Kurt Donald Cobain (pronounced ; February 20,
1967 –
c. April 5, 1994) was an American
songwriter and
musician, best known as the
lead singer and
guitarist of the
rock
band
Nirvana.
With the lead single "
Smells
Like Teen Spirit" from Nirvana's second album
Nevermind (1991), Nirvana entered into the
mainstream, popularizing a subgenre of
alternative rock called
grunge. Other Seattle grunge bands such as
Alice in Chains,
Pearl
Jam, and
Soundgarden also gained
wider audiences, and as a result, alternative rock became a
dominant genre on radio and music television in the United States
during the early-to-middle 1990s. Nirvana became considered as the
"flagship band" of "
Generation X", and
Cobain, as its frontman, found himself anointed by the media as the
generation's "spokesman." Cobain was uncomfortable with the
attention and placed his focus on the band's music, believing the
band's message and artistic vision to have been misinterpreted by
the public, challenging the band's audience with its third studio
album
In Utero (1993).
During the last years of his life, Cobain struggled with
drug addiction, illness and depression, his
fame and public image, as well as the professional and lifelong
personal pressures surrounding himself and his wife, musician
Courtney Love.
On April 8, 1994,
Cobain was found dead at his home in Seattle
, the victim
of what was officially ruled a suicide by a self-inflicted shotgun
wound to the head. The circumstances of
his death have become a topic of
fascination and debate. Since their debut, Nirvana, with Cobain as
a songwriter, sold over twenty-five million albums in the US alone,
and over fifty million worldwide.
Biography
Early life
Kurt
Donald Cobain was born on February 20, 1967, in Aberdeen
, Washington
. He lived his first six days in the city of
Hoquiam
, Washington, before the family moved back to
Aberdeen. His father, Donald Leland Cobain, was of
Irish and
French descent, and his mother, Wendy
Elizabeth Fradenburg, was of Irish,
German and
English ancestry.
After researching his
heritage, Cobain would discover his surname originated from the
Coburn clan, who migrated to North America from County Cork
, Ireland. Cobain had one younger sister
named Kimberly, born on April 24, 1970.
He was born into a musical family. His mother Wendy's older brother
Chuck was in a band called The Beachcombers, his Aunt Mari played
guitar and performed in bands throughout Aberdeen, and his
great-uncle Delbert had a career as an Irish tenor; making an
appearance in the 1930 film
King of
Jazz.
His talent as an artist was evident from an early age. His bedroom
was described as having taken on the appearance of an art studio
where he would draw his favorite characters from films and cartoons
such as
Aquaman, the
Creature from the Black
Lagoon, and
Disney characters like
Donald Duck,
Mickey Mouse and
Pluto.
He began developing an interest in music early in his life.
According to his Aunt Mary, he began singing at the age of two. At
four, Cobain began singing and playing the piano, writing a song
about their trip to the park. He would listen to artists like the
Ramones and sing songs like
Arlo Guthrie's "Motorcyle Song,"
The Beatles' "
Hey
Jude,"
Terry Jacks' "
Seasons in the Sun" and the theme song to
The Monkees television show.

A photograph of Cobain from his second
grade school yearbook; the picture was handed out at his memorial
service.
Cobain's parents divorced when he was eight years old, an event
which he later said had a profound effect on his life. His mother
noted that his personality changed dramatically - Cobain became
more withdrawn. In a 1993 interview, Cobain elaborated:
"I remember feeling ashamed, for some
reason.
I was ashamed of my parents.
I couldn't face some of my friends at school anymore,
because I desperately wanted to have the classic, you know, typical
family.
Mother, father.
I wanted that security, so I resented my parents for
quite a few years because of that."
After one
year of living with his mother following the divorce, Cobain moved
to Montesano
, Washington to live with his father. After
several years, however, his youthful rebellion became too
overwhelming for his father and he was shuffled between friends and
family.
Teenage years
While living with the born-again
Christian family of his friend Jesse Reed,
Cobain converted to Christianity, regularly reading the
Bible and attending church services. Cobain later
renounced Christianity, engaging in what would be described as
"anti-God" rants. The song "
Lithium" is about Cobain's experience
with the Reeds.
Religion would still play an important part in Cobain's personal
life and beliefs, as he often used Christian imagery in his work
and maintained a constant interest in
Jainism and
Buddhist
philosophy. The band name
Nirvana was
taken from the
Buddhist concept, which
Cobain described as "freedom from pain, suffering and the external
world," which paralleled with
punk rock
ethic and
ideology. Cobain would
regard himself as both a Buddhist and a Jain during different
points of his life, including through watching late night
television documentaries of both subjects.
At school, Cobain took little interest in sports. At his father's
insistence, he joined the junior high school
wrestling team. Though skilled, he despised the
experience because of the abuse he received from his teammates and
coach. He allowed himself to be pinned in order to spite his
father, to his father's disgust and
disownment. His father later enlisted him for a
local baseball league, where Cobain would intentionally strike out
to avoid having to play.
Cobain focused on his art courses instead. He often drew during
classes, including objects associated with
human anatomy. When given a caricature
assignment, Cobain drew a posing
Michael
Jackson. When told this would be inappropriate to be displayed
within the school, Cobain drew an unflattering sketch of then
President
Ronald Reagan.
