its really fun to see all these gen x people commenting similet comments to this on these kinda videos, you know there is a band called "Sap" which did a great job at making 90s like grunge in 2023. I love 80s and 90s rock especially grunge and metal so its fun to see thats there are still really good grunge and metal bands in 2024
@@silversnoops568 because they had just had one of the biggest albums of all time and they just took all the junk they had laying around and put it onto an album. I believe Dave Grohl even said as much that the studio really said they were gonna make a lot of money. Kurt wasn't comfortable doing it but he eventually relented.
Nirvana MTV Unplugged is a must, too! Honestly, I love every single album by them, they have so much feelings, whatever they are: anger, sadness, fear, even happiness sometimes. Kurt was majestic. Thats crazy that they existed for like 5 years (popularity came later, so ~3 years) and after 30 years people still in love with his voice ❤
@@garysimonson1135 I second the pair, but would reverse the order, especially when they just listened to and very much liked Bleach, they're ready for the edgier, rawer BMF. Makes more send to go chronological, too.
It’s a crime Chad Channing didn’t make the Hall of Fame with Nirvana. He was not only pivotal in launching their distinctive sound on the Bleach album, but had also already written many drum parts on Nevermind, which Dave Grohl kept, and I believe influenced his playing moving forward.
I think they pushed to try to have him included in some way but the committee wouldn't budge. All three members really liked Chad. There's a concert they played on the In Utero tour in Ohio where they hear a rumor Chad is in the crowd, and they spend the entire show trying to get him to come up and play School. Kurt at one point even apologizes and says if him asking Chad to come on stage freaked him out, he's really sorry. They ended up waiting for him until they closed the show playing School, the only time that ever happened in band history. Chad wasn't there 😢
Yeah, I mean, it wasn’t even like Kurt and Chad disliked each other, it’s just Kurt was the songwriter and Chad wanted to have more input writing songs, they both didn’t want to budge on their opinion, so, Chad was out, heard all of the band still liked him though.
IIRC, Krist Dave and Pat tried to have him included but were blocked by the committee. Dave Grohl did give him a tribute in his speech though, saying that Chad deserved to be there and said that many of "his" iconic drum parts are from Chad's notes (He'd never said they were his, but people assumed) I don't think there was any hostility between Chad and the others when he left, it was said to be creative differences. If you compare the drums on Bleach era songs and then Dave Grohls, you can see that he wouldn't have fit in. Channing's best work is on the heavy tracks like Floyd the Barber, not the soft things like About a Girl - which Nevermind is similar too. It's 100% a shame that he wasn't included, though. Especially because Pat Smear, the touring guitarist for a year, got included. I'm glad Pat got recognition, he deserved it, but Channing did too.
If you guys want more grunge like “Bleach”, check out TAD - Inhaler (1993) and Melvins - Houdini (1993, this album was partially produced by Kurt too). If you want more grunge like “Dirt”, check out Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger (1991) and King’s X - Dogman (1994). Also, if you ever get curious about “post-grunge”, Silverchair - Frogstomp (1995) is an absolute killer album from front-to-back.
I love how much you guys are into the heavy shit, this album is easily the most adrenaline inducing record Nirvana has made, it has a raw and unfiltered energy that is hard to match. Also to add context to some tracks, About A Girl actually is about a girl Kurt was dating around the late 80s that dumped him because he couldn't get a job, and School is actually inspired by Kurt going to work as a janitor at his old highschool. A lot of the lyrics on this album are definitely last minute, and Kurt confirms that but there's still songs that have a rhyme and a reason behind them.
I laughed when you said “imagine looking at the radio and seeing Nirvana - Blue” (Bro, our radios didn’t tell you the song that was playing back then… you’d be staring at your radio FM channel wondering “what is this dope song?” And have to hope the dj tells you who sang it after the song is over. Also, please do more Nirvana, I would love for yall to do all there albums eventually, but I’ll try to be patient. I’ll try to check out more than just nirvana and pearl jam too. I never got into Alice In Chains growing up. Oh! Would also love to see yall cover The Offspring - Smash. That one was huge for me growing up. Thanks for listening to my input :-)
Love buzz was their first recorded single, which was a cover song, I believe they released it alongside Blew. Pearl Jam Ten is a must for this grunge week. Edit: Jar of Flies too! When my dad attended a Nirvana concert he said it was right before they blew up, probably right before nevermind came out. They went from playing clubs and bars to arenas and stadiums instantly
The lyrics to Floyd were based on characters from The Andy Griffith Show, which Kurt watched as a kid. It's like his grown up/twisted/whateverthefuck of what he really thought was going down in Mayberry 😂 🤘
Badmotorfinger should not be missed. It was part of a threesome with _Nevermind_ and _Ten_ that introduced grunge to the world outside of Seattle back in '91. If you've only heard "Black Hole Sun", you may not be prepared for the aggressive rock full of alt tunings and timings.
