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Grunge Is Dead: The Oral History of Seattle Rock Music Paperback – April 1, 2009
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Weaving together the definitive story of the Seattle music scene through a series of interviews with the people who were there, this book contains more than 130 interviews, along with essential background information. Digging deeper than other accounts, this history begins in the early 1960s, tracing the chain of events that spawned some of the greatest rock acts of all time in the 1990s, including Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Alice in Chains, and Soundgarden. First-ever interviews include Eddie Vedder's take on Pearl Jam’s history, a discussion among the members of Alice in Chains, and Layne Staley’s mother’s comments on her son's drug addiction and death. There is also plenty of information on less well-known aspects of the grunge scene, including the Riot Grrrl movement and the oft-overlooked but highly influential Seattle bands such as Mother Love Bone/Andy Wood, the Melvins, Screaming Trees, and Mudhoney. The end result is a comprehensive guide that includes a wealth of previously untold stories and offers a fresh and immediate approach to music history.
- Print length478 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherECW Press
- Publication dateApril 1, 2009
- Dimensions6.75 x 1 x 9.75 inches
- ISBN-101550228773
- ISBN-13978-1550228779
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Start with the Sonics and keep moving. 'Grunge is Dead' is the ground floor, bloody version of that other Seattle music oral history. Prato's reporting is thick with anecdote and he pulls meaty descriptors from the hundreds of voices that tell the story of the scene. Unvarnished, the way this shit should be delivered." --Steve Miller, author, 'Detroit Rock City: The Uncensored History of Rock 'n' Roll in America's Loudest City'
"'Grunge is Dead' is a classic - best documentation of the grunge scene there ever was." --Martin Popoff, author, 'The Big Book of Hair Metal: The Illustrated Oral History of Heavy Metal's Debauched Decade'
"It is a classic. If any kid really wanted to capture what the grunge movement was all about, 'Grunge is Dead' is the book to read, undoubtedly." --Keith Roth, The Electric Ballroom Radio Show"
"I thought it was really good." --Mark Arm, Mudhoney singer/guitarist
"It's pretty much filled with comments and stuff from just about everyone that was around during those years--more of the insider on things than the outsiders attempting to fill in the blanks! Anyway, I do recommend this book. It's a fun read!" --Chad Channing, Nirvana drummer
"I like this book. It lets the people who were actually here tell the story directly, without the author having any particular axe to grind." --Jack Endino, Seattle producer/musician
"The author is not from Seattle, but the book is done in the Please Kill Me style so it doesn't really matter. It has some cool interviews with the guys from Mudhoney in it and it's always interesting to read a version of history that you were a part of." --Tobi Vail, Bikini Kill drummer
"All those records from that time continue to let the world know what things sounded like in our little universe, but if someone wants to know what people were feeling and thinking about the scene as it all transpired, this is where I point them to." --Robert Roth, Truly singer/guitarist
"(Grunge is Dead) is an accomplishment that will find fans as long as the music does. The book is remarkably comprehensive, nearly 500 pages long, and filled with rarely seen photographs, astute analyses of popular culture, insider gossip and interesting, funny and painful stories." --Washington Post Express
"A complete, exhaustive and authoritative account of Music 1.0's last successful marketing experiment . . . an invaluable record." --Eye Weekly
"Probably the most complete time capsule of a particular era in music history that has been penned to date." --Popmatters.com
"Goes straight to the cow's craw for this enlightening oral history of the scene from the people actually involved, and no stone is unturned . . . the final word on an exciting musical mutiny, and triumphs as a potently honest view of the perhaps the last punk rock revival." --Synthesis
"This tome is heavy and honorable, like a tombstone. If grunge is dead now (and by all accounts it is, despite its ongoing impact on rock music today) it was most certainly was alive." --Popdose.com
"Fifteen years after Kurt Cobain's suicide comes an exhaustive tome (nearly 500 pages) . . . if you're still embracing the plaid button-ups of yesteryear, you might actually feel like you've died and gone to heaven." --Filter
"The book is remarkably comprehensive, nearly 500 pages long, and filled with rarely seen photographs, astute analyses of popular culture, insider gossip and interesting, funny and painful stories." --Express, Washington, DC
"An enlightening chronological history of the Seattle rock scene from the 1960s through the mid-90s, as told by the folks who lived it."--YuppiePunk.org