Cobain was friends with a
homosexual
student at his high school, sometimes suffering bullying from
homophobic students who concluded that
Cobain was gay. In a 1993 interview with
The Advocate, Cobain claimed that he was
"gay in spirit" and "probably could be
bisexual." He also stated that he used to spray
paint "God Is Gay" on pickup trucks around Aberdeen. However,
Aberdeen police records show that the phrase for which he was
arrested was actually "Ain't got no how watchamacallit." One of his
personal journals states, "I am not gay, although I wish I were,
just to piss off homophobes."
As
attributed to numerous of Cobain's classmates and family members,
the first concert he attended was Sammy
Hagar and Quarterflash at the
Seattle Center
Coliseum
in 1983. Cobain, however, claimed his first
attended concert to be the
Melvins - an
experience of which he wrote prolifically in his
Journals.
As a teenager living in Montesano, Cobain eventually found escape
through the thriving
Pacific
Northwest punk scene, going to punk rock shows in Seattle.
Eventually, Cobain began frequenting the practice space of fellow
Montesano musicians the Melvins.
In the middle of 10th grade, Cobain moved back in with his mother
in Aberdeen. Two weeks before graduation, he dropped out of high
school after realizing that he did not have enough credits to
graduate. His mother gave him a choice: get a job or leave. After a
week or so, Cobain found his clothes and other belongings packed
away in boxes.
Forced out of his mother's home, Cobain often stayed at friends'
houses and sneaked into his mother's basement occasionally.
Cobain
later claimed that when he could not find anywhere else to stay, he
lived under a bridge over the Wishkah River
, an experience that inspired the Nevermind
track "Something in the
Way". However, Nirvana bassist
Krist Novoselic said, "He hung out there,
but you couldn't live on those muddy banks, with the tides coming
up and down. That was his own revisionism."
In late 1986, for the first time, Cobain found his own residence
and paid his rent by working at a
Polynesian coastal resort 20 miles from
Aberdeen.
At the same time, he was traveling more
frequently to Olympia
, Washington to check out rock shows. During
his visits to Olympia, Cobain started a relationship with Tracy
Marander, who reportedly was the
subject of the song
"
About a Girl", and is
listed in the photo credits on the album
Bleach.
After breaking up with Marander, Cobain began a relationship with
Tobi Vail, an influential
DIY punk zinester of the
riot grrrl band
Bikini Kill. After meeting Vail, Cobain vomited
due to being so overwhelmed with anxiety through his infatuation
with her. This would inspire the lyric; "Love you so much it makes
me sick," which would appear in the song "
Aneurysm". While Cobain would regard Vail as
his female counterpart, his relationship with her waned: Cobain
wished for the maternal comfort of a traditional relationship which
Vail regarded as sexist within a
countercultural punk rock community.
Partners to Vail would be described by friend
Alice Wheeler as "fashion accessories." They
would spend most of their time as a couple discussing political and
philosophical issues. Cobain's experience of his relationship with
Vail would inspire the lyrical content of numerous of the songs on
Nevermind. When discussing topics such as
anarchism and punk rock with friend
Kathleen Hanna, she once spraypainted "Kurt
Smells Like Teen Spirit" on his wall.
Teen Spirit being the name of a
deodorant Vail would wear, that Hanna joked Cobain smelled like.
Cobain however was unaware of this, and would interpret the slogan
as having a revolutionary meaning, inspiring the title to the song
"Smells Like Teen Spirit".
Nirvana
For his 14th birthday, Cobain's uncle gave him the option of a
guitar or a bicycle as a gift - Cobain chose the guitar. He started
by learning a few covers, including "
Louie
Louie" and
The Cars' "
My Best Friend's Girl", and
soon began working on his own songs. During high school, Cobain
rarely found anyone with whom he could play music. While hanging
out at the Melvins' practice space, he met
Krist Novoselic, a fellow devotee of punk
rock. Novoselic's mother owned a hair salon and Cobain and
Novoselic would occasionally practice in the upstairs room. A few
years later, Cobain tried to convince Novoselic to form a band with
him by lending him a copy of a
home demo recorded by Cobain's
earlier band,
Fecal Matter.
After months of asking, Novoselic finally agreed to join Cobain,
forming the beginnings of Nirvana.
Early touring saw Cobain disenchanted, due to the band being unable
to draw substantial crowds and difficulty in sustaining themselves.
During their first few years playing together, Novoselic and Cobain
were hosts to a rotating list of drummers. Eventually, the band
settled on
Chad Channing, with whom
Nirvana recorded the album
Bleach, released on
Sub Pop Records in 1989. Cobain, however, became
dissatisfied with Channing's style, leading the band to seek out a
replacement and eventually settling on
Dave
Grohl. With Grohl, the band found their greatest success via
their 1991 major-label debut,
Nevermind.
Cobain struggled to reconcile the massive success of Nirvana with
his
underground roots. He also felt
persecuted by the
media, comparing
himself to
Frances Farmer. Then he
harbored resentment for people who claimed to be fans of the band
but who did not acknowledge or misinterpreted the band's social and
political views. A vocal opponent of sexism, racism and homophobia,
he was publicly proud that Nirvana had played at a
gay rights benefit supporting No-on-Nine in
Oregon in 1992.
Cobain was a vocal supporter of the
pro-choice movement, and had been involved in
Rock for Choice from the campaign
inception by
L7. He received
death threats from a small number of
anti-abortion activists for doing so, with
one activist threatening that Cobain would be shot as soon as he
stepped on stage. The liner notes from
Incesticide declared "if any of you in any
way hate homosexuals, people of different color, or women, please
do this one favor for us-leave us the fuck alone! Don't come to our
shows and don't buy our records". An article from his posthumously
released
Journals
declares that social liberation could be made possible only through
the eradication of sexism.