@misterscarisma learned Mr. Moustache in my first month of playing guitar, I STILL can't get Love Buzz or Mexican Seafood and it's been a year and a half
This album was made for $600. The hubbins and I saw Nirvana right before they hit it big with “Smells Like Teen Spirit “ at SXSW in Austin. There was probably 20 or so people there. It was awesome and unhinged! A few months later, we were at our favorite punk bar. Ministry’s song, “So What” had just ended, and just like a bomb went off….the DJ dropped “Smells Like Teen Spirit”! We were like, “WE KNOW THIS SONG!!! WE JUST SAW THIS BAND!! HOLY SHIT!!” The whole bar seemed to stop and just listened with amazement then we all hit the floor aggressively slam dancing. That song was an embodiment of our anger and cynicism. Music totally changed after that. Hair bands were DONE, to which we all were thankful! I just wished we would’ve picked up a poster bill from that SXSW show! We could’ve totally had them sign it. That’ll be one of our biggest regrets. BUT, we got to see them at their most raw!
I saw nirvana on 11-27-93 at Bayfront Park, Miami. The full show is up on youtube. Also saw Alice in Chains, Pumpkins, Tool, Pearl Jam. Janes Addiction, Cypress Hill, Beastie Boys. Too many early 90s bands to list, it was a good time for music.
I’m happy to see you guys enjoy this album beyond what happened with Kurt. Let’s always remember until everything went down, this was a couple of guys living their dreams through their passion about music
Y'all should check out the album "Spiderland" by the band Slint. It's not grunge, it's post-rock from 1991. It's the band's second, and final album. It's a masterpiece.
@@johnfountain5619 and @jay_evans1, Jay is obviously from the US, are you also, John? And did you grow up in an urban or rural area? I have a couple of theories as to why punk was considerably more popular in England than in the U.S, just testing them out.
Check out some of the early live Nirvana videos & you can see them playing a bunch of those songs in places like little German bars (or basements). It’s amazing how tight they are & how well the songs sound live.
They were a completely incredible live band before the fame and Kurt's issues changed the vibes forever. They were still good at times after, but never as enthusiastic or as physical on stage as the Bleach era.
Everyone already listed some of the best, but gonna echo another comment - you gotta hear Temple Of The Dog's self-titled (and only) album which is comprised of Chris Cornell of Soundgarden and several members of what would become Pearl Jam. It is a tribute album to Cornell's friend, the frontman of Mother Love Bone, Andrew Wood, who died of an OD. An incredible album
Looks like you guys got Bleached! This is my favorite grunge album, no question. Low budget, sounds like a show at a small club. Best $600 ever spent. This is how rock should sound. Soundgarden should definitely be in your grunge lineup. Either Badmotorfinger or Superunknown. Badmotorfinger is a more classic grunge album, but they’re both classics. Soundgarden was also a titan of grunge from Seattle with Pearl Jam, Nirvana, and others. Also, The Melvins are I think are looked at as kind of the godfathers of grunge. They are from Seattle as well I think. This was a lot of fun. My favorite moment was, “I know what bass is.” Lol. Thanks, guys! Hope you had a great 4th!
I'm excited for Facelift, but I hope you guys do Nirvana's Unplugged soon my wish list is still: Pearl Jam - Ten Stone Temple Pilots - Purple Faith No More - The Real Thing or Angel Dust Deftones - White Pony Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger U2 - Joshua Tree Foo Fighters - The Colour and the Shape
I just wanted to let you know. Kurt sang hard and was damaging his vocal cords throughout his short career. That’s why he sounds so much different on Bleach to how he sounds on In Utero. Smoother voice in Bleach, scratchy gritty voice on In Utero.
I live in Seattle, just a few miles from where Kurt died. People still visit the park next door to his house and leave tokens for him on the park bench. The museum of pop culture is saturated with his things. The other day, I passed by Linda’s Tavern, the last place he was seen alive. And it’s not just him: Soundgarden, AIC, Pearl Jam; they all were/are such a part of our lives here. They’ll never be forgotten. Recommendation: Lithium from the Live and Loud concert in Seattle, 1993.
One thing that I love about Nirvana is the lyrics, are related with real things that Kurt lives on his town and things like that, like the Beatles lyrics.
