Friday 21 December 2012

2012


Listed below are the bands and singers featured for each month in 2012. The December 2012 blogs can be found due right, and include articles on Nirvana and U2.

The complete list for the year is shown below:
January 2012 - Status Quo
February 2012 - Bruce Springsteen / Cat Stevens
March 2012 - Madonna / U2
April 2012 - Pink / Inspiral Carpets
May 2012 - Depeche Mode / Slade
June 2012 - David Bowie / Smashing Pumpkins
July 2012 - Blur
August 2012 - Sugababes / The Who / Elton John
September 2012 - Elton John
October 2012 - Elton John / New Order
November 2012 - Madonna / Elton John
December 2012 - U2 / Nirvana

To look at blogs from January to November, click on the relevant month, then for the blog you wish to look at, click on the relevant link that will then appear.























































































"All in all is all we are"

Tuesday 4 December 2012

U2: 1991-1999

Earlier this year, I looked at U2’s earlier recordings, covering the late 70’s and the 80’s. As mentioned before, the period from 1980 to 2000 were covered a few years back by a pair of “Best Of” sets, and so this month, we look at the period more or less covered by the second one. A post 2000 look at U2 will follow in due course.

Overview

With the critical mauling of “Rattle And Hum” forcing a rethink in the U2 camp, it was Bono and The Edge who were most determined to reinvent the band as sessions for “Achtung Baby” got underway. Although the album was not a wholesale revamp of the band, it’s teutonic beats and dance infused rhythms resulted in a more futuristic sounding U2 come 1991.

“Achtung Baby” is a great record. Probably helped by the fact that it still sounds, most of the time, like old-school U2. But what elevates it above so many others, is that the songs are superb, the band’s love of pop music giving the likes of “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses” or “Ultravoilet” a structure to hang the electronic bells and whistles onto. The opening crunch of “Zoo Station”, the chugger-chugger sound of The Edge on “Until The End Of The World”, the slow burn finale of “Love Is Blindness”, this was the album where I really started to sit up and take notice of this band.

The band’s “Zoo TV” tour kicked off in February 1992, and it was a new look U2 that hit the stage. Having previously struggled to work out how to deal with the concept of the stadium rock show, the band simply got round the ludicrousness of it by sending it all up - be it Bono in his “MacPhisto” stage outfit, or the bank of TV screens that filled up the stage. The tour was a satirical attack on mass media, the 24 hour rolling news channels, and the weird and not always wonderful world of Satellite TV. There were screens displaying, at hyper fast speed, words and phrases that might - or might not - mean something, there were crank calls to, amongst other places, The Whitehouse, and during each show, Bono would flick a remote control at the TV screens to see “what was on”, with live satellite link ups being conducted on several occasions, including some to war torn Sarajevo during the 1993 leg of the tour.

After finishing the first leg of the tour in November 1992, the band had a six month break before the tour was due to resume in May 1993. However, rather than just have a rest, the band decided to record an EP, with a view to playing the material on stage in order to revamp the setlist. However, at Bono’s insistence, the EP became an LP, and as the weeks passed, more and more material was being written. At one point, somewhere in the region of twenty songs were in various stages of completion. Of course, the concept of writing, recording, and then releasing an album in such a short space of time proved too much, and as the next leg of the tour kicked off, the new album was still not complete, and initially, the band had to commute back and forth to Dublin inbetween shows to try and complete the album.

“Zooropa” was eventually released in the summer, and a large chunk of the album was worked into the band’s set. Critical appraisal was generally good, but the band later admitted it was a flawed effort, with The Edge claiming the songs were not classics, but “experimental”. It still feels like a sort of side project album, a cousin of “Achtung Baby” rather than an LP in it’s own right, which probably explains why it was included inside the boxset edition of “Baby” that was issued last year. That said, it did spawn one of the band’s finest ever singles, “Stay (Faraway, So Close!)”, a tug-at-the-heartstrings ballad that matched virtually anything on “Achtung Baby”.

A stand alone single followed in 1995, when the band’s monumental contribution to the “Batman Forever” soundtrack, “Hold Me Thrill Me Kiss Me Kill Me”, was issued as a 45. A glorious continuation of the electro-rock sound of “Achtung Baby”, it was home to one of the greatest ever key changes in the bridge between the verses and the choruses, and pretty much convinced me that I had totally underestimated this band. Although it came in a cartoon Batman-esque video, the song had not actually been written for the movie, but was actually an off cut from the “Zooropa” sessions.

Later that year, the band released what really was a proper side project album (unlike “Zooropa“) - “Original Soundtracks 1”, credited to the “Passengers”. A collaboration with Brian Eno (the first time an entire U2 album had a regular “fifth” member, hence the decision to not release it under the U2 banner), it was billed as a series of songs from imaginary movies. Larry Mullen Jr hates it, stating it was the sign of a band becoming too self indulgent. It’s a forgotten part of the band’s past, with only the sole single, the sublime “Miss Sarajevo”, having made it into the band’s live set in intervening years.

Work on “Pop” began in 1996, but was held up during the recording process thanks to a back injury obtained by Mullen Jr. The band did try to speed the process up by working on the album without him, helped in part by the fact that the record would be a continuation of the “electro” stylings of “Achtung Baby”, so you could stick a drum machine in here or there, but the drummer was not entirely happy about this, and eventually, sessions were halted in order to allow him time to recover.

In what seemed to be an attempt to hurry themselves along, the band announced tour dates for the spring of 1997, as this would give them a focus and deadline within which to complete the album. However, the plan slightly backfired, as the band later admitted to rushing the final stages of the album to get it ready in time, and like “Zooropa”, it has since been viewed with an element of dissatisfaction by some fans, and the band themselves. The recording time also cut into rehearsals for the tour, and eye witness reports from initial shows suggest the early gigs on the tour were far from perfect. Some detractors also claim that, far from being another ironic attempt at a rock show that the “Zoo TV” tour was, the appearance of a big lemon on the stage was the sign of a band veering close to self-parody once more.

The first of two career spanning best of sets turned up in 1998, with the first one concentrating on the “1980-1990” part of the band’s past. To help promote the album, an old Joshua Tree-era B-side, “Sweetest Thing”, was re-recorded, and released as a single in it’s own right. Archive live recordings from the earliest part of the band’s career were exhumed from the vaults for use as B-sides, a sign of the band now being seemingly quite happy and proud to revisit their past. The likes of “Out Of Control” had all but disappeared from the setlists circa “The Joshua Tree”. When the band toured their next LP, “All That You Can’t Leave Behind” in 2001, a number of oldies were wheeled out for these shows for the first time in many years, a situation that has continued with each tour. More about latter period U2 will appear in a future article.

