Some seismic shifts took place in the music world in 1994. After Kurt Cobainâs death rocked the world early in the year, grungeâs grip on music fans was loosened and new sounds took its place, from Britpop to rave to US punk. Woodstock returned to the festival circuit for a historic, mud-soaked weekend, while the likes of Oasis, Nine Inch Nails, and more all had their big breakthroughs. Here are 25 albums from 1994 that turn 30 in 2024.
Additional Words: Thomas Smith
Tori Amos â âUnder The Pinkâ
When: January 31
On her second album, âUnder The Pinkâ, Tori Amos put her blinkers on to the fame her debut had brought her and got raw. The record tackled numerous difficult subjects, from female genital mutilation on hit single âCornflake Girlâ, to losing a friend to an abusive relationship on âBells For Herâ.
What happened next: âUnder The Pinkâ was declared one of the best albums of the â90s by many and secured Amosâ position as a songwriter with soul and grit. Yet more acclaimed works followed, including 1996âs âBoys For Peleâ, and more recently, 2021âs âOcean To Oceanâ.
Green Day â âDookieâ
When:Â February 1
Green Day made their major label debut with their third album âDookieâ in 1994 but didnât lose the punk edge of their previous two releases. The record went on to define â90s pop-punk and, with the likes of âWelcome To Paradiseâ and âBasket Caseâ, swung rockâs pendulum away from grunge and safely into the sub-genre.
What happened next: Fittingly for a band whose album defined a decade, Green Day became superstars. Their popularity waned towards the end of the â90s, but they reignited the worldâs love for them with âAmerican Idiotâ in 2004.
Pavement â âCrooked Rain, Crooked Rainâ
When: February 14
After becoming indie darlings with debut album âSlanted And Enchantedâ, Pavement returned in 1994 with a slightly more accessible sound â without losing the charm that made their first record so special. The album was made as the band was in transition, not just in style, but in line-up, following the departure of drummer Gary Young.
What happened next: Pavement continued to keep the world on its toes and became bona fide cult heroes over the course of two further albums. They broke up in 1999, before reuniting in 2010 and again in 2022.
Beck â âMellow Goldâ
When: March 1
Beckâs âLoserâ â an irony-laden megahit â picked up where Nirvanaâs âSmells Like Teen Spiritâ left off: lyrical eye-rolls that encapsulated Gen Xâs mid-â90s malaise. His third album, which that song opened, does not cower in the shadows, as âBeercanâ, âPay No Mind (Snoozer)â and âSteal My Body Homeâ proved.
What happened next: His 1996 album âOdelayâ is widely considered one of the decadeâs defining records and Beck has remained steady in his output since: 1998âs âMidnite Vulturesâ and 2002âs âSea Changeâ are equally irresistible. TS
Aphex Twin â âSelected Ambient Works Volume IIâ
When: March 7
Three decades on, Richard D. Jamesâ second studio album remains beguiling. Following the spacey but danceable âSelected Ambient Works 85-92â, this 24-song epic â with a running time of over two hours â is dense ambient music inspired by lucid dreaming. It was deliberately unmarketable and debate still rages on where some of the songs start and finish and even what their titles are. You sense he revelled in the chaos.
What happened next:Â The two records that followed â 1995âs âI Care Because You Doâ and 1996âs âRichard D. Jamesâ â were intense, and his work since the turn of the millennium has been sporadic but brilliant. In 2023, he released an EP and continued to tour his mind-melting DJ sets. TS
Soundgarden â âSuperunknownâ
When: March 8
Although Soundgarden had already been around for a decade before releasing their fourth album, it wasnât until âSuperunknownâ that the band scored their big breakthrough. The record married their heavy approach, while bringing in disparate new influences, to create genre-defining songs like âBlack Hole Sunâ.
What happened next: Soundgarden became grunge icons thanks to the record and finally secured mainstream success. It was short-lived, with the band breaking up in 1997 before ultimately reuniting in 2010. They remained together until Chris Cornell’s death in 2017.
Nine Inch Nails â âThe Downward Spiralâ
When: March 8
Nine Inch Nails never do anything by halves and the same could be said of their second album, âThe Downward Spiralâ, which took the idea of a concept album and fully committed to it. The record followed the descent of a man to his breaking point and subsequent suicide, viscerally capturing the emotions and horrors that accompanied that journey.
What happened next: The album brought huge success NINâs way but also put frontman Trent Reznor on his own downward spiral with addiction and depression. Johnny Cash would go on to cover the recordâs âHurtâ in 2002, giving it a new lease of life, while the band and Reznor would become highly regarded for their work not just in the industrial field but Reznorâs film scores too.
Morrissey â âVauxhall And Iâ
When: March 14
Morrissey had parted ways with The Smiths some years before the release of his fourth solo album âVauxhall And Iâ, but the record was his first that really solidified his place as a star in his own right. Across the album, he refined his brand of poetic heartache, offering up gems of observations on life and his position in the spotlight.
