Offspring Albums - |work|

The Progeny of the Hit: A Structural and Commercial Analysis of the "Offspring Album" in Popular Music

Following the unexpected mainstream explosion of Nevermind , Nirvana faced a critical paradox: their fanbase (new vs. old) was bifurcated. Incesticide functioned as a "return to the underground" while the parent album was still on the charts. Notably, the album was released at a budget price ($9.99 vs. $15.99) and featured liner notes by Kurt Cobain explicitly attacking homophobic and sexist elements of the new fanbase. offspring albums

Kid A and Amnesiac are unique in that they are fraternal twins. However, standard discography lists Amnesiac as the follow-up. Our argument posits that Amnesiac is an OA precisely because it shares 100% of its recording chronology with Kid A . The Progeny of the Hit: A Structural and

Radiohead deliberately withheld "Pyramid Song" and "You and Whose Army?" from Kid A to avoid making that album too conventional. By releasing a second, more jazz-inflected volume six months later, the band achieved two goals. First, they prevented the "difficult" Kid A from being judged as a standalone failure. Second, they doubled the "album cycle" revenue without writing new material. The OA here became a . 5. Case Study III: The Commercial Hedge – Guns N’ Roses’ The Spaghetti Incident? (1993) Parent Album: Use Your Illusion I & II (1991) – Bloated, expensive, successful. The OA: The Spaghetti Incident? (Nov 1993) – A collection of punk covers. Notably, the album was released at a budget price ($9