🎸 Top 10 Underrated Grunge Tracks You Forgot You Loved (CommonX Edition)
CommonX digs deep into the Seattle sound — the forgotten grunge tracks that still roar beneath the surface. Crank it, feel it, and remember why it mattered.
By CommonX
Before playlists and polished pop, we had distortion, sweat, and heartache echoing from basements and bar stages. Grunge wasn’t a sound — it was a generation finally saying, “We’re not okay, and that’s okay.”
Everyone remembers Nirvana and Pearl Jam, but the underground had deeper veins — songs that hit just as hard and spoke louder in the quiet moments between chaos.
So fire up the SONOS, close your eyes, and fall back into the feedback. Here are the 10 underrated grunge anthems that still deserve to shake your soul.
⚡ 10. Screaming Trees – “Nearly Lost You” (1992)
That voice. That fuzz. That groove. The soundtrack to smoky nights and restless hearts — forever under-appreciated.
🎤 9. Mother Love Bone – “Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns” (1990)
Where it all began. Before Pearl Jam, there was MLB — poetic, tragic, and pure Seattle soul.
🔥 8. Mudhoney – “Touch Me I’m Sick” (1988)
The filthy riff that started it all. Raw, snotty, and brilliant — the sound that gave Sub Pop its swagger.
🎧 7. Temple of the Dog – “Say Hello 2 Heaven” (1991)
Chris Cornell’s voice in its purest form — grief turned into grace. A tribute that became a movement.
🌀 6. L7 – “Pretend We’re Dead” (1992)
Feminist fury meets killer hooks. L7 proved you didn’t need to smile to melt faces.
💔 5. Candlebox – “You” (1993)
Melodic, emotional, and criminally underrated. Candlebox gave grunge a pulse that could actually break hearts.
⚙️ 4. The Melvins – “Hooch” (1993)
Heavy, sludgy, hypnotic. The godfathers of doom who inspired Nirvana’s heaviest moments.
🧠 3. Soundgarden – “Room a Thousand Years Wide” (1991)
Buried behind the hits lies one of their best riffs. Cornell and Thayil made darkness sound divine.
🚀 2. Alice in Chains – “Nutshell” (1994)
If you ever doubted grunge had poetry, listen again. Layne’s voice still echoes in every lonely apartment at 2 a.m.
🦇 1. Stone Temple Pilots – “Silvergun Superman” (1994)
Overshadowed by hits like “Plush,” this deep cut is pure STP swagger — bassline grooves, velvet vocals, and a solo that burns slow.
🎧 Honorable Mentions
Nirvana – “Aneurysm” | Pearl Jam – “Release” | Hole – “Malibu” | Bush – “Cold Contagious”
🧠 Excerpt
CommonX digs deep into the Seattle sound — the forgotten grunge tracks that still roar beneath the surface. Crank it, feel it, and remember why it mattered.
written by Ian Primmer
Two Voices, One Frequency: How CommonX Reached 25 Countries
From a small town in Washington to speakers and screens in 25 countries, the CommonX Podcast with Jared & Ian is proving that real talk, laughter, and Gen-X honesty travel farther than anyone expected.
From a small town in Washington to speakers and screens in 25 countries, the CommonX Podcast with Jared & Ian is proving that real talk, laughter, and Gen-X honesty travel farther than anyone expected.
When we started CommonX, the dream was simple — to talk about the world the way we saw it. Two Gen-X friends from Deer Park, Washington, microphones in hand, hoping maybe a few people would listen.
Now, that little idea has crossed oceans. Listeners are tuning in from the United States, Canada, Romania, Peru, France, Turkey, Kenya, Colombia, China, South Korea, Guyana, Venezuela, Bahrain, Argentina, Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, South Africa, Australia, Brazil, the Philippines, Russia, the United Kingdom, Spain, and India.
That’s twenty-five countries. That’s a lot of shared stories, laughs, and moments that connect us all.
It turns out, no matter where you live, the feeling of being part of Generation X — that mix of independence, skepticism, humor, and heart — hits home everywhere.
So here’s to the listeners. To everyone out there on night shifts, in traffic, on treadmills, or sitting in silence with earbuds in — thank you for letting us be part of your world.
We may be two middle-aged guys from a small town, but together with all of you, we’re building something global, one honest conversation at a time.