1991 in music
This is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 1991.
Specific locations
Specific genres
- 1991 in country music
- 1991 in heavy metal music
- 1991 in hip-hop
- 1991 in Latin music
- 1991 in jazz
- 1991 in progressive rock
Events
Summary
Although the year 1991 is the year that grunge music made its popular breakthrough, heavy metal was still the dominant form of rock music for the year. Therefore, Nirvana's Nevermind, led by the surprise hit single "Smells Like Teen Spirit", was not the most popular U.S. album of the year. The most popular album was Metallica's self-titled "black album". Nirvana's success was eventually followed by other grunge bands like Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, and Stone Temple Pilots, as grunge climbed the U.S. charts for the next few years. Its success eventually ended the reign of the glam metal and other hard rock groups that enjoyed massive success in the 1980s like Mötley Crüe, Poison, Warrant, Cinderella, and Ratt, whose sales were still going strong by 1991. Also during the year, the rock band Guns N' Roses's popularity flourished with the release of their albums Use Your Illusion I & Use Your Illusion II, both selling over 15 million copies total. Def Leppard's next album Adrenalize, released in March 1992, would go on to reach multi-platinum status and prove to be the last major commercial success for 1980s hair metal. A Tribe Called Quest's Low End Theory is released this year; it would go on to be considered one of the best hip-hop albums of the 1990s. A Tribe Called Quest, along with De La Soul, Dream Warriors, Gang Starr and the Poor Righteous Teachers, help define what comes to be known as alternative rap with important releases this year.On November 24, the death of Freddie Mercury, who had confirmed to the press that he had AIDS only a day before his death, came as a shock to millions of fans and the music industry. The remaining members of Queen formed the Mercury Phoenix Trust and the following year, a tribute concert would be staged in Wembley Stadium, in front of a sell-out crowd.
Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody" went to number one for the second time in the U.K.. It is also the only time a single has gone to number one more than once on the UK Christmas charts.
During the year, Billboard started using Nielsen SoundScan for its sales source for the music charts. Nielsen SoundScan began tracking sales data for Nielsen on 1 March 1991. The 25 May issue of Billboard published Billboard 200 and Country Album charts based on SoundScan "piece count data," and the first Hot 100 chart to debut with the system was released on 30 November 1991. Previously, Billboard tracked sales by calling stores across the U.S. and asking about sales – a method that was inherently error-prone and open to outright fraud. Indeed, while transitioning from the calling to tracking methods, the airplay and sales charts and the Hot 100 often did not match. Although most record company executives conceded that the new method was far more accurate than the old, the chart's volatility and its geographical balance initially caused deep concern, before the change and the market shifts it brought about were accepted across the industry. Tower Records, the country's second-largest retail chain, was originally not included in the sample because its stores are equipped with different technology to measure sales. At first, some industry executives complained that the new system – which relied on high-tech sales measurement rather than store employee estimates – was based on an inadequate sample, one that favored established and mainstream acts over newcomers.
1991 was also the year CCM, or contemporary Christian music, reached a new peak. Amy Grant, who had already crossed back and forth between CCM and Contemporary Pop in the mid-80s, achieved her first solo No. 1 hit on the pop charts with the hit single "Baby Baby", becoming the first single by a CCM artist to reach No. 1. Another single, "That's What Love Is For", would also top the charts, this time in the Adult Contemporary field. Meanwhile, Grant's album Heart In Motion reaches No. 11 on the pop chart and No. 1 on the Christian chart despite its non-religious objective, and quickly becomes a best-seller. Another CCM crossover artist in 1991 is Michael W. Smith, who achieves a Top Ten pop hit with his single "Place In This World". The subsequent album, Go West Young Man, is also a hit. Jon Gibson's hit "Jesus Loves Ya" still holds the record as the longest playing hit single in Christian music history. The track spent eleven weeks at No. 1 and became the top selling CCM single of 1991. Only three artists received more airplay on Christian radio stations in that year other than Gibson; Amy Grant, Michael W. Smith and BeBe & CeCe Winans.
The massive success of Garth Brooks in this year set the stage for the mid-1990s influx of pop-oriented country musicians. Several soon-to-be pivotal bands formed or released debut recordings, including Dave Matthews Band, Live, Phish, Spin Doctors and stoner metal. Massive Attack's Blue Lines, pioneered the sound that would eventually become known as trip hop. Entombed's Clandestine and Dismember's Like an Ever Flowing Stream were early releases from the Scandinavian metal scene. In the US, New York death metal band Suffocation released their debut full-length Effigy of the Forgotten, often considered one of the most influential of extreme metal albums. Trance music rose to prominence in the underground dance scene of Frankfurt, Germany, pioneered by such producers as Dance 2 Trance and Resistance D. U2 released their seventh album Achtung Baby, considered by many of their fans to be their best. Metallica's self-titled album was their most commercially successful, and the Red Hot Chili Peppers broke through to the mainstream with Blood Sugar Sex Magik. R.E.M. released their massive commercial breakthrough album Out of Time.