One

To my mind, the second greatest single ever released after “Born To Run”, “One” was issued as the third single from “Achtung Baby” in March 1992. It was the song that finally saw the album sessions start to produce something cohesive, following weeks of abortive attempts at song writing, and in-band fighting.

The lyrics have often been misinterpreted, with couples claiming it as their very own love-song, or having it as their first dance at their wedding - despite the fact that the song was a rather more melancholy look at the fractured relationships within the band at the time, as well as also being a comment on the 1990 German Reunification of East and West Germany.

The single was a bit of an odd one out, as the sleeve design bore no resemblance to the artwork used on either the preceding, or subsequent, singles from the LP. It was housed in a quite incredible, but unbearably heartbreaking cover, the now famous “Falling Buffaloes” photograph by David Wojnarowicz.

A number of promo videos were made, although each time one was made, the band had cold feet about using it. The two so-called “withdrawn” clips are probably the most famous ones - the first, a mix of the band sitting around in drag and then driving in Trabant cars around Berlin (both the car and the city were very much adopted as symbols of the whole “Achtung Baby“ promo campaign), was pulled after the band were worried that the “drag queen” element would cause conflict with the single itself, as it was being released as a benefit single for AIDS research. The second, mostly consisting of slo-mo footage of running buffaloes, tied in with the sleeve of the single, but the band didn’t think it did the trick. I personally think both these videos are wonderful. Rarely, very rarely, can a promo video bring you close to tears, and yet both of these are beautiful enough to do so. The former, which climaxes with two Trabants coming bumper to bumper, kissing almost, is a fantastic moment, whilst the second ends with a still of the single cover, a real lump in the throat moment.

As a lover of prog, and a fan of punk, why is it that I find “One”, essentially a ballad, to be so magnificent? Simply because it works. It builds slowly. The Edge’s guitar work is minimalist to start with, epic to finish. And perhaps, simply, the sheer sadness of the song brings out the closet miserablist in me. The lyrics are incredible - “did I disappoint you, or leave a bad taste in your mouth… did I ask too much, more than a lot, you gave me nothing, now it’s all I’ve got… you ask me to enter, but then you make me crawl, and I can‘t be holding on”. Bono gets more and more agitated as the song goes on, and by the time it hits the final stretch, the songs’ momentum has built up to a glorious, skyscraping finale. It is utterly incredible.

Everything about the single just hangs together brilliantly. The song, the words, the videos, the cover. “One” is the sort of single that goes beyond just being a good song, it is classic art. I might actually sound a bit like Bono here, claiming that it’s an audio “Mona Lisa”, or an aural “The Scream”, but it really is that good. On a lesser album, “One” would have been in danger of overshadowing the rest of the entire record, but on “Achtung Baby”, it’s simply the jewel in the crown. I state again - the second greatest single ever made after “Born To Run".

Formats And Releases

With the CD single becoming the format of choice in the 1990’s, it is no surprise to say that you could buy any U2 single from that decade on the format in the UK, and you would at least end up with an exclusive B-side, or an exclusive remix. The only odd one out was “Staring At The Sun”, which included on one of it’s editions, one of the songs from “Original Soundtracks” as it’s 'exclusive' b-side, presumably on the basis that the obscure nature of the album made the record company think nobody would already own it. The song, “Your Blue Room”, even turned up on the B-sides disc of the “Best Of 1990-2000” compilation.

The first single from “Achtung Baby”, “The Fly”, was issued as a limited single, a less than sly attempt to help hype the single into the upper reaches of the charts, with the 12“ and CD editions including a remix of the A-side as an exclusive bonus track. Both this and the follow up single, “Mysterious Ways”, were issued in rather abstract looking picture sleeves. “Mysterious Ways” was the subject of multiple remixing, and along with the standard 5-mix CD and 12” editions, various other - at the time - vinyl only mixes were released.

Following the release of “One”, two further singles were issued from the album. The sleeves of “Even Better Than The Real Thing” and “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses”, when placed side by side, formed a larger single photo. The single of the former featured a side view shot of Adam Clayton and The Edge in the rear of a Trabant, the latter featured a side view of the front, featuring Bono and Larry Mullen Jr.

Both singles also went down the remix route. A number of dance mixes of “The Real Thing” were made and spread across a remix 12” and remix CD. These singles came housed in a simple black sleeve, with the titles and info printed in white text on the front. The “remix” version of “Wild Horses” used the same image as the standard CD, but in some rather psychedelically altered colouring.

In what was probably a nod to the visual nature of the “Zoo TV” tour, the first single from “Zooropa”, “Numb”, was only issued in the UK as a VHS Single, although audio promos exist. “Lemon” was the single that never was in the UK - a video was made, and overseas releases exist, but it was not until the release of “Stay” that a UK CD single from “Zooropa” was issued commercially.

“Hold Me Thrill Me Kiss Me Kill Me” was issued on a red vinyl 7” as well as a CD edition, and was followed by the sole single from “Original Soundtracks”, “Miss Sarajevo”. It appeared on only one format of major interest, CD again, although the 7” edition came in a unique sleeve. The CD was housed in a quite remarkable cover, a genuine photo from a Beauty Pageant in Sarajevo, with the contestants holding up a banner bearing the legend “Don’t Let Them Kill Us”. It’s quite possibly the most striking sleeve of a single I have ever seen.

The singles from “Pop” went down the two-CD single route, although such was the number of remixes made of “Discotheque” and “Mofo”, that both were issued on 12” as well with exclusive material. Some of the recordings on these singles are on the double disc “Best Of”, but every single - excepting the CD1 “Staring At The Sun” - is still home to at least one exclusive rarity in the UK. Ditto the live tracks on both versions of the “Sweetest Thing” single. It is worth noting that even though the final single from “Pop” was a double A sided release of “Mofo” and “If God Will Send His Angels”, each format only listed one or the other title on the cover, so you wouldn’t immediately be aware that it even was a double A side release. Indeed the “Mofo” 12” includes no versions of “Angels” at all, and the CD1 version includes no versions of “Mofo“ either!

We have already mentioned the double disc “1980-1990” best of in my previous article, and up until last year, with the exception of that album, all of U2’s 1990 releases remained unchanged track listing wise since their original release. But the fall of 2011 saw the re-release of “Achtung Baby”. In addition to the usual 2-CD revamp, there was a “Super Deluxe” boxset, and an “Uber Deluxe” one.

