the march plaidness tournament field

is now set. 64 writers (in parentheses, below) were selected by lottery from a list of around 200 who expressed interest. Those 64 writers each selected a song from the longlist (listed following the tournament field). When a song by one of the bands with two songs on the longlist was selected, both were removed from the list (no more than one song per band).

Here’s this year’s tournament bracket. As in previous tournaments, seeding is primarily based on markers of popularity (sales, ubiquity), as best the Selection Committee was able to ascertain.

You can view the updated bracket with the results as the tournament proceeds here (we’ll also update the image file above after each round).

Go to Google Sheets to view or fill out your own bracket, or download an editable Excel file or a pdf. Fill out your own bracket for free to enter the tournament. As always, the bracket with the most successful picks (weighted the further we go in the tournament), will receive a prize. The tournament starts on 3/1, so all bracket submissions must be submitted by 7am 3/1.

We started with grunge (mostly Seattle/Pacific NW) and circled out to include adjacent songs that have include some of the major markers of the grunge era: bass-heaviness; loud, distorted, crunchy guitars; seeming artlessness especially in the vocals and production; angsty (kinda emo) feels and lyrics; apparent carelessness esp in instrumentation or presentation; use of the loud-quiet loud dynamic; seeming dirtiness/crustiness/slackerness; some relationship with punk, indie, or metal (grunge’s formative influences), and so forth. Songs must be released 88-98. A video is helpful but not required. Being from the Pacific NW is a plus but not required. Bands on the Sub Pop label get bonus points. When some seemingly anti-grunge features showed up in songs, the more likely they’d be seen as not sufficiently Plaid. For instance, too much progginess or hair metalliness, super mainstream sounds or production, overly melodic vocals, slap bass, rapping, too much wackiness or irony, weird instrumentation (like the presence of a saxophone, for instance) may well be disqualifying.

The songs and their writers:

  • Afghan Whigs, Gentleman (Mo Daviau)

  • Alice in Chains, Would? (Lucinda Bliss)

  • Babes in Toyland, Bruise Violet (Scott Beal)

  • Beck, Loser (Jessica Handler)

  • Better than Ezra, Good (Ragini Srinivasan)

  • Bikini Kill, Rebel Girl (Emily Mills)

  • Blur, Song #2 (Roy Ivy)

  • Breeders, Cannonball (Susan Briante)

  • Buffalo Tom, Taillights Fade (Katie Darby Mullins)

  • Butthole Surfers, Pepper (David Turkel)

  • Collective Soul: Shine (Tucker Leighty-Phillips)

  • Cracker, Low (Sean Lovelace)

  • Cranberries, Zombie (Maya C Popa)

  • Creed, My Own Prison (Matt Bell)

  • Dinosaur Jr, Feel the Pain (Diana Hurlburt)

  • Everclear, Santa Monica (Melissa Faliveno)

  • Fishbone, Sunless Saturday (Carolyn Kellogg)

  • Flaming Lips, She Don’t Use Jelly (Linda Michel-Cassidy)

  • The Flys, Got You (Where I Want You) (Stephanie Austin)

  • Foo Fighters, I’ll Stick Around (Jordan Wiklund)

  • Fugazi, Waiting Room (Brad Efford)

  • Garbage, Only Happy When it Rains (Kristine Langley Mahler)

  • Gits, Second Skin (Raquel Gutiérrez)

  • Green Day, Brain Stew/Jaded (Joe Bonomo)

  • PJ Harvey, Rid of Me (Lisa Nikolidakis)

  • Helmet, Unsung (Michael D. Miller)

  • Hole, Doll Parts (Janine Annett)

  • Hum, Stars (Ken Caldwell)

  • Jane’s Addiction, Mountain Song (Elana Levin)

  • Kings X, Dogman (Patrick Madden)

  • Lemonheads, It’s a Shame About Ray (Greg Oldfield)

  • Live, I Alone (Erin McReynolds)

  • Local H, Bound for the Floor (John Melillo)

  • Ministry, Jesus Built My Hot Rod (Oscar Mardell)

  • Mother Love Bone, Chloe Dancer / Crown of Thorns (Natasha Padilla)

  • Mudhoney, Touch Me I’m Sick (Matthew Vadnais)

  • Nine Inch Nails, Closer (Mika Taylor)

  • Nirvana, In Bloom (Jason Huff)

  • The Offspring, Self-Esteem (Tom McAllister)

  • Pavement, Summer Babe (Winter Version) (Katie Moulton)

  • Paw, Jessie (Steven Church)

