I’m
posting this on Thursday because I’ll be out of town this weekend. Moreover, my lazy writer’s block has me
retrieving an issue which I meant to address earlier but never got around to
until now: one of the top Four Grunge
bands, Nirvana. Actually, I did discuss
this band earlier, but that was before I got all three of their albums.
As
I mentioned earlier, my favorites of the grunge genre are Soundgarden and Alice in
Chains, both of which I saw back in the early 90’s, the former on the Superunknown
tour, the latter on the Facelift tour with Layne Staley, opening for the
Clash of the Titans (Anthrax, Slayer, Megadeth) and Van Halen. Those two bands have a strong Black Sabbath
influence which I liked.
I
heard so much Nirvana on the radio – particularly, of course, “Smells Like the
Teen Spirit” – and music videos that I was never inclined to actually purchase
any of their music. None of it impressed
me. Kurt Cobain did not impress me. Nor, for that matter, did Pearl Jam or Eddie
Vedder, and while I have Ten and a few others by PJ, I’ve never bothered to see
them in concert either. Of the four
bands, Nirvana seem to have a PUNK influence and less Iommi there. Again, not impressed.
Bleach (1989). This is their first album, and has Chas
Channing on drums instead of Dave Grohl.
Krist Novoselic is the bassist, and of course the guitarist/vocalist/songwriter
is Kurt Cobain. I got the deluxe version
with all the extra tracks and live stuff, basically to binge on
everything. It’s more raw and punk-oriented
than Nevermind but OK to listen to.
Nevermind (1991). This is clearly the album that blew them open
big time. “Smells Like The Teen Spirit”? Yes, it’s on here. The only songs I like are “In Bloom”, and the
extra track (of course I got the two disc “deluxe edition”) “Curmudgeon”, which
is Hawkwind-esque. Whoever decided which
songs should be the singles was 100% correct, as the other songs aren’t as
good, though not as shitty as to qualify as filler.
In Utero (1993). As to say “f**K you” to the record company
and all the lesser bandwagon fans who bought Nevermind at Sam Goody or
FYE for $16.99, Kurt and the boys got as radio-unfriendly as they could on this
album, even to the point of having an obnoxious song called “Radio Friendly
Unit Shifter”.
Kurt Cobain kills
himself. In April 1994 Kurt Cobain shot himself. Game over.
His body was found after several days.
Apparently he was unhappy. Duff McKagan, the GNR bassist, says shortly
before that he was on the plane with Kurt going to Seattle, and Kurt was
remarkably upbeat, out of character for him.
Duff said, “ok, that told me that something was very wrong with him.” He had stomach problems and was also addicted
to heroin.
Among the Gen X crowd I was hanging
out with at the time, at Montclair State University in New Jersey, who
worshipped Kurt as a modern-day rock god, the suicide really bummed them
out. I was neither happy nor sad, and
since Kurt had tried to kill himself before, not surprised either.
Dave Grohl. After Nirvana, drummer Dave Grohl formed a
band, just for the hell of it, the Foo Fighters. Like Tool, this band just to screw around
ended up being more successful than many bands who actually try to be
successful. Grohl has also played in
Queens of the Stone Age and Them Crooked Vultures, a supergroup with QOTSA
guitarist/vocalist John Homme and Led Zeppelin bassist John Paul Jones. I find Grohl much more likeable and normal
than Kurt Cobain, though I’m not a big fan of the Foo Fighters and have never
seen them in concert.
No comments:
Post a Comment