Yeah, Nirvana unplugged is a must, the unplugged concert video would be best, then yall can see the band and see Kurt do his thing, instead of listening to the audio😊
'Floyd the Barber' is excellent and brilliant. The Andy Griffith Show was, and to a degree still is, held up as an image of the 'small town American lifestyle' perfection. Conformity, no one having any real problems, no one struggling or hopeless, etc. It was delusional and dishonest, depicting a reality that never existed, glossing over and denying the dark realities that simmer behind the closed doors of outwardly 'perfect' and 'squeaky clean' small town America in the 50s. Gen X has no patience with that WASPy denial and 'we don't talk about that' bullshit. Kurt was our avatar. He would take the characters and setting of the Andy Griffith Show and degrade it with visions of abuse and cult-like murder. Just like the 50s family home gave birth to the Charles Manson cult and his murderous family. Nirvana concerts during the production of Bleach would have just been club shows, mostly local. The music from Bleach is absolutely perfect for a club environment. You can just picture these raw, grungy, powerful songs getting the small crowd cramped into a dark club moshing together in front of the stage, only a foot or two away from Kurt screaming and shredding on the guitar. Where music is played and how it is listened to actually has a very big influence on the music itself. Music made for a huge concert hall has to be different than music for a tiny club. The acoustics are all different, what sounds travel well over large spaces is different, etc. David Byrne from The Talking Heads wrote a book called 'How Music Works' that talks about this a great deal. It's a very good book if you're curious about why different kinds of music were popular during different eras. Like why don't we have lots of 'classical' style music now or why didn't they have loud, driving basslines and piercing vocals back in the past? As technology develops and how and where music is listened to changes, music also changes. When classical music was dominant, it was listened to in giant concert halls where the audience was mostly walking around, talking to each other, and music listening was an inherently social gathering event. When recorded music was developed, lots of people predicted it would destroy music completely. They described listening to a record at home, alone, as a sort of craven masturbation. They predicted that no one would ever learn to make music because they could always just buy a recording of a true master playing more beautifully than the amateur could ever see themselves as capable of. Philip de Souza, the marching band guy, was particularly doom-and-gloom about it and reading his opinions on the matter is quite fascinating from the modern era. But such things still have influence today. Now people generally don't listen to music on home stereos, they have earbuds in playing compressed digital audio. All of that has an impact on what type of music can be successful. The 'poop as hard as rock' lyric that might seem strange and out of place is a consequence of heroin. Opiates bind to opioid receptors in the body. In the brain, that can lead to euphoria (and analgesia, painkilling, suppression of breathing, addiction, there are a bunch of different receptors and different opiates stimulate different ones to different degrees... neuropharmacokinetics are as complicated as the name makes it sound) but there are also receptors in the intestines. There, it slows and temporarily paralyzes the intestines. Which leads to poop not moving through the intestines as fast as normal. When such stuff hangs around, the body pulls water out of it. Which results in, well, poop as hard as rocks. (Insert 'the more you know' gif here) (Another fun fact, the most popular anti-diarrhea medicine is actually an opiate derivative that works the same way, stimulating the same receptors in the intestine, but it can't cross the blood-brain barrier so that's why it is legal without prescription - they don't have to worry about it making anyone happy)
Pixies - Doolittle is a must. Do some research and you'll see that Pixies were shockingly influential for a number of better known 90s bands that came after them.
The first song i learned on guitar was also about a girl! the chorus is a lil hard to get cuz of the lower chords but promise it’s worth man. Great video guys! looking forward to the next grunge videos.
Ten by Pearl Jam is absolutely necessary, as well as the album Vs. by Pearl Jam. Soundgarden has two albums you gotta do as well - Suoerunknown and Badmotorfinger
The first song Nirvana released was Love Buzz, this was a cover of a Dutch band (not grunge/punk at all, very hippie sounding actually), which is why this song sounds so different compared to the rest of the album. They released Love Buzz together with Big Cheese. The album itself is a bit of a mess (a good one don't get me wrong), because they recorder the album at different studios and times. The first session they did was 6 hours (recording and mastering), yet only 3 songs where chosen from this session for this album. The next session they recorded Love Buzz and Big Cheese, for only around 100-200 dollars. The last session also didn't take very long and was for the final songs on the album, costing around 600 dollars.. They did not have a lot of budget simply because their lable at the time (Sub Pop) was very poor and going almost bankrupt at some point, meaning that their budget was very small. Nirvana also wasn't their priority at the time, Mudhoney was their more popular band at the time. A great, but messy album in my opinion, but very important to Kurt for finding his sound and finaly feeling like he could make music for a living. If you ever want a very detailed biography on Kurt, you should check out the book 'Heavier than Heaven' by Charles R. Cross. This is one of the best and most acurate books about Kurt's life.
The songs on here some of them reference his relationship with his mother it was a turbulent one he would run away a lot and his mother kicked him out at one point. About a girl was written about his girlfriend at the time she asked him to write a song about her and that was the song Kurt wrote.
I appreciate you young guys checking out some of this stuff. If you haven't already you need to watch the entire unplugged video. They went from bleach to that performance in about 5 years. they were the biggest punk band in the world when they did unplugged.All of their albums were great and very different but I think Incesticide is the most representative of who they really were.
