Nirvana & Recording IN UTERO: Steve Albini Discusses the Recording Process
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- Опубліковано 16 кві 2020
- In Utero, recorded by Steve Albini, is Nirvana's third & final studio record. Nirvana specifically chose Steve Albini as the producer they wanted to work with for In Utero, despite their record label's objections. This set the ground work for what would end up becoming a strenuous situation for Nirvana & in particular for Steve Albini. Despite this, Steve Albini managed to record what many consider to be Nirvana's greatest work. In this video, Steve Albini discusses what the recording process was like with Nirvana.
This is my second interview with Steve Albini, I originally interviewed him in December of 2017 for my documentary 'Rock is Dead?' - if you would like to see 'Rock is Dead?' the film is available on my UA-cam channel.
ROCK IS DEAD? Full Film: • Rock is Dead? Full Fil...
WHAT IS CLASSIC ROCK? - CANADA & USA:
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WHAT IS CLASSIC ROCK? - WORLDWIDE:
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I love hearing these stories from him and Endino. I've been a fan of Nirvana since 12 years old and I've never heard these stories before.
"Hey, can you get rid of that rain-stick?" - Everybody should heed this wise request.
We could always imagine how Kurt would have said that. He is a Beautiful person! Damn those drugs and drug dealers.
@@amotorcyclerider3230 Damn him you mean. They didn't force those drugs on him, he had a choice.
Yeah but unfortunately he lived in a time where it was way easier to cope with depression by going junkie instead of consulting a psychiatrist and taking actual medication
"Anything we can do about that heat?"
-Leo DiCaprio, on flamethrowers
The best sound engineer on earth. No one records drums better than Steve Albini! In Utero is just another - albeit one of my favourite - example.
Michael Beinhorn is right up there too. I wouldn’t say one is better than the other because it is all personal opinion, but they are both amazing.
@@toad8840 Pixies' "Surfer Rosa" is my all-time favourite. Also try: The Breeders - "Pod", Jesus Lizard - "Head", "Goat" or "Liar", Shellac (Albini's own band) - "At Action Park". You don't even have to buy them on vinyl. They are all killer on CD. ;)
drums too loud
I think if you want a raw and booming punk John Bonham-sort of sound, Albini is a great choice. I love his work, but there are other engineers I'd prefer for drums.
@@michagosawski1490 AMERICAN DON
I KNEW IT!!! Despite what I read all these years, I've been CERTAIN the Marigold drums were recorded during the In Utero sessions!! Sweet vindication!!!
Nice.
I agree that Dave is one of the great drummers of all time! And Jimmy Chamberlain! 👏🏻😎🎸
Just saw the smashing pumpkins for the first time this past weekend and Jimmy’s drumming blew me away.
I was hoping he’d say Milk It! Nice! 👍🏼
Me too
A great insight, many nuggets of untold info and stories you managed to get Steve to reveal. Your interviewing technique is brilliant, very professional. You obviously made Steve feel very relaxed and had built up a certain amount of trust with him to give up so new many new details, about the session. I really enjoy the interview, thank you and keep up the good work.
This video is a dream for me to watch, thank you SO MUCH. Also to answer some questions Steve couldn't: Kurt didn't want too many noise rock songs on the album so that's why I Hate Myself and Want to Die was left out (even though that was one of the original names for the album itself). As far as Sappy went, Albini has stated that even though it was a good song, he assumed it wore out its welcome on the band. Likely due to the fact it was written in 87 and the band had spent hours and hours trying to get the right sound. It was titled Verse Chorus Verse for a time, and that was also an early idea for an album title. It was given to the No Alternative compilation instead which released a month after In Utero.
I had also read somewhere that Kurt wanted Sappy to be absolutely perfect to him, and for some reason or another the version they cut at the In Utero sessions still wasn't "perfect". It's a shame, it's a great track (and so is the older version from 1990 to a lesser extent). It just for some odd reason wasn't good enough for Kurt.
Thanks!
@@scottudell7202 It be like that sometimes.
If Kurt would have lived 2 more years. He would have been an amateur engineer and doing experimental recording & Along with working with the producers on the next album. I’m a musician and a engineer. Lots of people don’t realize the utero sessions were an awaking to him. He realized you could be experimental in the engineering side of things just as much as with instruments if not more. He fell in love with that idea because of this guy right here who showed him strange techniques that he didn’t know were possible.
Interesting. I didn't know they re-recorded Sappy with the intention of including it on In Utero. It makes a lot of sense as to the production quality of the No Alternative comp version - now I know, it is quite clear.
it would be cool to see albini talk about recording process with don caballero one day.
Great to hear the behind the scenes stuff of In Utero. "What's the name game?!" 😂
i kno.....and PATCH yderm he says.....yikes! stunad
Oh man I facepalmed at that part. Steve just looks at him like...are you kidding me bro?
@@LeviBulger 🤣
@Joe McKenzie Deal with it. 😉
Never heard of it ! Must be an American thing?
Wow, one of my favorite albums , so glad to know more about the process and that Steve Albini is such an intelligent dude and understood Kurt, & what that album was for him...
