Jason was very put together mentally, had a solid upbringing, didn't do heroin, and had a positive outlook on life. Completely different person than Kurt.
I know you probably get this a lot, but your videos are very well edited, as well as informative, you manage to keep the balance between being too boring and being to loud, you have established the perfect medium for music lovers looking for a bit of insight on their semi niche topics. either way I'm all here for it. keep up the great work!
Dear ant, i am a somewhat new writer and critic of popular culture including music videos. Your writing is very eloquent and i enjoy your professional stance between loudness and softness concerning words that you choose for expression. I provide op/ ed writing regularly on the editor, mixologist and producer of the amazing well known and rare insights of the seminal Seattle band Nirvana.. Whom are still going on as strong as ever with new listeners and generations. From one writer to another..SFP
As a hardcore Nirvana fan, I'm happy a pre nevermind history video with this amount of class, respect, knowledge, era appropriate footage/photos and good taste in humor. Thank you very much for this video and all your other works
@theshiningemerald4288 completely agree with you. We need more videos like this one. I think Cobain will never cease to be an important figure on the international rock scene. He left its mark on an entire generation and continues to impact the most recent ones. Kurt's story is worth knowing and telling.
I do think that Kurt was plagued by a feeling that nobody understood him or got him. I think he saw himself as an ineffective communicator and there was so much he wanted to express and so he relied on his music to be heard. You can imagine how he felt when the jocks and rednecks thought they understood him. He was continually frustrated and felt so alone a lot in this world.❤
@@joleneloveland4602 Irony is he'd probably identify more with the rednecks today since they're the current impermissibly alienated outcasts of society. It's either that or Rage on the part of The Machine.
It's exhilarating, even on a small level. A local radio station has played my band's music before and it really is like a drug. Hearing yourself on the radio and knowing others are listening is so awesome
I am a founding member of the Nirvana fan club on prodigy message boards. Pre nevermind days were rough as the internet was basically people dialing up to prodigy or AOL to write a message on a public forum that might never even be seen by anyone. I was 12 years old and it was a really fun time!
I have the flu but I saw nirvana/ MarcbutEvil I clicked on it and I already feel better. Thanks marc. It is incredible how well detailed the story is, you are a great storyteller with a particular sense of humor. I really enjoyed these videos about nirvana.
Nirvana left their mark on an entire generation. Some fans said that he hated “Smells Like Teen Spirit”. According to them Kurt wasn't the most excited about playing it live. It is said that in many shows he avoided doing so and if he did, he made an intentional mistake.
The thing about never mind is that it kind of goes against a lot that curt stood for Curt cobain hated the mainstream and loved being an underground band so now that all the jocks and popular people think it’s the best album ever he kind of no longer enjoyed it If that makes sense My dad loves underground bands and used to listen to nirvana before never mind It’s not necessarily a bad album at all it’s just the mainstream ruining cultures / music scenes
@@BlaiseStAmand It was probably semi strategic also that Nevermind reached the mainstream. Becoming mainstream meant they got on the radio, and became known. Absolutely no-one knew that Nevermind would become anywhere near the number 1 success it became, however.
I've never bought the idea that he didn't put much thought into the lyrics. With the number of rewrites he did it's clear he put a lot of thought into them. I've always thought he was just distancing himself from how truly personal a lot of them are.
Indeed. I think he resented people trying to "figure him out" as if that could be done from a few lines he wrote. So I think he very much tried to simplify his songs by making his situations more universal than personal. But because of his raw emotional vocals you could tell the words meant a lot to him. So as not to encourage speculation, in interviews he would down play them. I think the last thing he wanted was anybody feeling sorry for him.❤
I was born the same year as Cobain so may have similar/crossover influences. I played guitar and wrote songs from 89-99. I always thought lyrics were secondary and often threw many different ideas into the same song just to get a rhyme or words that sounded good together. I do believe Cobain was much the same, certainly with the lyrics to most songs that made up the first.two albums. I believe he may have put himself under pressure to have more cohesive lyrics for In Utero though to satisfy the fans.