The “Uber Deluxe” box retailed at a wallet emptying £250. Thing is, apart from some fancy packaging, there was nothing really music-wise inside that the cheaper (£80) “Super” box didn’t already have. You got all five of the singles repressed as coloured vinyl 7” singles, and the album on vinyl as well, but with most of these B-sides already included elsewhere in the same box, it did feel like it was simply aimed at people who worked in a bank and had received a bonus and didn’t know what to spend their cash on.

So let’s just look at what the “Super Deluxe” one has. Well, first up, none of the discs come in individual sleeves, so if you want a “Zooropa” in it’s original cover, you’ll have to go and buy the original. There was a disc devoted to alternate versions of the original “Achtung Baby”, and three CD’s full of rare and unreleased songs, B-sides and remixes from the period. There were four DVD’s - the “Zoo TV Live From Sydney” release, the “From The Sky Down” documentary (later released in it’s own right), a DVD of the promo videos, and a DVD of TV material. All in all, rather good VFM. It effectively made the original release rather defunct, although if you do fancy owning a 1991 original, it is worth pointing out that the Cassette edition came in a different sleeve - because the cover was made up of blocks of photos, the cassette - simply by being a different size - features less blocks. The boxset comes in a “4x4” arrangement, the tape a “3x2” one.

Discography

It is always quite awkward to try and show a discography that is both “pre” and “post” the release of a boxset, or a career spanning best-of, both of which U2 have done since these singles were released. But I have tried to make it simple.

For each single, I have included the original releases of interest (including the CD1 edition of “Staring At The Sun”, just because it makes sense to do so), with the CD Single being listed as the standard format, and thence any other formats including what were unique mixes/tracks thereafter.

I have then detailed, for the “Achtung Baby” singles, which bonus tracks have or haven’t reappeared since. Where relevant, I have then listed the formats that, if you have both the Super Deluxe box of “Achtung” and the 2-CD “Best Of 1990-2000” releases, you might wish to consider hunting down instead if you are missing any singles. Of course, it may be easier to find the CD version of “One” rather than the Cassette anyway, but you never know.

For the albums, again, I have opted to go for the original CD pressings to show the band’s own cataloguing system, and indeed, in the case of most, these are still the only versions of interest. The only exception to the rule is “Achtung Baby”, of course, with it’s fancy box set editions.

ALBUMS

Achtung Baby (1991, CD, Island CIDU2 8)
Zooropa (1993, CD, Island CIDU2 9)
Melon (1993, CD, Island MELONCD 1, originally given free with “Propaganda” fan club magazine)
Original Soundtracks 1 (1995, CD, Island CID 8043)
Pop (1997, CD, Island CIDU2 10)
The Best Of 1980-1990 (1998, 2xCD, Island CIDDU2 11)

“Melon” is a remix album, and with several songs still exclusive to the album, retails for £50 even without the magazine. The band issued another fan club CD in 2000, “Hasta La Vista Baby”, which was simply an edited highlights set from the VHS release, “Popmart Live From Mexico City”.

SINGLES

The Fly/Alex Descends Into Hell For A Bottle Of Milk/Korova 1/The Lounge Fly Mix (CD, Island CID 500)
All b-sides appear on the super deluxe boxset edition of “Achtung Baby”. “The Fly” was also issued on 7”, 12” and Cassette.

Mysterious Ways (Album Version)/(Solar Plexus Magic Hour Remix) (7”, Island IS 509)
Mysterious Ways (The Perfecto Mix)/(Ultimatum Mix)/(Apollo 440 Magic Hour Remix)/(Solar Plexus Extended Club Mix) (Remix 12”, Island 12 ISX 509)
Mysterious Ways (Album Version)/(Solar Plexus Extended Club Mix)/(Apollo 440 Magic Hour Remix)/(Tabla Motown Remix)/(Solar Plexus Club Mix) (CD, Island CID 509)
All the remixes appear on the super deluxe boxset edition of “Achtung Baby”, with the exception of the “Solar Plexus Club Mix”, which appears on the 2-CD version of “The Best Of 1990-2000”. “Mysterious Ways” was also issued on a standard 12” and Cassette.

One/Lady With The Spinning Head (UVI)/Satellite Of Love/Night And Day (Steel String Remix) (CD, Island CID 515)
All b-sides appear on the super deluxe boxset edition of “Achtung Baby”. “One” was also issued on 7”, 12” and Cassette.

Even Better Than The Real Thing (Single Version)/Salome/Where Did It All Go Wrong?/Lady With The Spinning Head (Extended Dance Mix) (CD, Island CID 525)
Even Better Than The Real Thing (The Perfecto Mix)/(Trance Mix)/(Sexy Dub Mix) (Remix 12”, Island REAL U2)
Even Better Than The Real Thing (The Perfecto Mix)/(Sexy Dub Mix)/(Apollo 440 Stealth Sonic Remix)/(V16 Exit Wound Remix)/(A440 Vs U2 Instrumental Remix) (Remix CD, Island C REAL U2)
“Salome” and “Where Did It All Go Wrong?” appear on the super deluxe boxset edition of “Achtung Baby”, whilst the extended mix of “Lady With The Spinning Head” appears on the 2-CD version of “The Best Of 1990-2000”. A number of the remixes, including the “Trance Mix” of the a-side also appear on the boxset, but the “A440 Instrumental Remix” remains exclusive to this single.

Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses (The Temple Bar Edit)/Paint It Black/Fortunate Son/Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses (The Temple Bar Remix) (CD, Island CID 550)
Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses (The Temple Bar Edit)/Paint It Black/Salome (Zooromancer Remix)/Can’t Help Falling In Love (Triple Peaks Remix) (Remix CD, Island CIDX 550)
All b-sides from both singles appear on the super deluxe boxset edition of “Achtung Baby”. “Who’s Gonna Ride Your Wild Horses” was also issued on 7”, 12” and Cassette.