You are killing it with these interviews, thank you 🙏
The key was the band itself. They paid Albini rather than letting the studio...so they had total control
Definitely my favorite Nirvana album. This along with Incesticide
I just want to point out that you are a great interviewer Daniel!
You just let people speak their mind and you just sit back, listen and capture everything as you should.
Kudos!
Shellac and Big Black are two of my fav bands
The interviewer not knowing “The Name Game” made me feel really old. 😢
Thank you so much for these. Really important what you're doing
Aweosome interview man! thank you very much
FANTASTIC INTERVIEW!
This is amazing- thank you! One of my all time favourite albums so every bit of new information is much appreciated
Thank you both! Love Steve’s honest tell it like it is interviews. Much the way his recordings sound.
Great work, Daniel! Keep it up!
Love these interviews fair play dude 🤟
Thanks! It's awesome listen Albini tell all these details
Great stuff. Please keep them coming. It's important that these conversations, and the details spoken there-in, are recorded for history's sake if nothing else.
This is gold !
awesome stuff . Love Steve's work
Thanks Daniel, I've learnt more new stuff about Nirvana in the last month than the last 20 years from your Albini interviews!
Steve is a LEGEND! thank you
Great interview. Actually liked that you didn’t edit out the Name Game part. Albini was so polite about it.
Fascinating stuff. Thanks
Good to see quality content like this finding traction on UA-cam. 🤘😎
Thank you for doing this interview with Steve. Ever since hearing songs off this album in the late 90s i wanted to know how it was recorded.
I stumbled across this channel last week. I subscribed before I even watched. I love it! Thanks for straight forward information on the music of my generation
This is some amazingly interesting stuff Daniel! Great job :)
Great interview
Outstanding opportunity to listen to Steve. Thank you Daniel!
Superb work. I really wanted to hear these stories from the people that were there. Thanks
Awesome interview Daniel! 🤟🙌🙏
It can't get more real and honest than this,Steve is the man!! Thanks very much Daniel,awesome work!!
This is a lot of new information! I have so much respect for Albini, he is a great musician and engineer
In Utero was one of the most anticipated and most satisfying albums of the 1990s.
Great stuff. Awesome
awesome insight!
Thanks bro for the work u put in for the band that play the soundtrack of the lifes of young ppl of my generation.. i love your well verse of questions ..it really shows your depth of research .i wish all the best in producing more brilliant pieces of history
Every couple years I seem to fall down the Nirvana rabbit hole and discover new interesting things. Advancing media channels like this, and the age of the algorithmic smart phone help make that easier every time. Great interview and info in this one! Thanks!
Awesome anecdotes man. Great questions
Very interesting interview. I’ve read almost every book on Kurt and/or Nirvana and I learned some things that I don’t think is published anywhere. The fact of the Randall amp and the status of the Fender Quad Reverb. I wonder if that was the Randall Commander he used pre Nevermind. If this interview is longer than this please upload the rest. This was very enlightening. Thanks
It's hilarious -- the story about needing to do something percussive while recording -- because I was literally just sitting here, thinking the same exact thing -- that I am going to need to play a guitar while I track a particular song I'm going to be recording, to make my vocal performance better.
more albini interview coming? yes sir
Very interesting information
I think it would've been nice to hear Krist's name mentioned and perhaps a bit about the process behind recording his bass parts and whether the band did any of the tracks together live.
Great content!
Steve is one of the nicest guys I've ever met.
Really thank you for doing all this new material dude, is amazing. I only have one doubt, that is if Steve really recorded the drums of Very Ape in the kitchen as Wikipedia claims
Name game was a massive hit in the late 80's I remember every one in my class used to sing it in 1989, I'm blown away the interview never heard of it lol
Wow, super interesting interview here. This man is very intelligent also.
I totally agree with his drum recording technique
Its kind of wild to hear Albini go so in depth. I feel like he's been pretty reluctant to discuss the sessions like this. I imagine it's a bit annoying having everyone focus on only one project so much.
Steve is DA GOAT.
Interviewer is really good. Excellent job with the questions and pacing.
Great interview! Would like to learn more about Steve’s time working with Jimmy Page & Robert Plant.
If Kurt would have lived 2 more years. He would have been an amateur engineer and doing experimental recording & Along with working with the producers on the next album. I’m a musician and a engineer. Lots of people don’t realize the utero sessions were an awaking to him. He realized you could be experimental in the engineering side of things just as much as with instruments if not more. He fell in love with that idea because of this guy right here who showed him strange techniques that he didn’t know were possible.
I would have liked to hear a Kurt Cobain and early Radiohead collaboration.
