
Much like the punk explosion that spat in the face of the 1970s' self-indulgent prog rock groups, grunge music moped onto the scene in the early 1990s and blew the hair metal bands off the face of MTV.

By the end of the '80s, LA-based bands such as Poison, Skid Row and Motley Crue had begun to outstay their welcome as younger fans hungered for something more than the hairspray and headbands acts could provide.

In their place emerged a new musical movement, mostly out of Seattle, Washington, were forming into a fast-growing movement and screaming about stuff that disaffected youth could actually relate to.

The gods of grunge: '90s rock legends Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden and Alice In Chains have again taken centre stage in a new exhibition by renowned photographer Chris Cuffaro. Pictured from left: Nirvana's Krist Novoselic, Kurt Cobain and Dave Grohl, July 22, 1991

While Poison wailed about having Nothin' But A Good Time, Nirvana sang of Lithium and depression, while wearing very un-glamorous plaid shirts, ripped jeans and mud-stained Converse sneakers.

Depression, anxiety, and alienation were given expression by bands with a hard and heavy yet melodic sound, as the likes of Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Alice In Chains, Soundgarden and Mudhoney began to dominate radio playlists.

And renowned photographer Chris Cuffaro was there to capture it all. On the eve of his first Australian exhibition, Greatest Hits: Grunge, Chris reveals the stories behind the photos which have become iconic mementos of what was arguably rock's last revolution.

Sleepless in Seattle: Much like the 1970s punk explosion that spat in the face of that era's self-indulgent prog rock groups, grunge moped onto the music scene in the early '90s and blew the hair metal bands off the face of MTV. Pictured: Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, August 28, 1991

Nirvana, formed in Aberdeen, Washington, in 1987, and led by the tortured and depressive Kurt Cobain, quickly became the poster boys for grunge as it burst upon the world stage with its 1991 album Nevermind and defined the 'loud bit, quiet bit' song pattern.

'I first met Nirvana in March of 1991,' said Chris. 'I was in Seattle and had a day off with nothing to do. I contacted the manager of Nirvana, who is a good friend of mine, and just asked him if I could shoot them and he said, great, they need photos. They just got a new drummer. Dave [Grohl] had just joined the band.'

'That was a really, amusing fun day. They were really hungover from the night before so I took them to a diner and fed them,' Chris revealed.

'Back in those days in Seattle, the bands were all so poor. They had nothing.'

'That was a really, amusing fun day. They were really hungover from the night before so I took them to a diner and fed them,' said Chris of Nirvana (above), March 30, 1991. Left to right: Kris Novoselic, Dave Grohl, Kurt Cobain.

One of Nirvana's most iconic photos is of the trio standing in a bathtub while drummer Dave pretends to do pull-ups on the shower curtain rod.

'That session was at my apartment in Los Angeles,' revealed Chris. 'The guys would walk in and I'd go, "So OK we're going to go in my bathtub", and they'd go, "OK, Chris." And I'd say, "Yeah come on, get in the bathtub, let's go!"'

He added: 'I also took Nirvana into the alleyway behind my apartment. It was just an easy place to go. Bands didn't have money to go rent a location, we just had to really make it work. At that time Nevermind had just come out, and it was starting to build. I felt the momentum.'

'I also took Nirvana into the alleyway behind my apartment. It was just an easy place to go. Bands didn't have money to go rent a location we just had to really make it work. At that time [their album] Nevermind had just come out, and it was starting to build. I felt the momentum,' said Chris. Pictured: Nirvana, March 30, 1991

Chris had become well known around Seattle for his photography and became fast friends with many of the bands, including locals Pearl Jam, who formed in 1990.

He ended up photographing the megastars in numerous locations, including Dallas.

'I shot them in 1991 in a field in Dallas. Back in the day when the labels had money, when they spent money on bands, every band would get a photoshoot for the album cover and a photoshoot for publicity,' Chris said.