You guys need to watch their earlier performances with Chad Channing in 89 y’all would be mind blown for how good Kurt sounded in 89 especially in their older days I always thought “Bleach” was what defined what and how nirvana should really be don’t get me wrong Nirvanas newer stuff sounds amazing but what’s stands out to be the most is that bleach is by far their most grungy and sludgy album ever while in-utero and nevermind are more on the poppy mainstream grunge style man Kurt was really ahead of his time writing crazy riffs n lyrics to go with it
Song 6, Paper Cuts, has one of my top ten favorite lyrics from Nirvana (maybe top 5): "I have found my eternal love but she can not look me in the eyes, but I see hers and they are blue". - I dont know why I love that so much, perhaps because I have blue eyes lol.
Kurt wasn't thrilled that Nirvana's first single Love Buzz was a cover. But he was thrilled when heard himself on the radio for the first time! Ask his girlfriend Tracy Marander. This is Nirvana's first album but you need to hear Incesticide. It's what they released after NeVeRmInD to prepare their fans with their actual roots before for In Utero
ALICE IN CHAINS - FACELIFT NEXT! What else should we add to the grunge marathon list??
Acid bath when the kite string pops, pretty please
@@spvilles7556 up!
Purple by stone temple pilots, superfuzz bigmuff by mudhoney and you should for sure check out daydream nation or goo by sonic youth!!!
super unknown soundgarden
LET'S GOOO
47 year old here. I love watching the younger generations stumble into the music of my youth and find it just as magical as I did.
its really fun to see all these gen x people commenting similet comments to this on these kinda videos, you know there is a band called "Sap" which did a great job at making 90s like grunge in 2023. I love 80s and 90s rock especially grunge and metal so its fun to see thats there are still really good grunge and metal bands in 2024
The compilation album Incesticide (1992) is great too. For me it is at the same level as the "official" Nirvana albums
Agreed
probably my favorite
It was a cash grab, literally.
@@TheTree1 what makes you think so?
@@silversnoops568 because they had just had one of the biggest albums of all time and they just took all the junk they had laying around and put it onto an album. I believe Dave Grohl even said as much that the studio really said they were gonna make a lot of money. Kurt wasn't comfortable doing it but he eventually relented.
Album: Superfuzz Bigmuff
Artist: Mudhoney
Release: 1988
thats a must!
About A Girl is what convinced the producer of Bleach to work with Nirvana.He knew Kurt was special
Nirvana MTV Unplugged is a must, too!
Honestly, I love every single album by them, they have so much feelings, whatever they are: anger, sadness, fear, even happiness sometimes. Kurt was majestic. Thats crazy that they existed for like 5 years (popularity came later, so ~3 years) and after 30 years people still in love with his voice ❤
Soundgarden - superunknown
First do Soundgarden-Superunknown, then do Soundgarden-Badmotorfinger.
@@garysimonson1135 I second the pair, but would reverse the order, especially when they just listened to and very much liked Bleach, they're ready for the edgier, rawer BMF. Makes more send to go chronological, too.
Superunknown, no question
Best grunge album ever for me🖤
It’s a crime Chad Channing didn’t make the Hall of Fame with Nirvana. He was not only pivotal in launching their distinctive sound on the Bleach album, but had also already written many drum parts on Nevermind, which Dave Grohl kept, and I believe influenced his playing moving forward.
I think they pushed to try to have him included in some way but the committee wouldn't budge. All three members really liked Chad. There's a concert they played on the In Utero tour in Ohio where they hear a rumor Chad is in the crowd, and they spend the entire show trying to get him to come up and play School. Kurt at one point even apologizes and says if him asking Chad to come on stage freaked him out, he's really sorry. They ended up waiting for him until they closed the show playing School, the only time that ever happened in band history. Chad wasn't there 😢
Yeah, I mean, it wasn’t even like Kurt and Chad disliked each other, it’s just Kurt was the songwriter and Chad wanted to have more input writing songs, they both didn’t want to budge on their opinion, so, Chad was out, heard all of the band still liked him though.
LITERALLY A CHAD
IIRC, Krist Dave and Pat tried to have him included but were blocked by the committee. Dave Grohl did give him a tribute in his speech though, saying that Chad deserved to be there and said that many of "his" iconic drum parts are from Chad's notes (He'd never said they were his, but people assumed)
I don't think there was any hostility between Chad and the others when he left, it was said to be creative differences. If you compare the drums on Bleach era songs and then Dave Grohls, you can see that he wouldn't have fit in. Channing's best work is on the heavy tracks like Floyd the Barber, not the soft things like About a Girl - which Nevermind is similar too.
It's 100% a shame that he wasn't included, though. Especially because Pat Smear, the touring guitarist for a year, got included. I'm glad Pat got recognition, he deserved it, but Channing did too.
@@aw3046 drums on Floyd The Barber is played by Dale Crover from The Melvins lol
If you guys want more grunge like “Bleach”, check out TAD - Inhaler (1993) and Melvins - Houdini (1993, this album was partially produced by Kurt too).