"By approaching the subject as an oral rather than a written account, [Prato] gives the story back to Seattle . . . a multifaceted portrait of the music that pretty much defined the decade." --Blurt Magazine
"Grunge is Dead' takes an inside look at one of the most successful and tragic rock scenes ever, by talking to the actual people who helped create it." --Stone & Double T, WXRX, Rockford, IL
About the Author
Prato is a writer who contributes regularly to Rolling Stone. He lives in New York.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The singer didn’t wait long — upon the first notes of the opening number, he was climbing over the crowd on pipes attached to the ceiling (if my memory serves me correctly — already shirtless, and wearing shorts that were completely covered in silver electrical tape), before dropping himself into the sea of “moshers” below. The guitarist looked like something out of Cheech and Chong, with a full–on beard, and his eyes seemingly constantly closed — as if he were reaching a state of nirvana playing monstrous Sabbathy riffs. The bassist’s large mop of curly hair bobbed in time to the music, while the drummer bashed out some impressively complex yet primal beats. This, my friends, was my introduction to the mighty Soundgarden.
Needless to say, soon after, I was a major convert, buying just about every Soundgarden recording that I could get my hands on, and reading all the interviews on the band that I could gather. And in most of the articles, it was mentioned that there were other similarly styled bands from Soundgarden’s hometown — Seattle — that were on their way up the ladder as well. Over the next year or so, it appeared as though each month, there was a new band from the Seattle area to discover — Mother Love Bone, Alice in Chains, Tad, Temple of the Dog, Mudhoney, the Melvins, the Screaming Trees, etc. And of course, when Nirvana and Pearl Jam hit, the rock world had thankfully shifted towards music that was both honest and real. And along with it came the word that would forever be associated with the movement: grunge.
While the movement didn’t turn out to be as long lasting as many figured it would, what it packed into a four–year period (1990–1994) was pretty darn extraordinary. How many songs from this period are still being played on the radio? How many of these albums sound as great today as when they first came out, continue to sell, and are still being discovered by younger generations? I rest my case. It may have only lasted a few years, but for a few brief and shining moments, grunge certainly shifted the direction of culture (and even fashion), and brought in an unmistakable feeling of change — just as the ’60s hippie and ’70s punk movements had.
The original idea for doing this book came about when I was doing a Soundgarden article for Classic Rock magazine back in 2004. While interviewing the group’s early producer, Jack Endino, he mentioned that almost every single article being written about grunge bands nowadays were by writers who were not from the Seattle area, yet were giving their “revisionist take” on what happened. Which got me thinking … what if a book was comprised of nothing but quotes from the actual people that experienced the movement firsthand, tracing it from its very beginning to its end? In other words, letting them tell the entire story as it unfolded (with only chapter intro paragraphs from yours truly). Nearly 130 interviews later, here we are.
Product details
- Publisher : ECW Press (April 1, 2009)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 478 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1550228773
- ISBN-13 : 978-1550228779
- Item Weight : 1.75 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.75 x 1 x 9.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #242,466 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #69 in Punk Music (Books)
- #79 in Heavy Metal Music (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Greg Prato is a writer and journalist from Long Island, New York, whose writing has appeared in such renowned publications as Rolling Stone, Classic Rock, and Vintage Guitar. He is also the author of several popular books, including Grunge Is Dead: The Oral History Of Seattle Rock Music, MTV Ruled the World: The Early Years of Music Video, and A Devil on One Shoulder and an Angel on the Other: The Story of Shannon Hoon and Blind Melon, among other titles. And you may even have heard him on one of his many radio or TV appearances, which include interviews on The Howard Stern Wrap-Up Show, Eddie Trunk Live, and Feedback with Nik Carter and Lori Majewski.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book well-written and informative, particularly appreciating its oral history style and extensive interviews with band members. The book provides a unique look into the world of grunge music.
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Customers find the book extremely well written and enjoy reading it, with one customer specifically noting it's a must-read for Layne Staley fans.
