Of all the people I've watched react to this song you're the first I've seen actually break it down. Good job. You'd have a field day with the rest of their stuff
You were 17 when this song came out? That must have been wild. I was 11 and this video changed so much for me, not just in terms of music, but in terms of how I viewed the world.
@@garysimonson1135 I was 15 when this came out and yeah, it was pretty wild. For the first time the kind of music that I was used to only hearing on local college radio was actually getting airtime on major TV music programs. The mainstream was so unsure how to categorize it that at first it was only getting played on shows that normally covered Metal.
You do a great job of not interrupting the flow of the music, prepping ahead with the lyrics, and get right to the point of what you think the song means. And then applying it to life, not just a head exercise. Even if you don't nail it "exactly" I like your commitment to the position and the passion to help people make the positive changes. Really enjoyed your SOAD reactions. You're bound to find the Tool rabbit hole sooner or later, and your subs will skyrocket, as well as your views. Plus, your time commitment will also increase as well.
That's what I love about Grunge. It washed away all the 80's hair/glam bands and was truly honest and always expressing what it felt. It was never concerned with appearances or facades. And it always made you feel what it felt. A legendary Grunge song/video that helped blast Grunge across the globe. Love your analysis- All that goes right over my head unless it's literal symbolism-lol.
I really like your vids. I would be very interested to see you react to Marylin Mansons older stuff. Especially The Beautiful people, Tourniquet, or the nobodies.The music videos are super artistic and interesting as well. Keep up the amazing vids :)
Wow, you really nailed this! And even when the apathetic teens get excited and have energy it's aggressive and destructive and - they're not celebrating who they are (like the janitor) - they're lashing out. It's almost like - this is what putting on the mask of apathy and holding it in does. It builds and builds until the dam breaks and it comes out in cathartic yet uncontrollable aggression.
The Anarchy cheerleading squad is my favorite! 😂 Did you know that Kurt had a job as a janitor at his high school after dropping out? He dropped out two weeks before graduation because he didn't have enough credits to graduate.
Everytime this song pops on I get the feeling to walk around like Diamond Dallas Page from WCW since this was his theme song. He's a great dude went from having a Hall of Fame Pro Wrestling career to helping people turn their life around with his DDP Yoga program that gotten people to get in shape and help find their way to sobriety.
This was my childhood song as a kid i would listen to it whenever i could. and im now glad that i know the meaning of the song from how you see it. The way you explain things makes SO much sense to my brain and i completely understand every song you explain your view of the song. Thank you for doing these videos these are SO helpful. ^w^
Same, first time I heard it on TV in the early 90s I was like 7-8 year old and all i wanted is to jump around like them, without realizing the whole apathy piece and tough teenagerhood could be.
You nailed it . I completely understood it when it came out. Because the social pressures in high school, And the snobs that played head games and beat you down emotionally Created trust issues. Even someone you made friends with would make hurtful mistakes because we were young and immature.You put up emotional walls and mentally wear a mask. You do make friends but it takes a lot of time. Only after high school was I able to field normal. In my school it affected everyone. Even the ones you would say were good looking. This song came out right after I graduated, and it fit for perfect for the times
There is one thing she got wrong. There was more than 1 memorable person in this video than just the janitor. It's the kid running away with high hat 😂
Interesting to see how you elaborate on things that probably even Kurt Cobain himself couldn't or even wanted to. This has been quoted from an article: quote ''My lyrics are total cut-up,'' Cobain maintained, referring to Beat poet William S. Burroughs' famous writing method. ''I take lines from different poems that I've written. I build on a theme if I can, but sometimes I can't even come up with an idea of what the song is about.'' endquote He had an incredible ear for melodies tho, and it's not unlikely that he just inserted lyrics here and there because they made sense in a "collage" sort of way.
I love your breakdowns of songs. A lot of the 90s grunge and metal hits home for me. One song that got me through a lot was Nutshell by Alice in Chains. Would love to hear your take on that song.
I need you to listen to so far away my Avenged sevenfold. there is SOO much emotion to draw from that song. I CRIED listening to it and music usually doesn't leave that kind of impact on me. Does the fact that its about their dead drummer make it any more emotional?