If you want more grunge like “Dirt”, check out Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger (1991) and King’s X - Dogman (1994).
Also, if you ever get curious about “post-grunge”, Silverchair - Frogstomp (1995) is an absolute killer album from front-to-back.
'Houdini' and 'Badmotorfinger' especially
Silverchair Frogstomp has a bunch of underrated songs for sure.
I love how much you guys are into the heavy shit, this album is easily the most adrenaline inducing record Nirvana has made, it has a raw and unfiltered energy that is hard to match.
Also to add context to some tracks, About A Girl actually is about a girl Kurt was dating around the late 80s that dumped him because he couldn't get a job, and School is actually inspired by Kurt going to work as a janitor at his old highschool.
A lot of the lyrics on this album are definitely last minute, and Kurt confirms that but there's still songs that have a rhyme and a reason behind them.
Pearl Jam-Ten
🫡
no
Yes
Garbage
@@basskit_fuck u mean no ??
I laughed when you said “imagine looking at the radio and seeing Nirvana - Blue” (Bro, our radios didn’t tell you the song that was playing back then… you’d be staring at your radio FM channel wondering “what is this dope song?” And have to hope the dj tells you who sang it after the song is over. Also, please do more Nirvana, I would love for yall to do all there albums eventually, but I’ll try to be patient. I’ll try to check out more than just nirvana and pearl jam too. I never got into Alice In Chains growing up. Oh! Would also love to see yall cover The Offspring - Smash. That one was huge for me growing up. Thanks for listening to my input :-)
Stone Temple Pilots- Core
I know i already commented, but also surfer rosa by pixies. Kurt cobain took a lot of inspiration from that album to make nevermind.
Love the pixies suggestions. Incredible band!
Love buzz was their first recorded single, which was a cover song, I believe they released it alongside Blew. Pearl Jam Ten is a must for this grunge week. Edit: Jar of Flies too! When my dad attended a Nirvana concert he said it was right before they blew up, probably right before nevermind came out. They went from playing clubs and bars to arenas and stadiums instantly
The lyrics to Floyd were based on characters from The Andy Griffith Show, which Kurt watched as a kid. It's like his grown up/twisted/whateverthefuck of what he really thought was going down in Mayberry 😂 🤘
Badmotorfinger should not be missed. It was part of a threesome with _Nevermind_ and _Ten_ that introduced grunge to the world outside of Seattle back in '91. If you've only heard
"Black Hole Sun", you may not be prepared for the aggressive rock full of alt tunings and timings.
The guy on the album cover is actually Jason Everman, Kurt is on his left
The Pixies were the seed. Jane's Addiction's Nothing's Shocking started the 90s renaissance.
For the record, Mr. Mustache is super fun to play on guitar. Good finger exercise. One of their more complicated songs.
Love Buzz and Mexican Seafood are MILES more complicated
@@absolutez3r058 Miles? I disagree. Maybe equally.
@misterscarisma learned Mr. Moustache in my first month of playing guitar, I STILL can't get Love Buzz or Mexican Seafood and it's been a year and a half
This album was made for $600.
The hubbins and I saw Nirvana right before they hit it big with “Smells Like Teen Spirit “ at SXSW in Austin.
There was probably 20 or so people there.
It was awesome and unhinged!
A few months later, we were at our favorite punk bar. Ministry’s song, “So What” had just ended, and just like a bomb went off….the DJ dropped “Smells Like Teen Spirit”!
We were like, “WE KNOW THIS SONG!!! WE JUST SAW THIS BAND!! HOLY SHIT!!”
The whole bar seemed to stop and just listened with amazement then we all hit the floor aggressively slam dancing. That song was an embodiment of our anger and cynicism.
Music totally changed after that. Hair bands were DONE, to which we all were thankful!
I just wished we would’ve picked up a poster bill from that SXSW show! We could’ve totally had them sign it. That’ll be one of our biggest regrets. BUT, we got to see them at their most raw!
great story, thanks for sharing
@@Geo-wc7jcHappy to share it. :)
You guys should definitely listen to Incesticide, Superunknown, and Jar of Flies
Yeah, they definitely need to check out Incesticide.
Heavy on jar of flies, my favorite Alice in chains album
@@wyanthewion288 My favorite album from them is Dirt but Rotten Apple is probably my favorite song from them
@@therealninjastar that’s valid, I love the bass on rotten apple
@@wyanthewion288 Oh yeah it’s iconic
Pixies doolittle
The album is Doolittle my bad
Second this!
They are gonna love this album
Pixies also inspired radiohead
for sure! very influential band to 90s alternative rock
I saw nirvana on 11-27-93 at Bayfront Park, Miami. The full show is up on youtube. Also saw Alice in Chains, Pumpkins, Tool, Pearl Jam. Janes Addiction, Cypress Hill, Beastie Boys. Too many early 90s bands to list, it was a good time for music.
