Kurt Cobain’s most beloved six-string companion could soon be in your hands.
DRUMS WEEK 2025: In 1991, Nirvana released the album that would propel them from burgeoning club-level favourites to The Biggest Band in The World. Nevermind, Nirvana’s major label debut, would apply ...
During a 1994 interview with Rolling Stone, Cobain was asked to explain the origin of “Here we are now, entertain us.” “That came from something I used to say every time I used to walk into a party to ...
Nirvana had no idea that “Smells Like Teen Spirit” would become one of the greatest rock songs of all time and would continue to influence the grunge scene today. After its release, the song ...
Smells like a bargain. Kurt Cobain guitar from the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” music video will be sold an a Midtown auction next spring — and it’s expected to fetch millions, The ...
Kurt Cobain‘s intention with “Smells Like Teen Spirit” was to write a massive pop hit while ripping off a band he admired. “I was trying to write the ultimate pop song,” Cobain told David Fricke in ...
Most people would agree that Nirvana’s music embodies the spirit of Generation X, yet they never managed to write a song worthy of becoming number one. In fact, they never even breached the top five.
You know the words by heart. Just the strum of the opening chords and drumbeats of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" has you singing along. But did you realize that there are actually alternate ...
How did Smells Like Teen Spirit become the anthem of the '90s? Dive into the story behind Nirvana's groundbreaking hit, its cultural impact, and how it defined the grunge era and a generation.
Last last year, Courtney Love went on the WTF With Marc Maron podcast and revealed that she had an unreleased song called “Justice For Kurt.” Yesterday (May 17), the Hole bandleader appeared on a new ...
Creating art inherently creates more art. Now, that might sound weird, but the minute a piece of art is released and consumed, fellow artists are immediately, consciously or not, relating it back to ...
After a three month break, Rob Harvilla‘s amazing podcast 60 Songs That Explain the ’90s is back, having already gone 30 songs past the show’s title, with the first of what he says will be the final ...