What happened next: Morrissey moved to LA in 1995 and released two further albums before scoring a career resurgence in 2004 with âYou Are The Quarryâ. However, allegations of racism â which he has denied â have dogged him since, and more recently heâs struggled with labels and unreleased albums.
Hole â âLive Through Thisâ
When: April 12
Hole polished up on their second album âLive Through Thisâ, which frontwoman Courtney Love said she wanted to shock listeners who thought the band didnât âhave a soft edgeâ. Despite more melodic presentations, the record still tackled weighty topics, from anti-elitism to violence against women.
What happened next: Bassist Kristen Pfaff died shortly after the recordâs release, with Melissa Auf der Maur filling her spot. Two years later, Hole shared their most successful album âCelebrity Skinâ but split in 2002. They reunited in 2009, but broke up again in 2013.
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds â âLet Love Inâ
When: April 18
The bandâs run of albums in the mid-â90s were, quite frankly, as good as it gets. 1994âs âLet Love Inâ kicked things off, showcasing a sound that would get progressively heavier, more intense but, curiously, would soon bring them sustained commercial success. Its centrepiece âRed Right Handâ was notably chosen as the theme music for BBC’s gangster drama Peaky Blinders.
What happened next: The good form continued on âMurder Balladsâ and âThe Boatmanâs Callâ, both of which are equally celebrated. Their most recent records âSkeleton Treeâ (2016) and âGhosteenâ (2019) are astonishing meditations of loss and grief. TS
Nas â âIllmaticâ
When: April 19
Nas named his debut album âIllmaticâ as both a nod to his friend Illmatic Ice and to the gold contained within the record, living up to the titleâs meaning of âbeyond illâ. The then-rising star used the tracks to depict and explore his experiences growing up in Queens, New York, bringing his story vividly to life.
What happened next: While âIllmaticâ might not have sparked huge sales on its first release, itâs now considered one of the greatest records in the East Coast hip-hop canon, and its creator one of the sceneâs biggest legends.
Blur â âParklifeâ
When: April 25
On their third album, Blur became genuine contenders for the Britpop crown. The laddish chants of âParklifeââs title track combined with the tenderness of âThis Is A Lowâ and âEnd Of A Centuryâ to present a band growing into and deepening their many facets.
What happened next: An almighty rivalry with fellow Britpoppers Oasis and an enduring legacy as one of Britainâs greatest bands. Frontman Damon Albarn reinvented himself as something of a renaissance man during the bandâs break-up, but soon found his way back to Blur.
Weezer â âWeezerâ
When: May 10
Also known as âThe Blue Albumâ, Weezerâs self-titled first album has become a prevailing icon of geek-rock since its release three decades ago. Despite the world being submerged in grunge-mania at the time, the bandâs wiry work with producer (and The Cars legend) Ric Ocasek helped them break through the sludgy riffs with a charming, harmonious awkwardness.
What happened next: The geeks triumphed, with âWeezerâ becoming a multi-platinum hit and setting the tone for more angular anthems on second album âPinkertonâ. After a hiatus, the band returned in 2001, adding a heavier edge to their sound.
Beastie Boys â âIll Communicationâ
When: May 31
Beastie Boys might now be synonymous with merging hip-hop with other sounds like punk and jazz, but it wasnât until âIll Communicationâ that they really made that eclectic spirit their calling card. The results birthed tracks both gigantic and glorious, from the juddering howls of âSabotageâ to the flute-laden âSure Shotâ.
What happened next: Big, big things, from Grammys wins to being recognised for their unique music videos, arena tours to yet more landmark albums like 2004âs âTo The 5 Boroughsâ. In 2012, Adam âMCAâ Yauch died from cancer and Mike D and Ad-Rock pledged never to make music under the Beastie Boys name again.
The Prodigy â âMusic For The Jilted Generationâ
When: July 4
At the time of the release of The Prodigyâs second album, rave culture in the UK was being cracked down on by the authorities. That didnât stop âMusic For The Jilted Generationâ from becoming a runaway success, topping the charts in the UK and soundtracking nights out for many in 1994.
What happened next: The Prodigy became household names on follow-up âThe Fat Of The Landâ, thanks to singles like âFirestarterâ and âBreatheâ. They continued their reign as the UKâs premier dance group across four more albums, before Keith Flintâs death in 2019. The surviving members continue to light up festivals and venues around the world with their live set today.
Portishead â âDummyâ
When: August 22
Itâs not often a debut album is credited with popularising a whole genre, but Portisheadâs first effort, âDummyâ, is often cited as the spark behind trip-hopâs breakthrough moment. The record would also go on to become closely tied to Bristol and the sound emerging from the city, casting a leftfield and woozy image over the city.
What happened next: The band would release only two further records â 1997âs âPortisheadâ and 2008âs âThirdâ â and dip in and out of hiatus. Most recently, they reformed in 2022 to perform together for the first time in seven years at a War Child UK benefit show.
Jeff Buckley â âGraceâ
When: August 23
At the time of release, Jeff Buckleyâs âGraceâ didnât make much of a splash. Critics werenât won over and neither were the public. Since then, though, the record has become something of a slow-burner, gradually making its way into peopleâs hearts and landing spots on several Best Albums of All Time lists.