I’m happy to see you guys enjoy this album beyond what happened with Kurt. Let’s always remember until everything went down, this was a couple of guys living their dreams through their passion about music
Sweet Oblivion - Screaming Trees
I needn't say anymore. Listen to it.
I’ll say it again, y’all got to listen to Temple of the Dog, one of the most emotional grunge albums ever.
Y'all should check out the album "Spiderland" by the band Slint. It's not grunge, it's post-rock from 1991. It's the band's second, and final album. It's a masterpiece.
That's a band you rarely hear from. Critics love them, but I can't handle the punk-like off-pitch vocals.
Excellent album! Ethan Buckler from Slint went on to form King Kong, one of my all time favorites!
@@johnfountain5619 and @jay_evans1, Jay is obviously from the US, are you also, John? And did you grow up in an urban or rural area? I have a couple of theories as to why punk was considerably more popular in England than in the U.S, just testing them out.
Check out some of the early live Nirvana videos & you can see them playing a bunch of those songs in places like little German bars (or basements). It’s amazing how tight they are & how well the songs sound live.
They were a completely incredible live band before the fame and Kurt's issues changed the vibes forever. They were still good at times after, but never as enthusiastic or as physical on stage as the Bleach era.
Everyone already listed some of the best, but gonna echo another comment - you gotta hear Temple Of The Dog's self-titled (and only) album which is comprised of Chris Cornell of Soundgarden and several members of what would become Pearl Jam. It is a tribute album to Cornell's friend, the frontman of Mother Love Bone, Andrew Wood, who died of an OD. An incredible album
If the want to do a deep dive they should absolutely do Mother Love Bone
Nirvana MTV unplugged!
Deftones guys! Diamond Eyes or White Pony. You will be blown away.
I second that!
That’s not grunge
@@jacktilghman9797 Captain Obvious entered the chat.
Looks like you guys got Bleached! This is my favorite grunge album, no question. Low budget, sounds like a show at a small club. Best $600 ever spent. This is how rock should sound. Soundgarden should definitely be in your grunge lineup. Either Badmotorfinger or Superunknown. Badmotorfinger is a more classic grunge album, but they’re both classics. Soundgarden was also a titan of grunge from Seattle with Pearl Jam, Nirvana, and others. Also, The Melvins are I think are looked at as kind of the godfathers of grunge. They are from Seattle as well I think. This was a lot of fun. My favorite moment was, “I know what bass is.” Lol. Thanks, guys! Hope you had a great 4th!
react to "You Know You're Right" is the last song Nirvana ever recorded
Papercuts is so good
Idk if this counts but I recommend Nirvanas Incesticide album it’s a compilation of b sides and songs from all the albums highly recommend
Live through this- hole(Kurt cobains wife’s band)
Sonic Youth - Goo
Dirty
Alice In Chains Unplugged is by far one of the best live shows ever.
aint no way bro pulled out the ds-1
I'm excited for Facelift, but I hope you guys do Nirvana's Unplugged soon
my wish list is still:
Pearl Jam - Ten
Stone Temple Pilots - Purple
Faith No More - The Real Thing or Angel Dust
Deftones - White Pony
Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger
U2 - Joshua Tree
Foo Fighters - The Colour and the Shape
And negative creep is iconic
I just wanted to let you know.
Kurt sang hard and was damaging his vocal cords throughout his short career.
That’s why he sounds so much different on Bleach to how he sounds on In Utero. Smoother voice in Bleach, scratchy gritty voice on In Utero.
Nirvana MTV Unplugged in New York
Negative creep by far my favorite. Good reaction. Great to see people about 10 years younger than me liking what I grew up listening to
I have heard some folks say Kurt was a bad guitarist . Rather, was he so good, that he could make himself sound off on purpose?
Having lived through it, the big four... AIC, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden.... def need to cover Ten by Pearl Jam, and, Superunknown by Soundgarden
There's a long interview here on YT with producer Jack Endino about the making of Bleach and other Nirvana tracks he recored.
Mad Season - Above
A FANTASTIC ALBUM
I wouldnt say that mad season is grunge, bit given it is still 90s i would bump it into the list
I live in Seattle, just a few miles from where Kurt died. People still visit the park next door to his house and leave tokens for him on the park bench. The museum of pop culture is saturated with his things. The other day, I passed by Linda’s Tavern, the last place he was seen alive. And it’s not just him: Soundgarden, AIC, Pearl Jam; they all were/are such a part of our lives here. They’ll never be forgotten. Recommendation: Lithium from the Live and Loud concert in Seattle, 1993.
Love the energy you guys bring to this reaction
Something new for you could be reviewing classic 90s movie soundtracks like:
Singles
One thing that I love about Nirvana is the lyrics, are related with real things that Kurt lives on his town and things like that, like the Beatles lyrics.