Marriage and birth of Frances Bean Cobain
Courtney Love first saw Cobain perform in 1989
at a show in Portland
, Oregon
; they talked
briefly after the show and Love developed a crush on him.
Cobain was already aware of Love through her role in the 1987 film
Straight to Hell.
According to journalist
Everett True,
the pair were formally introduced at an
L7
and
Butthole Surfers concert in Los
Angeles in May 1991. In the weeks that followed, after learning
from Dave Grohl that she and Cobain shared mutual interests, Love
began pursuing Cobain. In the fall of 1991 the two were often
together and bonded through drug use.
Marriage
Around the time of Nirvana's 1992 performance on
Saturday Night Live, Love
discovered that she was pregnant with Cobain's child.
A few days after the
conclusion of Nirvana's Pacific Rim
tour, on Monday, February 24, 1992, Cobain and Love married on
Waikiki
Beach
in Hawaii. Weeks later, Cobain noted "In the
last couple months I've gotten engaged and my attitude has changed
drastically," in an interview with
Sassy magazine. "I can't believe how
much happier I am. At times I even forget that I'm in a band, I'm
so blinded by love. I know that sounds embarrassing, but it's true.
I could give up the band right now. It doesn't matter, but I'm
under contract."
Frances Bean Cobain and custody battle
On August 18, the couple's daughter
Frances Bean Cobain was born.
In a 1992 article in
Vanity
Fair, Love admitted to using
heroin
while unknowingly pregnant. Love claimed that
Vanity Fair
had misquoted her, but the event created controversy for the
couple. While Cobain and Love's romance had always been a media
attraction, they found themselves hounded by
tabloid reporters after the article was published,
many wanting to know if Frances was addicted to drugs at birth. The
Los Angeles County Department of Children's Services took the
Cobains to court, claiming that the couple's drug usage made them
unfit parents. Two-week-old Frances Bean Cobain was ordered by the
judge to be taken from their custody and placed with Courtney's
sister Jamie for several weeks, after which the couple obtained
custody in an exchange agreement to submit to urine tests and
regular visits from a social worker. After months of legal
wrangling, the couple were eventually granted full custody of their
daughter.
Substance abuse and health
Throughout most of his life, Cobain suffered from chronic
bronchitis and intense physical pain due to an
undiagnosed chronic stomach condition. His first drug experience
was with
marijuana in 1980 at age
13, and he regularly used the drug during adulthood. Cobain also
had a period of consuming "notable" amounts of
LSD, as observed by Tracy Marander, and "really into
getting fucked up: drugs, acid, any kind of drug", observed Krist
Novoselic; Cobain was also prone to
alcoholism and
solvent
abuse.
Stomach condition
Cobain's stomach condition was especially emotionally debilitating
to him, and he spent years trying to find its cause. None of the
doctors he consulted were able to pinpoint the specific cause,
however, guessing that it was either a result of Cobain's possible
childhood
scoliosis or related to the
stresses of performing. He suffered from self consciousness and
poor body image due to his low body weight, through to the
malnourishment of his stomach condition, and due to poor diet as
attributed by numerous doctors.
Substance abuse
Cobain's
first experience with heroin occurred
sometime in 1986, administered to him by a local drug dealer in
Tacoma,
Washington
who had previously been supplying him with Percodan. He used heroin sporadically for
several years, but, by the end of 1990, his use developed into a
full-fledged
addiction. Cobain claimed
that he was "determined to get a habit" as a way to self-medicate
his stomach condition. "It started with three days in a row of
doing heroin and I don't have a stomach pain. That was such a
relief," he related.
His heroin use began to affect the band's
Nevermind
supporting tour, Cobain
passing out
during photo shoots. One memorable example came the day of the
band's 1992 performance on
Saturday Night Live, where
Nirvana had a shoot with photographer Michael Levine. Having
shot up beforehand, Cobain
nodded off several times during the shoot.
Cobain divulged to biographer
Michael
Azerrad, "I mean, what are they supposed to do? They're not
going to be able to tell me to stop. So I really didn't care.
Obviously to them it was like practicing
witchcraft or something. They didn't know
anything about it so they thought that any second, I was going to
die."
Rehabilitation
As the years progressed, Cobain's heroin addiction worsened. His
first attempt at
rehab was made
in early 1992, not long after he and Love discovered they were
going to become parents. Immediately after leaving rehab, Nirvana
embarked on their Australian tour, with Cobain appearing pale and
gaunt while suffering through
withdrawals. Not long after returning home,
Cobain's heroin use resumed.
Overdose and revival
Prior to
a performance at the New Music Seminar in New York City
in July 1993, Cobain suffered a heroin overdose. Rather than calling for an
ambulance, Love injected Cobain with illegally acquired
Narcan to bring him out of his unconscious state.
Cobain proceeded to perform with Nirvana, giving the public no
indication that anything out of the ordinary had taken place.
Death
Following
a tour stop at Terminal Eins
in Munich
, Germany, on
March 1, 1994, Cobain was diagnosed with bronchitis and severe laryngitis. He flew to Rome the next day
for medical treatment, and was joined there by his wife on March 3.
The next morning, Love awoke to find that Cobain had overdosed on a
combination of
champagne and
Rohypnol (Love had a prescription for
Rohypnol filled after arriving in Rome). Cobain was immediately
rushed to the hospital, and spent the rest of the day unconscious.
