This is an obvious one, but “Smells Like Teen Spirit” by Nirvana.
Damn Yankees, Winger, Nelson, Poison, Extreme, Warrant, Styx, Slaughter, Cinderella, Tesla, Steelheart, Great White, Skid Row, Queensryche, Scorpions, Motley Crüe, Guns N’ Roses, and the Black Crowes we’re all high on the hog in ‘90 & ‘91. Where were they by ‘94?
With Nevermind being released in Sep. ‘91, knocking Michael Jackson off the top of the charts by January, we are looking at a new landscape of pop music for the rest of the decade. Here come Soundgarden (already a bit successful), Pearl Jam, Alice In Chains, Smashing Pumpkins, Stone Temple Pilots from ‘92-‘97, with the insipid tripe that followed the next five years: Live, Hootie and the Blowfish, Alanis Morissette, Matchbox 20, Third Eye Blind, Eve 6, Tonic, Fuel, Limp Bizkit, Papa Roach, Creed, Staind, Nickelback, Seether, Godsmack, and Puddle of Mudd.
”Herion,” “Black Angel’s Death Song,” “Sister Ray,” and “The Murder Mystery” by the Velvet Underground. Considering their relative visibility (being on the Verve label, being attached to the super-famous Warhol name), absolutely no one at that level of the pop universe was doing anything remotely close to that stuff in ‘67, ‘68, lyrically or sonically. The influence for the last 55 years is immense and far-reaching.
“Eleanor Rigby.” The songwriting…where to begin…
The use of a string quartet employing modern, Herrmann-esque backing for a rock ‘b’ roll single.
It’s one thing for the previous year’s (a very good year) September of My Years by LP by Sinatra to combine outrageous songwriting with tremendous vocals and orchestral arrangements, it’s another for some rough, untrained 23-year-olds who 4 years prior were banging out sweaty, screamy, 8-hour sets of primitive, loud covers in dingy clubs to be doing that, and even employing innovative use of not only the Herrmann-circa-Psycho-esque string arrangement itself (courtesy of George Martin) but with bracing, unorthodox mic placement as well (courtesy of Martin and Geoff Emerick). As far as the rock n’ roll era is concerned, this track is a biggie.