Great analysis of this song. This is one I've been trying to understand for quite some time, and you definitely made me realize some key points. If you ever take suggestions, I recommend you to check out the band The Warning. Most of their songs have some very good analysis material so you cannot go wrong.
I think this is the worst analysis of this song I've ever heard. She even missed the easy parts. 😂 Sounds the same as a text book diagnose from 1991. Oh, man, haha. We really need to update our psychiatry books in America. It's not like this is a new song. It probably should have been taught somewhere in her education...and it probably was. But, hey, shitty UA-cam videos still get views... and make the same money as the good ones, right?
Your analysis of this song really hit home for me today, thank you. I’d never really sat down to listen or understand the lyrics, but I wish I had 25-30 years ago. Jeremy by Pearl Jam on the other hand…
thank you so much for this!!! wish you could have explained this song to me when i was in school! please do black by pear jam at some point, I'd love to hear your take on it.
I like your analysis on this!!!:) I feel like you got in his head a little bit more than people that read a book or listened to a CD or something. Thank you!!:)
Love your natural without any filters behaviour in your videos! The way you dance and take music for rhythm waves moves is just great. This without talking about your smile 😎. Really hope you will continue on this path that suits you perfectly (for the nothing I know you… 😊) Take care! 🤘
I've really been enjoying your content for the last little bit now and I've seen you've checked out some slipknot and the song's you have checked out and analyzed are really good and in depth but I think it would be very interesting if you analyzed their songs Everything Ends or Skin Ticket off their album IOWA
Amazing analysis! Know, about the line "With the lights out, it's less dangerous" there's a song from a brazilian rock artist named Pitty, and she says pretty much what you've said about the darkness. There's a line that goes like this: "When is dark and no one sees me, when is dark I see better". Anyway, she's a great artist and the song is "No Escuro" in english it means "In The Dark. Again, amazing reaction and lyric break down. Cheers from a brazilian here. ♥♥♥
That's interesting you picked up on the apathy, which was all they talked about with gen x. REM, whose lead singer was friends with Cobain and was a late boomer said in the song "What's the Frequency Kenneth" "Withdrawal in disgust is the not the same as apathy". This song is about a person from one generation trying to understand the younger generation by studying all their culture.
This style of music was pretty new when it appered. All the grown-ups where shocked by the noise. But on every party their music was played. It spread a feeling of not be a part of the grown-up society.
It was always my experience that sticking out in any way led to physical violence in school. I had to learn to blend into any background for my own safety. Which is something I wish I would have learned earlier. I would have saved me a lot of pain, and humiliation.
@heartsupport As I appreciate your reactions so much, I would also like to make a suggestion. The band is Heaven's Guardian from Brazil. The style is Symphonic Metal. The song is Artificial Times: ua-cam.com/video/KUu-iqbg73I/v-deo.html The song is part of the first studio album "Chronos" recorded by a metal band and a professional orchestra/choir. Hope you like them. Thx!
This was literally an Anthem for a generation of us who was sick of the 80's glam and hair bands the "Greed is good" Era of the Yuppie and being given new and improved doses of capitalism. An Era where the Rich and Famous was on every channel we were shown the filthy rich and shoved in our faces was "You are not as good as them cause you are not Rich". Kurt was that voice for this generation he just neve wanted to be it was too big for him. Not a day goes by I do not miss Kurt and Nirvana.
With so much made about the “young male loneliness epidemic” recently, I must say that male loneliness was also an epidemic while I grew up in the 80’s-90’s. It was still a time when it was common for most Father’s to still be passing down the false narrative of fake or hollow masculinity. Having slightly older guys in their 20’s such as Cobain, Stayley, Vedder and Cornell it made me realize how okay it was to show open compassion, vulnerability and empathy. Today kids and young men have grifters like Peterson, Tate and the Manosphere. In know it sounds counterintuitive because so many that I named ended their lives but you have to have compassion and care about others to be hurt. So many men using lonely young men to make money and grift have no shame. I’m thankful that I had examples and voices.