After five days in the hospital, Cobain was released and returned
to Seattle. Love later stated that the incident was Cobain's first
suicide attempt.
On March 18, Love phoned police to inform them that Cobain was
suicidal and had locked himself in a room with a gun. Police
arrived and confiscated several guns and a bottle of pills from
Cobain, who insisted that he was not suicidal and had locked
himself in the room to hide from Love. When questioned by police,
Love said that Cobain had never mentioned that he was suicidal and
that she had not seen him with a gun.
Love arranged an
intervention concerning Cobain's
drug use that took place on March 25. The ten people involved
included musician friends, record company executives, and one of
Cobain's closest friends,
Dylan
Carlson. The intervention would result in Cobain engaging in
scathing insults toward its participants and locking himself in the
upstairs bedroom. However, by the end of the day, Cobain had agreed
to undergo a
detox program.
Cobain
arrived at the Exodus Recovery Center in Los Angeles, California
on March 30. The staff at the facility were
unaware of Cobain's history of depression and prior attempts at
suicide. When visited by friends, there was no indication to them
that Cobain was in any negative or suicidal state of mind. He spent
the day talking to counselors about his drug abuse and personal
problems, and happily played with his visiting daughter Frances,
the last she would ever see of her father. The following night,
Cobain walked outside to have a cigarette, then climbed over a
six-foot-high fence to leave the facility (of which he joked of
earlier in the day to be a stupid feat to attempt).
He took a taxi to
Los Angeles
Airport
and flew back to Seattle, on a flight where he sat
next to Duff McKagan of Guns N' Roses. Even after the prior
animosity from Nirvana to Guns N' Roses, and Cobain's own personal
animosity to
Axl Rose, Cobain "seemed
happy" to see McKagan. McKagan would later say that he knew from
"all of my instincts that something was wrong." Over the course of
April 2 and April 3, Cobain was spotted in various locations around
Seattle, but most of his friends and family were unaware of his
whereabouts. He was not seen on April 4. On April 3, Love contacted
a private investigator,
Tom Grant, and hired him to
find Cobain. On April 7, amid rumors Nirvana was going to break up,
the band pulled out of that year's
Lollapalooza music festival.

Cobain's suicide note.
On April
8, 1994, Cobain's body was discovered at his Lake
Washington
home by an electrician who had arrived to install a
security system. Apart from a minor amount of blood coming
out of Cobain's ear, the electrician reported seeing no visible
signs of
trauma, and initially
believed that Cobain was asleep until he saw the shotgun pointing
at his chin. A
suicide note was found
that said, in part, "I haven't felt the excitement of listening to
as well as creating music, along with really writing . . . for too
many years now". A high concentration of heroin and traces of
Valium were also found in his body. Cobain's body had been lying
there for days; the coroner's report estimated Cobain to have died
on April 5, 1994.
A public
vigil was held for Cobain on April 10 at a park at Seattle
Center
which drew approximately seven thousand
mourners. Prerecorded messages by Krist Novoselic and
Courtney Love were played at the memorial. Love read portions of
Cobain's suicide note to the crowd and broke down, crying and
chastising Cobain. Near the end of the vigil, Love arrived at the
park and distributed some of Cobain's clothing to those who still
remained. Dave Grohl would say that the news of Cobain's death was
"probably the worst thing that has happened to me in my life. I
remember the day after that I woke up and I was heartbroken that he
was gone. I just felt like, 'Okay, so I get to wake up today and
have another day and he doesn't.'" While also believing that he
knew that Cobain would die at an early age, saying that "sometimes
you just can't save someone from themselves", and "in some ways,
you kind of prepare yourself emotionally for that to be a
reality."
Musical influences
In his
Journals Cobain listed
Raw
Power by
The Stooges as his
favourite album of all time. Cobain also noted the influence of the
Pixies, and commented that "
Smells Like Teen Spirit" bore some
similarities to their sound. In a 1994 interview with
Rolling Stone he explained: "I was trying
to write the ultimate pop song. I was basically trying to rip off
the Pixies. I have to admit it. When I heard the Pixies for the
first time, I connected with that band so heavily that I should
have been in that band— or at least a Pixies cover band. We used
their sense of dynamics, being soft and quiet and then loud and
hard." Cobain told
Melody
Maker in 1992 that hearing
Surfer Rosa for the first time convinced
him to abandon his more Black Flag-influenced songwriting in favor
of the "
Iggy Pop /
Aerosmith" type songwriting that appeared on
Nevermind.
When given the opportunity to meet Pixies lead singer and guitarist
Black Francis by Pixies manager Ken
Goes, Cobain refused, being too subdued with nervosity and
admiration of Francis to do so. Goes described Cobain as not "so
much of a fan; He was a
student of the band. He obviously
had a massive amount of respect for what they were doing. He went
on and on about it".
Neil Young's profound influence on Cobain
and other grunge musicians has caused him to be labeled as
"
the Godfather
of Grunge". Cobain quoted Young's song "
Hey Hey, My My" in his
suicide note, stating "It's better to burn out than to fade away".
Young had reportedly made repeated attempts to contact Cobain prior
to his death. The emotional impact of his death would influence
Young to dedicate his 1994 album
Sleeps with Angels to Cobain.