Numb (Video)/(Video Remix)/Love Is Blindness (Video) (VHS, Island 088 162 3)

Stay (Faraway, So Close!)/I’ve Got You Under My Skin/Lemon (Bard Yard Club Edit)/(Perfecto Mix) (CD1, Island CID 578)
Stay (Faraway, So Close!)/Slow Dancing/Bullet The Blue Sky (Live)/Love Is Blindness (Live) (CD2, Island CIDX 578)

Hold Me Thrill Me Kiss Me Kill Me (Single Version) +2 (CD, Atlantic A 7131 CD)

Miss Sarajevo (Single Version)/One (Live Modena 12.9.1995)/Bottoms (Zoo Station Remix)/Viva Davidoff (CD, Island CID 625)

Discotheque/Holy Joe (Garage Mix)/(Guilty Mix) (CD1, Island CID 649)
Discotheque (DM Deep Club Mix)/(Howie B Hairy B Mix)/(Hexidecimal Mix)/(DM Tec Radio Mix) (CD2, Island CIDX 649)
Discotheque (DM Deep Extended Club Mix)/(DM Deep Beats Mix)/(DM Tec Radio Mix)/(DM Deep Instrumental Mix)/(12” Version)/(David Holmes Mix)/(Howie B Hairy B Mix)/(Hexidecimal Mix) (3x12”, Island 12 IST 649)

Staring At the Sun/North And South Of The River/Your Blue Room (CD1, Island CID 658)
Staring At the Sun (Monster Truck Mix)/(Sad Bastards Mix)/North And South Of The River/Staring At The Sun (Lab Rat Mix) (CD2, Island CIDX 658)

Last Night On Earth (Single Version)/Pop Muzik (Pop Mart Mix)/Happiness Is A Warm Gun (The Gun Mix) (CD1, Island CID 664)
Last Night On Earth (First Night In Hell Mix)/Numb (The Soul Assassins Mix)/Happiness Is A Warm Gun (The Danny Saber Mix)/Pop Muzik (Pop Mart Mix) (CD2, Island CIDX 664)

Please (Single Version)/Dirty Day (Junk Day)/(Bitter Kiss)/I’m Not Your Baby (Skysplitter Dub) (CD1, Island CID 673)
Please (Live In Rotterdam)/Where The Streets Have No Name (Live In Rotterdam)/With Or Without You (Live In Edmonton)/Staring At The Sun (Live In Rotterdam) (CD2, Island CIDX 673)

If God Will Send His Angels (Single Version)/Slow Dancing (1997 Version)/Two Shots Of Happy, One Shot Of Sad/Sunday Bloody Sunday (Live In Sarajevo) (CD1, Island CID 684)
Mofo (Phunk Phorce Mix)/(Mother’s Mix)/If God Will Send His Angels (The Grand Jury Mix) (CD2, Island CIDX 684)
Mofo (Phunk Phorce Mix)/(Black Hole Dub)/(Mother’s Mix)/(House Flavour Mix)/(Romin Remix) (12”, Island 12 IS 684)

Sweetest Thing (The Single Mix)/Twilight (Live From Red Rocks)/An Cat Dubh (Live From Red Rocks) (CD1, Island CID 727)
Sweetest Thing (The Single Mix)/Stories For Boys (Live From Boston)/Out Of Control (Live From Boston) (CD2, Island CIDX 727)

Saturday 1 December 2012

Nirvana: The Geffen Years

Last year, I did an article looking at the early years of Nirvana. I did it without fully remembering that it was 20 years since “Nevermind” had been released, and by the year end - bang! Geffen issued their 20th anniversary “Nevermind” deluxe reissue. But as I’ve said before, you can find an anniversary for just about anything at any time. So, to celebrate the… er… 21st anniversary of “Nevermind”, here is a look at the band’s releases after they had jumped ship from Sub Pop. The catalogue numbers listed per LP relate to the original UK CD edition, whilst details of the handful of Nirvana singles from this period are listed where appropriate, detailing the CD and Coloured Vinyl/Picture Disc pressings only, for clarity‘s sake.


Nevermind (GED 24425)

You don’t need me to tell you about this LP. The album that sent Grunge overground, and turned Nirvana into unwitting rock stars, the deluxe boxset issued by Geffen last year is probably the final word on this record - although half the world and his wife already own this album, so anybody who bought it was probably buying it for the second time, at least. There seem to have been a number of official - and unofficial - limited editions of this record when it was first released back in 91, including a US CD pressing in a “Squidgy Pack”, which had a floating baby and dollar bills rumbling about in the front of the packaging - check out the Discogs site for some scans of that one.

Nirvana still seemed to have some sort of contract with Sub Pop, and so “Nevermind” appeared with both Geffen and Sub Pop labels on the rear cover. As well as being issued on LP and Cassette, the CD editions included a hidden track, “Endless Nameless”, which could only be played by fast-forwarding the CD after the official final track, “Something In The Way”, had finished. Of course, it was a bit of tuneless nonsense, which was why it was hidden in the first place.

Four singles were lifted from the LP for promo purposes - more than the entire number of singles the band issued during their time on Sub Pop. The first of these, “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, was edited for radio purposes, with thirty seconds of Cobain’s middle eight guitar solo being chopped out, to reduce the running time to 4:30. Some formats of the single played this mix, others played the album version. “Come As You Are”, “Lithium”, and a re-recorded track from the Sub Pop days, “In Bloom”, were issued as singles in 1992.

Although the singles lifted from the album were issued on a number of formats, it was the CD editions that were usually of most interest, as they often featured extra tracks in comparison to what was on the other formats. “Teen Spirit” was issued as a 4-track CD, with “Drain You” from “Nevermind” as a b-side (thus providing fans with a quick preview of the LP), and two other proper b-sides in the form of “Aneurysm” and “Even In His Youth”. Despite not being included on the LP, the former has become a very well known tune in the Nirvana cannon, as the band played it live endless times over the years. In America, “Teen Spirit” was issued in a different sleeve to it’s UK counterpart.

“Come As You Are” came backed with “Endless Nameless”, for those people who didn’t own “Nevermind” on CD, and two previously unissued live recordings of “School” and “Drain You”. “Lithium” came backed with three rarities, a live version of “Been A Son”, a new studio b-side “Curmudgeon”, and a cover of “D-7” taped during the band’s 1990 “Nirvana Play The Cover Versions” Peel Session, where the band, with no real new product to plug, just played four covers for John Peel’s BBC Radio 1 show instead. The other three songs from this session would appear later that year on the odds and sods set, “Incesticide”.

“In Bloom” was issued as the tail end of 1992, at around about the same time that Tupelo were reissuing “Sliver” in the UK. The CD edition of “In Bloom” was issued with only three tracks, the two bonus tracks being previously unissued live takes of “Sliver” and “Polly”.