'That was in 1991 in a field in Dallas. Back in the day when the labels had money, when they spent money on bands, every band would get a photoshoot for the album cover and a photoshoot for publicity.' Pictured: Pearl Jam, December 11, 1991

'If you look at a lot of pictures, I'll have people sit down, because people aren't sure of themselves. They wonder, "Where do a put my hands, how do I not look stupid?" So the first thing I'd always tell people is sit down It always makes people feel comfortable. It makes people forget about what they’re doing there.' Pictured: Pearl Jam, December 11, 1991

He continued: 'In those days you kept things simple. Bands didn't like doing photoshoots and the big trick was them liking me. If they liked me the I could get them to do things like stand in the middle of a field while it's freezing cold.'

Chris said one of his ways to break the ice with any new bands was to ask his subjects to simply sit down.

'If you look at a lot of my pictures, I'll have people sit down, because people aren't sure of themselves. They wonder, "Where do I put my hands, how do I not look stupid?" So the first thing I'd always tell people is sit down. It always makes people feel comfortable. It makes people forget about what they're doing there,' he said.

'Beginning of 1992. 'One day Eddie and his girlfriend Beth and I were sitting at their house just shooting the s**t talking and Eddie was just playing his bass. He just played and I shot, having fun.' Pictured: Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, January 18, 1992

One of Chris' most beloved set of shots is of Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder playing bass by himself in a bedroom.

'It was the beginning of 1992. One day Eddie and his girlfriend Beth and I were sitting at their house just shooting the s**t, talking, and Eddie was just playing his bass. He just played and I shot, having fun.'

In another memorable shot, Eddie is grinning malevolently while playfully raising his middle finger at Chris, as if to sum up the grunge movement's attitude to the world at large.

'We drove to Seattle for the last Lollapalooza show of the tour. The three of us jumped in the car, got a bunch a beer, and drank the whole way. Eddie [Vedder] was just walking around the grounds, having a laugh. At one point he just turned to the camera and started flipping me off.' Pictured: Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, September 11, 1992

'That was in the middle of the music video shoot [for Soundgarden's song Jesus Christ Pose] in the Indio desert where I guess they have Coachella now. Chris Cornell wrote the song about a picture I took of Perry Farrell [from Jane's Addiction].' Pictured: Chris Cornell, September 8, 1992

'That was one of the best days ever. That was right after the last Jane's addiction show before they broke up. Soundgarden were good friends, I loved [singer] Chris Cornell, he was one of the nicest people you could ever meet.' Pictured: Soundgarden, September 29, 1991

What is grunge? - Dirty guitars, strong riffs and heavy drumming, with instruments often tuned down to a lower key. - Peak years of the movement were from 1991 to 1994, spearheaded by Seattle bands such as Nirvana, on independent label Subpop. Key grunge albums: - Nevermind, Nirvana (1991) - In Utero, Nirvana (1993); Ten, Pearl Jam (1991) - Superunknown, Soundgarden (1994) - Live Through This, Hole (1994) - Dirt, Alice in Chains (1992) - Superfuzz Bigmuff EP, Mudhoney (1988) Key grunge songs: - Smells Like Teen Spirit, Nirvana (1991) - Alive, Pearl Jam (1991) - Man in the Box, Alice in Chains (1991) - Outshined, Soundgarden (1991) - Touch Me I'm Sick, Mudhoney (1988); - Doll Parts, Hole (1994) Advertisement

'Me, Eddie and Beth drove to Seattle for the last Lollapalooza [music festival] show of the tour in 1991. The three of us jumped in the car, got a bunch a beer, and drank the whole way. Eddie was just walking around the grounds, having a laugh. At one point he just turned to the camera and started flipping me off.'

Soundgarden, who would go on to have massive hits with songs Outshined, Spoonman and Black Hole Sun, also sought out Chris' photographic eye.

Frontman Chris Cornell often appeared solo in Chris' photos, including one in which the late singer is crouching down in a desert location.