The Beatles were an early and important
musical influence on Cobain. Cobain expressed a particular fondness
for
John Lennon, whom he called his
"idol" in
his journals. Cobain
once related that he wrote "
About a Girl" after spending
three hours listening to
Meet The
Beatles!. He was heavily influenced by
punk rock and
hardcore
punk, and often credited bands such as Black Flag,
Big Black and the
Sex
Pistols for his artistic style and attitude. Cobain claimed
that
Sandinista! by
The Clash was the first album he ever owned of the
punk genre.
Cobain was a devoted champion of early
alternative rock acts such as
R.E.M. and
Sonic Youth.
His interest in the underground started when
Buzz Osborne of the Melvins let him borrow a
tape with songs by punk bands such as
Black Flag,
Flipper, and
Millions of Dead Cops. He would often
make reference to his favorite bands in interviews, often placing a
greater importance on the eclectic range of bands and peformers
that influenced him than on his own music. The interviews and
writings of Cobain were often littered with references to obscure
performers like
The Vaselines,
Teenage Fanclub,
Daniel Johnston,
Young Marble Giants,
The Wipers,
Butthole
Surfers,
Captain Beefheart,
The Pastels,
Saccharine Trust,
Fang,
The Shaggs,
Frightwig (whose t-shirt he wore during
his
MTV Unplugged
performance),
Half Japanese (whose
t-shirt he was wearing when found dead),
Tales of Terror, the
Marine Girls,
Swans,
The
Frogs,
Big Black,
Scratch Acid and
Billy Childish. Where Sonic Youth had served
to help Cobain and Nirvana gain wider success, Nirvana attempted to
help other
indie acts attain success.
The band submitted the song "Oh, the Guilt" to a split single with
Chicago's
The Jesus Lizard, helping
Nirvana's indie credibility while opening The Jesus Lizard to a
wider audience.
While
touring the United Kingdom, Cobain went into the Rough Trade Shop on Portobello
Road
, London in search of a new copy of The Raincoats by the band
of the same name. Jude Crighton
sent him round the corner to see
Ana da
Silva, a member of the band, at her cousin's antique shop.
Cobain wrote passionately about this meeting in the liner notes of
Incesticide. In late 1993 Rough Trade and DGC Records
released the three albums by the band with liner notes by Cobain
and
Kim Gordon.
Even with Cobain's loyalism of promoting indie and underground
artists while criticizing mainstream music, Nirvana's early style
was influenced by many of the major rock bands of the '70s,
including
Led Zeppelin,
AC/DC,
Black Sabbath,
Queen, and
Kiss. In its early days, Nirvana made a habit of
regularly playing cover songs by those bands, including Led
Zeppelin's "
Immigrant Song",
"
Dazed and Confused",
"
Heartbreaker",
Black Sabbath's "
Hand of Doom" and made a studio
recording of
Kiss' "Do You Love Me?".
Cobain also talked about the influence of bands like
The Knack,
Boston,
and
The Bay City Rollers. As well
as
new wave bands such as
Blondie and
Devo, recording a
cover Devo's "Turnaround" and a faster tempoed version of "Polly"
labelled "(New Wave) Polly", during their BBC sessions with
John Peel, both of which would appear on
Incesticide. And
post-punk bands
such as
Killing Joke and
Public Image Ltd. In his
Journals,
Cobain noted the similarity of the main riff of "
Come As You Are" from
Nevermind, to
that of Killing Joke's song "Eighties". The band themselves would
notice the similarity, and would controversially sue Cobain for
plagiarizing the riff, even though Cobain and Nirvana would deny
doing so at the time. The lawsuit was dropped after the death of
Cobain. Dave Grohl would later play drums for the band on their
self-titled album in 2003.
His musical tastes were not limited simply to
Western acts as Cobain expressed his
admiration for Japanese rock bands such as
Shonen Knife.
Nirvana's
MTV Unplugged concert ended with a version of
"
Where Did You Sleep Last
Night", a song popularized by
blues artist
Lead Belly, whom Cobain called his
favorite performer. Cobain was offered a chance to buy his guitar
from the Lead Belly estate for $500,000, although this figure may
have been exaggerated, and personally asked
David Geffen to buy the guitar for him. Critic
Greil Marcus suggested that Cobain's
"
Polly" was a descendant of "
Pretty Polly", a murder ballad that
might have been a century old when
Dock
Boggs recorded it in 1927.
Cobain also made efforts to include his favorite performers in his
musical endeavors. At the 1991
Reading Festival,
Eugene Kelly of the Vaselines joined Nirvana
onstage for a duet of "Molly's Lips", which Cobain would later
proclaim to be one of the greatest moments of his life.
In 1993,
when he decided that he wanted a second guitarist to help him on
stage, he recruited Pat Smear of the
legendary L.A.
punk band The
Germs. When rehearsals of three Meat Puppets covers for
Nirvana's 1993 performance for
MTV Unplugged went awry,
Cobain placed a call to the two lead members of the band,
Curt and
Cris
Kirkwood, who ended up joining the band on stage to perform the
songs. Cobain contributed guest vocals to his friend Dylan
Carlson's
drone metal band
Earth, on a song entitled "Divine and Bright",
which would appear on the band's 1995 album,
Sunn Amps and Smashed
Guitars, re-released in 2001.
Shortly before his death, Cobain was planning to begin a writing
and recording collaboration with his friend, R.E.M. frontman
Michael Stipe. Stipe has stated that
Cobain quit the project at the very last minute, with a chauffeur,
plane ticket, studio and recording equipment arranged for him.