Honestly not putting thoughts into lyrics doesn’t make them any less deeper. The beauty of Kurt’s lyricism is that so much emotion is put into it that digging into them feels more like psychoanalyzing someone rather than encrypting a message. It’s top tier abstract art
I was thinking about it & I realized that Nirvana was touring Bleach in Europe right when the Berlin Wall fell. In fact, they started the German leg of the tour two days before it fell. Not that they were some huge stadium act at the time, but I think that the excitement of the era definitely contributed to their success, because they were an American punk band. I think they were actually bigger in Europe first before Nevermind was released, you can kinda see this vibe in 1991: The Year Punk Broke.
It's so refreshing to find someone who makes informative but entertaining videos about Nirvana! I never heard about the nervous breakdown and also the breakup with that girl and what made him push to drugs... Thank you.
The care and consideration that went into this video is very apparent. You've ballenced the line of funny and informative increadibly and your voice! Silky smooth! Please make more videos! (And maybe about other Seattle groups)
My bladder/prostate area gave me absolute hell for almost 20 years. I’m still glad it wasn’t my stomach. Gastrointestinal discomfort will fuck your life up and nobody sees it.
Nirvana is probably one of the best examples of hard work pays off. They literally started off so broke that they were having trouble paying off bills. And yes, hard to believe that the world’s largest grunge band started off with no money. Now if I were them, I wouldn’t believe in myself and I would probably just give up on trying to make it big. But Nirvana (specifically Kurt and Krist) didn’t think or do that. They kept working and working and going to shows and preforming. Kurt was literally singing and playing the guitar while dealing with stomach pains. And after 3 hard years of work, they did it. They had become the #1 grunge band in the world. They went from selling thousands of records to selling millions. They went from preforming in front of a few hundred people or a thousand people to preforming in front of tens of thousands of people. They had become the biggest band of the early 90s. And that is a good example of why hard work pays off.
Kurt was a grade a slacker. Yeah they practiced a lot from ~ 87 to 90 but always very late in the day and what really saved Kurt and his music was moving from Aberdeen to Olympia and having Tracy Marander provide for him so that he could focus on his art plus Tobi Vail who basically inspired Nevermind but also the rest of the Olympia music scene
This is the first of your videos that I've ever seen, and it absolutely shreds the lazy video essays I have so far seen here about music from my formative era during the alt/grunge renaissance. It's really satisfying to consume a video made by someone whose personal investment in the topic is unmistakable and whose research goes deeper than Wikipedia and Rolling Stone. So I've got to say thanks, man - my radio heroes as a kid were Kurt, Layne, Scott, Chris, and Eddie... and Eddie's the only one that life, the industry, or a combination of both didn't break in the end. I miss them all, and getting to see Kurt's stories done right in this format has been a treat.
I don't think any of their music is incredible. But I credit Kurt with being the 90's version of Bowie. As a curator keeping alive & getting back together bands who he loved and/or influenced him which were IMO much more groundbreaking & overall musically prescient than Nirvana. If nothing else, he had impeccable musical taste.
I found your channel today and have enjoyed every video so far! My hat is off to you, you will 100% get more subs with this content and you deserve it too! Would love to see more videos about various bands, One I think would fit your recent videos would be one about the Soviet rock band Kino and Viktor Tsoi
Now we can just wait for the “Nirvana after Nevermind” or “Cobain before becoming a contemporary artist” in fact ngl I’m really interested to see the next video
I never really enjoyed music that much i liked listening to it but nothing outside of that until I found buddy holly and thus found ur channel ik it sounds cheesy but ur channel helped spark an interest in music for me and I'm grateful i found it
Buddy Holly was the one that seriously started the varied genre of rock n roll. He lived just long enough to see it's very beginnings; it's birth, but he was very aware of it and realized it's potential power.