January–March
- 8 January – Def Leppard guitarist Steve Clark dies of respiratory failure from a lethal mixture of alcohol and prescription drugs. He was 30 years old.
- 15 January – A new all-star rendition of the John Lennon song "Give Peace a Chance" is released, featuring Yoko Ono, Lenny Kravitz, Peter Gabriel, Alannah Myles, Tom Petty, Bonnie Raitt and many more, billed as "The Peace Choir". The single has been rushed to market in response to the imminent Gulf War.
- 16 January – The sixth annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony is held in New York. The event goes forward despite a tense atmosphere caused by the US President's announcement of the Gulf War the same evening. The inductees are Ike & Tina Turner, Jimmy Reed, John Lee Hooker, LaVern Baker, The Byrds, The Impressions, Wilson Pickett and Howlin' Wolf.
- 18 January – Three people are crushed to death during an AC/DC concert in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, when audience members rush the stage.
- 18–27 January – The massive nine-day festival Rock in Rio II is held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The headliners are a-ha, Prince, INXS, Guns N' Roses, New Kids on the Block, George Michael and Happy Mondays.
- 19 January – Janet Jackson with seventh single from Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814, "Love Will Never Do (Without You)", becomes the only artist to have seven singles from the same album chart in the top five.
- 27 January – Whitney Houston sings "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the Super Bowl. The recording is then released and becomes a hit single.
- 31 January – DJ Magazine is launched under its new name.
- 5 February – Queen release their final album of Freddie Mercury's lifetime, entitled Innuendo. This album includes hit singles such as "The Show Must Go On", "Headlong", "These Are The Days Of Our Lives" and "Innuendo".
- 20 February – The 33rd Annual Grammy Awards are presented in New York, hosted by Garry Shandling. Quincy Jones' Back on the Block wins Album of the Year, Phil Collins' "Another Day in Paradise" wins Record of the Year and Bette Midler's version of "From a Distance" wins Song of the Year. Mariah Carey wins Best New Artist.
- 27 February – James Brown is granted an early parole and released from jail, following his arrest after a high-speed car chase through two states in 1989. Pop Will Eat Itself documented the affair with their song, "Not Now James, We're Busy".
- 28 February – Hollywood's Record Plant Studios recording studio closes down. Among the albums recorded at the Record Plant were The Eagles' Hotel California, Fleetwood Mac's Rumours and Stevie Wonder's Songs in the Key of Life.
- 1 March – Nielsen SoundScan begins tracking sales data for Nielsen.
- 11 March – Janet Jackson signs a US$30 million contract with Virgin Records, making her the highest paid female recording artist ever.
- 12 March – R.E.M. release their seventh studio album, Out of Time. The album would serve as the band's breakthrough, catapulting the Georgia alternative rock band from cult status to a massive international act.
- 16 March – Seven members of country music singer Reba McEntire's band and her road manager are killed when their private plane crashes in California, near the U.S.-Mexico border. McEntire travels on a separate plane. The disaster inspires the title song of her next album, For My Broken Heart.
- 20 March
- *Michael Jackson signs a contract with Sony for 1 billion dollars.
- *Eric Clapton's four-year-old son, Conor, dies after falling 49 stories from a New York City apartment window; the event later inspires Clapton to write the hit single "Tears in Heaven".
- 24 March – The Black Crowes are dropped as the opening act of ZZ Top's tour for repeatedly insulting the tour's sponsor, Miller Beer.
- 27 March – New Kids on the Block star Donnie Wahlberg is arrested in Louisville, Kentucky for allegedly setting his hotel room on fire.
- 28 March – George Harrison, Phil Collins and others attend funeral services for Eric Clapton's late son, Conor.
April–June
- 17 April – Nirvana performs "Smells Like Teen Spirit" live for the first time at the OK Hotel in Seattle, Washington.
- 28 April – Bonnie Raitt marries actor Michael O'Keefe in New York.
- 4 May – The Eurovision Song Contest 1991 is held in Rome, Italy, and, after a highly controversial voting segment, Sweden's Fångad av en stormvind by Carola is declared the winner.