Stipe has stated belief that Cobain's future work would have been
"very quiet and acoustic, with lots of stringed instruments. It was
going to be an amazing fucking record, and I’m a little bit angry
at him for killing himself." R.E.M. would write and record the song
"Let Me In" in tribute to Cobain, which would appear on the band's
1994 album,
Monster.
Stipe was later chosen as the godfather of Cobain's daughter
Frances Bean.
Lyricial and artistic content
Dave Grohl would say Cobain believed that "Music comes first,
lyrics come second", and that above all Cobain focused on the
melodies of his songs. Cobain would complain when fans and rock
journalists attempted to decipher his singing and extract meaning
from his lyrics, writing "Why in the hell do journalists insist on
coming up with a second-rate
Freudian
evaluation of my lyrics, when 90 percent of the time they've
transcribed them incorrectly?" While Cobain would insist of the
subjectivity and unimportance of his lyrics, he was known to labour
and procrastinate in writing them. Cobain would describe his lyrics
himself as "a big pile of contradictions. They're split down the
middle between very sincere opinions that I have and sarcastic
opinions and feelings that I have and sarcastic and hopeful,
humorous rebuttals toward
cliché
bohemian ideals that have been exhausted
for years."
Cobain has originally wanted for
Nevermind to be divided
into two sides. A "Boy"-side, for the songs written about his the
experiences of his early life and childhood, and a "Girl"-side, for
the songs written about his dysfunctional relationship with Tobi
Vail. Charles R. Cross would write "In the four months following
their break-up, Kurt would write a half dozen of his most memorable
songs, all of them about Tobi Vail". Though "Lithium" had been
written before Cobain knew Vail, the lyrics of the song were
changed to reference her. Cobain would say in an interview with
Musician that "some of
my very personal experiences, like breaking up with girlfriends and
having bad relationships, feeling that death void that the person
in the song is feeling–very lonely, sick." While Cobain would
regard
In Utero "for the most part very impersonal", he
would on the album deal with the childhood divorce of his parents,
his newfound name and the public image and perception of himself
and Courtney Love on "Serve the Servants", his enamoured
relationship with Love, conveyed through lyrical themes of
pregnancy and the female anatomy on "
Heart-Shaped Box". Rape, both objectively
and representative of his treatment by the media on "
Rape Me", drug addiction and abortion on "
Pennyroyal Tea" and women's rights and the
life of Frances Farmer on "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on
Seattle".
Cobain was effected enough to write the song "
Polly" from
Nevermind, after reading a
newspaper story of an incident in 1987, where a young girl was
kidnapped after attending a punk rock show, then raped and tortured
with a
blowtorch. Only managing to escape
after gaining the trust of her captor through flirting with him.
After seeing Nirvana perform,
Bob Dylan
would cite "Polly" as the best of Nirvana's songs, and was quoted
as saying about Cobain that, "the kid has heart".
Patrick Süskind, whose novel
Perfume: The Story of a
Murderer inspired Cobain to write the song "Scentless
Apprentice" from
In Utero. A
historical horror novel about a
perfumer's apprentice born with no body odor of his
own but with a highly developed sense of smell, and who attempts to
create the "ultimate perfume" by killing virgin women and taking
their scent.
Cobain immersed himself in artistic projects throughout his life,
just as much as he did in songwriting. The sentiments of his work
followed the same subjects of his lyrics, often expressed through
his own dark and macabre sense of humour. Often unable to afford
artistic resources, Cobain would improvise with materials, painting
on board games and album sleeves, and painting with an array of
substances, including his own bodily fluids. The artwork seen in
his
Journals would later draw acclaim as being of a high
artistic standard. Numerous of Cobain's paintings, collages and
sculptures would appear in the artwork of many of Nirvana's albums;
as well as his artistic concepts which would feature notably in
their music videos, the production and direction of which were
acrimonious due to Cobain's artistic perfectionism of his
visions.
Cobain would contribute backing guitar for a
spoken word recording of beat poet
William S. Burroughs' entitled "
the "Priest" they called him". Cobain regarded
Burroughs as a hero, and among his few possessions during Nirvana's
European tour was a copy of Burroughs'
Naked Lunch, purchased in a London
bookstall.
Ana Finel-Honigman, in her introduction to
an interview with artist Stella Vine on
the Saatchi
Gallery
website, described Vine's art as bitterly honest in
the same way Cobain's songs were about "adult lies and injustice",
Holden Caulfield's observations
about "a world filled with phonies", and Sylvia Plath's poetry an "over-heated anger and
bitterness at the world's betrayals".
Legacy

The bench in Viretta Park has become a
notable memorial to Cobain.
In the years following his death, Cobain has been remembered as one
of the most iconic rock musicians in the history of alternative
music. He was ranked by
Rolling Stone as the 12th greatest
guitarist and 45th greatest singer of all time, and by MTV as 7th
in the "22 Greatest Voices in Music".
In 2005, a sign was
put up in Aberdeen,
Washington
that read "Welcome to Aberdeen — Come As You
Are" as a tribute to Cobain. The sign was paid for and
created by the Kurt Cobain Memorial Committee, a
non-profit organization created in
May 2004 to honor Cobain. The Committee also planned to create a
Kurt Cobain Memorial Park and a youth center in Aberdeen.