As well as being issued as CD singles, all four singles from “Nevermind” were also issued in the UK as 12” Picture Discs, housed in die cut sleeves. Depending on whatever the record label decided, the “rare” B-sides from the CD editions did or did not appear on these releases. “Aneurysm” made the “Teen Spirit” picture disc, but “Even In His Youth” didn’t. On “Come As You Are”, the live version of “School” appeared on the flip with “Endless Nameless”. However, of some interest, is the fact that the German 12” Picture Disc opted for an alternate track listing, and instead of playing “School”, played the other live b-side from this single, “Drain You”. German copies are easily noticeable by the fact that they were housed in a clear see-through wallet, rather than a die cut sleeve, and thus have the band name and song title printed on the front (these were printed on the sleeve of the UK edition instead).

“Lithium” was missing the “D-7” cover. If you fancy owning this track on vinyl, it is possible to do so, as it was included - along with “Even in His Youth” and the rest of that Peel Session - on an Australian EP called “Hormoaning” in early 1992. Vinyl copies of the EP are quite rare, although there has been a UK/US joint reissue as part of the 2011 Record Store Day event. The easiest version of “Hormoaning” to find is the Japanese CD, issued in what has been described as a “low budget Nevermind” sleeve, and pressed in huge numbers. It was eventually deleted when the band were made aware of it’s existence - they had not authorised the release of the EP outside of Australia - but so many copies had already been pressed, the fact that it was “withdrawn” does not mean that there are not still tens of thousands of them in existence. As for the “In Bloom” picture disc, it played all three tracks from the CD edition.

SINGLES

Smells Like Teen Spirit/Drain You/Aneurysm (12” Picture Disc, Geffen DGCTP 5)
Smells Like Teen Spirit (Edit)/Drain You/Even In His Youth/Aneurysm (CD, Geffen DGCTD 5)
Come As You Are/Endless Nameless/School (Live) (12” Picture Disc, Geffen DGCTP 7)
Come As You Are/Endless Nameless/School (Live)/Drain You (Live) (CD, Geffen DGCTD 7)
Lithium/Been A Son (Live)/Curmudgeon (12” Picture Disc, Geffen DGCTP 9)
Lithium/Been A Son (Live)/Curmudgeon/D-7 (BBC Radio 1 Version) (CD, Geffen DGCTD 9)
In Bloom/Sliver (Live)/Polly (Live) (12” Picture Disc GFSTP 34)
In Bloom/Sliver (Live)/Polly (Live) (CD, Geffen GFSTD 34)


Incesticide (GED 24504)

Issued at the tail end of 1992, this seemed like an obvious cash in job by Geffen, keen to make a few quid out of the millions of fans who had discovered Nirvana post-”Nevermind”. It’s objective was to make available rare and bootlegged material, and came in a bootleg style sleeve designed by Cobain - it was therefore the first Nirvana LP to be issued without the use of their logo on the front. US vinyl copies were pressed on light blue wax.

As to what was included, well, the album seemed to be a bit scant on info. Perhaps this was done to further enhance the bootleg feel. So it makes sense to explain it here.

The album opened, in reverse order, with both sides of the “Sliver” 7”, although the mix of “Sliver” was the Tueplo single mix, and not the Sub Pop one, so the “phone outro” part at the end was missing. “Stain” was lifted from the “Blew” EP, whilst three songs taped for a BBC Radio 1 Mark Goodier session made the album, namely “Been A Son”, “Aneurysm” and “Polly”, played in it’s “fast” version (it was originally played by the band in this way on stage before a slowed down version was taped for “Nevermind”), and was thus dubbed “New Wave Polly”.

As touched on earlier, the other three songs from the 1990 Peel Session were on the LP, whilst “Downer” was an outtake, but had been given a second lease of life earlier that year when it was tagged onto the end of Geffen’s CD repressing of “Bleach”. “Beeswax” had been included on a 1991 compilation LP called “Kill Rock Stars”, whilst “Mexican Seafood” had been on the “Teriyaki Asthma Volume 1” 7” Various Artists EP back in 1989. The remaining three songs were all previously unreleased.

There were no singles taken from the album, although Tupelo’s “Sliver” reissue seemed to surface just before the album’s release. The band were asked by Geffen to produce a music video for “Sliver” to send to MTV and Co, to help plug the album, and thus Dave Grohl had to pretend to play the drums on a song he had had no involvement in at all.


Oh The Guilt (TG 83)

Given that Nirvana had never harboured any ambitions to become megastars, you can’t help but think their next move - a return to the world of the Split Single, on the Touch And Go label - was a deliberate attempt to go back to their roots. The only difference now, was that this single would be issued not only on Vinyl, but also on CD. A concession by the record label, or just an acknowledgement that the CD Single was now taking over from the 7”?

“Oh The Guilt” had been knocking about in the band’s live shows for some time, and this studio mix was recorded in Spring 1992. The single was released in February 1993, and was being issued on Touch And Go as this was the label that Nirvana’s partners on the single, The Jesus Lizard, were signed to. Nirvana were technically on the B-side, and as such, “Oh The Guilt” was track 2 on the CD edition. As the A-side act, the Lizard filmed a video for their song - which, after the single had charted in the top 20, led to the likes of “The Chart Show” having to show a clip of their video, despite the fact that it was obvious that it was the Nirvana connection that explained how the single had done so well.

The single was done as a limited edition - just not THAT limited. I got my blue vinyl 7” copy in a Woolworths in Woolwich! The hype surrounding the single - limited edition, new Nirvana material, blue vinyl - saw the now expanded fan base rush to buy the single in it’s first week in case it sold out, and it entered at number 12, although other unofficial charts gave it a top 10 placing. A handful of unsold copies then sold out during the second week of it’s release, but so few were left in the shops by this time, that the second week sales were too minimal to stop the single dropping straight out of the top 40 after that first week.

Australian copies exist - pressed as a 7” Picture Disc, I remember seeing a stack of these in a Virgin Megastore in London, but they were priced at a fiver each. Deciding against buying a single I theoretically already owned on the basis that £5 was a bit steep for a 45, I regret it now, as copies change hands for no less than £100 each! I wished I’d bought the lot, kept one, and flogged the rest.

There was absolutely no plan to include “Oh The Guilt” on the band’s next album, and for many years, the song became one of the leading obscurities in the band’s back catalogue. It got a second lease of life in 2004, when it appeared on the band’s rarities boxset “With The Lights Out”, albeit in slightly remixed form.