- 7 May – In Macon, Georgia, a judge dismisses a wrongful death lawsuit against Ozzy Osbourne. The suit was filed by a local couple that believed their son was inspired to attempt suicide by Osbourne's music.
- 10 May – Truth or Dare, a documentary chronicling singer Madonna's 1990 Blond Ambition Tour, is released to theatres.
- 24 May – Guns N' Roses kick off their 26-month world Use Your Illusion Tour in Alpine Valley in East Troy.
- 25 May – The Billboard 200 album chart starts incorporating electronically monitored sales data provided by Nielsen SoundScan, thus beginning what chart aficionados tag as the "SoundScan era".
- 28 May – The Smashing Pumpkins release their debut album Gish, establishing the band as one of the most important of the alternative scene.
- 7 June – ABC revives the late-night rock performance series In Concert.
- 21 June – The Mérida State Symphony Orchestra is founded in Venezuela.
- 28 June – Paul McCartney's classical composition, the Liverpool Oratorio, receives its première at the Liverpool Anglican Cathedral.
July–September
- 2 July
- *Launch of the Australian Festival of Chamber Music.
- *Hollywood Bowl Orchestra gives its first public performance.
- *During the Use Your Illusion Tour, Axl Rose assaults a member of the audience watching the show on camera, after security fails to respond to the singer's orders to confiscate the camera. After the attack, Rose angrily says, "Thanks to the lame-ass security, I'm goin' home!" and storms off the stage.
- 13 July – Pianist Keith Jarrett records his Vienna Concert at the Vienna Staatsoper.
- 18 July – Perry Farrell launches the first Lollapalooza tour as a farewell for his just-dissolved band, Jane's Addiction. Other acts appearing on the tour include Siouxsie and the Banshees, Nine Inch Nails, Rollins Band, Fishbone and Rage Against the Machine.
- 12 August – Metallica release their most successful album, Metallica. Something of a departure from the thrash metal sound they helped pioneer, it becomes one of the best-selling albums of all time
- 15 August – Paul Simon's Concert in the Park takes place in Central Park. The free concert is broadcast live on HBO.
- 20 August – The six-day International Pop Underground Convention opens in Olympia, Washington.
- *Pearl Jam release their debut album, Ten. While initially slow to sell, it becomes No. 2 on the Billboard charts within a year and has since become certified thirteen times Platinum in the United States.
- 27 August – Dr. Dre pleads no contest to charges that he beat up a woman at a West Hollywood nightclub. Dr. Dre is sentenced to 24 months probation.
- 10 September – Nirvana releases the single for "Smells Like Teen Spirit", a song that would achieve unprecedented success the following year and become a trailblazer for grunge and alternative rock as a whole.
- 17 September – Rock band Guns N' Roses release their first full-length follow up to their debut album Appetite for Destruction in the form of the double album Use Your Illusion I & Use Your Illusion II. Both go on to sell a combined excess of 1.3 million on their first week of sale in the US alone.
- 23 September
- *Primal Scream releases Screamadelica, which would go on to win the first Mercury Prize in 1992.
- *The TV Series Baywatch begins its second season with a new theme song performed and co-written by former Survivor member Jimi Jamison, "I'm Always Here".
- *Bryan Adams releases his sixth album Waking Up the Neighbours produced by Mutt Lange, achieving diamond status in his native Canada for the second time.
- 24 September – Retrospectively considered by critics to be a seminal date in music history, as it saw the release of several key albums:
- *Nevermind, the sophomore album from Seattle-based band Nirvana, which would go on to popularize the grunge movement nationwide and be considered both a defining album of Generation X and one of the greatest albums in the history of popular music.
- *The Low End Theory, the sophomore album from hip-hop group A Tribe Called Quest, which came to also be regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time, as well as a defining album for alternative hip-hop.
- *Blood Sugar Sex Magik, the fifth album from funk rock band the Red Hot Chili Peppers, which, alongside Nevermind, also helped to popularize alternative rock.
- *Trompe le Monde, the fourth album from influential alternative rock band the Pixies, their last before their breakup two years later. It would be the band's final full-length LP for 22 years.
October–December
- 8 October – Soundgarden releases their breakout album Badmotorfinger.
- 3 November – A free tribute concert is held at Golden Gate Park in memory of concert promoter Bill Graham, killed in a helicopter crash three weeks earlier at the age of 60. Performers include Santana, Grateful Dead, Journey and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
- 7 November
- *Bryan Adams's 16-week stay at the top of the UK Singles Chart with "Everything I Do (I Do It For You)" is finally ended by U2 single "The Fly", having already set a new record for the longest consecutive stay at the top of the UK Singles Chart.