This album was recorded in the capitol of Wisconsin. An infamous studio recorded fast. They recorded it fast. Because who cared then? Was not till he was alive but seemed dead that it was even recognized. The keeper and provider of entertainment usually think what they do makes a difference positively. Moneywiaw. Keep music Live to allow it to ljve free
@HeartSupport - Talk About Your Mental Health time for the harder stuff, do you want to try it? GUTALAX - DIARRHERO (Special lyrics) Cannibal Corpse - Hammer Smashed Face (Oldschool) DYING FETUS - Unbridled Fury ABORTED - Infinite Terror SHINING - Allt För Döden Torsof.ck- Raped by Elephants GORGOROTH - Black Mass Krakow (live Full show) Endstille - Depressive/Abstract/Banished/Despised if someone still knows bands please write ->
People didn't put meanings to it like this back then...you are right mostly though 90s was grundge when no sense made sense was the vibe. I honestly think kids were more in large active back then so the teenage drift wasn't as impacted. I really think teens struggle more today in many ways
You should definitly try: You know you‘re right (Nirvana). In my opinion their best song. Also I‘m just new to your channel, but I really like your videos :)
Oh my God you need to react to Alice in Chains!! As a therapist, i think the songs Nutshell and Down in a Hole, both live at MTV Unplugged, are a must watch. Please analyze those two songs for us!
@heartsupport Hi girl! As I appreciate your reactions so much, I would also like to make a suggestion. The band is Heaven's Guardian from Brazil. The style is Symphonic Metal. The song is Artificial Times: ua-cam.com/video/KUu-iqbg73I/v-deo.html The song is part of the first studio album "Chronos" recorded by a metal band and a professional orchestra/choir. Hope you like them. Thx!
This is so nostalgic. Playing Age of empires with Nivana on the background. What is this song al about? Can't figure any lyrics out. How do the words to it go. I wish you tell me. I don't know.
Bloopers in the video : 2 kids moving to the music when it begins Cheerleader smiling right into the Camera Facts = Kurt was a Janitor in the same high school he quit The Cheerleaders were Strippers hired Samuel Bayer ( the director ) made a "Johnny Rotten" Video Looking exactly the same in 1992....this coming from a singer who hated Nirvana Some facts from VH1 ( POP UP VIDEO -1997 )
You're doing good at interpretation of lyrics as a cry for help or speaking truths to power. It's not just senseless violence and devil worship as the audience parents thought.
Nirvana is in my top 5. This is obviously their most famous song regardless that they have a gazillion amazing songs but I always thought that he says “I found it hard, it’s hard to find a will, whatever, Nevermind” it’s super disappointing that those aren’t the correct lyrics and he actually says “I found it hard, its hard to find OH WELL, whatever Nevermind”. In my heart and mind it will always be “I found it hard to find A WILL, whatever Nevermind”.
I think that even Kurt Cobain had an issue with vulnerability. After the band Nirvana became famous he started saying that his goal was never to attain that statut which makes me wonder why he decided to release his songs in the first place. When you release songs it's for people to listen to them, no ? Smells like contradiction, isn't it ?
I think what he meant is that he didn’t want to be like the mainstream. I could be wrong because Kurt played to the camera so he usually told people what they wanted to hear, but I think he wanted to be famous for being different.
Listen to it backwards. He says things like "I'm scared of Satan you see. His house is where you'll find him." And "why do you hate me so much?! What do you want from me?!" And the " hello hello hello part backwards says. " Oh God why. Hi how are you. Hi how are you." Almost all of the songs on this album were rewritten by Kurt last minute to incorporate backwards lyrics. The first clue this was intentional was when Kurt screamed "Robert Taylor!" At the end of his first mtv show. Robert Taylor was the drummer of queens. One of the first bands to shine light on backwards lyrics. Their song "another one bites the dust " reversed says "Smoke marijuana." For those who didn't know. Chillax. Kurt backwards songs are good too. This one and something in the way are particularly nice sounding reversed.