SINGLES

Oh The Guilt +1 (Blue Vinyl 7”, Touch And Go TG 83)
Oh The Guilt +1 (CD, Touch And Go TG 83 CD)


In Utero (GED 24536)

Whilst the likes of you and I might like the idea of not having to have a proper job in order to survive, Nirvana never quite got used to the limelight - certainly not Kurt. “In Utero”, depending on where you stand, was either an exhilarating blast of rock and roll, arguably better than “Nevermind”, or was a bunch of rich rock stars moaning about being famous. Either way, there’s no denying the brilliantly cynical opening line of the first song, “Serve The Servants” - “teenage angst has paid off well, now I’m bored and old”. Equally telling, was the photo inside showing an MTV microphone being shoved into the face of Krist Novoselic - although you could say here, “don’t bite the hand that feeds”. As the first proper post-”Nevermind” album, there was a huge amount of hype surrounding the record, and there were TV shows and interviews aplenty. And the likes of MTV were heavily supportive.

Once again, the US edition of the Vinyl version came on coloured vinyl, a sort of see-through white/green hybrid, whilst in the UK, the CD edition, like “Nevermind”, went for the hidden track thing again, with “Gallons Of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through The Strip” being tagged on at the end. When this track was later included on “With The Lights Out”, it was listed as a “B-side”, on the basis it had appeared in the US on a 12” single.

As regards the singles, the band wanted - in the UK at least - to avoid any special formats, and wanted it to be that whichever format the fans bought, they would not be cheated out of any bonus material. And so, “Heart Shaped Box” appeared as the first single, backed with a new song, the Grohl sung “Marigold”. The 12” and CD editions added a track from “In Utero”, “Milk It”, as a bonus track to give the buyer some value for money. This “no special formats” rule didn’t seem to apply elsewhere, as in Germany, the 7” editions of the single were pressed on red vinyl.

The next single, a double A release of “All Apologies” and “Rape Me” appeared as a 3-track Maxi on all formats, with bonus track “MV” appearing on every edition. 12” copies included a free art print, which slightly bent the “no special formats” rule.

Of course, you all know what happened next. “Pennyroyal Tea” was being planned as the next 45. It was to be issued in a “new” mix, a more radio-friendly sounding version done by Scott Litt, who had remixed most of “In Utero” for special copies of the LP to be sold in US stores like Wal-Mart, who had refused to stock the “harder” sounding original version of the album. The single mix of “Pennyroyal Tea” was to be taken from this version of “In Utero”, and so whilst not unreleased in the USA, it was due to make it’s debut appearance in the UK where no such “remixed” version of the album existed. The single was due to be issued at the same time that Nirvana were to tour the UK, but Cobain took his own life in April 1994, and the single was cancelled. Nirvana split up on the spot - there was no official announcement, Grohl and Novoselic just assumed that everybody knew that with no Kurt, there was no Nirvana.

Now, over the years, I have lost track of which countries pressed up a “Pennyroyal Tea” before it was withdrawn, and which countries did or didn’t issue a promo. But from what I can gather, this is what survived.

In the UK, a one track CD was issued as a promo, housed in a slim line jewel case, but with no picture sleeve. A 7” single was planned, which was due to feature the band’s cover of Leadbelly’s “Where Did You Sleep Last Night” from the then recent MTV Unplugged show on the B-side, but apparently, got no further than the sleeve pressing stage. Test pressings may also exist, but according to “Record Collector”, no more than ten were made before the release was pulled, and Geffen ordered them all to be destroyed.

In Germany, a CD Single was planned, and a number of copies were finished. These added an extra track, “I Hate Myself And Want To Die”, originally tossed away by the band on the compilation LP “The Beavis And Butthead Experience”. The mix on the single was missing the Beavis And Butthead skit that preceded the song, but apart from this, the two versions were identical. You will also note that, had the single release gone ahead, then it seems as though the “no special formats” rule was being bent once again.

Suffice to say, any official “Pennyroyal Tea” releases that surface are worth a small fortune, but it is also worth noting that the rather literal artwork that was created (a cup of tea on the cover) had not been OK’d by the band, so any CD Singles that surface, may not have looked this way had the release gone ahead as planned, as the band may not have actually agreed on using the artwork. This doesn’t dent their value any more, but it’s worth acknowledging that any of these “finished” copies may have actually ended up being withdrawn anyway. Check out www.sliver.it for more info about the original and fake releases that exist.

Another “In Utero” rarity surrounds the LP itself. In 2003, a UK Vinyl reissue was being planned, but an alternate mix of the album, done by Steve Albini, was somehow used instead. Copies were withdrawn, but a small number escaped and do exist in the collectors world. The main difference seems to be the matrix references scratched into the vinyl’s run out groove (A33 9124 536 S1 320 on side 1, the same but ending S2 320 on side 2). Check out www.nirvananorge.com for more info about this and other odds and ends.

SINGLES

Heart Shaped Box/Milk It/Marigold (CD, Geffen GFSTD 54)
All Apologies/Rape Me/MV (CD, Geffen GFSTD 66)


MTV Unplugged In New York (GED 24727)

To be seen as a celebration of the band, plans were being drawn up in 1994 for a double album live set called “Verse Chorus Verse”, the title taken from a Nirvana song that was tossed away as a hidden bonus track on the CD edition of the 1993 Various Artists compilation record, “No Alternative”. It was to consist of two discs - one devoted to material cribbed from various Nirvana gigs, and the second a recording of their MTV “Unplugged” show from 1993. In the end, Grohl and Novoselic alone could not face the prospect of going through hours of tapes to select the best available songs for the live disc, and so the decision was taken instead to issue the Unplugged show on its own - this would simply involve picking the best bits of the show, and would be a far less arduous and emotional task.

The show took place just after the release of “In Utero”, and has gone down in legend as not just one of Nirvana’s finest moments, but as the finest Unplugged show done by anybody. Whilst most acts who appeared on the show just attempted to do acoustic versions of the hits, resulting in some messy results (I still have nightmares whenever I hear REM having a crack at “Love Is All Around”), the band knew doing a stripped down “Teen Spirit” was never going to work, and so decided to base the setlist around the songs from the back catalogue that they knew could benefit from the Unplugged treatment. The hits, mostly, were to be excluded. The band also decided to do a number of covers, nothing new there, but this time on the basis that they could get something out of these songs that they might not have got from trying to do “Lithum” or such like.

MTV had a heart attack when they heard what was going on. They were also distraught when the band announced they were going to have some special guests, but instead of Pearl Jam or Soundgarden turning up, it was a not-exactly-endorsed-by-MTV act instead, The Meat Puppets. But Nirvana knew exactly what they were doing, and the set worked perfectly. It was only a misjudged missive by Kurt, before “About A Girl” - “this is from our first record…most people don’t own it”, only for it to be accompanied by huge cheers during the opening bars, that jarred somewhat.