- *Izzy Stradlin quits Guns N' Roses.
- *Frank Zappa's children, Dweezil and Moon, announce to an audience in New York that their father is unable to attend the tribute concert to his music because he is seriously ill with prostate cancer.
- 14 November – The new Michael Jackson music video "Black or White" premieres simultaneously in 27 countries to an audience of 500 million people. Controversy is immediately generated by the video's last four minutes in which Jackson smashes windows, vandalizes a car and causes a building to explode, as well as suggestively grabs his crotch repeatedly while dancing.
- 19 November
- *U2 releases album Achtung Baby.
- *Luis Miguel releases Romance which revitalized the popularity of boleros in the 1990s.
- 24 November – Freddie Mercury, lead singer of Queen, dies from AIDS-related complications at the age of 45 one day after making the disease public. The same day, Eric Carr, formerly of Kiss, also dies from complications of heart cancer.
- 26 November – Michael Jackson releases his worldwide hit album Dangerous. It comes four years after Bad and goes on to sell more than 32 million copies worldwide.
- 30 November – Following in the steps of the Billboard 200, the Billboard Hot 100 also begins a new era by incorporating and merging electronically measured sales and airplay data from SoundScan and BDS respectively.
- 1 December
- *A Carnegie Hall Christmas Concert, featuring Kathleen Battle and Frederica von Stade, a jazz band led by Wynton Marsalis, and orchestra and chorus conducted by André Previn, is recorded for television.
- *George Harrison plays Yokohama, Japan. The brief Japanese tour with Eric Clapton marks his first set of formal concert performances since 1974.
- 4 December – The Judds give their final concert performance as a duo.
- 14 December - The 20th OTI Festival, held at the in Acapulco, Mexico, is won by the song "¿Adónde estás ahora?", written by Claudia Brant and, and performed by Brant herself representing Argentina.
- 17 December - Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy rules, in singer-songwriter Gilbert O'Sullivan's lawsuit against rapper Biz Markie, that all future samples must be cleared.
- 31 December – The twentieth annual New Year's Rockin' Eve special airs on ABC, with appearances by Boyz II Men, Simply Red, Vanessa L. Williams, Another Bad Creation, Restless Heart, Michael Bivins and Barry Manilow.
Also in 1991
- Aerosmith signs a new deal with Sony Music worth an estimated $30 million.
- The Rolling Stones sign a new contract with Virgin Records.
- Country music legend Kenny Rogers starts his restaurant chain, Kenny Rogers Roasters.
- Tupac Shakur's solo career begins with his first album, 2Pacalypse Now.
- Mangue Bit is originated in Recife, Brazil, circa 1991.
Bands formed
- ''See Musical groups established in 1991''
Bands disbanded
- ''See Musical groups disestablished in 1991''
Bands reformed
- ''See Musical groups reestablished in 1991''
Albums released
Release date unknown
- 85–86 – Dag Nasty
- Addicted to Jesus – Carman
- Alice in Wonderland No. 1 – Randy Greif
- Alice in Wonderland No. 2 – Randy Greif
- Alice in Wonderland No. 3 – Randy Greif
- Amen – Salif Keita
- Angst – Lacrimosa
- Architect of Fear – Raven
- Artistic Vice – Daniel Johnston
- Baby Animals – Baby Animals
- BBC Radio 1 Live in Concert – Hawkwind
- The Beast Inside – Inspiral Carpets
- Believing in Better – Lennie Gallant
- The Best of Spandau Ballet – Spandau Ballet
- The Big Wheel – Runrig
- Bluesiana II – Dr. John
- Boomerang – Mad at the World
- Border Drive-In Theatre – The Raindogs
- Burnt Offering – Jimmy Lyons and Andrew Cyrille
- Cadillac Rag – John Hartford
- Caporal Grille – Zangalewa
- Chagall Guevara – Chagall Guevara
- Civil Rites – REZ
- Clown Heaven and Hell – Me Mom and Morgentaler
- Coming Down – Daniel Ash
- The Commitments – Various Artists
- Daisychain Reaction – Poster Children
