@@Newton-Reuther yeah they were scehduled to start working together in spring of 1994 but then Kurt died. Kurt said he wanted his music to head in a more acoustic and ethereal direction, similar to 'Automatic to the People'. Sucks it never happened
@@implicitdifferentiation also in one of His last interviews (the one where he Is in a boat) he says he didn't want to make another Grungy álbum with Nirvana and than In Útero was the last bit of that sound. He also Said he was pretty interested un other genres such as disco and hip Hop. Makes me wonder how different and cool a 4th Studio álbum could have sounded...
bro this could be the beginning of an INCREDIBLE series. not only is it informative, but it’s CHARMING! the labels on the seasonings being classic punk records, the whole “chef” concept and watching how a beloved album is “prepared and served,” the grainy effect on the screen for the whole video to match the mood of what album we’re talking about, IT’S COOL AS FUCK. please make more of these, i absolutely adore seeing what influences my favorite artists pulled from to make their own art. it makes me wanna make more art myself! stellar job, polyphonic. some suggestions for new episodes: loveless - my bloody valentine lonerism - tame impala the new abnormal - the strokes the 20/20 experience - justin timberlake an evening with silk sonic - silk sonic just to name a few!
Loveless would be SUPER interesting. At that point, it’s tough to think of MBV as sounding like anyone but themselves; I think identifying the influences on that album would really get across that music is never made in a vacuum.
The amount of maturing that happened between Nevermind and In Utero just leaves me wondering what else we would have heard from Nirvana if what happened hadn't happened. Kurt left so many question marks behind.
Great concept. I would just say you understated the REM influence. So much of this album sounds like a noisier REM album, it is mindblowing. The unplugged album really highlighted that. REM is at the core of both Nirvana and Radiohead, the 2 most important bands of the 90s
@@nicolasriveros943 a radiohead influenced Cobain solo album exists in a different timeline. In yet another timeline, John Lennon collaborated on its lead single. 😢
I remember when Nirvana witness critics or people in the streets on TV. They were given their latest album In Utero so they can hear it and review it. And then they came back and told their thought on the album.
Yeah Sage stated that Kurt was planning on flying down to Arizona where Greg & his label Zeno Records had recently relocated to & record an album of Leadbelly covers. This was apparently a month or so before he died.
Really hoping this becomes an ongoing series! I love hearing about the influences of great albums. Also, congrats on 1 million subs! Very well deserved.
I love In Utero so much, it's my fave Nirvana album. I enjoyed how well this picked apart all the different sounds and influences that made this album. I'd love to see more of this with other albums.
And the cherry on top would be the album Rid Of Me by PJ Harvey. Also recorded by Steve Albini at Pachyderm Studios in Minnesota. You can hear how it influenced In Utero’s sound, especially in the drums.
The playfulness of this is so refreshing. Compelling and inventive while being insightful throughout. I always love the videos that include snippets of the songs being referenced.
I love this new video concept, I feel like you should follow this up with the influences in Nevermind, since you mentioned Bowie and Sonic Youth etc very briefly here and I would love to hear more.
For an "album recipe" ideas, I'd love to know how Faith No More's "The Real Thing" gets made, including how a major label decides to authorize/distribute it (was it just that liminal period in-between 80's rock but before Grunge would shake up the status quo?)... I love that album (as well as "Angel Dust"), but I've always been amazed by how that album gets made and released.
Great video as usual with fantastic visual style. Well done. Just one ingredient I found missing: there is a lot on the album, "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" in particular, that sounds a lot like The Jesus Lizard, and given their connection to Steve Albini and the fact that Nirvana did a split single with them I have to say they are certainly one of the major Influences on this album. Albini's own music with Big Black also. Thank you.
You should take a look at a Soundgarden album. They pioneered grunge after all, they had been doing it since the mid eighties and were first of the big 4 to sign with a label.
