Nirvana
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Nirvana
Source: rollingstone.com
Few
bands in rock history have had a more immediate and tangible impact
on their contemporary pop musical landscape than Nirvana did
in the early Nineties. When the Seattle trio hit the scene in 1991,
mainstream radio was awash in the hair metal of Poison
and Def
Leppard. But seemingly within hours of the release of Nirvana's
anarchic, angry single "Smells Like Teen Spirit" — and
its twisted anti-pep-rally video—the rules had changed. Artifice
was devalued; pure, raw emotion was king.
Kurt
Cobain, Nirvana's leader, was Seattle's resident genius —
and a tortured one at that. Nirvana's reign was tragically cut
short on April 5, 1994, when Cobain took his own life following at
least one earlier suicide attempt and severe bouts with drug
addiction, a chronic stomach ailment, and depression. He was 27.
Cobain and Krist Novoselic grew up in Aberdeen, Washington, a small logging town 100 miles southwest of Seattle. When Cobain was eight, his secretary mother and auto-mechanic father divorced, leaving him constantly moving from one set of relatives to
another. As a child he
loved the Beatles, but by nine discovered the heavier music of Led
Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, and Kiss. Cobain met the 6-foot-7-inch
Novoselic, son of a local hairdresser, through mutual friend Buzz
Osborne of the Aberdeen band the Melvins. Osborne introduced them to
the hardcore punk of Black Flag and Flipper.
In 1987, Cobain and Novoselic, both of whom had long felt alienated from their working-class peers, formed Nirvana and started playing parties at the liberal Evergreen State College in nearby Olympia. The following year, Seattle independent label Sub Pop signed the band and released its first single, "Love Buzz" b/w "Big Cheese."
Nirvana's debut album, Bleach, recorded for $606.17, came out in 1989 to kudos from the underground-rock community. It sold an initial 35,000 copies—considerable for an indie-label release. The next year, Nirvana put out another Sub Pop single, "Sliver" b/w "Dive,"
and recorded six new songs (including "Smells
Like Teen Spirit") with producer Butch Vig. They also dismissed
Channing and hired Dave Grohl of D.C. hardcore band Scream. Although
opposed to major labels in principle, the band claimed it shopped the
songs to bigger companies in hopes of getting its message to a larger
audience.
A major-label bidding war ensued, with DGC ultimately offering the group a $287,000 advance (rumors had it at $750,000). With Nevermind, Nirvana succeeded at getting its rowdy rally to the populace on a grand scale: After an initial shipment of 50,000 copies, the
record kept selling, eventually bumping new albums by Michael
Jackson, Garth Brooks, U2, and MC Hammer from the top of the chart.
Nevermind ultimately sold 10 million copies in the U.S. alone. It
also produced another hit, "Come as You Are" (Number 32,
1992). In the
wake of that success, Cobain explored a few pet
projects, including performing frayed guitar feedback on William
Burroughs' The "Priest" They Called Him spoken-word CD and
coproducing the Melvins' Houdini album
By early 1992, Nirvana's success was biting back. As "Smells Like Teen Spirit" continued climbing up the charts, Cobain began bemoaning the group's meteoric rise, worrying that fans were missing the point of Nirvana's antiestablishment message. Cobain's expressions of support for women and homosexuals also challenged the earlier rock & roll status quo.
Simultaneously, his new relationship with Courtney Love, singer of the band Hole, had become a hot topic in the gossip columns. The couple married on February 24. When Love
became pregnant with Cobain's child and was
quoted in a Vanity Fair article as admitting she had used heroin
during the pregnancy, the couple's alleged drug addiction became the
subject of intense media scrutiny.