As Cobain
has no gravesite (he was cremated, with
his ashes scattered into the Wishkah River
in Washington
), many Nirvana fans visit Viretta Park
, near Cobain's former Lake Washington
home, to pay tribute. On the anniversary of
his death, fans gather in the park to celebrate his life and
memory.
Controversy erupted in July 2009 when a
monument to Cobain in Aberdeen along the Wishkah River
included the quote "Drugs Are Bad For You
... They Will Fuck You Up." The city ultimately decided to
sandblast the monument to say "F---", but fans immediately drew the
letters back in. The monument and bridge have become popular places
for fans to leave tributes.
Gus Van Sant based his 2005 movie
Last Days on what might
have happened in the final hours of Cobain's life. In January 2007,
Courtney Love began to shop the biography
Heavier Than
Heaven to various movie studios in Hollywood to turn the book
into an
A-list feature film about Cobain and
Nirvana. The video game
Guitar Hero
5 features Cobain as a playable character. However, the
inclusion of Cobain has met with controversy, with surviving
bandmates Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl and wife Courtney Love
expressing dismay at the ability to use Cobain with any song.
Books and films on Cobain
Prior to Cobain's death, writer Michael Azerrad published
Come as You
Are: The Story of Nirvana, a book that chronicled
Nirvana's career from its beginning, as well as the personal
histories of the band members. The book explored Cobain's drug
addiction, as well as the countless controversies surrounding the
band. After Cobain's death, Azerrad re-published the book to
include a final chapter discussing the last year of Cobain's life.
The book is notable for its involvement of the band members
themselves, who gave interviews and personal information to Azerrad
specifically for the book. In 2006, Azerrad's taped conversations
with Cobain were transformed into a documentary about Cobain,
titled
Kurt Cobain About a
Son. Though this film does not feature any music by
Nirvana, it has songs by the artists that inspired Cobain.
In the 1998 documentary
Kurt
& Courtney, filmmaker
Nick
Broomfield investigated Tom Grant's claim that Cobain was
actually murdered, and took a film crew to visit a number of people
associated with Cobain and Love, including Love's father, Cobain's
aunt, and one of the couple's former nannies. Broomfield also spoke
to
Mentors bandleader
Eldon "El Duce" Hoke, who claimed that Love had
offered him $50,000 to kill Cobain. Although Hoke claimed that he
knew who killed Cobain, he failed to mention a name, and offered no
evidence to support his assertion. Broomfield inadvertently
captured Hoke's last interview, as he died days later, reportedly
hit by a train while drunk. In the end, however, Broomfield felt he
hadn't uncovered enough evidence to conclude the existence of a
conspiracy. In a 1998 interview, Broomfield summed it up by saying,
"I think that he committed suicide.
I don't think that there's a smoking gun.
And I think there's only one way you can explain a lot
of things around his death.
Not that he was murdered, but that there was just a
lack of caring for him.
I just think that Courtney had moved on, and he was
expendable."
Journalists
Ian Halperin and
Max Wallace took a similar path and attempted to
investigate the conspiracy for themselves. Their initial work, the
1999 book
Who Killed Kurt Cobain? argued that, while there
wasn't enough evidence to prove a conspiracy, there was more than
enough to demand that the case be reopened. A notable element of
the book included their discussions with Grant, who had taped
nearly every conversation that he had undertaken while he was in
Love's employ. Over the next several years, Halperin and Wallace
collaborated with Grant to write a second book, 2004's
Love and Death: The
Murder of Kurt Cobain.
In 2001, writer
Charles R. Cross published a
biography of Cobain titled
Heavier Than Heaven. For the book,
Cross conducted over 400 interviews, and was given access by
Courtney Love to Cobain's journals, lyrics, and diaries. Cross'
biography was met with criticism and controversy, including
allegations of Cross accepting secondhand (and incorrect)
information as fact. Friend
Everett
True, who derided the book as being inaccurate, omissive, and
highly biased; he said
Heavier than Heaven was "the
Courtney-sanctioned version of history" or, alternatively, Cross's
“Oh, I think I need to find the new
Bruce Springsteen now” Kurt Cobain book.
However, beyond the criticism, the book contained many details
about Cobain and Nirvana's career that had otherwise gone unnoted.
In 2002, a sampling of Cobain's writings was published as
Journals. The book is 280
pages with a simple black cover; the pages are arranged somewhat
chronologically (although Cobain generally did not date them). The
journal pages are reproduced in color, and there is a section added
at the back that has explanations and transcripts of some of the
less legible pages. The writings begin in the late 1980s and were
continued until his death. A paperback version of the book,
released in 2003, included a handful of writings that were not
offered in the initial release. In the journals, Cobain talked
about the ups and downs of life on the road, made lists of what
music he was enjoying, and often scribbled down lyric ideas for
future reference. Upon its release, reviewers and fans were
conflicted about the collection. Many were elated to be able to
learn more about Cobain and read his inner thoughts in his own
words, but were disturbed by what was viewed as an
invasion of his privacy.
In 2003,
Omnibus Press released
Godspeed: The Kurt Cobain Graphic. It was written by Jim
McCarthy and Barnaby Legg with illustrations by Flameboy. It
depicts Cobain's life, but is not a factual
biography. Rather, it uses
artistic license to tell Cobain's story
from his own
point of
view.
In 2009,
ECW Press released a book titled
Grunge is Dead: The Oral History of Seattle Rock Music. It
was written by Greg Prato, and features large portions about
Nirvana and Kurt Cobain's life and death (including new interviews
with bandmates and friends), as well as exploring the history of
grunge in great detail. A picture of Cobain from the
Bleach era is used for the book's front cover, and its
title comes from a shirt that Cobain was once photographed
wearing.
