" was also nominated for Best Rock Song, and
SUPERUNKNOWN was nominated for Best Rock Album.
As the first grunge
band to be signed by a major label, Seattle's Soundgarden opened the
pop floodgates, and a deluge of thrash-o-rama bands began swamping the
airwaves. Following a series of trend-setting releases on the
independent Sub Pop and SST labels, Soundgarden's initial A&M
releases LOUDER THAN LOVE and BADMOTORFINGER signaled the return of the
classic guitar band to popular consciousness.
Using the time-honored
Led Zeppelin/Aerosmith approach as a jump-off point--not to mention
influential bands like Black Sabbath, MC5, The Stooges and Killing
Joke--Soundgarden has formalized their own approach to raw power. Their
stylized melodic hooks, however, along with their sometimes surreal
lyrics, set them apart from the pack. Whether they get dazed and
confused on the vamping "Limo Wreck," or cut loose with a wham-
bam-thank-you-ma'am 4/4 cruncher like "Kickstand," Soundgarden can rock
and roll with all the jet-propelled, no-nonsense crunch of all your
favorite bands, from Zeppelin to the Ramones--and lead guitarist Kim
Thayil's chops never outrace his melodic imagination.
But
Soundgarden is doing a lot more than simply recycling their best bits
for another run up the charts. With SUPERUNKNOWN, they're stretching
out and putting some distance between themselves and their imitators,
incorporating different styles into their own mix, and creating a fresh
modern sound. Certainly, there are not many bands who could rock
convincingly in 5/4 time without sounding like slumming jazzbos, but
Soundgarden's "My Wave" is a fist-shaking anthem that suggests the tone
of the Stones' "Get Off My Cloud." The curious mixture of psychedelic
blues elements, Near-Eastern tonalities and Indian ragas which make
"Head Down," "Black Hole Sun" and "Half" so distinctive indicates that
Soundgarden didn't simply cop their ideas from a Hollywood soundtrack.
With his guttural Steve Tyler-like growl, frontman/songwriter Chris
Cornell can turn a spoon player into a street shaman on "Spoonman,"
give in to despair on "Let Me Drown," or rail against authoritarian
types on "Head Down." With slamming production by Michael Beinhorn,
SUPERUNKNOWN is the hard rock event of 1994.
Release Date - 03/08/1994
Label - A&M Records (USA)
| TRACKS |
| 1 |
Let Me Drown |
| 2 |
My Wave |
| 3 |
Fell On Black Days |
| 4 |
Mailman |
| 5 |
Superunknown |
| 6 |
Head Down |
| 7 |
Black Hole Sun |
| 8 |
Spoonman |
| 9 |
Limo Wreck |
| 10 |
Day I Tried To Live, The |
| 11 |
Kickstand |
| 12 |
Fresh Tendrils |
| 13 |
4th Of July |
| 14 |
Half |
| 15 |
Like Suicide |