Interesting format, other albums I can think of with some well blended influences that would be perfect for this (and you may already have queued up) would be the Pumpkin's Siamese Dream, Bowie's Low, Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly, Combat Rock, Hounds of Love (I know you did Kate Bush recently), So (Gabriel), Physical Graffiti, Meat Puppets II, Kid A and Sturgill Simpson's Sound and Fury
I was cruising by and had to stop for this. Anything Nirvana or Bob Dylan always catches my attention. In Utero definitely had a distinctive sound and vibe. I remember when I used to listen to Tourette's, I would say the "Moderate rock" line and it blended so well, people thought I was just lip syncing. I'm like this hillbilly from the south and when I was a kid, I listened to so much Nirvana that I started picking up that accent. I'm back to a more hillbilly accent in my old age but you can still hear the influence underneath. I was only 7 years old when Cobain died but I still discovered Nirvana in the 90's thankfully - I remember my older cousins had Nirvana posters and that was my very first intro. But it's kind of interesting - I got really hung up on booze and drugs for a long time and I can barely remember my youth. But hearing these songs still brings back some kind of a feeling of nostalgia. Just like a simpler time - running around with friends, swimming in the creeks. I played Nirvana so much back then, everyone was totally sick of hearing it lol. And everyone wanted like upbeat type music but I was blasting Endless, Nameless; Big Long Now, D7, etc... I've never followed those social rules like that where you're supposed to listen to certain types of music in certain situations. Like how people might blast rap or pop rock at a party, I'll be listening to Leadbelly or how people might listen to soft, laid back music for romantic situations - I'd be totally fine with The Misfits, or whatever.
An In Utero Chef that leaves out the Beatles 7th major chords on Serve the Servants, the opening track. And the ‘Cry Baby Cry’ seasoning on ‘Frances Farmer’. I’d like to send this dish back to the kitchen please
Love this album, and love this video! Your animation styles and video production just keep getting better and better-really. Side note, have you thought about covering neutral milk hotel? I think your style would mesh really well with their sound and aesthetic. Thanks for another great vid!
I remember getting a CD of In Utero back in middle school (early 2010s) at a flea market when I was first getting into heavier music. It has been one of my favorite albums ever since.
I would like to point the fact "very ape"´s riff is from "Kanishka" by the argentine band called "Los Brujos". Los Brujos played as opening act in 1992 when Nirvana played in Buenos Aires and even Kurt told the Los Brujos´s singer that he really liked theyr style.
A relief to hear someone talking about grunge, even if as part of a wider series, when most songs today are mass-produced as background music for shopping malls.
The solo on Francis Farmer sounds so much like Duane Dennison, it’s one of my favorite parts of that record. Just those few chords are VERY reminiscent of the Jesus Lizard.
Another great album to do for this series is Living Colour - "Vivid". Their blend of hard rock, funk, metal & soul would be a great and interesting exercise for you to explore.
Funny. At the time when In Utero came out I started as a 14 year old in 1994 to discover Nevermind. But I already knew REM. And with Unplugged I started to play guitar in 95 and discovered that there were other good bands of the 60s besides the Beatles and Stones, Hendrix, The Doors. And somehow I always thought, somehow everything sounds based on each other and influenced each other. Only then did I start to realize what the Stooges, Ramones, Beastie Boys, Pumpkins, etc. had in common. What a cool time it was to be a teenager in the late 90s. You could combine so many things from so many different decades. But only now, through such great internet channels you get a total picture and a confirmation of your own assumptions at that time. Thanks for that! Still, what a great time (now in his 40s) to be.
Really weird. Just went to the toilet and thought "I wonder if there's any new Polyphonic videos". This was the top of the recommendations when I got back 😮
It’ll be great to dissect any albums by The Smiths, but i’d love to see their last album dissected cause it was moving to a certain direction from their signature jangly sound.
K I would commit tax fraud for this series to continue, the editing and visual flair is on a level even higher than your usual work, and there's so many albums to dissect here
I hope this series becomes a staple. So cool to see how these influences are all mixed around into something amazing
i totally agree this format is so interesting and entertaining
yeah i wanna see Metal Machine Music by Lou Reed covered like this
I got In Utero when it came out and I thought it was a better album than Nevermind. I loved the direction in what the band was going to.
Kurt was going to make an acoustic album with the lead singer of REM before he died. Sucks that we never got to hear it
@@implicitdifferentiation No way! Michael Stipe?
@@Newton-Reuther yeah they were scehduled to start working together in spring of 1994 but then Kurt died. Kurt said he wanted his music to head in a more acoustic and ethereal direction, similar to 'Automatic to the People'. Sucks it never happened
Ah, that’s sounds cool, it does suck that Kurt died and I do not give much a of a damn for R.E.M.
@@implicitdifferentiation also in one of His last interviews (the one where he Is in a boat) he says he didn't want to make another Grungy álbum with Nirvana and than In Útero was the last bit of that sound. He also Said he was pretty interested un other genres such as disco and hip Hop. Makes me wonder how different and cool a 4th Studio álbum could have sounded...
