I wondered if anyone was going to post about this newest list.
I pretty much gave up on the list (although, really, who puts a lot of faith in an MTV organization to pick any music?) when I saw that not only was Nirvana in the list, but they topped it, too.
And Def Leppard’s one and only entry was “Photograph”? And Sheryl Crow was in the list, period?
The fact that they dubbed Creep Radiohead’s best song, and then putting it 55 places behind that Britney Spears song pretty much sums up how moronic this one is. :wally
Meh, okay, that was a limited reply. I’ll add this: Teen Spirit isn’t Nirvana’s best song either, and best isn’t even remotely what this is really about. Too bad they couldn’t have titled it more honestly, like most famous or popular songs (or videos). Not that I’d have cared, and it’s not like I’ll watch VH1 anyway. But just in the interests of honesty.
You’re surprised a Nirvana song was listed as one of the Top 100 of the last quarter-century? Like them or not, I’m puzzled as to how this is surprising.
The fact that Nirvana topped the list was one of the few good things about that list. Bad things include Nelly–and not only Nelly, but a Nelly song with some of the most idiotic lyrics ever penned, Greeen Day’s suckiest song, Hanson (!!), and the Backstreet Boys. Not to mention Alanis Morrisette, TLC, No Doubt, Celine Dion, Bon Jovi, and Britney Spears all beating out the Clash, the Ramones, Radiohead and Metallica. Good lord, people. Get a grip.
Bah! Drek… piffle… nonsense… crap… a sure sign of the coming apocalypse… and so forth.
Only about 4 of those bands would have made a real list, and it would have been for different songs.
VH1 can lick my sack :mad:
Well, at first, I was curious. Then, kabam! you guys come in and rescue me from what may have been the most frustrating experience of my life…! Danke sehr!
I understand why Emminem got #4 with “Lose Yourself”: it won an Oscar. It’s not actually a best list, as the term best is so subjective. It’s actually a Most Influential list. You can’t say these are the difinative best, but you can gauge pop-culture impact and cast a vote that way. “Thats why Smells Like Teen Spirit” always tops these things, its not their best but it was their biggest and most memorable.
And I would like to add that some of those songs are obviously just pandering to the morons of my age group (15-20). For example, Nelly. I can’t tell you how many times I was subjected to that terrible song last summer. Mostly by guys in white jeeps that slowed down to honk at me and my friends.
Lastly: The Ramones at #75??? A band that pretty much started an entire musical movement? At 75? WTF!!!
I agree with RahRahMah in that it’s a pretty much a “most influential” list. Like it or not (and I agree that it’s not even their best), “Teen Spirit” is one of the few songs in history that clearly mark the “before” and “after” point of a sea change in pop culture. The Sex Pistol’s “Anarchy in the UK” is another, but it just missed the 25 year cutoff.
Apparently though, the song had to be a huge hit too. Otherwise, I don’t see how NWA’s “Straight Outta Compton” isn’t on here as it pretty much launched gangsta rap. Lots of other debatable stuff too as others have pointed out, but that’s the fun isn’ it?
As I actually wrote on another message board earlier, ‘influential’ is usually measured in sales and airplay. But it’s hard to argue against Smells Like Teen Spirit as the most influential in that regard, I think. And interestingly, the song apparently knocked Thriller off the charts - rather significant as a changing-of-the-guard moment. [Props to the All Music Guide on that one.]
How about “I Will Always Love You” at number 8? I guess it can be said to be influential, in that it influences me to want to destroy whatever device is playing that song.
or rather no-one at VH-1 with any kind of decent musical judgement or knowledge.
exactly how big a hit was ‘our lips are sealed’ by the go-gos anyway…?