Nineties Friday Returns! Friday May 23rd! Talking šļø & Sharing Tunes šøFrom The Band Failure And The 1996 Album Fantastic Planet šæ
Nineties Friday returns! Friday May 23rd!
Today Iāll be bringing ya 5 tunes and doing a special #FiveTuneFriday on #NinetiesFriday
From the year 1996 Iāll be talking and sharing tunes from the band Failure. Weāll mainly talk the 1996 Fantastic Planet third album from the band and Iāll share 5 of my favorite songs from the record. Iāll also bring you a bonus jam from each there earlier albums (1994 & 1992). šø
šļøGene Talks Tunes Vlog šļø
- 1996 Underrated Album
- Failure
- Fantastic Planet
- The Tunes
- Older Records (BonusJams)
Letās Go!
Band - Failure
Song - Saturday Saviour
Album - Fantastic Planet (1996)
Band - Failure
Song - Sergeant Politeness
Album - Fantastic Planet (1996)
Band - Failure
Song - Smoking Umbrellas
Album - Fantastic Planet (1996)
Band - Failure
Song - Another Space Song
Album - Fantastic Planet (1996)
Band - Failure
Song - Stuck On You
Album - Fantastic Planet (1996)
For bonus jams hereās two songs from the first two Failure records! The first released in 1992. The second released in 1994.
Band - Failure
Song - Macaque
Album - Comfort (1992)
Band - Failure
Song - Frogs
Album - Magnified (1994)
#Nineties #Friday #AltRock #Failure #NinetiesFriday #MTV #Alternative #Rock #GeneTalksTunes #NinetiesVlog
Thanks for swinging by! Join us any Friday using the tag #NinetiesFriday & talk anything you like from the nineties! Movies or sports or music or anything! Cheers! šø
Some bonus info on the band and album below if you didnāt get enough above! ā¬ļø
Album: Fantastic Planet by Failure (1996)
Genre: Alternative Rock / Space Rock / Art Grunge
Release Date: August 13, 1996
Score: 9.5/10
Released in 1996 to little mainstream fanfare, Fantastic Planet by Failure has become one of the most revered cult albums in alternative rock history. Itās the kind of record that flew under the radar when it dropped, only to grow in legend with every passing year. Now often cited by bands like A Perfect Circle, Paramore, and Tool as a major influence, Fantastic Planet is a sprawling, dark, and atmospheric journey that feels like it was beamed in from another dimensionāor at least from a more daring musical era.
Fantastic Planet is dense, dynamic, and cinematic in scope. It takes the distorted textures of grunge and blends them with space rock, prog, and industrial elements to create something deeply immersive. The production, handled by the band themselves (Ken Andrews and Greg Edwards), is meticulous and layered, with shimmering reverb-soaked guitars, glitchy interludes, and pulsating basslines.
Think Smashing Pumpkins meets Pink Floyd, with a touch of Nine Inch Nailsā shadow and David Bowieās sci-fi imagination!
Lyrically, Fantastic Planet is a deep dive into decay, disconnection, and escapismāthemes that feel eerily prophetic today. It often uses space travel as a metaphor for addiction, depression, and dissociation. Lines like āYouāre stuck on a cycleā and āSolar eyes are watching meā speak to the albumās constant pull between inner void and external surveillance.
Failure doesnāt just write songs; they create entire atmospheres. The lyrics donāt always make linear sense, but they resonate emotionallyālike transmission signals from a lonely satellite!
Why It Still Matters? At 17 tracks and over an hour long, Fantastic Planet was out of step with radio trends in 1996ābut thatās precisely why it has endured. It wasnāt chasing hits; it was chasing a vision.
This is an album made for headphones, late nights, and introspection. It predated the era where āconcept albumā became a buzzword for try-hard experimentation. Failure made something bold and beautiful without compromiseāand listeners caught up eventually.
Itās no wonder the album has been reissued multiple times and regularly lands on āBest Albums Youāve Never Heardā lists.
Fantastic Planet isnāt just one of the best alt-rock records of the ā90sāitās one of the most underappreciated artistic achievements of the decade. Itās daring, emotionally resonant, and endlessly replayable.
If youāre into spacey, emotionally raw, intricately layered rock with zero filler youāll love this album! šæ
You received an upvote of 58% from Precious the Silver Mermaid!
Please remember to contribute great content to the #SilverGoldStackers tag to create another Precious Gem.
Just a bonus for participating last week! @thebighigg
I shut down the community. So just use tag instead though. It doesnāt show up when I search tag if u use community.
Let me know whatcha think of the album I discussed this week šøšæ
Right back at you dude!

Failure is such a crazy band
Their performances are lovelyā¦
This is old music, it is much more special and interesting. I am also enjoying listening to this music.
I thought only I knew about this hahaha, or maybe at least in this part of the world few of us did. Nice of you to pull it out of the trunk of memories. Frogs is the best! š¤
You actually knew it before seeing my post? Nice!!!! šøšæ
Definitely we are in a smaller club. This band deserved mainstream success! !PIMP !PIZZA !LADY
If I remember correctly it was through a cousin, but yes, at that time music did not travel so easily around the world, and yet it still reached me š
$PIZZA slices delivered:
@geneeverett(1/5) tipped @jesuslnrs
Come get MOONed!