Absolutely love these videos Pretty much some of the best music journalism on UA-cam Great summaries of the history of various bands that really only present the most important or interesting info Question: Are you gonna check out the new edition of Come As You Are? I heard it doubled the page length I know I wanna check it out eventually
Thks a lot for the info and the researching. Im just discovering Nirvana and wanting to know more objetive info. It was a video with value amd also I passed a good time ^^
Personally I've always preferred Bleach to Nevermind Also Jason Everman became a Green Beret and went to Columbia so I think he wound up doing OK Also also Kurt probably had Celiac before people knew what it was
not celiac but maybe an intolerance to foods like gluten, my mum has that and it caused her bad stomach pains for years before she got it diagnosed, slowly getting worse like Kurts. celiac is more severe, where people can be hospitalised for eating gluten
I was 16 living in an isolated little town in NZ when Nirvana broke.They changed my life. Nirvana's sound was always soaked to the gills in opiates. The junky nihilism of the music is there in spades from that first single. Yank teeny bopper MTV had no idea what they were really releasing to the masses.
I had a music assignment in 9th grade lit where you read the lyrics to a song and Hom Tutchinson read Come As You Are and our English teacher just belittled him, made fun of him, made fun of the music, half way though I raised my hand and said “I love this song and I love Nirvana, too” and a couple other people gave a “yeah! Me too!” Because she was really going in on Tom. How two generations reacted two one voice.
Geez... I had a teacher like that who threw a story, I was not finished with, into the trash can in front of the class. Stifling creativity is never okay with me. Whether you understand it or not, you should not be a teacher if you have to be- little your pupils.
@@lillyrush-y9c I hear people say this, but no one ever points out the specific lies. I've read both Heavier Than Heaven and Come As You Are and I don't recall there being much difference between the two.
You should see Soaked in Bleach & listen to CL being taped. I would not read it but can guess what she said about her great love for Kurt. Bet she left out the part about him asking for a divorce.
@@lillyrush-y9c I'm not interested in that conspiracy BS. I asked for an example of the lies in Heavier Than Heaven. I'm assuming you haven't even read it.
@@paulwblair an easy example is in regards to Nirvana's final recording session. the information was easily accessible to him given how much access he had to courtney when he was writing the book. instead he peddled BS like the following: * You Know You're Right had lyrics like "walking in the piss" when this was in Courtney's version. * Kurt played drums on Marigold (the entire song was recorded by Dave and Dave only) * Kurt screams "Pain" in You Know You're Right when listening to the acapella he clearly just screams "hey" * He attributes "Skid Marks" and "Butterfly" to Kurt when these were both written by Dave and were recorded without Kurt around (the second song is actually Butterflies and is a popular unreleased Foo Fighters song) Bonus: He claims Courtney "co-wrote" Pennyroyal Tea when the first recording is of Kurt and Dave recording it in 1990 in their apartment. The book is a piece of garbage full of inaccurate information. Before you give me the "oh, how could he have known," there are other folks like Gillian Gaar who had less access than he did and put in the time and research and got paid less to actually obtain the facts. If you need more proof of the worthlessness of the book, happy to keep going. Thanks.
I was past 40 years when I first heard, Nirvana’s music. I was not impressed with the first 16 bars of one of there early album songs but then they played the 17th bar and it was the perfect resolution to what had gone before and I was hooked. God, I love listening pleasure.
People tend to overlook that Kurt was pretty savvy in promoting Nirvana in the early days. He so desperately wanted to become big that when it hit like a tsunami it was at first exhilarating but when the newness of fame wore off he become an icon and voice that he had a love/hate relationship with.
The bands were all looking for their "psychedelic sound" around then with a trippy instrumental break in the middle of the song. The Grateful Dead continued the practice, at their live concerts, which they called "space"
I was happy seeing them in 1989 in Austria Graz. It's was only a coincidence but after the first song, i knew they will get big. Even in his youth was my favorite at that day…
I was 11 when I first heard Nirvana on MTV in `91. I still remember "slamming" on my grandparent`s shaky livingroom floor as I heard Nevermind for the first time! They were the beginning of my independent taste in music. It`s still funny to me, born in 1980, to hear people born in the 70`s, hate on Nirvana. They cannot see the genious of his melodic hooks and lyrics, for the death of their beloved hair /glam metal genre! Had he just found the strength to kick the heroin and continued to write music, I am 100% sure he would rise to Lennon level legend! And all the hair metal dudes would still hate on them just because! Huh, huh, huh This is cool!