- Daniela Mercury – Daniela Mercury
- Day By Day – E. T. Mensah
- A Different Kind of Weather – The Dream Academy
- Don't Fear the Reaper – Clint Ruin and Lydia Lunch
- Distant Plastic Trees – The Magnetic Fields
- Drive Like Jehu - Drive Like Jehu
- Du ciment sous les plaines – Noir Désir
- Early On (1964–1966) – David Bowie
- Eggnog – Melvins
- Ella Returns to Berlin – Ella Fitzgerald
- Fillet Show - Hum
- Fire and Love – Guardian
- The First of Too Many – Senseless Things
- Fis Fis Tziganes – Okay Temiz
- Freaks – X Marks the Pedwalk
- Galaxies – Andrew Cyrille and Vladimir Tarasov
- Ghosts – Techno Animal
- Girly-Sound – Liz Phair
- Girlsville – Thee Headcoatees
- Go Figure – Spirit of the West
- Good Woman – Gladys Knight
- Hangover – Auktyon
- Hammerbox – Hammerbox
- Hartford & Hartford – John Hartford & Jamie Hartford
- Havana 3am – Havana 3am
- Harmony Ranch – Riders in the Sky
- Hung Far Low – The Honeymoon Killers
- I Scream Sunday – One Bad Pig
- Information Libre – Sham 69
- Inside Out – Idle Cure
- Jahmekya – Ziggy Marley
- Jah Won't Pay the Bills – Sublime
- The John Fahey Christmas Album – John Fahey
- Kinetic Faith – Bride
- Krov za krov – Aria
- Life 'n Perspectives of a Genuine Crossover – Urban Dance Squad
- Life's To Short – Marshall Crenshaw
- Lunar Womb – The Obsessed
- Magnetic Dance – Okay Temiz
- Milestone – The Temptations
- Mr. Lucky – John Lee Hooker
- The Nymphs – The Nymphs
- On the Way Down from the Moon Palace – Lisa Germano
- The Only Solution: Another Revolution – The Fatima Mansions
- Open Doors, Closed Windows – Disco Inferno
- Ophelia's Shadow – Toyah
- Orbital – Orbital
- Out for the Count – Show of Hands
- Out of the Grey – Out of the Grey
- Overlapping Hands: Eight Segments – Marilyn Crispell and Irène Schweizer
- Page of Life – Jon and Vangelis
- Palace Springs – Hawkwind
- Pop Pop – Rickie Lee Jones
- The Promise – T'Pau
- Real Men (album) – John S. Hall & Kramer
- Revolution Girl Style Now! – Bikini Kill
- Rise of the Common Woodpile – Caroliner Rainbow Open Wound Chorale
- The Sadness of Things – Steven Stapleton & David Tibet
- San Antorium – Lowlife
- Sexplosion! – My Life with the Thrill Kill Kult
- Shakill's Warrior – David Murray
- Shotgun Wedding – Lydia Lunch and Rowland S. Howard
- Silver Lining – Nils Lofgren
- Soul Show: Live at Delta 88 – Joan Osborne
- Spirit Electricity – Bad Brains
- Stars Crash Down – Hue and Cry
- Stranger in This Town – Richie Sambora
- Struck by Lightning – Graham Parker
- Suit suit...hehehe – Slank
- Surprise – Crystal Waters
- Ten Stories – Rick Elias
- Themes and Dreams – The Shadows
- Tossing Seeds – Superchunk
- Total Castration – Zeni Geva
- Unity - 311
- Unsane – Unsane
- Unseen Power – Petra
- Unseen Worlds – Laurie Spiegel
- Voices – Kenny Thomas
- Volume One – Sleep
- War Master – Bolt Thrower
- Welcome to the Ball – Vicious Rumors
- Welcome to Love – Pharoah Sanders
- Watershed – Grant McLennan
Biggest hit singles
The following songs achieved the highestin the charts of 1991.
| # | Artist | Title | Year | Country | Chart Entries |
| 1 | Bryan Adams | (Everything I Do) I Do it For You | 1991 | ![]() Top best albums of the yearAll albums have been named albums of the year for their hits in the charts.
Published popular music
Classical music
Opera
Musical theaterMiss Saigon – Broadway production opened at the Broadway Theatre on 11 April and ran for 4097 performancesThe Secret Garden – Broadway production opened at the St. James Theatre on 25 April and ran for 706 performancesSong of Singapore – off-Broadway production opened at the Irving Plaza on 7 May and ran for 459 performancesWill Rogers Follies – Broadway production opened at the Palace Theatre on 1 May and ran for 983 performancesMusical filmsBeauty and the Beast The CommitmentsThe Five HeartbeatsFor the BoysKilukkamStepping OutStones at the MaxEl Acompañamiento
Births
Deaths
Awards
Charts
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