Fast-paced, guitar-driven anthems with high energy.
On October 26, 1999, Bush released their third studio album, The Science of Things , which saw the band incorporating more electronic textures into their hard rock foundation. This album represented a further exploration of the sounds they had played with on Deconstructed , blending heavy guitar riffs with programmed beats and atmospheric synths. While continuing their commercial success, the album is often cited as a transitional record that showed the band experimenting beyond the strict post-grunge template.
By archiving and listening to Bush’s golden-era discography in verified FLAC, you preserve the precise intent of the artists and engineers who shaped the alternative rock movement of the 1990s.
Electronic-infused rock, loop-driven rhythms, and layered synthesizers.
The period between 1994 and 2001 represents the definitive commercial and creative peak of the British rock band Bush. Despite being from London, the band became one of the most successful acts of the American post-grunge movement, selling over 10 million records in the U.S. during this era.
Open a track like "Glycerine" in Spek.