  • Pearl Jam, Corduroy (Veronica Klash)

  • Pixies, Wave of Mutilation (UK Surf) (Stephanie Mankins)

  • Placebo, Pure Morning (Jamison Crabtree)

  • Presidents of the USA, Lump (Dan Cassidy)

  • Radiohead, Creep (Rob Hays)

  • Rage Against the Machine, Killing in the Name (Ron Hogan)

  • Refreshments, Banditos (Amy Long)

  • REM, What’s the Frequency Kenneth (Adam O Davis)

  • Screaming Trees: Nearly Lost You (Scott Nadelson)

  • 7 Year Bitch, The Scratch (Emma Ramey)

  • Smashing Pumpkins, Today (Paul Hurh)

  • Spacehog, In the Meantime (Ryan Grandick)

  • Soul Asylum, Somebody to Shove (Mark Neely)

  • Soundgarden, Fell On Black Days (Josh Borgmann)

  • Stone Temple Pilots, Sex Type Thing (Jim Ruland)

  • Sunny Day Real Estate, Seven (Sam Martone)

  • Teenage Fanclub, The Concept (Katie Jean Shinkle)

  • Temple of the Dog, Hunger Strike (Lydia Pudzianowski)

  • Throwing Muses, Not Too Soon (Heidi Czerwiec)

  • Tool, Sober (Rebecca Chapman)

  • Veruca Salt, Seether (Danielle Evans)

  • Weezer, Say It Ain’t So (Emily Costa)

  • Weird Al Yankovic, Smells Like Nirvana (J. Robert Lennon)

The Selection Committee will seed the tournament songs and produce the bracket in December 2020. The tournament will begin in March 2021.

methodology

The longlist (below) was made up of 125 songs. We started with grunge (mostly Seattle/Pacific NW) and circled out to include adjacent songs that have include some of the major markers of the grunge era: bass-heaviness; loud, distorted, crunchy guitars; seeming artlessness especially in the vocals and production; angsty (kinda emo) feels and lyrics; apparent carelessness esp in instrumentation or presentation; use of the loud-quiet loud dynamic; seeming dirtiness/crustiness/slackerness; some relationship with punk, indie, or metal (grunge’s formative influences) etc. Songs must be released 88-98. A video is helpful but not required. Being from the Pacific NW is a plus but not required. Bands on the Sub Pop label get bonus points. When some seemingly anti-grunge features showed up in songs, the more likely they’d be seen as not sufficiently Plaid. For instance, too much progginess or hair metalliness, super mainstream sounds or production, overly melodic vocals, slap bass, rapping, too much wackiness or irony, weird instrumentation (like the presence of a saxophone, for instance) may well be disqualifying.

The major tournament bands (Nirvana, Soundgarden, etc.) are each represented by two songs. From this longlist, 64 writers will be selected by lottery to each choose a song from the list. Once a song by one of the major bands (who have two songs on the longlist) is selected, the other is ineligible for the tournament. The 64 songs selected by our writers will make up the tournament field. We will seed the songs and create the bracket later this fall.

Songs on this list are from 1988-1998. We are not claiming that all of these songs are “grunge,” so do not @ us. They are not. We make no such claim. Even most of the bands identified as “grunge” would not have accepted the label. No one really agrees on what it means or what exactly it meant, if anything, except to identify it roughly with Seattle in that era and particularly with the Sub Pop label. From there, grunge quickly blew up and became a term useful for marketing a bunch of (mostly) rock bands.

If you see something we obviously missed, tweet us or email us.

If you’re new to March Xnesses, we run an actual March Madness-style tournament every March. This year’s theme is the grunge era.


the official tournament longlist

  • Afghan Whigs, Gentleman

  • Alice in Chains: Would

  • Alice in Chains: Man in the Box

  • Archers of Loaf, Harnessed in Slums

  • Babes in Toyland, Bruise Violet

  • Beck, Loser

  • Belly, Feed the Tree

  • Best Kissers in the World, Goldfish Bowl

  • Better than Ezra, Good

  • Bikini Kill, Rebel Girl

  • Blur, Song #2 

  • Breeders, Cannonball

  • Bush, Machinehead

  • Buffalo Tom, Taillights Fade

  • Butthole Surfers, Pepper

  • Candlebox, Cover Me

  • Collective Soul: Shine

  • Come, Car

  • Cracker, Low

  • Cranberries, Zombie

  • Creed, My Own Prison

  • Curve, Fait Accompli

  • Daisy Chainsaw, Love Your Money

  • Days of the New, Touch, Peel, and Stand

  • Dinosaur Jr, Feel the Pain

  • Eels, Novocaine for the Soul

  • Everclear, Santa Monica

  • Failure, Stuck on You

  • Filter, Hey Man, Nice Shot

  • Fishbone, Sunless Saturday

  • Flaming Lips, She Don’t Use Jelly

  • The Fluid, One Eye Out

  • The Flys, Got You (Where I Want You)