How the apathy was contextualized in this time in the reality of deeply Christian nationalist 80s and it’s complete disconnect with the “happy” glam and retrowave aesthetic that had been co-opted to reinforce misogyny, racism, homophobia and offer only the reprieve of excess consumption as panacea is the thing I feel is missing from this otherwise excellent analysis. The inverted pep rally was an artistic reflection of how the band and many contemporaries felt about the culture of the day (this was wildly subversive art at the time.) Within just that year the same social forces would co-opt this aesthetic to be the new “cool” & apathetic “vibe”. So we went from be happy, shroud hate in bright colors, don’t care, to be angry, don’t care, wear your ugliness on your sleeve. The net effect missing the entire point of this new absurdist influenced movement. They were so ahead of everyone on this the NEXT song on this album literally predicted this behavior about the audience missing the message entirely.
So you’d really like to think of Nirvana as a brainless entity with no meaningful and/or emotional lyrical input? They just luckily put together music and lyrics by simply banging a drum, strumming a guitar, plucking a base, and putting some words together that rhyme. So, you can guarantee that Nirvana had no idea, ooops 10% of an idea, to put meaning to the lyrical portion of their songs? Imagine the audacity of a licensed clinical therapist breaking down some song lyrics based on an unbiased perspective. That’s crazy man, let’s listen to the critique of someone that did 3 ludes and a bottle of JD before they jumped in the mosh pit.
Feel like a reaction to "You know you're right," is a must. It's the last song the band record.
"Where Did You Sleep Last Night" needs to be listened to and analyzed. Just for the pure emotion Kurt into singing that song. It is raw and moving.
Of all the people I've watched react to this song you're the first I've seen actually break it down. Good job. You'd have a field day with the rest of their stuff
I fully agree. She had deepened my appreciation of this archetypal song.
...and she got it all wrong. Funny.
I can't figure out why this channel is so small... terrific content
Just discovered your channel. Happy to see someone try to figure out the meaning of songs and really delve into the lyrics. Really great.
It’s took me over 50 years to realise that caring is not a weakness,it must be even more difficult to be young these days
You were 17 when this song came out? That must have been wild. I was 11 and this video changed so much for me, not just in terms of music, but in terms of how I viewed the world.
@@garysimonson1135 I was 15 when this came out and yeah, it was pretty wild. For the first time the kind of music that I was used to only hearing on local college radio was actually getting airtime on major TV music programs. The mainstream was so unsure how to categorize it that at first it was only getting played on shows that normally covered Metal.
You do a great job of not interrupting the flow of the music, prepping ahead with the lyrics, and get right to the point of what you think the song means. And then applying it to life, not just a head exercise. Even if you don't nail it "exactly" I like your commitment to the position and the passion to help people make the positive changes. Really enjoyed your SOAD reactions. You're bound to find the Tool rabbit hole sooner or later, and your subs will skyrocket, as well as your views. Plus, your time commitment will also increase as well.
Yup, that’s how I ended up here!
That's what I love about Grunge. It washed away all the 80's hair/glam bands and was truly honest and always expressing what it felt. It was never concerned with appearances or facades. And it always made you feel what it felt. A legendary Grunge song/video that helped blast Grunge across the globe. Love your analysis- All that goes right over my head unless it's literal symbolism-lol.
I really like your vids. I would be very interested to see you react to Marylin Mansons older stuff. Especially The Beautiful people, Tourniquet, or the nobodies.The music videos are super artistic and interesting as well. Keep up the amazing vids :)
Beautiful People
@@ronaldpeklar9302 it’s all relative to the size of your steeple
The song that literally changed lives, including mine, would do anything to hear this for the first time again!
I remember hearing it when it first came out and I was like... I need more of this music in my life. I hadn't heard anything like it.
Yeah, I'm old :(
Great statement
I absolutely love that you just start from second 1, just playing the video without any intro
Therapist.... you're after my heart! You're cool!
Wow, you really nailed this! And even when the apathetic teens get excited and have energy it's aggressive and destructive and - they're not celebrating who they are (like the janitor) - they're lashing out. It's almost like - this is what putting on the mask of apathy and holding it in does. It builds and builds until the dam breaks and it comes out in cathartic yet uncontrollable aggression.