"Great to read" Read more
"Absolutely LOVE this book!! I was so happy to actually read information I hadn't already read somewhere else!..." Read more
"...Because the story is presented as first person quotes, it's highly entertaining: informative, funny, and sad...." Read more
"Enjoyed reading the book. Learned about a lot of band that I wasn't aware of before...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's extensive coverage of the Seattle rock music scene and its oral history style, with one customer noting it includes interviews and photographs.
"...Grunge Is Dead is an outstanding summation of a brief moment in time whem music did change the world." Read more
"...It really brings you that much closer to this movement in history, makes you feel like you know that person or band just a little..." Read more
"...Because the story is presented as first person quotes, it's highly entertaining: informative, funny, and sad...." Read more
"...This read gives a detailed, behind-the-scene, glimpse of one of Rock Music's most vulnerable, most artistic and brutally honest eras...." Read more
Customers appreciate the interviews in the book, with one customer noting that it is entirely made up of band members' quotes, while another mentions the nice balance between lesser-known bands.
"Decent oral history of Seattle music, although, in my opinion, Everybody Loves our Town is slightly better organized...." Read more
"...I was person A before, and I was person B after. Music has the power to change people, and that particular music, whatever you want to call it..." Read more
"...info...it's literally the thoughts, experiences, perceptions of the musician and bands in the eyes of the significant other, friend, etc...." Read more
"...The famous and the not-so-famous, musician and non-musician are interviewed and add many different perspectives...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's pacing, describing it as a unique look into the world of grunge.
"...And that's a good thing. This book is a fascinating look at how that "movement", for better or worse..." Read more
"...behind-the-scene, glimpse of one of Rock Music's most vulnerable, most artistic and brutally honest eras...." Read more
"Grunge is Dead is truly an amazing look into the Seattle grunge scene...." Read more
"This book takes a unique look into the world of grunge...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 15, 2024Great to read
- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2010As a late 30-something, the whole "Grunge Era" breaking into the mainstream coincided with me breaking out from high school to college, and that music became the soundtrack of my life. GRUNGE IS DEAD really brought those songs, bands, and whole era back to life. While Greg Prato covers everything from its origins to its collapse, the real meat is the late 80s-early90s heyday when the music of the Pacific North West surged out across the land and changed the landscape of Alterntive Rock forever, the golden years before before people started dying.
That's kind of the story of any scene though. It's like a great party that you never want to end, but know deep down it has to at some point if it's to become one of those mythic moments in time that people will talk about for years to come, that younger generations will envy, and wish they could have been a part of it. The Grunge era is a Rock Myth, its participants, legends.
Grunge Is Dead is an outstanding summation of a brief moment in time whem music did change the world.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2016Decent oral history of Seattle music, although, in my opinion, Everybody Loves our Town is slightly better organized. For example, when quoting a person for the first time, GID does not give any background on them (though everyone is listed in the back) while ELOT had a description (Band/job/instuments, etc) when they were introduced. I recommend reading them both though.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2013If you weren't there, read this book. If you were there, read this book. If you know somebody who was changed by the "grunge movement", read this book. If you ARE somebody who was changed by the "grunge movement", read this book. What the heck, scratch all that: If you are a human, READ THIS BOOK.
As a high school science teacher, I often think back to when I was the age of my students and wonder what got me to where I am today. If I were to start with "me now" and draw lines back through all of the decisions I've made that shaped the person I've become, there'd be many branches, but most of them would begin to converge around 1992 or 1993, when "grunge" finally swept through my little nook in rural Kentucky. I don't care if that sounds superficial. I was person A before, and I was person B after. Music has the power to change people, and that particular music, whatever you want to call it (and after you read this book, you'll understand why I put quotes around grunge above, and you may even understand that while it was packaged to the rest of us as "the Seattle Sound", it was really much, much more than that) changed most people for the better. All of a sudden, it didn't matter what kind of music you liked, it didn't matter what socioeconomic group you belonged to, it didn't matter what you wore, it didn't matter if you were "different"...nothing mattered. In this rural town, this music broke down those petty barriers.