18:01 -Noveselic looking kinda like Pete Townshend -Grohl sporting a Bonham cap -Kurt is thinking “boy howdy Heroin sure clears up that chronic stomach problem”
Every video is excellent. You make it seem effortless but I can tell you put so much effort into your research, script and editing ~ excuse me while I rewatch every Weezer video 😅
Excellent video! The book 'Heavier Than Heaven' is one of the best Rock bios I've ever had the pleasure to read. I prefer to remember them from their appearances in Dave Markey's '1991: the year Punk broke' when they were right about to become mega famous and everything changed forever.
I think Kurt thinking Chad was at a live performance and asking him to play with them (I think in 1991?) proves how much Kurt still felt guilty about firing Chad.
i think nirvana is a pretty neat band :)
Don't we all?
@@YouraverageDusterfanWe do
@@YouraverageDusterfanno
Me too Kurt is peachy keen
yeah it's cool i thinks
Jason: *does the same things as kurt*
Kurt: P O S E R
punk rock in a nutshell
every genre involving guitars in a nutshell
That was just a joke. Nirvana and Jason parted ways because Jason wanted to play sludge (Bleach), whereas Kurt wanted to write pop songs (Nevermind).
thats kinda what a poser is, alfonso.
Jason was very put together mentally, had a solid upbringing, didn't do heroin, and had a positive outlook on life. Completely different person than Kurt.
I know you probably get this a lot, but your videos are very well edited, as well as informative, you manage to keep the balance between being too boring and being to loud, you have established the perfect medium for music lovers looking for a bit of insight on their semi niche topics. either way I'm all here for it. keep up the great work!
That's very nice of you to say. Thank you!
Agreed.
@@MarcButEvil your videos are better than social studies if it was music instead of our country’s history
Yep good job brother 💯
Dear ant, i am a somewhat new writer and critic of popular culture including music videos. Your writing is very eloquent and i enjoy your professional stance between loudness and softness concerning words that you choose for expression. I provide op/
ed writing regularly on the editor, mixologist and producer of the amazing well known and rare insights of the seminal Seattle band Nirvana.. Whom are still going on as strong as ever with new listeners and generations. From one writer to another..SFP
As a hardcore Nirvana fan, I'm happy a pre nevermind history video with this amount of class, respect, knowledge, era appropriate footage/photos and good taste in humor. Thank you very much for this video and all your other works
@theshiningemerald4288 completely agree with you. We need more videos like this one. I think Cobain will never cease to be an important figure on the international rock scene. He left its mark on an entire generation and continues to impact the most recent ones. Kurt's story is worth knowing and telling.
Yes
You didn't finish your sentence
Imagine that feeling of having a song you recorded be played by a radio station for the first time.
I do think that Kurt was plagued by a feeling that nobody understood him or got him. I think he saw himself as an ineffective communicator and there was so much he wanted to express and so he relied on his music to be heard. You can imagine how he felt when the jocks and rednecks thought they understood him. He was continually frustrated and felt so alone a lot in this world.❤
@@joleneloveland4602 no, he was in love with his own melodrama and was a "nice guy" given everything he wanted but was just too edgy to live
@@joleneloveland4602 Irony is he'd probably identify more with the rednecks today since they're the current impermissibly alienated outcasts of society. It's either that or Rage on the part of The Machine.
@@hughmungus431there’s a difference between edgy and mental illness
It's exhilarating, even on a small level. A local radio station has played my band's music before and it really is like a drug. Hearing yourself on the radio and knowing others are listening is so awesome
I am a founding member of the Nirvana fan club on prodigy message boards. Pre nevermind days were rough as the internet was basically people dialing up to prodigy or AOL to write a message on a public forum that might never even be seen by anyone. I was 12 years old and it was a really fun time!
I have the flu but I saw nirvana/ MarcbutEvil I clicked on it and I already feel better. Thanks marc. It is incredible how well detailed the story is, you are a great storyteller with a particular sense of humor. I really enjoyed these videos about nirvana.
Nirvana left their mark on an entire generation. Some fans said that he hated “Smells Like Teen Spirit”. According to them Kurt wasn't the most excited about playing it live. It is said that in many shows he avoided doing so and if he did, he made an intentional mistake.