I'm loving the new creative approach for this series. It'd be cool to see a newer band like crumb covered
Crumb is probably my favorite modern band.
@@arthurr.r.lucasspublicdoma5621 fave song by them?
Best new band is The Doublejumps out of New zealand imo but they don't have that many recordings
@@clay_freespirit Either Jinx or MR.
I would love a video about crumb, they are amazing!
bro this could be the beginning of an INCREDIBLE series. not only is it informative, but it’s CHARMING! the labels on the seasonings being classic punk records, the whole “chef” concept and watching how a beloved album is “prepared and served,” the grainy effect on the screen for the whole video to match the mood of what album we’re talking about, IT’S COOL AS FUCK. please make more of these, i absolutely adore seeing what influences my favorite artists pulled from to make their own art. it makes me wanna make more art myself! stellar job, polyphonic.
some suggestions for new episodes:
loveless - my bloody valentine
lonerism - tame impala
the new abnormal - the strokes
the 20/20 experience - justin timberlake
an evening with silk sonic - silk sonic
just to name a few!
Loveless would be SUPER interesting. At that point, it’s tough to think of MBV as sounding like anyone but themselves; I think identifying the influences on that album would really get across that music is never made in a vacuum.
LOVELESS AND LONERISM PLEASE
I LOOOVE TAME IMPALA AND MY BLOODY VALENTINE!!
The amount of maturing that happened between Nevermind and In Utero just leaves me wondering what else we would have heard from Nirvana if what happened hadn't happened. Kurt left so many question marks behind.
Great concept. I would just say you understated the REM influence. So much of this album sounds like a noisier REM album, it is mindblowing.
The unplugged album really highlighted that. REM is at the core of both Nirvana and Radiohead, the 2 most important bands of the 90s
Of all time you mean 😉
It's interesting that you noted Nirvana and Radiohead, both of which have stated that they were just copying the Pixies in the past.
@@devenscience8894 actually, both have said they were copying both Pixies and REM
I think Kurt would have loved a band like Radiohead, specially from Ok Computer going foward Through Kid A... if only he lived to hear it
@@nicolasriveros943 a radiohead influenced Cobain solo album exists in a different timeline.
In yet another timeline, John Lennon collaborated on its lead single. 😢
I remember when Nirvana witness critics or people in the streets on TV. They were given their latest album In Utero so they can hear it and review it. And then they came back and told their thought on the album.
The Wipers were a big influence on Nirvana. Kurt was friends with Greg Sage and he wanted to record covers of old blues songs in Greg's studio.
Yeah Sage stated that Kurt was planning on flying down to Arizona where Greg & his label Zeno Records had recently relocated to & record an album of Leadbelly covers. This was apparently a month or so before he died.
With mark lanegan
Really hoping this becomes an ongoing series! I love hearing about the influences of great albums. Also, congrats on 1 million subs! Very well deserved.
The animations are always so beautiful in these videos.
I love In Utero so much, it's my fave Nirvana album. I enjoyed how well this picked apart all the different sounds and influences that made this album. I'd love to see more of this with other albums.
Nothing else on youtube comes close to your style and presentation, ive been following you for years and you still keep putting out bangers
we cannot forget that
a great inspiration for in utero was Red from king crimson
Oh yeah , so original ..
And the cherry on top would be the album Rid Of Me by PJ Harvey. Also recorded by Steve Albini at Pachyderm Studios in Minnesota. You can hear how it influenced In Utero’s sound, especially in the drums.
"Teenage angst has paid off well, now I'm old and bored". I remember buying In Utero on CD. I can now relate to it all in my 50s.
The playfulness of this is so refreshing. Compelling and inventive while being insightful throughout. I always love the videos that include snippets of the songs being referenced.
I love this new video concept, I feel like you should follow this up with the influences in Nevermind, since you mentioned Bowie and Sonic Youth etc very briefly here and I would love to hear more.
Taking "Surfer Rosa" apart would also be great!!! Or "Hybrid Theory", or "Superunknown". Or "Nevermind", like you mentioned.
Kurt said in interviews that one of the biggest influences on "In Utero" was the album "Red" by King Crimson.
I was waiting for someone to mention this
And Courtney
For an "album recipe" ideas, I'd love to know how Faith No More's "The Real Thing" gets made, including how a major label decides to authorize/distribute it (was it just that liminal period in-between 80's rock but before Grunge would shake up the status quo?)... I love that album (as well as "Angel Dust"), but I've always been amazed by how that album gets made and released.