Attention to the Cobain-Love affair reached a level of intensity matched in the pop world
only by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, or the fated punk couple
Sid Vicious and Nancy Spungen. On August 18, 1992, the Cobains
delivered a healthy seven-pound baby,
Frances Bean (named after the
tormented, lobotomized Forties film actress Frances Farmer). After a
battle with children's services in L.A., which challenged the
Cobain's
parental fitness based on Love's comments in Vanity Fair,
the couple was granted custody of the child. Amid the chaos, Nirvana
released Incesticide, a collection of early singles and outtakes.
Beginning in spring of 1993, a series of events occurred that foreshadowed the demise of Cobain and Nirvana. On May 2, the singer overdosed on heroin at his Seattle home. The following month, he was charged with domestic assault after Love summoned the police
during an
argument over Cobain's gun collection. On July 23, Cobain overdosed
again, this time in the bathroom of a New York hotel room before a
Nirvana show at the Roseland Ballroom.
On September 21, Nirvana released In Utero, which debuted at Number One and produced the Modern Rock radio hits "Heart-Shaped Box" and "All Apologies." On January 7, 1994, Nirvana performed what would be their last American concert, at the Seattle Center Arena.
On February 6, the band departed for a European tour,
but after a series of shows in France, Portugal, the former
Yugoslavia, Germany, and Italy, decided to take a break, during which
Cobain remained in Rome. At 6:30 a.m. on March 4, Love found Cobain
unconscious in the couple's room at Rome's Excelsior Hotel, the
result of an overdose of the tranquilizer Rohypnol. At first deemed
an accident, later reports uncovered a suicide note.
Cobain remained
in a coma for 20 hours. He woke up and returned to Seattle. On March
18, police arrived at the Cobain home again after the singer locked
himself in a room with a .38-caliber revolver, threatening to kill
himself.
On March 30, Cobain checked in to the Exodus Recovery Center in L.A., but fled on April 1, after telling staff members he was going outside for a smoke. On April 8, he was found dead in a room above the garage of the couple's Seattle home, the result of a self-inflicted .20-
gauge shotgun wound to his head. For weeks afterward, fans, the
news media, MTV, and radio mourned his death with specials about
Nirvana and the generations they inspired. In
November 1994,
MTV Unplugged in New York, an album of the acoustic show taped in
1993, was released. It debuted at Number One, sold 5 million copies
and, in 1995, won a Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album.
Novoselic and Grohl made a post-Nirvana performance appearance together in 1994 in Olympia, Washington, where they joined the Stinky Puffs onstage for a set that included the
Puffs' "I Love You Anyway,"
a song for Cobain. Grohl soon found success leading his new band the
Foo Fighters, and, with Novoselic, gathered 16 live Nirvana
performances recorded between 1989 and 1994 for From the Muddy Banks
of the Wishkah.
While Novoselic turned to alcohol in the months after Cobain's suicide, he eventually stopped drinking and formed a political action committee (JAMPAC, for Joint Artists and Music Promotions Political Action Committee) to battle censorship. In 1994 he picked up a
guitar and
joined Venezuela-born singer-bassist Yva Las Vegas for the
short-lived band Sweet 75, which released a self-titled album on
Geffen in 1997. Novoselic occasionally played with a band called
Sunshine Cake, but, by decade's end, most of his energy was
spent on
political activism, performing with Soundgarden's Kim Thayil and Dead
Kennedys founder Jello Biafra as the No WTO Combo during protests
against the World Trade Organization's 1999 gathering in Seattle. A
live album, Live From the Battle in Seattle, was released by Biafra's
Alternative Tentacles label in 2000.
Nirvana's impact was also felt by some of Cobain's own musical heroes, heard in such Cobain tributes as Neil Young's Sleeps With Angels album and Patti Smith's song "About a Boy." After years of legal-wrangling, With The Lights Out was released, exposing a box-set
collection of the band's rawest demos and studio outakes in November
2004. The 2009 album Live at Reading, captured at the British music
festival in 1992, captured Nirvana at the peak of "Teen
Spirit" mania. The band doesn't sound quite overwhelmed by their
newfound fame, playing a blistering set that had long been
bootlegged.
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