You can see videos of them f*cking up the song live.
The thing about never mind is that it kind of goes against a lot that curt stood for
Curt cobain hated the mainstream and loved being an underground band so now that all the jocks and popular people think it’s the best album ever he kind of no longer enjoyed it
If that makes sense
My dad loves underground bands and used to listen to nirvana before never mind
It’s not necessarily a bad album at all it’s just the mainstream ruining cultures / music scenes
@@BlaiseStAmand lol People talking about their dads
OH MY GAWD
@@BlaiseStAmand It was probably semi strategic also that Nevermind reached the mainstream. Becoming mainstream meant they got on the radio, and became known. Absolutely no-one knew that Nevermind would become anywhere near the number 1 success it became, however.
I've never bought the idea that he didn't put much thought into the lyrics. With the number of rewrites he did it's clear he put a lot of thought into them. I've always thought he was just distancing himself from how truly personal a lot of them are.
Indeed. I think he resented people trying to "figure him out" as if that could be done from a few lines he wrote. So I think he very much tried to simplify his songs by making his situations more universal than personal. But because of his raw emotional vocals you could tell the words meant a lot to him. So as not to encourage speculation, in interviews he would down play them. I think the last thing he wanted was anybody feeling sorry for him.❤
I was born the same year as Cobain so may have similar/crossover influences. I played guitar and wrote songs from 89-99. I always thought lyrics were secondary and often threw many different ideas into the same song just to get a rhyme or words that sounded good together.
I do believe Cobain was much the same, certainly with the lyrics to most songs that made up the first.two albums. I believe he may have put himself under pressure to have more cohesive lyrics for In Utero though to satisfy the fans.
Honestly not putting thoughts into lyrics doesn’t make them any less deeper. The beauty of Kurt’s lyricism is that so much emotion is put into it that digging into them feels more like psychoanalyzing someone rather than encrypting a message. It’s top tier abstract art
Nope, no real thought went into any of his lyrics. Part of the inauthenticity of the act he tried to escape.
These are refreshingly honest and well-produced videos. Thank you.
Happy birthday Brian Bell, Nevermind changed my life and im so glad Brian left his indelible mark on history with this one
He's so goddamn hot bro
Chad actually looks alot like Rivers Cuomo tbh.
I fucking love brian bell@@Jervenshmine
I was thinking about it & I realized that Nirvana was touring Bleach in Europe right when the Berlin Wall fell. In fact, they started the German leg of the tour two days before it fell. Not that they were some huge stadium act at the time, but I think that the excitement of the era definitely contributed to their success, because they were an American punk band. I think they were actually bigger in Europe first before Nevermind was released, you can kinda see this vibe in 1991: The Year Punk Broke.
I don't understand. What does the emotion of the falling of the berlin wall have to do with Nirvana itself, mate? I don't understand, mate.
Little known FACT: Before coming up with Nevermind, Nirvana debated calling the second album "Oh Well, Whatever" or "I Guess, Maybe."
Idk that but i know he did think about naming the album "Sheep"
@@slump4life123 Sure, If You Say So (was actually the back-up-of-a-back-up name after Oh Well Whatever, I Guess Maybe and Sheep). Interesting stuff.
@@OnaOmaOla yeah, pretty interesting
holy shit
“oh well, whatever nevermind”
@@BacMas48 lol
It's so refreshing to find someone who makes informative but entertaining videos about Nirvana! I never heard about the nervous breakdown and also the breakup with that girl and what made him push to drugs... Thank you.
The care and consideration that went into this video is very apparent. You've ballenced the line of funny and informative increadibly and your voice! Silky smooth! Please make more videos! (And maybe about other Seattle groups)
My bladder/prostate area gave me absolute hell for almost 20 years. I’m still glad it wasn’t my stomach. Gastrointestinal discomfort will fuck your life up and nobody sees it.
i havent watched the full thing does this have anything to do with this
@drydeck1 kurt had really bad stomach pains, was probably one of the major reasons he was addicted to opiates
Nirvana is probably one of the best examples of hard work pays off. They literally started off so broke that they were having trouble paying off bills. And yes, hard to believe that the world’s largest grunge band started off with no money. Now if I were them, I wouldn’t believe in myself and I would probably just give up on trying to make it big. But Nirvana (specifically Kurt and Krist) didn’t think or do that. They kept working and working and going to shows and preforming. Kurt was literally singing and playing the guitar while dealing with stomach pains. And after 3 hard years of work, they did it. They had become the #1 grunge band in the world. They went from selling thousands of records to selling millions. They went from preforming in front of a few hundred people or a thousand people to preforming in front of tens of thousands of people. They had become the biggest band of the early 90s. And that is a good example of why hard work pays off.