With Nirvana now MTV darlings by the end of 1993, the show was broadcast on a regular basis, and thus got heavily bootlegged in video form. So when it came to putting the LP together, it made sense to try and offer material that had not made the original broadcast, and as such, a number of “previously unavailable” songs were included to try and help sell the product. Of course, it worked, and “Unplugged” was a chart topper worldwide. Once again, some countries issued copies on white vinyl, whilst the Cassette edition came with an information sticker on the front so big, it more or less obscured the whole cover image!

The audio edition has since been made defunct, as “Unplugged” has since been released on DVD. You get two versions of the show - the original, “songs in the wrong order” edited TV version, complete with on screen captions, and the full length concert, which includes - of course - everything previously included on the audio edition. There were no singles released from the LP in the UK - indeed, there have been no commercial Nirvana singles in the UK since “In Utero”, reissues excepting - although “About A Girl” did appear as a single in selected overseas territories.


Singles (GED 24901)

Although technically a European pressing, “Singles” was officially released in the UK in 1995. It was a 6-CD Single box set, concerning itself with the commercially released singles from “Nevermind” and “In Utero”.

What you got were repressings of the German versions of the singles. In most instances, the artwork differed little from the UK ones, although the singles were housed in slim line jewel cases (the UK “Nevermind” singles were issued as digipacks). As these were re-pressings, the original catalogue numbers from the original German releases were thus present and correct, which were of a different format to the UK ones.

B-side wise, well, Geffen decided to go off in a slightly different path with these singles when first released when compared to the UK versions. In some instances, this did not matter, in others it did. “Teen Spirit” appeared as a three track CD, with the “Edit” mix appearing as the A-side, and although only two of the three UK B-sides appeared, thankfully they were the two non album rarities “Even In His Youth” and “Aneurysm”. “Come As You Are” included all four tracks as per the UK edition, whilst “In Bloom”, “Heart Shaped Box” and “All Apologies” also appeared with the same bonus tracks as the UK originals. The only let down was “Lithium”, issued as a three track single and thus missing “D7”.

Aside from this, and ignoring the possible ‘cash in’ question marks, it’s a nice item. I love the front cover image, although bonus marks are lost for not sourcing the original artwork for these releases, instead the original covers seem to have been photographed, meaning the inlays for each of the singles have a bit of a “fuzzyness” to them, especially where the text for the song titles appear. A recent Record Store Day event has seen the release of the similarly titled “Nevermind Singles”, which opts for 10” reissues of the four singles from said LP.


From the Muddy Banks Of The Wishkah (GED 25105)

Just after Cobain’s death, a live VHS called “Live Tonight Sold Out!” appeared. Although it seemed, on the face of it, to be a video version of what disc 1 of the abandoned “Verse Chorus Verse” project might have sounded like, Cobain had actually been working on the release before his death, and - like “Unplugged” - it just took a bit of tying of loose ends before it was able to be released.

“From The Muddy Banks Of The Wishkah” was, to all intents and purposes, the delayed first half of “Verse Chorus Verse”, a live history of Nirvana told via a variety of previously unissued (officially) live recordings. Although it had taken Grohl and Novoselic several years to finally get around to working on this project, in many instances, it turned out that the shows that were used as the source material seemed familiar - several tracks were from a gig in Amsterdam in November 1991, recorded by VPRO-TV, and were thus in good quality, but had been subject to the bootleggers. Ditto the inclusion of a song from the band’s 1992 Reading Festival show. Gigs at the Paramount Theatre, Seattle and Del Mar Fairgrounds had been delved into previously for b-sides. The running order was based, vaguely, around the standard Nirvana setlist, with “Blew” appearing at the end, as it had often been the standard gig closer.

The length of the album was, for a vinyl record, a bit awkward. Too long to squeeze onto a single slab of vinyl, but not long enough to try and spread across two, the decision was taken to include a vinyl only track on side 4 of the album, a five minute sound collage of snippets of songs from various shows. Suffice to say, this “song” (it has no official title) is still only available on the original vinyl pressings. Most people probably own this record on CD, although it is worth pointing out that - due to it’s rectangular shape - the Cassette version features a differently designed cover to both the LP and CD versions.


Nirvana (493 523-2)

Following Cobains’s death, much legal wrangling surrounding how future Nirvana material would be released took place between Cobain’s widow, Courtney Love, and Novoselic & Grohl. The situation was eventually resolved, and part of the solution was the release of this best-of set in 2002.

Coming in a simple black sleeve with the Nirvana logo placed in the centre, whatever the merits or lack of this release might have, you can at least argue that design wise, it looked impressive. Certainly better than if it had been called “The Best Of” or “Greatest Hits”. It was, for the most part, a selective trawl through the band’s back catalogue with a few rarities thrown in.

The big selling point was the inclusion of a previously unissued song, “You Know You’re Right”, used to start the album off. Although the set ran in more or less chronological order, this outtake dated from January 1994. The other rarities on the album were the original EP mix of “Been A Son”, which for US buyers, was making it’s official release in the band’s homeland, whilst the ‘Scott Litt’ mix of “Pennyroyal Tea” was also included, the first time this mix had been made officially available in the UK.

“Nirvana” is, thanks to that opening rarity, an essential purchase, but it still feels a bit patchy. Trying to put together a 16 track best-of, from a band who never released more than 16 singles, feels a bit odd. Had the release been longer, and thus opened up the opportunity to include B-sides and more rarities, it could have been turned into a more complete collection, along the lines of “Singles Going Steady” or New Order’s “Substance”.

It was, believe it or not, not the final Nirvana “hits” collection. Geffen have since issued another one called “Icon”, which is nothing more than an even shorter version of this one. It was part of a series of releases by various Universal Music acts, all of which shared this title, although the sleeve designs were unique to each act. The Nirvana one opted, like “Nirvana”, to have a big band logo covering much of the sleeve, so it again looks quite impressive, but quite who this was being aimed at, is beyond me.


With The Lights Out (0602 4986 48384)

There is always a problem with multi disc box sets. Many of them opt to include a mix of hits and rarities, only for you to realise you have shelled out £40 for 40 minutes worth of “new” material. But then, if you fill the whole thing up with never before heard material, the argument is you are trying to get somebody to pay over the odds for 4 hours worth of songs that if they had been good enough, would surely have already been released in the first place. So, you can’t win.