Good one
Another killer video essay! You are such a inspiration, for music, video and design purposes. Congrats!
Great video as usual with fantastic visual style. Well done.
Just one ingredient I found missing: there is a lot on the album, "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" in particular, that sounds a lot like The Jesus Lizard, and given their connection to Steve Albini and the fact that Nirvana did a split single with them I have to say they are certainly one of the major Influences on this album. Albini's own music with Big Black also.
Thank you.
You should take a look at a Soundgarden album. They pioneered grunge after all, they had been doing it since the mid eighties and were first of the big 4 to sign with a label.
That was an awesome idea for a video, very helpful and informative in understanding history of modern music.
Interesting format, other albums I can think of with some well blended influences that would be perfect for this (and you may already have queued up) would be the Pumpkin's Siamese Dream, Bowie's Low, Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly, Combat Rock, Hounds of Love (I know you did Kate Bush recently), So (Gabriel), Physical Graffiti, Meat Puppets II, Kid A and Sturgill Simpson's Sound and Fury
I was cruising by and had to stop for this. Anything Nirvana or Bob Dylan always catches my attention. In Utero definitely had a distinctive sound and vibe. I remember when I used to listen to Tourette's, I would say the "Moderate rock" line and it blended so well, people thought I was just lip syncing. I'm like this hillbilly from the south and when I was a kid, I listened to so much Nirvana that I started picking up that accent. I'm back to a more hillbilly accent in my old age but you can still hear the influence underneath. I was only 7 years old when Cobain died but I still discovered Nirvana in the 90's thankfully - I remember my older cousins had Nirvana posters and that was my very first intro. But it's kind of interesting - I got really hung up on booze and drugs for a long time and I can barely remember my youth. But hearing these songs still brings back some kind of a feeling of nostalgia. Just like a simpler time - running around with friends, swimming in the creeks. I played Nirvana so much back then, everyone was totally sick of hearing it lol. And everyone wanted like upbeat type music but I was blasting Endless, Nameless; Big Long Now, D7, etc... I've never followed those social rules like that where you're supposed to listen to certain types of music in certain situations. Like how people might blast rap or pop rock at a party, I'll be listening to Leadbelly or how people might listen to soft, laid back music for romantic situations - I'd be totally fine with The Misfits, or whatever.
Saw Melvins 3 years ago, they're monsters. Dale Crover was absolutely amazing, what a drummer.
Loving the editing and aesthetic, please make more
Ahhh the album that sang me to sleep for months. It is such a rich album that showed so many more paths open to the band.
An In Utero Chef that leaves out the Beatles 7th major chords on Serve the Servants, the opening track. And the ‘Cry Baby Cry’ seasoning on ‘Frances Farmer’. I’d like to send this dish back to the kitchen please
Love this album, and love this video! Your animation styles and video production just keep getting better and better-really. Side note, have you thought about covering neutral milk hotel? I think your style would mesh really well with their sound and aesthetic. Thanks for another great vid!
OBSESSED WITH THIS VIDEO FORMAT !!! LOVING IT KEEP IT UP MR PHONIC!!!!
I remember getting a CD of In Utero back in middle school (early 2010s) at a flea market when I was first getting into heavier music. It has been one of my favorite albums ever since.
Love this format, Polyphonic! Reminds me why I rely on you for new music, and now I've gotta check out Melvins and Sonic Youth.
I love the sound of this new series! The animation, art and style is so charming and unique! Love it :D
Incredible approach over the series. Thanks for keep making these great video analysis. 🙌
Loved this, thank you! Would love to see a video on Pearl Jam's Ten!
Great idea for a series! I think Surrealist Pillow could have an interesting recipe for the next episode
What a great concept for a video, thanks for sharing.
The Middle 8 quieter part in that new A.I. fake Nirvana song sounds like Dinosaur Jr.
I would like to point the fact "very ape"´s riff is from "Kanishka" by the argentine band called "Los Brujos". Los Brujos played as opening act in 1992 when Nirvana played in Buenos Aires and even Kurt told the Los Brujos´s singer that he really liked theyr style.
Need more of these videos from the kitchen. Nice work.
Loving the concept for this series. I'm hungry for more.
congrats on 1 mil. i've been a fan since your video about the chain and its been awesome to see your content grow and evolve. keep making good shit!