To bad Kurt had demons he literally was a genius, and genius misunderstood
I'm just correcting this out of my OCD but it's not preforming it's performing
Nirvana became big in 3 years or over 2 and it took led zeplin 6 or so years
Kurt was a grade a slacker. Yeah they practiced a lot from ~ 87 to 90 but always very late in the day and what really saved Kurt and his music was moving from Aberdeen to Olympia and having Tracy Marander provide for him so that he could focus on his art plus Tobi Vail who basically inspired Nevermind but also the rest of the Olympia music scene
This is the first of your videos that I've ever seen, and it absolutely shreds the lazy video essays I have so far seen here about music from my formative era during the alt/grunge renaissance. It's really satisfying to consume a video made by someone whose personal investment in the topic is unmistakable and whose research goes deeper than Wikipedia and Rolling Stone. So I've got to say thanks, man - my radio heroes as a kid were Kurt, Layne, Scott, Chris, and Eddie... and Eddie's the only one that life, the industry, or a combination of both didn't break in the end. I miss them all, and getting to see Kurt's stories done right in this format has been a treat.
I don't think any of their music is incredible. But I credit Kurt with being the 90's version of Bowie. As a curator keeping alive & getting back together bands who he loved and/or influenced him which were IMO much more groundbreaking & overall musically prescient than Nirvana. If nothing else, he had impeccable musical taste.
My favorite comment gets pinned in one week!
1st
im from aberdeen ama
I will now be using love buzz to describe that
it’s so surprising you don’t get hundreds of thousands of views, genuinely well put together videos
a new marcbutevil video is the best thing to happen to me today
i would love it if you continue the nirvana videos until their end
I found your channel today and have enjoyed every video so far! My hat is off to you, you will 100% get more subs with this content and you deserve it too! Would love to see more videos about various bands, One I think would fit your recent videos would be one about the Soviet rock band Kino and Viktor Tsoi
I love the way you presented this video, the memes, the photos, and footage of their old days before nevermind! Great video!
wow, dgc really took a leap of faith and Nirvana truly delivered beyond all expectations.
The best art is made after a heart is broken
i got so excited when i saw you posted, i love your content man, keep it up!!
Well done vid of early days Nirvana. I like it!
Haha hey man!
1988 was cool ....i was in high school in Santa Ana California...good stuff
Now we can just wait for the “Nirvana after Nevermind” or “Cobain before becoming a contemporary artist” in fact ngl I’m really interested to see the next video
Honey, wake up Marc uploaded!
Honestly an amazing video, looking forward to the next part!
The stuff Nirvana was playing between 1987-1988 deserved its own album. Dark, weird, uncomfortable, hilarious.
Incesticide does exist
It's the spontaneity of the lyrics, the immediate thoughtlessness of them, that make them so awesome. And Mudhoneyed af.
I never really enjoyed music that much i liked listening to it but nothing outside of that until I found buddy holly and thus found ur channel ik it sounds cheesy but ur channel helped spark an interest in music for me and I'm grateful i found it
That's awesome! I hope that interest only grows from here.
Buddy Holly was the one that seriously started the varied genre of rock n roll. He lived just long enough to see it's very beginnings; it's birth, but he was very aware of it and realized it's potential power.
Nirvana is back! Great video as always👍
Damn, Nirvana didn't seem to like Rome very much.
True. Rome is the city where Cobain will later be hospitalized in 1993, about a week before his death.
It’s my lucky day
A MARCBUTEVIL VIDEO HAS BEEN RELEASED
Absolutely love these videos
Pretty much some of the best music journalism on UA-cam
Great summaries of the history of various bands that really only present the most important or interesting info
Question: Are you gonna check out the new edition of Come As You Are?