The Anarchy cheerleading squad is my favorite! 😂 Did you know that Kurt had a job as a janitor at his high school after dropping out? He dropped out two weeks before graduation because he didn't have enough credits to graduate.
Yeah the anarchy cheerleaders were awesome, I agree.
Everytime this song pops on I get the feeling to walk around like Diamond Dallas Page from WCW since this was his theme song. He's a great dude went from having a Hall of Fame Pro Wrestling career to helping people turn their life around with his DDP Yoga program that gotten people to get in shape and help find their way to sobriety.
This was my childhood song as a kid i would listen to it whenever i could. and im now glad that i know the meaning of the song from how you see it. The way you explain things makes SO much sense to my brain and i completely understand every song you explain your view of the song. Thank you for doing these videos these are SO helpful. ^w^
Same, first time I heard it on TV in the early 90s I was like 7-8 year old and all i wanted is to jump around like them, without realizing the whole apathy piece and tough teenagerhood could be.
You nailed it . I completely understood it when it came out. Because the social pressures in high school, And the snobs that played head games and beat you down emotionally Created trust issues. Even someone you made friends with would make hurtful mistakes because we were young and immature.You put up emotional walls and mentally wear a mask. You do make friends but it takes a lot of time. Only after high school was I able to field normal. In my school it affected everyone. Even the ones you would say were good looking. This song came out right after I graduated, and it fit for perfect for the times
There is one thing she got wrong. There was more than 1 memorable person in this video than just the janitor. It's the kid running away with high hat 😂
I came up in Seattle. That was an incredibly fun time.
So nostalgic of my youth … 18 years old when this album came out….listening to Nirvana while cutting hay fields In Texas on Mr. Furlows farm!
Interesting to see how you elaborate on things that probably even Kurt Cobain himself couldn't or even wanted to.
This has been quoted from an article: quote ''My lyrics are total cut-up,'' Cobain maintained, referring to Beat poet William S. Burroughs' famous writing method. ''I take lines from different poems that I've written. I build on a theme if I can, but sometimes I can't even come up with an idea of what the song is about.'' endquote
He had an incredible ear for melodies tho, and it's not unlikely that he just inserted lyrics here and there because they made sense in a "collage" sort of way.
I remember the first time I heard Smells Like Teen Spirit. It came on the radio in the 90s as I was driving down Route 21 in NJ and it blew me away.
I love your breakdowns of songs. A lot of the 90s grunge and metal hits home for me. One song that got me through a lot was Nutshell by Alice in Chains. Would love to hear your take on that song.
I need you to listen to so far away my Avenged sevenfold. there is SOO much emotion to draw from that song. I CRIED listening to it and music usually doesn't leave that kind of impact on me.
Does the fact that its about their dead drummer make it any more emotional?
Great analysis of this song. This is one I've been trying to understand for quite some time, and you definitely made me realize some key points.
If you ever take suggestions, I recommend you to check out the band The Warning. Most of their songs have some very good analysis material so you cannot go wrong.
I think this is the worst analysis of this song I've ever heard. She even missed the easy parts. 😂
Sounds the same as a text book diagnose from 1991. Oh, man, haha. We really need to update our psychiatry books in America. It's not like this is a new song. It probably should have been taught somewhere in her education...and it probably was. But, hey, shitty UA-cam videos still get views... and make the same money as the good ones, right?
@@djlm9169 whatever you say, bro...
Your analysis of this song really hit home for me today, thank you. I’d never really sat down to listen or understand the lyrics, but I wish I had 25-30 years ago. Jeremy by Pearl Jam on the other hand…
That was awesome. Makes sense. As a Nirvana fan, I wish you did that with the rest of their songs.
Straight into the song no messing around. Love your style
I love these videos especially the songs cause all of them you've done I love I ask one request please do the tragic truth or remember everything 🙏
This song broke out was on the radio all the time I loved it as well as all the other grunge bands
I wish I heard this explanation about apathy back in 95 when I was in high school😢, but I understand now, moving forward, thank you😊
With your grunge look! Ahah you’re beautiful, outside and inside❤ keep bringing light and thank you for the help you spread
Fuk, you nailed it. There is hope for humanity!
thank you so much for this!!! wish you could have explained this song to me when i was in school! please do black by pear jam at some point, I'd love to hear your take on it.