One of my favourites album of all time and favourite Nirvana album for sure, love the video
what an amazing idea for a video and so well executed
My fave Nirvana album, now I know the artists they listened to make this masterpiece
Congrats on a million!!!
I like the editing so much, this video is a work of art.
love this format!! please do more of these, its awesome to see all of the influences that lead into making an album.
This video is actually perfect. Thank you.
So this is the Polyphonic/Alton Brown mashup that I never knew I wanted until right now.
Your passion and quality in these videos never seizes to amaze me!
This is a really cool format you’ve come up with here, my compliments to the chef.
THIS HAS BEEN MY SEARCH HISTORY FOR THE PAST 3 DAYS!!! THANK YOU ❤
This was formatted so well, I loved the style! I’d love to see more videos like this!!
This is funny and smart on so many levels, keep that concept!
This is a really cool idea!! Thank you so much for the super informative and entertaining (as always) video.
absolutely living for everything about this
This was very well put together. Good job man!
A relief to hear someone talking about grunge, even if as part of a wider series, when most songs today are mass-produced as background music for shopping malls.
Excellent format, really liked it.
Super creative video. Love this.
As a young kid I loved the raw sound of “in utero” but now I really appreciate the lyrics. “Heart-shaped Box” is poetry.
Scentless was based on a Dave drum part so it makes sense that it’s drum heavy
The sound of the drums and the lyrics are my two favorite things about in utero that set it apart from their other material.
It would be so cool to have a Spotify playlist full of these influences!
Recipe analogy is perfect
I love the creativity and humor in this one!
this video is so impressive and this format is perfect
This is such a dope series please do more
Another very well done video, my man, and what a perfect album on which to concentrate.
Really loved this video…would love to see an episode on Ok Computer!
the production valuue for this video is actually insane
this may be the best assessment of Nirvana I have EVER seen, well done 👍
The video I've been waiting for years.
The solo on Francis Farmer sounds so much like Duane Dennison, it’s one of my favorite parts of that record. Just those few chords are VERY reminiscent of the Jesus Lizard.
Love the new format! Keep it going :D
love your videso so much. Thank you!
Uhh, the Velvet Underground's song you played is called Here She Comes Now and it's from their album White Light/White Heat
Another great album to do for this series is Living Colour - "Vivid". Their blend of hard rock, funk, metal & soul would be a great and interesting exercise for you to explore.
Awesome been waiting for you to make something on nirvana
I was thinking about In Utero and by pure coincidence polyphonic releases a video on it
loving this style of vid!!
please keep this series going, very cool to see the history & techniques shine through!
You never fail to deliver, my friend
this was my comfort album, wouldnt be here without it. rip kurt
This is my favorite type of music. I’d love to see you do a full length on the pixies
This was great. I'm definitely down for more record recipes 🙂
Funny. At the time when In Utero came out I started as a 14 year old in 1994 to discover Nevermind. But I already knew REM. And with Unplugged I started to play guitar in 95 and discovered that there were other good bands of the 60s besides the Beatles and Stones, Hendrix, The Doors. And somehow I always thought, somehow everything sounds based on each other and influenced each other. Only then did I start to realize what the Stooges, Ramones, Beastie Boys, Pumpkins, etc. had in common. What a cool time it was to be a teenager in the late 90s. You could combine so many things from so many different decades. But only now, through such great internet channels you get a total picture and a confirmation of your own assumptions at that time. Thanks for that! Still, what a great time (now in his 40s) to be.
Really weird. Just went to the toilet and thought "I wonder if there's any new Polyphonic videos". This was the top of the recommendations when I got back 😮
Oh this is such a fun concept! Im excited to see where it goes
This format is crazy, I can't even imagine the amount of work and effort you put into researching these songs. Astonishing
Blood Sugar Sex Magick or Rumours would be two amazing albums that I can see fitting in on any Easter dinner table. ;)
Congrats on 1 mil!
It’ll be great to dissect any albums by The Smiths, but i’d love to see their last album dissected cause it was moving to a certain direction from their signature jangly sound.
K I would commit tax fraud for this series to continue, the editing and visual flair is on a level even higher than your usual work, and there's so many albums to dissect here
When I first heard Nirvana, I thought "Black Sabbath meets REM".
Great series concept !
jUMPED over from Nebula to like and comment on here: love it! Love this format! Great idea extremely well executed!
this is a really interesting format, keep them coming