I heard it doubled the page length
I know I wanna check it out eventually
A very good documentary, thanks, man.
18:19 that camera man was wilding
i get him though
Ah another great video from my favorite nieezer hall channel
aw yeah man new marcbutevil nirvana video
i appreciate how much you emphasize on how much 100,000 dollars is
Thank you bro! We finally got good a band that isnt the foo fighters or weezer
This end before the "90s" actually started. Incredible how one album shape the music of half a decade.
Nice video!! I can tell that you put a lot of effort in it, keep it up!!
Thks a lot for the info and the researching. Im just discovering Nirvana and wanting to know more objetive info. It was a video with value amd also I passed a good time ^^
Hearing "he wasn't a very powerful drummer" after listening to the drums on bleach, absolutely blows my mind lol I love the drums on that album
Personally I've always preferred Bleach to Nevermind
Also Jason Everman became a Green Beret and went to Columbia so I think he wound up doing OK
Also also Kurt probably had Celiac before people knew what it was
not celiac but maybe an intolerance to foods like gluten, my mum has that and it caused her bad stomach pains for years before she got it diagnosed, slowly getting worse like Kurts. celiac is more severe, where people can be hospitalised for eating gluten
I see your real, objective and humurous perspective dear sir and I appreciate it. Well put.
I was 16 living in an isolated little town in NZ when Nirvana broke.They changed my life. Nirvana's sound was always soaked to the gills in opiates. The junky nihilism of the music is there in spades from that first single. Yank teeny bopper MTV had no idea what they were really releasing to the masses.
Their demography is 80's teens
Yet another banger brought to you by MarcButEvil
We need a Novoselic After Nirvana video. Absolutely love your content been bingewatching all weekend
I had a music assignment in 9th grade lit where you read the lyrics to a song and Hom Tutchinson read Come As You Are and our English teacher just belittled him, made fun of him, made fun of the music, half way though I raised my hand and said “I love this song and I love Nirvana, too” and a couple other people gave a “yeah! Me too!” Because she was really going in on Tom. How two generations reacted two one voice.
Geez... I had a teacher like that who threw a story, I was not finished with, into the trash can in front of the class. Stifling creativity is never okay with me. Whether you understand it or not, you should not be a teacher if you have to be- little your pupils.
Many from the Grunge Generation left home in the 80s
Mannn i want the 3rd video i love them!!!
It's confirmed: Garfield is a punk rocker
i love your videos they are so good and you go into so much detail its impressive
Bleach album cover bleeds aura. So raw but so immortal.
“Tad” threw a party in July of ‘94 & my band played our first show together there.
Time flies. ☮️❤️🎶
It is hard to get those opportunities nowadays in music industry.
Very well done video. Thank you!
I've been waiting for another NIRVANA video after the last one.
That was awesome...probably gonna watch it more than once...Thanks...
I personally read Heavier than Heaven about 2-3 years ago and I gotta say, it's a great read if you're into Nirvana.
Also amazing video 🤘🤘
The author takes Courtney Love's word as gospel so there's alot of lies in the book.
@@lillyrush-y9c I hear people say this, but no one ever points out the specific lies. I've read both Heavier Than Heaven and Come As You Are and I don't recall there being much difference between the two.
You should see Soaked in Bleach & listen to CL being taped. I would not read it but can guess what she said about her great love for Kurt. Bet she left out the part about him asking for a divorce.
@@lillyrush-y9c I'm not interested in that conspiracy BS. I asked for an example of the lies in Heavier Than Heaven. I'm assuming you haven't even read it.
@@paulwblair an easy example is in regards to Nirvana's final recording session. the information was easily accessible to him given how much access he had to courtney when he was writing the book. instead he peddled BS like the following:
* You Know You're Right had lyrics like "walking in the piss" when this was in Courtney's version.