I still see this today, in the classroom of a semi-diverse rural high school. Maybe I live in paradise, and it would be different if I went somewhere else, but here, people don't fight over the kinds of things kids fought about when I was growing up. Things such as: you have ugly shoes, you're a geek, you dress funny, you like rap, you're a freshman, you're gay, and on and on and on. Kids still fight, but it's over things kids will always fight about: you're hitting on my girlfriend, you made my girlfriend cheat on me with you, you called me a bad name...things like that.
So while Grunge is Dead, as the author says, and as those who were a part of that scene and were interviewed said, the attitudes and ideas that it spread throughout the rest of the country seem to have survived. And that's a good thing.
This book is a fascinating look at how that "movement", for better or worse (which seems to depend on whether or not you were there when it all began), came to be.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2014Absolutely LOVE this book!! I was so happy to actually read information I hadn't already read somewhere else! I appreciate this book because of the quotes :) It really brings you that much closer to this movement in history, makes you feel like you know that person or band just a little better than before. It's not a book for someone looking to find facts or literal info...it's literally the thoughts, experiences, perceptions of the musician and bands in the eyes of the significant other, friend, etc. A unique read! You can't help but feel the authenticity of these quotes, considering the sources. Grunge fans, Alice in Chains, Nirvana, Soundgarden, etc., I highly recommend!
- Reviewed in the United States on October 29, 2010This is a great book for Seattle music fans. The famous and the not-so-famous, musician and non-musician are interviewed and add many different perspectives. Because the story is presented as first person quotes, it's highly entertaining: informative, funny, and sad. (I love Alice In Chains, but they aren't particular favorites of mine. However, the friends and relatives of Layne Staley talking about his struggles is one of the most compelling parts of the book.) This is not a book about dates, facts, and figures, but about what it was like to be there by the people who actually were. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
- Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2017Enjoyed reading the book. Learned about a lot of band that I wasn't aware of before. But be forewarned that this book is just full of quotes from band members and fans that followed the bands from the beginning. If this isn't your thing find another book.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2014For those of us who grew up in the 90's...and share love of the Seattle music explosion.... this is a must read. This read gives a detailed, behind-the-scene, glimpse of one of Rock Music's most vulnerable, most artistic and brutally honest eras. RIP--Layne Staley, Kurt Cobain and Andy Wood.
Top reviews from other countries
- Jasmin JepsonReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 18, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars and provides a fantastic insight into the truths of the Seattle scene
Very informative and logical, and provides a fantastic insight into the truths of the Seattle scene.
- Slavcho SlavkovReviewed in Germany on May 9, 2024
2.0 out of 5 stars Poor item condition
The item came in a poor condition. There is a tear in the cover, some cardboard attached with adhesive on the front cover and some pages are curved and deformed.
Slavcho SlavkovPoor item condition
Reviewed in Germany on May 9, 2024
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- Rhiannon6Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 3, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
If you're a fan of the Seattle music, it's a must read.
- C. O'BrienReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 1, 2010
3.0 out of 5 stars Readable but lacking in objectivity
This is an account of the so-called "grunge scene" in the American Pacific North-west as told by many of its participants - musicians, managers, promoters, label bosses, staff and hangers-on. Although it bears the name of American music writer Greg Prato it's really just an old-fashioned scissors-and-paste job - a collection of readable (and occasionally controversial) quotes gathered roughly into chapters with titles like "A testosterone period" or "Preparing for the worst". As such it lacks any sense of a clear narrative, so if you're unfamiliar with the music, people, places or events involved you'll swiftly become confused. Without an editorial voice to pull the whole thing together the individual reminiscences also lack objectivity - we're never sure whether what we're reading is 100% factual, or people's personal versions of events fogged by time, selective memory, the ravages of substance abuse or outright revisionism. Some of the prime movers of the scene are now dead and cannot speak for themselves - others have been unaccountably omitted. All in all the book is probably more useful as a source of soundbyte quotes than a comprehensively researched history of events.
- LaurapacReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 17, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Great
I have learned a lot from Seattle and its band with this book. It is an easy reading and very well recommended for fans.