I like your analysis on this!!!:) I feel like you got in his head a little bit more than people that read a book or listened to a CD or something. Thank you!!:)
OMG You're a genius Taylor, love your analysis
I 100% think you should react to Sober by Tool, such a great song.
Not just sober but Parabol and Parabola
Should go through tool like she did slipknot.
The janitor in the video is actually a representation of Kurt because Kurt was a janitor at the same high school that he dropped out of
Cool Heart shirt👍 Awesome band. Wish I was old enough to see them back in the 70s
Love your natural without any filters behaviour in your videos! The way you dance and take music for rhythm waves moves is just great.
This without talking about your smile 😎. Really hope you will continue on this path that suits you perfectly (for the nothing I know you… 😊)
Take care! 🤘
Simp
I've really been enjoying your content for the last little bit now and I've seen you've checked out some slipknot and the song's you have checked out and analyzed are really good and in depth but I think it would be very interesting if you analyzed their songs Everything Ends or Skin Ticket off their album IOWA
Amazing analysis! Know, about the line "With the lights out, it's less dangerous" there's a song from a brazilian rock artist named Pitty, and she says pretty much what you've said about the darkness. There's a line that goes like this: "When is dark and no one sees me, when is dark I see better". Anyway, she's a great artist and the song is "No Escuro" in english it means "In The Dark. Again, amazing reaction and lyric break down. Cheers from a brazilian here. ♥♥♥
That's interesting you picked up on the apathy, which was all they talked about with gen x. REM, whose lead singer was friends with Cobain and was a late boomer said in the song "What's the Frequency Kenneth" "Withdrawal in disgust is the not the same as apathy". This song is about a person from one generation trying to understand the younger generation by studying all their culture.
This style of music was pretty new when it appered. All the grown-ups where shocked by the noise. But on every party their music was played. It spread a feeling of not be a part of the grown-up society.
Very interesting analysis of the song. Your analysis makes me think of what Is happening with something that I am doing and other people's reaction.
I'd love to see your analysis of the video: Orphan Soul by Infected Rain.
Loved this video, first time on this channel, Already subscribed. And I LOVE NIRVANA, I´m 42 years old. Great analysis.
It was always my experience that sticking out in any way led to physical violence in school. I had to learn to blend into any background for my own safety. Which is something I wish I would have learned earlier. I would have saved me a lot of pain, and humiliation.
Wow, love your take on this! New sub! ❤
@heartsupport As I appreciate your reactions so much, I would also like to make a suggestion. The band is Heaven's Guardian from Brazil. The style is Symphonic Metal.
The song is Artificial Times:
ua-cam.com/video/KUu-iqbg73I/v-deo.html
The song is part of the first studio album "Chronos" recorded by a metal band and a professional orchestra/choir. Hope you like them. Thx!
New subscriber I like how you break down your reaction 🔥
This was literally an Anthem for a generation of us who was sick of the 80's glam and hair bands the "Greed is good" Era of the Yuppie and being given new and improved doses of capitalism. An Era where the Rich and Famous was on every channel we were shown the filthy rich and shoved in our faces was "You are not as good as them cause you are not Rich". Kurt was that voice for this generation he just neve wanted to be it was too big for him. Not a day goes by I do not miss Kurt and Nirvana.
The Janitor is a nod to Kurt himself. He dropped out of school and the only job he could get was as the janitor at his high school....
Very, very deep analysis. Respect.
You gotta check out "The World I Know" by Collective Soul. Very heavy song addressing depression and suicide with a powerful video to say the least.
4:49 there is one other person who is rememberable from this video. It's the kid running away with the high hat and took it home 😂
first reactor I subbed to, good job
With so much made about the “young male loneliness epidemic” recently, I must say that male loneliness was also an epidemic while I grew up in the 80’s-90’s. It was still a time when it was common for most Father’s to still be passing down the false narrative of fake or hollow masculinity.