Hole-Live through this
yessssssss i’ve been waiting for you guys to react to this one a kind album!
Yeah, Nirvana unplugged is a must, the unplugged concert video would be best, then yall can see the band and see Kurt do his thing, instead of listening to the audio😊
During the marathon you need to do incestiside by nirvana And then after the marathon do MTV live unplugged by nirvana To just complete the collection
Live through this by Hole soon. The singer is Kurt Cobain's wife. Hole is the most successful and famous female led grunge band.
OMG YES!!!!
They need some lady-grunge for balance.
@@smithfield731 definitely
Great album. Rumors were Kurt helped quite a bit with it before he died
@@neonbible08 Lucky I don't like rumors isn't it. Except for rumors by Fleetwood Mac that's a flawless album, I like that kind of rumors.
'Floyd the Barber' is excellent and brilliant. The Andy Griffith Show was, and to a degree still is, held up as an image of the 'small town American lifestyle' perfection. Conformity, no one having any real problems, no one struggling or hopeless, etc. It was delusional and dishonest, depicting a reality that never existed, glossing over and denying the dark realities that simmer behind the closed doors of outwardly 'perfect' and 'squeaky clean' small town America in the 50s. Gen X has no patience with that WASPy denial and 'we don't talk about that' bullshit. Kurt was our avatar. He would take the characters and setting of the Andy Griffith Show and degrade it with visions of abuse and cult-like murder. Just like the 50s family home gave birth to the Charles Manson cult and his murderous family.
Nirvana concerts during the production of Bleach would have just been club shows, mostly local. The music from Bleach is absolutely perfect for a club environment. You can just picture these raw, grungy, powerful songs getting the small crowd cramped into a dark club moshing together in front of the stage, only a foot or two away from Kurt screaming and shredding on the guitar. Where music is played and how it is listened to actually has a very big influence on the music itself. Music made for a huge concert hall has to be different than music for a tiny club. The acoustics are all different, what sounds travel well over large spaces is different, etc. David Byrne from The Talking Heads wrote a book called 'How Music Works' that talks about this a great deal. It's a very good book if you're curious about why different kinds of music were popular during different eras. Like why don't we have lots of 'classical' style music now or why didn't they have loud, driving basslines and piercing vocals back in the past? As technology develops and how and where music is listened to changes, music also changes. When classical music was dominant, it was listened to in giant concert halls where the audience was mostly walking around, talking to each other, and music listening was an inherently social gathering event. When recorded music was developed, lots of people predicted it would destroy music completely. They described listening to a record at home, alone, as a sort of craven masturbation. They predicted that no one would ever learn to make music because they could always just buy a recording of a true master playing more beautifully than the amateur could ever see themselves as capable of. Philip de Souza, the marching band guy, was particularly doom-and-gloom about it and reading his opinions on the matter is quite fascinating from the modern era. But such things still have influence today. Now people generally don't listen to music on home stereos, they have earbuds in playing compressed digital audio. All of that has an impact on what type of music can be successful.
The 'poop as hard as rock' lyric that might seem strange and out of place is a consequence of heroin. Opiates bind to opioid receptors in the body. In the brain, that can lead to euphoria (and analgesia, painkilling, suppression of breathing, addiction, there are a bunch of different receptors and different opiates stimulate different ones to different degrees... neuropharmacokinetics are as complicated as the name makes it sound) but there are also receptors in the intestines. There, it slows and temporarily paralyzes the intestines. Which leads to poop not moving through the intestines as fast as normal. When such stuff hangs around, the body pulls water out of it. Which results in, well, poop as hard as rocks. (Insert 'the more you know' gif here) (Another fun fact, the most popular anti-diarrhea medicine is actually an opiate derivative that works the same way, stimulating the same receptors in the intestine, but it can't cross the blood-brain barrier so that's why it is legal without prescription - they don't have to worry about it making anyone happy)
Uh, sorry, but Kurt himself said he was a fan of The Andy Griffith Show.
Pixies - Doolittle is a must. Do some research and you'll see that Pixies were shockingly influential for a number of better known 90s bands that came after them.
💯
This album will grow on y’all more and more the more you listen to it
Down On The Upside - Soundgarden
Everyone skips this one and it’s arguably their best!!! Please do this one >w
I hope they get to it, too, but coming off of Bleach, I'd have to go Badmotorfinger first.
I loved this album at the time. Little did know this Album was the catalyst for me to go on to discover Melvins, Crowbar and Silverchair.
Lol, he’s not shredding, he’s fucking around on the guitar, Kurt hated shredders. 😂
You knew him!!!!???????
@@baconator1550 Yeah, I did.
@@jacktilghman9797 wow!!!!!!!! Congratulations on your success!
@@baconator1550your are a dunce. That’s info is available if you were a fan
It really is crazy they impacted music and only were from 87 to 94... Still are relevant today!