* Kurt played drums on Marigold (the entire song was recorded by Dave and Dave only)
* Kurt screams "Pain" in You Know You're Right when listening to the acapella he clearly just screams "hey"
* He attributes "Skid Marks" and "Butterfly" to Kurt when these were both written by Dave and were recorded without Kurt around (the second song is actually Butterflies and is a popular unreleased Foo Fighters song)
Bonus: He claims Courtney "co-wrote" Pennyroyal Tea when the first recording is of Kurt and Dave recording it in 1990 in their apartment.
The book is a piece of garbage full of inaccurate information. Before you give me the "oh, how could he have known," there are other folks like Gillian Gaar who had less access than he did and put in the time and research and got paid less to actually obtain the facts.
If you need more proof of the worthlessness of the book, happy to keep going. Thanks.
These guys are gonna be huge
Back when Nirvana was punk!
I was past 40 years when I first heard, Nirvana’s music. I was not impressed with the first 16 bars of one of there early album songs but then they played the 17th bar and it was the perfect resolution to what had gone before and I was hooked. God, I love listening pleasure.
People tend to overlook that Kurt was pretty savvy in promoting Nirvana in the early days. He so desperately wanted to become big that when it hit like a tsunami it was at first exhilarating but when the newness of fame wore off he become an icon and voice that he had a love/hate relationship with.
You are awesome I watch every video you make you light up my day.
As hardcore Nirvana fan... This is a Great video!
The way in which Krist went down and made sure they had a contract is just one example of why Nirvana isn't just Kurt Cobain.
The Weezer guy is now making Nirvana videos and life couldn't be better
Waited 4 months for this video 😿
These videos are great because Nirvana is my new hyperfixation lmao, thanks
The original Love Buzz song by Shocking Blue is trippy.
The bands were all looking for their "psychedelic sound" around then with a trippy instrumental break in the middle of the song.
The Grateful Dead continued the practice, at their live concerts, which they called "space"
"High on there many successes at this point... and some other things" HALLARIOUS
I was happy seeing them in 1989 in Austria Graz. It's was only a coincidence but after the first song, i knew they will get big. Even in his youth was my favorite at that day…
7:43 CHAD LOOKS SO FREAKING COOL WITH DRESDS
As soon as I saw this on my for you page I was like oh hell yeah
nirvana is pretty cool
I was 11 when I first heard Nirvana on MTV in `91. I still remember "slamming" on my grandparent`s shaky livingroom floor as I heard Nevermind for the first time! They were the beginning of my independent taste in music.
It`s still funny to me, born in 1980, to hear people born in the 70`s, hate on Nirvana. They cannot see the genious of his melodic hooks and lyrics, for the death of their beloved hair /glam metal genre! Had he just found the strength to kick the heroin and continued to write music, I am 100% sure he would rise to Lennon level legend!
And all the hair metal dudes would still hate on them just because!
Huh, huh, huh This is cool!
"and high on their many successes at this point, and some other things-" i loled (lol)
i really look forward to your videos thank you a lot
18:01
-Noveselic looking kinda like Pete Townshend
-Grohl sporting a Bonham cap
-Kurt is thinking “boy howdy Heroin sure clears up that chronic stomach problem”
This band going to be BIG , cant wait
I could imminently tell that the first song was “heart shaped box” it’s my favorite nirvana song
Being able to tour/off a well received recoord, is à feat in itself and they were having fun..❤..
Every video is excellent. You make it seem effortless but I can tell you put so much effort into your research, script and editing ~ excuse me while I rewatch every Weezer video 😅
ok but when do we get the kurt cobain becomes rivers cuomo video
Fantastic video, thanks!!
Polly wasn’t on the Blew EP, the track list is
Blew
Love buzz
Been a Son
Stain
Never been this early to a video I know will blow up
love videos like these
“nirvana before nevermind”
(uses a picture of kurt after nevermind in the thumbnail)
i love this channel
Excellent video! The book 'Heavier Than Heaven' is one of the best Rock bios I've ever had the pleasure to read. I prefer to remember them from their appearances in Dave Markey's '1991: the year Punk broke' when they were right about to become mega famous and everything changed forever.
I think Kurt thinking Chad was at a live performance and asking him to play with them (I think in 1991?) proves how much Kurt still felt guilty about firing Chad.
fire video. i luv nirvana
truly an amazing video