Interesting, cool observation
I’m still in mourning that Kurt and Michael Stipe never got to collaborate. 😭
You dont have next weeks loto numbers as well whilst youre seeing factually forward
He'd probably have an intense modular setup and a beard if he was alive
marigold's also on grohl's album pocketwatch/late which is awesome
The bullshit name that they booked the studio sessions under was The Simon Ritchie Bluegrass Ensemble 😁
Cannon Falls in the house. I was 15 at the the time and they were spotted in town buying fishing licenses to go ice fishing on Lake Byllesby. My friends ended up recording there a couple years later. Long story short I smoked bud out of a bong Kurt used. A green ceramic piece. Good times
Albini must feel proud that it’s considered by many to be one of the greatest albums of all time. Which it is.
ask Albini why the last weedeater record sounds so tame compared to the one he did with them before. Love the vids...!!!
It’s amazing how different the vocal tracking experience was with Steve Albini versus Butch Vig. Butch had Kurt do double tracking on a lot of the vocals, and Kurt really got burned out. Albini had him do mostly single track vocals, and they were done in basically one day
I could listen to this shit all day long
Steve Albini gets cold called, twice.
Absolute madlads
It's evan dando.
Great videos, does anyone know whether nirvana and bands alike tracked all in one room or played their parts separately to some sort of guide?
Whoa!, did you go to journalism school or something? It shows.
5:59 Steve wearing the most replayed t-shirt
You should release uncut versions of your interviews. We want to see it all, not just the "important parts". I'm sure you talked for much much more
Yeah, i like to see it too
Bless you Daniel for this documantary with Steve Albini, thank you. Does anybody here know how many room mics that Albini used for In Utero, and where he placed them in that room while recording?
Steve interacts with users on the discussion forum over at electricalaudio.com. It’s probably been asked there before, and if it hasn’t Steve doesn’t seem to mind discussing his recording techniques when asked.
Really...I never heard the guitar! I'll have to listen more closely that's amazing.
I think you can hear it best during the quiet parts on Pennyroyal Tea
🤘
Great interview Daniel! Would like to learn more about Steve’s time working with Jimmy Page & Robert Plant.
ministerofdarkness there’s an interview on UA-cam where he goes into detail about that experience
I will try to utilize “the name game” beat in a different way. He’s correct, it’s underutilized and it’s an awesome beat.
my favourite nirvana .
anybody know where i can contact steve for an autograph i love his work and would love and autograph from him
beard and bun look great man, good job
I like In Utero, I like Nirvana, I like Steve Albini and it's great to get info on this record and its session, but holy shit I can't help shake off the feeling Steve Albini is tired of talking about it. He's obviously very polite and personable, but I just can't help he's been questioned to death about it.
I didn’t personally get that impression, but that might be due to the fact that I’m used to Steve voicing his disdain of a given subject matter in a very unambiguous manner, even after he had “chilled out” from his younger days. If Steve doesn’t want to do something, or has an opinion of it, he makes all of it known. He’s just become more tactful about it over the years.
You should have asked him what the hell Kurt said at the beginning of Radio Friendly. Damn, thought you were going to reference Moist Vagina, it has always been a mysterious song to me...Great work as always my friend.
He says "Whats your name? Do you like me?"
@@itsliketryingtofitapowerst1860 Really?
@@itsliketryingtofitapowerst1860 It's so clear now after all of these years, that has to be a Fugazi reference.
@@krisfrederick5001 didnt nirvanna cover one of their songs live?
@@itsliketryingtofitapowerst1860 Hmm....I wouldn't be surprised but I haven't heard a recording. Since we're both fans, check out my first crappy video on here and let me know what you think?
Sappy wasn’t recorded in the in utero sessions. It was recorded surprisingly early on....I think there was a version of it in 89, the studio version is from no later than 1992.
*Actually, there was. The version was called "Verse Chorus Verse," and it was released as a bonus track on the No Alternative compilation.*
Very cool that you got to talk to him, he was a real one, rest in peace steve albini
"The Name Game" by Shirley Ellis, yo!
How great is it he doesnt even know the song titles to a classic album he produced...what an incredible age for music.
Pretty good Sarkissian. Although I wish you would've pressed Albini for some descriptors of the "aesthetic inspirations" Kurt had which he mentioned. I'm a tough crowd though.
HEY DANIEL! GREAT WORK!! SEE IF YOU CAN INTERVIEW BUTCH VIG??!!BEST
Much better than reading the bio books
You should have asked Steve about Dave and Krist doing whippets at some point during the session.
Steve Albeanie
Kurt
When they build time machines I will witness the recording of in utero
Do you know what Albinis input was as the Producer? He pressed Record! That’s it! He’s known for not adding anything to the recordings. He’s basically just a recordist. And for that he charges a $150,000 flat fee. Brilliant!
To his credit, he is no nonsense and straight forward so Kurt probably liked that about him and he’s not an ass kisser.
Wrong. He also engineers and arranges mic placement.
So it wasn't a Fender twin reverb on the album
2:57 I wouldn’t say this rhythm (from Scentless...) is/was underutilized. Among others, Bonham applied it in „Bonzo”, and this is where Grohl ripped it from, most probably ...
so what t shirt is he wearing?? looks maybe familiar...
I recall an interview Kurt did where he said he was drinking lots of codeine cough syrup when he did his vocals. I bet he felt amazing.
Codeine is a hell of a step down from diamorphine though