  • Foo Fighters, I’ll Stick Around

  • Fugazi, Waiting Room

  • Garbage, Only Happy When it Rains

  • Gits, Second Skin

  • Green Day, Brain Stew/Jaded

  • Green River, Swallow My Pride

  • Gruntruck, Tribe

  • Guided by Voices, I am a Scientist

  • Hammerbox, Hed

  • PJ Harvey, Rid of Me

  • Hazel, Comet

  • Heatmiser, Blackout

  • Helmet, Unsung 

  • Hole, Doll Parts

  • Hole, Violet

  • Hum, Stars

  • Jane’s Addiction, Mountain Song 

  • Jawbox, Cooling Card

  • Kings X, Black the Sky

  • Lemonheads, It’s a Shame About Ray

  • Letters to Cleo, Here and Now

  • Live, I Alone

  • L7, Pretend We’re Dead

  • Local H, Bound for the Floor

  • Love Battery, Half Past You

  • Magnapop, Slowly, Slowly

  • Mad Season, River of Deceit

  • Meat Puppets, Backwater

  • Melvins, Going Blind

  • Ministry, Jesus Built My Hot Rod 

  • Mother Love Bone, Chloe Dancer / Crown of Thorns

  • Mudhoney, Touch Me I’m Sick 

  • Mudhoney, Into the Drink

  • The Muffs, Lucky Guy

  • My Sister’s Machine, I Hate You

  • Nada Surf, Popular

  • Nine Inch Nails, Closer

  • Nirvana, Heart Shaped Box

  • Nirvana, In Bloom

  • The Offspring, Self-Esteem

  • Our Lady Peace, Starseed

  • Pavement, Summer Babe (Winter Version)

  • Paw, Jessie 

  • Pearl Jam, Corduroy

  • Pearl Jam, Even Flow

  • Pixies, UMass

  • Pixies, Wave of Mutilation (UK Surf)

  • Placebo, Pure Morning

  • Pond, Spots

  • Posies, Dream All Day

  • Presidents of the USA, Lump

  • Radiohead, Creep

  • Rage Against the Machine, Killing in the Name

  • Rancid, Ruby Soho

  • Redd Kross, Jimmy’s Fantasy

  • Refreshments, Banditos 

  • REM, What’s the Frequency Kenneth

  • The Rentals, Friends of P

  • Screaming Trees: Nearly Lost You

  • Seaweed, Kid Candy

  • Sebadoh, License to Confuse

  • Semisonic, Singing in My Sleep

  • Seven Mary Three, Cumbersome

  • 7 Year Bitch, The Scratch

  • Silverchair, Tomorrow

  • Skinyard, 1000 Smiling Knuckles

  • Skunk Anansie, Selling Jesus

  • Sleater Kinney, Dig Me Out

  • Sloan, Underwhelmed

  • Smashing Pumpkins, Today

  • Smashing Pumpkins, I Am One    

  • Sonic Youth, Bull in the Heather

  • Spacehog, In the Meantime

  • Sponge, Plowed

  • Soul Asylum, Somebody to Shove

  • Soundgarden, Fell On Black Days

  • Soundgarden, Jesus Christ Pose

  • Stone Temple Pilots, Sex Type Thing

  • Stone Temple Pilots, Interstate Love Song

  • Sugar, JC Auto

  • Sunny Day Real Estate, Seven

  • Sweetwater, Cake and Strychnine

  • Swervedriver, Rave Down

  • TAD, Grease Box

  • Teenage Fanclub, The Concept

  • Temple of the Dog, Hunger Strike

  • That dog., Kissing Christian

  • Throwing Muses, Not Too Soon

  • Tool, Sober

  • Veruca Salt, seether

  • Weezer, Say It Ain’t So

  • Weird Al Yankovic, Smells Like Nirvana


We also publish essays on any aspect of the tournament theme—roughly, “grunge” and alt rock 1988-1998. If you’d like to pitch us a piece on a song not on our short- or longlist, or on some aspect of the sound, the scene, and your experience with it, hit us up at marchxness—at—thediagram.com or on twitter.



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