Having slightly older guys in their 20’s such as Cobain, Stayley, Vedder and Cornell it made me realize how okay it was to show open compassion, vulnerability and empathy. Today kids and young men have grifters like Peterson, Tate and the Manosphere.
In know it sounds counterintuitive because so many that I named ended their lives but you have to have compassion and care about others to be hurt.
So many men using lonely young men to make money and grift have no shame. I’m thankful that I had examples and voices.
This album was recorded in the capitol of Wisconsin. An infamous studio recorded fast. They recorded it fast. Because who cared then? Was not till he was alive but seemed dead that it was even recognized. The keeper and provider of entertainment usually think what they do makes a difference positively. Moneywiaw. Keep music Live to allow it to ljve free
@HeartSupport - Talk About Your Mental Health time for the harder stuff, do you want to try it?
GUTALAX - DIARRHERO (Special lyrics)
Cannibal Corpse - Hammer Smashed Face (Oldschool)
DYING FETUS - Unbridled Fury
ABORTED - Infinite Terror
SHINING - Allt För Döden
Torsof.ck- Raped by Elephants
GORGOROTH - Black Mass Krakow (live Full show)
Endstille - Depressive/Abstract/Banished/Despised
if someone still knows bands please write ->
For gods sake pleaseeee I’m begging you to react to 1. Nirvana: where did you sleep last night and 2: Alice In Chains: Don’t follow
You should Def react to Jeris Johnson, Boi what- Battling my Demons. Such a great song!!
People didn't put meanings to it like this back then...you are right mostly though
90s was grundge when no sense made sense was the vibe. I honestly think kids were more in large active back then so the teenage drift wasn't as impacted. I really think teens struggle more today in many ways
Wow you broke that song down really well
You should definitly try: You know you‘re right (Nirvana).
In my opinion their best song.
Also I‘m just new to your channel, but I really like your videos :)
She is a vibe. When she groove's I groove watching her.
Please watch their unplugged version of their song "dumb" so good
Please look into Alice In Chains. Some pretty deep stuff and of course Lane Staley and Jerry are phenomenal artists.
Nice analysis . This came out when I was in high school…..I figured it just meant I could wreck shit!
They literally have another song called Lithium. Would love you to hear you analyze that as well.
First song i learned on guitar and played in the grade 8 talent show
Kurt was one of a kind .❤
Oh my God you need to react to Alice in Chains!! As a therapist, i think the songs Nutshell and Down in a Hole, both live at MTV Unplugged, are a must watch. Please analyze those two songs for us!
@heartsupport Hi girl! As I appreciate your reactions so much, I would also like to make a suggestion. The band is Heaven's Guardian from Brazil. The style is Symphonic Metal.
The song is Artificial Times:
ua-cam.com/video/KUu-iqbg73I/v-deo.html
The song is part of the first studio album "Chronos" recorded by a metal band and a professional orchestra/choir. Hope you like them. Thx!
The "it's not cool to care" comes with the teenage mindset, but do you think that was more prevalent with the Gen-X generation than other generations?
Who raised them?
I’d like to see her react to Type O Negative-Christian Woman
This is so nostalgic. Playing Age of empires with Nivana on the background. What is this song al about? Can't figure any lyrics out. How do the words to it go. I wish you tell me. I don't know.
Bloopers in the video :
2 kids moving to the music when it begins
Cheerleader smiling right into the Camera
Facts = Kurt was a Janitor in the same high school he quit
The Cheerleaders were Strippers hired
Samuel Bayer ( the director ) made a "Johnny Rotten" Video
Looking exactly the same in 1992....this coming from a singer who hated Nirvana
Some facts from VH1 ( POP UP VIDEO -1997 )
good analysis
You're doing good at interpretation of lyrics as a cry for help or speaking truths to power. It's not just senseless violence and devil worship as the audience parents thought.