“With The Lights Out” goes for the latter approach. A three CD plus 1-DVD release, its’ primary objective was to include rarities from the earliest, pre-”Bleach” years of the band, through to the end in 1994. The DVD would do the same, but in “visual” form.

Of course, the appearance of “new” material is always going to be of interest to the collectors, which accounts for most of the box, but what previously released rarities made the set? Well, disc 2 offers an early version of “Stay Away”, known as “Pay To Play”, which appeared on the “DGC Rarities Volume 1” compilation, and their cover of “Here She Comes Now”, issued on a split 7” as mentioned in my previous Nirvana article. Also on this disc are the b-sides “Aneurysm” and “Curmudgeon”, plus that Peel Session version of “D7”. We have already mentioned the inclusion of “Of The Guilt”, whilst also on disc 2 is “Return Of The Rat”, previously issued on another comp called “Eight Songs For Greg Sage And The Wipers”.

Disc 3 includes another b-side in the form of “Marigold”, plus the aforementioned “I Hate Myself And Want To Die”, again missing it’s “Beavis and Butthead” intro, and “Gallons Of Rubbing Alcohol…”. The aforementioned “Verse Chorus Verse” is also here, but as it was one of two Nirvana songs to be recorded (but not both released) with that title, it appears here under it’s alternate title, “Sappy”.

The DVD, by opting to go down the rarities route, is as you would expect, fascinating, but it leads to a strange situation. None of the band’s promos for their singles are included, with the exception of “In Bloom” - but this is the original version for the Sub Pop single that never was. And given that this very clip had been released before on a Sub Pop Various Artists VHS, whilst the Geffen version is only available as part of the “Nevermind” box set, well… it’s all a bit strange that the real rarities in the band’s video cannon are the clips for the hit singles!

Disc 1, meanwhile, includes amongst it’s odds and sods, a number of songs taped by the band for a KAOS FM Radio Session in the States in 1987. The whole session has since been made available on a semi-legitimate CD called “Classic Airwaves”, unavailable in the USA due to ’copyright issues’. As mentioned on my Springsteen blog, recent years have seen a rise in these official bootlegs on various independent labels, and as far as Nirvana go, this is one of at least two such releases now on sale in the UK.


Sliver: The Best Of The Box (6024 988 67181)

You do have to wonder whether or not the remaining members of Nirvana really approved this one. “Sliver”, as it’s title suggested, included a number of selections from “With The Lights Out”. Fair enough. But the decision to include three new songs smacked of record company exploitation. Why weren’t they on the box set in the first place?

Whilst you can argue till the cows come home about how morally acceptable it is to make people pay the price of an album just to own an EP’s worth of new songs, at least the three songs are of interest. An alternate version of one of the big hits, “Come As You Are”, another version of “Sappy”/”Verse Chorus Verse” - the first time this song had therefore appeared on a normal priced Nirvana album - plus an early version of “Spank Thru”, taped way back in 1985 when the band were known as “Fecal Matter”, thereby pre-dating everything on “With The Lights On”. Indeed, the demo tape it came from was the first set of recordings made by the band in any form, although pedantic types will argue that Nirvana were actually formed after Fecal Matter had split up, as Novoselic is absent from this recording.

Although the amount of material issued on “With The Lights Out” and “Sliver” is merely the tip of the iceberg as far as unreleased studio/live material goes, the fact that these releases were produced suggested that they were seen to be the final word on the band. “Wishkah” did the job with Nirvana on stage, this was as far as the label would go in making available “unreleased material”. And for a short while, no more Nirvana material surfaced. But record companies are never ones to stop looking to make a fast buck, and by 2009, they had found their next source for a release from the vaults.


Live At Reading (06025 272 037-3)

Quite why it took until 2009 to release this 1992 gig, I am not sure. But at least by releasing “Live At Reading”, it does do the job of showcasing Nirvana at their explosive best. And, even if it feels like it’s just covering the same basic ground as “Wishkah” and “Live Tonight”, at least it’s all from a single show.

“Live At Reading” was taped at what was being rumoured, at the time, to be the band’s final gig, because Cobain was believed to have been at death‘s door. This explains why Kurt was wheeled onstage in a wheelchair, and then “collapsed” when he tried to stand up. The show was taped at the Reading Festival on 30th August 1992, just over a year after the band had played the same festival, where they appeared just after lunchtime on the Saturday afternoon, as relative unknowns, playing a few bits from “the new LP“, and lots of old grunge stuff. One “Nevermind” later, and they were headlining the Sunday night.

The gig had been taped and videoed, and thus audio and video bootlegs had been doing the rounds for years. The release of this album allowed the whole gig to be released officially in full, with both a CD and DVD edition being released. Time constraints on the CD meant that the performance of “Love Buzz” had to be excluded, whilst a lot of the amusing between songs banter had to be cut in order to squeeze the remaining 24 songs onto a single disc. Even then, the closing number, “Territorial Pissings”, had to be heavily edited to fit on, as the original version - as found on the DVD edition - featured the band doing a 10 minute long instrumental finale. Copies of the DVD included a CD as a free bonus, which made the standard CD edition of the record somewhat superfluous.

Although nobody knew it at the time, the show was not Nirvana’s final gig, but it was the final show they would ever play in the UK. In that respects, it seems like it should really stand up as the final word on Nirvana as a live act, but that has not stopped the live DVD from the “Nevermind” box set (“Live At the Paramount”) being issued in it’s own right last year. You do wonder just how many other gigs might get released in full, as I understand several other Nirvana shows, although released in parts on “Live Tonight” and “Wishkah”, are sitting gathering dust in the vaults.


Legacy

Maybe it’s just me, but it does seem as though the music scene in the UK is hitting “1980s” style problems at the moment, with a lot of decent bands either struggling to make it onto radio, or simply splitting up. Even pure pop is struggling, this year's mostly god-awful “T4 On The Beach” event showing just how badly we missed the likes of Girls Aloud.

And when you listen to Nirvana, you realise just how far BACKWARDS we seem to have gone. The band’s marriage of Abba melodies, and Black Sabbath riffs, when it worked, worked brilliantly. So, when I hear somebody banging on about the genius of Professor Green, or how cutting edge Example is supposed to be, I feel like crying. And don't get me started on Plan B. “Nevermind” is now twenty one years old, yet still sounds like it was made yesterday, and still sounds so far ahead of most “alternative” acts, it’s baffling. And the fact that we seem to be unable to find the “new Nirvana” (Idlewild and Nine Black Alps at least gave it a go), is heartbreaking really. Perhaps bands this good just don’t come along that often. What a shame.

Rest in peace Kurt.