I also don’t think I’ve ever heard Angel and also think that Teardrop is by far the best-known song of the genre. In fact, the only other song that is inarguably of the genre and that I have also heard in the wild in fairly-widespread pop culture is 6 Underground by the Sneaker Pimps, but I haven’t seen that referred to in awhile.
There are some other songs I heard on the radio that were trip hop but I don’t quite remember, and a lot of songs on Emiliana Torrini’s Love in the time of Science are trip hop but I only heard a song on an cable music channel once before buying the album so I’m not sure of the deepness of its penetration, and you could make the argument that if the hit “Your Woman” by White Town had to have a genre, it might be trip hop, but you could also argue that they simply share areal features from being dance-inspired mid-90s English alternative-friendly music.
I think, even if they don’t know they know it, most people also know Three Little Birds (even if they think it’s called Don’t Worry About A Thing). In fact, I’m not sure it’s possible to live in a college dorm for more than a week without hearing it.
Oh, yes, that’s a good one. Weird, as I know nothing else by them, but now a bunch of songs by both Massive Attack and Sneaker Pimps.
What about shoegaze? That might be a genre that is widely known in indie rock circles, and has been influential, but I’m having a hard time thinking of a song that would be recognizable by the average listener. Dream pop would fall into the same category.
I know that the OP excluded foreign language songs, but wasn’t Nena’s “99 Red Balloons” more popular in the English version? Because it surely is the only Neue Deutsche Welle (New German Wave) song most people in the US know.
Not to me, at least; I’m not sure that I’ve ever heard the term before.
I certainly recognize some of the songs and artists mentioned in the article (at least the US-based ones), but over here, they would have been much more likely to be classified with other terms, like “R&B,” “Motown sound,” etc.
Maybe Where Is My Mind? The only reason I even know of that song is because I mentioned to a friend that I’ve never heard a Pixies song and she told me that I have since it’s the outro to Fight Club (one of my favorite movies).
I’d say that’s fair. Angel I’ve heard on the soundtrack for a lot of movies and shows (as evident by the “In Popular Culture” section of this wiki page)
I would never connect the Pixies with shoegaze. Maybe only because they’re not British, but also because their music (and their fans) just really doesn’t match the genre.
That’s definitely not shoegaze. Shoegaze has very layered guitars, thick walls of sound, lots of effects, ethereal, not so much minimalistic like the Pixies. My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Ride, (ETA: Oh, how could I forget Lush) those sorts of bands. Smashing Pumpkins incorporate some shoegaze sound in some of their more expansive works. For me, something like “Only Shallow” sums up shoegaze:
If that’s shoegaze, I really misunderstood what it was. I can, however, very much hear Smashing Pumpkins (specifically, Today) in that song.
My (incorrect) understanding of shoe gaze is that it was the 90’s version of ‘stoner’ music. So, something more along the lines of Sneaker Pimps. In any case, it’s not a genre I really ever gave a lot of thought to. I’m sure I’m familiar with some of the music, but I’d never even heard the term until just a few years ago.
ETA, and at some point my brain attached Where Is My Mind to that term.