Good reaction!👍
Kurt was deeper than people thought.
one song: Tori Amos - me and a gun (live at montreux 1992) ...and i don't know what to say but it shouldn't be covered by silence
Nirvana is in my top 5. This is obviously their most famous song regardless that they have a gazillion amazing songs but I always thought that he says “I found it hard, it’s hard to find a will, whatever, Nevermind” it’s super disappointing that those aren’t the correct lyrics and he actually says “I found it hard, its hard to find OH WELL, whatever Nevermind”. In my heart and mind it will always be “I found it hard to find A WILL, whatever Nevermind”.
Always loved the line, "I feel stupid and contageous."
Now, it is imperative that you react to Weird Al Yancovick version of this same song.
I think that even Kurt Cobain had an issue with vulnerability. After the band Nirvana became famous he started saying that his goal was never to attain that statut which makes me wonder why he decided to release his songs in the first place. When you release songs it's for people to listen to them, no ? Smells like contradiction, isn't it ?
I think what he meant is that he didn’t want to be like the mainstream. I could be wrong because Kurt played to the camera so he usually told people what they wanted to hear, but I think he wanted to be famous for being different.
The janitor is a reference to kurt himself. After dropping out from highschool he got a job as a janitor at that same highschool
But it's also referencing so many other things.
Ilove this song thank you for this react
Listen to it backwards. He says things like "I'm scared of Satan you see. His house is where you'll find him." And "why do you hate me so much?! What do you want from me?!" And the " hello hello hello part backwards says. " Oh God why. Hi how are you. Hi how are you." Almost all of the songs on this album were rewritten by Kurt last minute to incorporate backwards lyrics. The first clue this was intentional was when Kurt screamed "Robert Taylor!" At the end of his first mtv show. Robert Taylor was the drummer of queens. One of the first bands to shine light on backwards lyrics. Their song "another one bites the dust " reversed says "Smoke marijuana." For those who didn't know. Chillax. Kurt backwards songs are good too. This one and something in the way are particularly nice sounding reversed.
And for proof He re wrote the songs check the mixtape he sent in to the record company.
He is really talking about stage fright
Would you suggest a prescription of Lithium?
Sad he went out like he did. He was so brilliant.
"vulnerability is what creates connection"
Miss, you just explained the entire point of Neon Genesis Evangelion in 5 words. Oh my goodness.
When i was growing up listening to this song i thought was saying "cut his eye out" you cant unhear it now 😂
A therapist analyzing Nirvana.. I expect to hear full bullshit but damn I am surprised.. That was really good !!
Keep it up
Please analyze Tool - Sober for me..
How the apathy was contextualized in this time in the reality of deeply Christian nationalist 80s and it’s complete disconnect with the “happy” glam and retrowave aesthetic that had been co-opted to reinforce misogyny, racism, homophobia and offer only the reprieve of excess consumption as panacea is the thing I feel is missing from this otherwise excellent analysis. The inverted pep rally was an artistic reflection of how the band and many contemporaries felt about the culture of the day (this was wildly subversive art at the time.) Within just that year the same social forces would co-opt this aesthetic to be the new “cool” & apathetic “vibe”. So we went from be happy, shroud hate in bright colors, don’t care, to be angry, don’t care, wear your ugliness on your sleeve. The net effect missing the entire point of this new absurdist influenced movement. They were so ahead of everyone on this the NEXT song on this album literally predicted this behavior about the audience missing the message entirely.
It's neat that you can come up with all this. But I can guarantee no l one in nirvana thought about even 10% of what you talked about.
How can you guarantee that?
So you’d really like to think of Nirvana as a brainless entity with no meaningful and/or emotional lyrical input? They just luckily put together music and lyrics by simply banging a drum, strumming a guitar, plucking a base, and putting some words together that rhyme. So, you can guarantee that Nirvana had no idea, ooops 10% of an idea, to put meaning to the lyrical portion of their songs? Imagine the audacity of a licensed clinical therapist breaking down some song lyrics based on an unbiased perspective. That’s crazy man, let’s listen to the critique of someone that did 3 ludes and a bottle of JD before they jumped in the mosh pit.
Please next Analyzes "Lithium" :O
Enter the sandman next!