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'Rolling Stone' Looks Back at the Nineties in a New Anthology

Introducing the definitive take on the decade of grunge, gangsta rap and Britney Spears

October 26, 2010 7:35 PM ET
'Rolling Stone' Looks Back at the Nineties in a New Anthology

Break out your flannel, because Rolling Stone and HarperCollins imprint Collins Design are publishing a collection of our greatest music stories and photography from the Nineties — the decade of grunge, gangsta rap and teen pop. From David Fricke's interview with Kurt Cobain months before the Nirvana leader's death to Steven Daly's visit to Britney Spears' bedroom, The '90s is packed with classic profiles, iconic photos, a guide to the decade's 100 greatest records, new essays by Slash, RZA, Perry Farrell, Matt Cameron and much more.

Rolling Stone: The '90s

To read the new issue of Rolling Stone online, plus the entire RS archive: Click Here

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Song Stories

“Oh Sherrie”

Steve Perry | 1984

Steve Perry's girlfriend Sherrie Swafford was actually in the studio when Perry began writing this song--his lone Top Ten hit as a solo act--with two co-writers. The trio began at midnight one night with just "Oh, Sherrie!" and "hold on, hold on." Three hours later, they had a complete song. Swafford, however, had to wait until the next day to hear it. "Sherrie actually got tired and went to bed," Perry said. She also appeared in the video, but their relationship did not hold on for long.

More Song Stories entries »