'That was in the middle of the music video shoot [for Jesus Christ Pose] in the Idaho desert where I guess they have Coachella now. Chris wrote the song about a picture I took of Perry Farrell [lead singer of Jane's Addiction],' said Chris.

'That was one of the best days ever. Soundgarden were good friends. I loved Chris Cornell, he was one of the nicest people you could ever meet.'

Grunge monsters Alice In Chains would eventually lose lead singer Layne Staley to a drug overdose in 2002 at age 34, and original bassist Mike Starr in 2011, aged 44.

Chris was fortunate enough to capture the band in the heyday in the early 1990s, including a classic shot of the musicians mucking around in a children's playground.

'That was shot in Seattle. I had to fly up to Seattle and I ended up shooting them at a recording studio. Pictured: Alice In Chains, September 29, 1991

'There was a little kids' school next to this recording studio. We just hung out for the day. I loved that band,' said Chris. Pictured: Alice In Chains, September 29, 1991

'I shot them in Seattle. There was a little kids' school next to this recording studio. We just hung out for the day. I loved that band,' said Chris.

He also took a memorable close-up of Layne wearing a pair of black bug-eye sunglasses.

'That's my favourite picture of Lane,' said Chris. 'We blew this one up gigantic, it's so powerful.'

He also took a memorable close-up of Alice In Chains' Layne Staley wearing a pair of black bug-eye sunglasses. 'That's my favourite picture of Lane,' said Chris. 'We blew this one up gigantic, it's so powerful.' Pictured: Layne Staley, September 11, 1991

The photographer, whose work has appeared on more than 300 albums, also snapped grunge pioneers Mudhoney, and Jonathan Poneman and Bruce Pavitt, the creators of independent record label Subpop.

Through SubPop, Poneman and Pavitt launched many of the grunge groups' careers including that of Nirvana, Mudhoney and Soundgarden, and went on to sell millions of records the world over.

'They [Pavitt and Poneman] were gods to me,' said Chris. 'They’re legends in Seattle. They started the whole thing.'

Pop-ular: The photographer, whose work has appeared on more than 300 albums and CDs, also snapped grunge pioneers Mudhoney and Jonathan Poneman and Bruce Pavitt, the creators of independent record label Subpop. Pictured: Mudhoney, September 27, 1992

Success tastes sweet: Through SubPop, Poneman and Pavitt launched many of the grunge groups' careers including Nirvana, Mudhoney and Soundgarden and went on to sell millions of records around the world. Pictured: Mudhoney, September 27, 1992

Chris said that the grunge movement was a genuine musical revolution, not some fad cooked up by record label marketing.

'The Seattle scene was very organic, and very honest. And very real. Chris Cornell got compared to Robert Plant [from Led Zeppelin]. The bands such as Soundgarden and Pearl Jam weren't trying to be anything, they were just being themselves. That's the beauty of it all.

'Everybody supported everybody, loved everybody. It wasn't like Hollywood, like, "Oh we're better than them". There was no competitive nature in Seattle. Everybody wanted everybody to succeed.'

And succeed they did, with Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden and other grunge groups going on to deafen the ears of teenagers around the world.

'They're the guys who created Subpop records. They were gods to me. They're legends in Seattle. They started the whole thing.' Pictured: Subpop's Jonathan Poneman (right) and Bruce Pavitt (left), January 18, 1992

Twenty-five years after the suicide of Kurt Cobain in April 1994, and two years since Chris Cornell took his own life in May 2017, photographer Chris still has fond memories of the evolution of his musician friends.

'In the beginning of '91 everyone I knew were starving musicians. By the end of '92 everybody was rich and successful. Buying houses. It was a crazy time. It was fun to watch,' said Chris.

Chris Cuffaro's Greatest Hits: Grunge photo exhibition runs from May 2 to June 1, at the Blender Gallery in Sydney's Paddington