What happened next: âGraceâ was to be Buckleyâs only studio album released in his lifetime. While working on a follow-up in 1997, he drowned in the Mississippi River at the age of 30.
Manic Street Preachers â âThe Holy Bibleâ
When: August 30
Manic Street Preachersâ last album with guitarist and lyricist Richey Edwards was also one of their best. On the songs that made up âThe Holy Bibleâ, the songwriter explored global politics, mental health and the anguish of humanity with his bandmates, setting their vital observations to roaring punk, post-punk and glam.
What happened next: Six months after the album was released, Edwards went missing and was eventually officially presumed dead in 2008. After taking a six month break following their bandmateâs disappearance, Manics regrouped in late 1995 and continued, with the blessing of Edwardsâ family. They have released 11 albums since âThe Holy Bibleâ, often still speaking out against political issues in their music, as they did with their former guitarist.
Oasis â âDefinitely Maybeâ
When: August 30
Everything about âDefinitely Maybeâ was iconic, from its stellar tracklist of banger after banger, to its cover, the bandâs interviews around it, and their live shows in 1994. It was one of the records that played a big part in propelling Britpop forward and out of the shadows of Americaâs grunge, and set up Oasis as a band about to go truly supersonic.
What happened next: A whole rollercoaster of rivalries â with other bands and between themselves. While still reigning over the world, Oasis broke up in 2009 minutes before they were due to headline Rock en Seine, and Noel and Liam have remained at each otherâs throats ever since.
The Cranberries â âNo Need To Argueâ
When: October 3
âZombieâ was one of 1994âs biggest hits. It topped the charts in their native Ireland, Germany, Australia and beyond, helping the album onto selling a whopping 5 million copies in the space of six months. Beyond that âOde To My Familyâ, âDreaming My Dreamsâ are up there with some of the bandâs most accomplished compositions.
What happened next:Â Extensive commercial success followed, though the band took a lengthy hiatus in the mid-â00s. Lead singer Dolores OâRiordan died in 2018 and the group subsequently disbanded. TS
The Notorious B.I.G. â âReady To Dieâ
When: September 13
The Notorious B.I.G. introduced himself in â94 with an album that let the world into his life. In part, âReady To Dieâ was an autobiographical account of Biggieâs misspent youth and, along with Nasâ âIllmaticâ, breathed new life into New Yorkâs hip-hop scene.
What happened next: After scoring huge success with âReady To Dieâ, the rapper recorded its follow-up, âLife After Deathâ. Tragically, Biggie was shot dead at the age of 24, weeks before that album was set to be released.
R.E.M. â âMonsterâ
When: September 27
âMonsterâ is R.E.M.’s grit in the oyster. After worldwide success with âOut of Timeâ and âAutomatic For The Peopleâ, the group returned with âMonsterâ, a challenging and often misunderstood record. It encouraged the band to head out on the road for their first run of performances in over five years.
What happened next:Â Following 1996âs âNew Adventures In Hi-Fiâ, R.E.Mâs material took a steady decline; they eventually called it quits in 2011. As of 2023, Michael Stipe was working on new solo material. TS
Nirvana â âMTV Unplugged in New Yorkâ
When: November 1
Some live albums might achieve fan favourite status, but it’s rare for them to be as highly regarded as Nirvanaâs âMTV Unplugged in New Yorkâ. Recorded for MTVâs acoustic concert series, the record stripped back the bandâs anthems and showcased the beauty in their bones, and featured some beloved covers of songs by David Bowie, Lead Belly and more.
What happened next: Kurt Cobain died seven months before the record was released and bandmates Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic went their separate ways. Grohl formed Foo Fighters, while Novoselic largely focused on activism.
TLC â âCrazySexyCoolâ
When: November 15
After making a strong start with their debut album in 1991, TLC made an about-turn in 1994 with âCrazySexyCoolâ. Leaving the rap roots of the group behind, they ventured more into R&B and soul, underpinning timeless hits like âCreepâ and âWaterfallsâ with hip-hop beats, and paving the way for the trioâs evolution into the R&B icons of 1999âs âFanMailâ.
What happened next: âFanMailâ was another critical and commercial success, but it couldnât stop the members from feuding with each other. Although they eventually made up, they wouldnât make another album together, with Lisa âLeft-Eyeâ Lopes dying in a car crash in 2002.
The Stone Roses â âSecond Comingâ
When: December 5
The record that destroyed the band. Following the success of their 1989 debut, the recording of its follow-up was fraught with legal battles, internal drama and the weight of expectation. âSecond Comingâ has some moments of brilliance, mind: âLove Spreadsâ and âTen Storey Love Songâ can hang with their best material.
What happened next:Â Unsurprisingly, the band split two years later amid acrimonious circumstances. Their reunion in 2011 shocked the world and they toured the festival circuit until 2017 and recorded two new songs. In early 2024, guitarist John Squire announced a collaborative album with Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher. TS
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