See also
References
- Azerrad, Michael. Come as You Are: The Story of
Nirvana. Doubleday, 1994. ISBN 0-385-47199-8.
- Burlingame, Jeff. Kurt Cobain: Oh Well, Whatever,
Nevermind. Enslow, 2006. ISBN 0-7660-2426-1
- Cross, Charles. Heavier Than Heaven: A Biography of Kurt
Cobain. Hyperion, 2001. ISBN 0-7868-8402-9.
- Summers, Kim. " Kurt Cobain". Allmusic. Accessed on May 9, 2005.
- Kitts, Jeff, et al. Guitar World Presents Nirvana and the
Grunge Revolution. Hal Leonard, 1998. ISBN 0-79-35900-6X.
Notes
- Azerrad, Michael. " Inside the Heart and Mind of Nirvana."
Rolling
Stone. April 16, 1992.
- Armstrong, Mark. "Nirvana Tops 50 Million Mark In Worldwide Sales,
'Journals' Number One". Yahoo! Music. November 17, 2002.
Retrieved August 18, 2007.
- Selling Artists. RIAA.com. Retrieved September
22, 2008.
- Cross, p. 7
- Azerrad, p. 13
- http://www.nirvanafreak.net/art/art8a.shtml
- Cross, p.11
- Gaar, Gillian. "Verse Chorus Verse: The Recording History of
Nirvana". Goldmine Magazine. February 14,
1997.
- Cross, p. 9
- Azerrad, p. 17
- Savage, Jon. "Kurt Cobain: The Lost Interview."
Guitar
World. 1997.
- Cross, p. 196
- Cross, p. 69
- Azerrad, p. 22
- Azerrad, pp. 20–25
- Cross, p. 41
- Cross, p. 68
- Cross, p. 44
- Cross, p.45
- Azerrad, p. 35
- Azerrad, p. 37
- Cross, Charles R. "Requiem for a Dream." Guitar World.
October 2001.
- Azerrad, p. 43
- Azerrad, p. 46
- Cross, p.152
- Cross, p.153
- Azerrad, p. 45
- Cross, p. 253.
- Azerrad, p. 169
- True, Everett. . Plan B Magazine Blogs. March 1, 2006.
- Azerrad, p. 172. Courtney Love: "We bonded over
pharmaceuticals."
- Kelly, Christina. " ". Sassy Magazine. April
1992.
- Azerrad, p. 266
- Azerrad, p. 270
- Azerrad, p. 66
- Cross, p. 76
- Cross p.75
- Azerrad, p. 41
- Azerrad, p. 236.
- Azerrad, p. 241
- Cross, p. 296–297
- David Fricke, " Courtney Love: Life After Death", Rolling
Stone, December 15, 1994.
- Cross, p.331
- Azerrad, p. 346
- Azerrad, p. 350
- http://www.nme.com/news/nirvana/48303
- Fricke, David. "Kurt Cobain: The Rolling Stone Interview."
Rolling
Stone. January 27, 1994
- Cobain, Kurt. "Kurt Cobain of Nirvana Talks About the Records
That Changed His Life". Melody Maker. August 29, 1992.
- Cross, p.159
- Neil Young: the quiet achiever -
smh.com.au
- Cross, p. 121.
- Cross, p. 169
- "Kurt & Courtney: No Nirvana".
The Smoking
Gun.
- "Conspiracy of Two". Kerrang!. April 12, 2003
- Borzillo-Vrenna, Carrie. " Nirvana Pay Back Killing Joke".
Rolling
Stone. April 10, 2003. Retrieved on October 1, 2008.
- Cross, p. 195
- Gannon, Louise. "We did it our way... REM's rules of rock,"
Daily Mail, 19 August 2008.
- Classic Albums—Nirvana: Nevermind [DVD]. Isis
Productions, 2004.
- Cross 2001, pg. 182
- Cross 2001, pg. 177
- Sliver: The Best of the Box album booklet.
- Cross 2001, pg. 177
- Cross 2001, pg. 168–69
- Morris, Chris. "The Year's Hottest Band Can't Stand Still".
Musician, January 1992.
- Savage, Jon. "Sounds Dirty: The Truth About Nirvana". The
Observer. August 15, 1993.
- Cross, p.136
- Cross 2001, pg. 137
- Gaar, 2006. p. 42–43
- Cross, p. 301
- Cross, p.189-190
-
http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/blogon/2007/07/stella_vine_in_conversation_wi.php
-
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5937559/the_100_greatest_guitarists_of_all_time/11
-
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/24161972/page/45
-
http://www.listology.com/list/mtvs-22-greatest-voices-music
- Kurt Cobain (1967 - 1994) - Find A Grave
Memorial
- "Tim Walker: 'In Guitar Hero, a virtual Kurt Cobain
can appear on stage with Bon Jovi'". The Independent.
September 7, 2009.
- Miller, Prairie. " Kurt and Courtney: Interview with Nick Broomfield".
Minireviews.com. 1998.
- ;Halperin & Wallace, p. 202
- Nirvana: the True Story by Everett True
- Smells Like Everett True - Books - The Stranger,
Seattle's Only Newspaper
- MAGNET Interview: Everett True
- Hartwig, David. "Nirvana releases a hit and miss." Notre
Dame Observer. November 19, 2002.
External links