The 1960s and the 1990s are considered two great decades for rock — but that doesnโt mean 1960s rock stars always liked 1990s rock stars. The Rolling Stonesโ Mick Jagger and Keith Richards were known for speaking their mind and creating controversy. Did they ever speak their minds on 1990s rockers?
The similarities between 1960s rock and 1990s rock
Rock music was a huge cultural force in the 1990s. Some of the bands of the time took obvious inspiration from 1960s music. Bands like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Soundgarden clearly incorporated some of the heavy sounds of Led Zeppelin into their work. In addition, the unorthodox lyrics of many 1990s rock songs are indebted to the strange lyrics of 1960s acts like the Beatles and the Moody Blues.
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The Rolling Stones arguably exerted a certain amount of influence over 1990s rock. A number of their best songs, from โ(I Canโt Get No) Satisfactionโ to โAngieโ are about angst, and angst was the major lyrical theme in grunge music. So what did Jagger think about 1990s rock?
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Mick Jagger on Nirvana and other 1990s bands
โIโm not in love with [rock music] at the moment,โ Jagger told Rolling Stoneโs Jann S. Wenner in 1995. Jagger admitted he “was never crazy about Nirvana — too angst-ridden for me. I like Pearl Jam. I prefer them to a lot of other bands. Thereโs a lot of angst in a lot of it, which is one of the great things to tap into. But Iโm not a fan of moroseness.โ Jagger added, โI donโt think any of these bands would claim to be daringly different.โ
Wenner asked Jagger about the influence 1960s bands had on 1990s bands. โIn that thereโs four people playing guitars and so on, thereโs a lot of โ60s influence. It may appear that theyโre playing the same thing or look the same on MTV, or thereโs certain haircuts youโve seen on the Byrds. But the grooves are different.โ In addition, Jagger felt none of the American bands of the 1990s shared the Rolling Stonesโ sense of the theatrical, save for the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Keith Richards on the Rolling Stones’ influence on Generation X rock
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Keith Richards opened up about the same topic. In a 1994 interview with Guitar World, Gary Graff noted how the Rolling Stones fell out of favor with other bands in the 1970s while โyounger bandsโ from the 1990s revered the Rolling Stones. Richards attributed this to โa matter of fashion and timing.โ He also felt things had come โfull circleโ now that current bands revered the Rolling Stones. In addition, Richards admired how many current guitarists were getting involved in music at an early age.
On the same token, Richards admitted he wasnโt too familiar with Nirvana, the band which was often seen as the voice of the mid-1990s. Richards didnโt even know Kurt Cobainโs name for much of Nirvanaโs existence. Some fans could see that as a slap in the face to 1990s rock! Regardless of what Jagger and Richards said, the Rolling Stones still clearly meant something to the rockers of Generation X, and their influence on other musicians lasts to this day.
