P o s t t e s t
The posttest consists of a series of reading passages with questions that follow to test your comprehension.
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P O S T T E S T
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Grunge Music and American Popular Culture
The late 1980s found the landscape of popular music in America dominated by a distinctive style of rock and roll
known as
Glam Rock or
Hair Metal—so called because of the over-styled hair, makeup, and wardrobe worn by
the genre’s ostentatious rockers. Bands
like Poison, Whitesnake, and Mötley Crüe popularized glam rock with their
power ballads and flashy style, but the product had worn thin by the early 1990s. Just as superficial as the 80s, glam
rockers were shallow, short on substance, and musically inferior.
In 1991, a Seattle-based band called Nirvana shocked the corporate music industry with
the release of its debut
single, “Smells Like Teen Spirit,” which quickly became a huge hit all over the world. Nirvana’s distorted, guitar-
laden sound and thought-provoking lyrics were the antithesis of glam rock, and the youth of America were quick
to pledge their allegiance to the
brand-new movement known as grunge.
Grunge actually got its start in the Pacific Northwest during the mid-1980s. Nirvana had simply main-
streamed a sound and culture that got its start years before with bands like Mudhoney, Soundgarden, and Green
River. Grunge rockers derived their fashion sense from the youth culture of the Pacific Northwest: a melding of punk
rock style and outdoors
clothing like flannels, heavy boots, worn out jeans, and corduroys. At the height of the move-
ment’s popularity, when other Seattle bands like Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains were all the rage, the trappings of
grunge were working their way to the height of American fashion. Like
the music, the teenagers were fast to
embrace the grunge fashion because it represented defiance against corporate America and shallow pop culture.
The popularity of grunge music was ephemeral; by the mid- to late-1990s, its influence upon American cul-
ture had all but disappeared, and most of its recognizable bands were nowhere to be seen on the charts. The heavy
sound and themes of grunge were replaced on the radio waves by boy
bands like the Backstreet Boys, and the
bubblegum pop of Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera.
There are many reasons why the Seattle sound faded out of the mainstream as quickly as it rocketed to promi-
nence, but the most glaring reason lies at the defiant, anti-establishment heart of the grunge movement itself. It
is very hard to buck the trend when you are the one setting it, and many of the grunge bands were never com-
fortable with the fame that was thrust upon them. Ultimately, the simple fact that many grunge bands were so
against mainstream rock stardom eventually took the movement back to where it started: underground. The fickle
American
mainstream public, as quick as they were to hop on to the grunge bandwagon, were just as quick to hop
off and move on to something else.