She actually didn't write most of all her songs. Billy Corgan actually wrote most of her songs. Still a good singer and did a good job for the grunge sound. But she had some good songs and she talented. But she owes a lot of credit to a few people who wrote her good grunge songs
The lyrics remind me of something Kurt Cobain would have written. I understand why there were so many rumors he wrote most of the lyrics (and music) on "Live Through This".
Kurt wrote primarily by taking random lines that fit the melody he wanted from different things he had written over time, be it poems or just random thoughts. That's why most of his songs require so much interpretation to get something out of them. This song is one lyrically coherent emotional sad story from start to finish, not at all Kurt's style.
@@StarryStarryNocturne Especially songs like "Polly", "Sliver", "Rape Me", "In Bloom"...I could go on. Definitely no topic or story in any of those songs. Just random lines.
@@jarifmanx Another one that has trouble reading. Do you know what "primarily" means? Here's a hint: it's not synonymous with "always." Also, out of the songs you listed, Polly is the only one that qualifies as a coherent emotional story and that was still like most Kurt songs, clinically detached from the subject matter, presenting it from a third person perspective and lyrically disguising it by poetically comparing the trapped girl to a caged parrot. "Sliver", is a detached incoherent childhood recollection. "Rape me" is a repetitive detached sentence fragment of an anti-rape protest song, for a more emotionally coherent song about rape see "Asking for it" by Hole. And "In Bloom" is exactly like 99% of Kurt's songwriting, it's just random lines for the verses, with the slightest relevance of a coherent topic found only in the chorus. Really the only song I can think of where Kurt wrote an honest emotionally coherent song that didn't suffer from any of his usual clinical, cynical detachment was, "You Know You're Right." You really shouldn't feel defensive about something that Kurt himself admitted. He always said that lyrics were the least important thing to him in his songwriting. Melody and rhythm were his main interest in writing songs, for lyrics he'd just go with whatever suited the melody and he admitted to using random lines from stuff he had written before in his journals, be it poems or just jotted down random thoughts he had. Kurt wasn't the voice of a generation because of brilliant insightful lyrics. He was the voice of a generation through the loud, frantic sonic struggle between depressed apathy and spirited rebellion that he bared through his music in a way that perfectly summed up and connected with his generation. That clinical, cynical detachment of his words were part of that package, but they weren't THE thing.
they’re completely different artists who sing on completely different topics, this is just classic pitting women against women. Both are unique in their own sense and only creeps and weirdos feel the need to demean or compare a fellow sister to another. It’s damaging and in the long run proves nothing.
i listen to this everyday
I listen to this whenever I have 30mins to kill wallowing in depression. I give myself just the length of this lp then I go back to being me.
Courtney Love was a good songwriter...the whole lp is brilliant...but, i cant say i much like any output beyond Live thru This
dawg, she ain't dead
She actually didn't write most of all her songs. Billy Corgan actually wrote most of her songs. Still a good singer and did a good job for the grunge sound. But she had some good songs and she talented. But she owes a lot of credit to a few people who wrote her good grunge songs
celebrity skin has a half dozen goodies
@@doesntmatter8393she wrote most of her songs.
perfect rock album
Oh finally reading the lyrics. Thanks for posting this. I like the purple background. Nice colour lol
RIP Kristen Pfaff
me and my homeys be boppen this shit 24 / 7 / 365 ✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀🧛🏿♀
HELL YEAH
Love this song💜💯
Kurt at back vocal..🖤❣️✌️
She talks about milk alot
it's a reference to heroin
How so?
Great quality
The lyrics remind me of something Kurt Cobain would have written. I understand why there were so many rumors he wrote most of the lyrics (and music) on "Live Through This".
Kurt wrote primarily by taking random lines that fit the melody he wanted from different things he had written over time, be it poems or just random thoughts. That's why most of his songs require so much interpretation to get something out of them. This song is one lyrically coherent emotional sad story from start to finish, not at all Kurt's style.
@@StarryStarryNocturne Especially songs like "Polly", "Sliver", "Rape Me", "In Bloom"...I could go on. Definitely no topic or story in any of those songs. Just random lines.
@@jarifmanx Another one that has trouble reading. Do you know what "primarily" means? Here's a hint: it's not synonymous with "always." Also, out of the songs you listed, Polly is the only one that qualifies as a coherent emotional story and that was still like most Kurt songs, clinically detached from the subject matter, presenting it from a third person perspective and lyrically disguising it by poetically comparing the trapped girl to a caged parrot.
"Sliver", is a detached incoherent childhood recollection. "Rape me" is a repetitive detached sentence fragment of an anti-rape protest song, for a more emotionally coherent song about rape see "Asking for it" by Hole. And "In Bloom" is exactly like 99% of Kurt's songwriting, it's just random lines for the verses, with the slightest relevance of a coherent topic found only in the chorus.
Really the only song I can think of where Kurt wrote an honest emotionally coherent song that didn't suffer from any of his usual clinical, cynical detachment was, "You Know You're Right."
You really shouldn't feel defensive about something that Kurt himself admitted. He always said that lyrics were the least important thing to him in his songwriting. Melody and rhythm were his main interest in writing songs, for lyrics he'd just go with whatever suited the melody and he admitted to using random lines from stuff he had written before in his journals, be it poems or just jotted down random thoughts he had.
Kurt wasn't the voice of a generation because of brilliant insightful lyrics. He was the voice of a generation through the loud, frantic sonic struggle between depressed apathy and spirited rebellion that he bared through his music in a way that perfectly summed up and connected with his generation. That clinical, cynical detachment of his words were part of that package, but they weren't THE thing.
This is nothing like Kurt’s songwriting
It's a fantastic sing, irrespective of who wrote it.
Courtney and Eric wrote it. :)
2:02 OK THEN COURTNEY BAHAHAHA
Hope Paxton I Love You
Finally found the lyrics
Great song about milk
About to do some rn ❤️🔥
real female rge
HELL EYAH
Cobain sang back vocals on this
Peewee herman..😢😢😢😢💜🌏🌏😶😶🙏🙏🙏
h u h
Courtney: awesome singer, guitarist. Katy Perry a one hit wonder, c ant whack an axe or move beyond a part of her...,,..not b her brain.
Courtney love >> Katy perry
they’re completely different artists who sing on completely different topics, this is just classic pitting women against women. Both are unique in their own sense and only creeps and weirdos feel the need to demean or compare a fellow sister to another. It’s damaging and in the long run proves nothing.