Love hate love Alice In Chains please
Watch the 'Live at the Moore' live version, as it is mind-blowing watching Layne in action.
The first song i learned on guitar was also about a girl! the chorus is a lil hard to get cuz of the lower chords but promise it’s worth man. Great video guys! looking forward to the next grunge videos.
Ten by Pearl Jam is absolutely necessary, as well as the album Vs. by Pearl Jam. Soundgarden has two albums you gotta do as well - Suoerunknown and Badmotorfinger
Definitively my favorite Nirvana album.
Btw love buzz was written by a band from my country called ‘shocking blue’ (Amsterdam)
The first song Nirvana released was Love Buzz, this was a cover of a Dutch band (not grunge/punk at all, very hippie sounding actually), which is why this song sounds so different compared to the rest of the album. They released Love Buzz together with Big Cheese. The album itself is a bit of a mess (a good one don't get me wrong), because they recorder the album at different studios and times. The first session they did was 6 hours (recording and mastering), yet only 3 songs where chosen from this session for this album. The next session they recorded Love Buzz and Big Cheese, for only around 100-200 dollars. The last session also didn't take very long and was for the final songs on the album, costing around 600 dollars.. They did not have a lot of budget simply because their lable at the time (Sub Pop) was very poor and going almost bankrupt at some point, meaning that their budget was very small. Nirvana also wasn't their priority at the time, Mudhoney was their more popular band at the time.
A great, but messy album in my opinion, but very important to Kurt for finding his sound and finaly feeling like he could make music for a living.
If you ever want a very detailed biography on Kurt, you should check out the book 'Heavier than Heaven' by Charles R. Cross. This is one of the best and most acurate books about Kurt's life.
The songs on here some of them reference his relationship with his mother it was a turbulent one he would run away a lot and his mother kicked him out at one point. About a girl was written about his girlfriend at the time she asked him to write a song about her and that was the song Kurt wrote.
I WAS WAITING FOR YOU GUYS TO REACT TO THISSS
It's not grunge, but i think you guys might like slanted and enchanted by pavement! Just very good indie rock vibes :)
Shocking Blue - Love Buzz is the original one. Funky and psychedelic. Great band.
"Pretty on the Inside" by HOLE is heavier than Bleach.
YES!!
They definitely need to do Hole, Live Through This. Also guaranteed to piss off all the conspiracy loons
@@shenanigans3710 I like pissing them off they're so sure they're right and seeing them get mad like a toddler when I don't agree makes my day.
I appreciate you young guys checking out some of this stuff. If you haven't already you need to watch the entire unplugged video. They went from bleach to that performance in about 5 years. they were the biggest punk band in the world when they did unplugged.All of their albums were great and very different but I think Incesticide is the most representative of who they really were.
Just some insight for the inspo on the track *school* Kurt had dropped out and shortly returned to his high school as a janitor!
Smashing Pumpinks - Pisces Iscariot
Did they listen to Mellon Collie yet?
Pisces Iscariot for sure👍
@@IronFloydiannah
@@beanboi3178 They should listen to Mellon Collie next.
@@IronFloydian I’m saying
My favourite Nirvana album! 🫡 this is Nirvana!!!
About A Girl was the first song I learnt on guitar - recommend watching him play it on Unplugged to learn. Keep practicing - you'll get there :)
Yeah, it's also a song to practice singing while playing guitar
Fun fact love buzz is a cover of a 60s song
You gotta do the full show of Nirvana's M-TV Unplugged!!
You guys need to watch their earlier performances with Chad Channing in 89 y’all would be mind blown for how good Kurt sounded in 89 especially in their older days I always thought “Bleach” was what defined what and how nirvana should really be don’t get me wrong Nirvanas newer stuff sounds amazing but what’s stands out to be the most is that bleach is by far their most grungy and sludgy album ever while in-utero and nevermind are more on the poppy mainstream grunge style man Kurt was really ahead of his time writing crazy riffs n lyrics to go with it
Song 6, Paper Cuts, has one of my top ten favorite lyrics from Nirvana (maybe top 5): "I have found my eternal love but she can not look me in the eyes, but I see hers and they are blue". - I dont know why I love that so much, perhaps because I have blue eyes lol.
Love buzz was a cover of a band called shocking blue from the 60s
Green river - dry as bone. This one is first grunge album ever made
live through this - hole
vs. - pearl jam
You need to watch Nirvana MTV Unplugged
Love Buzz is a cover song originally by The Shocking Blue. Also, Jason Everman played bass in Soundgarden too.
Nirvana all the way! Cobain changed the f@@@ing world!
Kurt wasn't thrilled that Nirvana's first single Love Buzz was a cover. But he was thrilled when heard himself on the radio for the first time! Ask his girlfriend Tracy Marander. This is Nirvana's first album but you need to hear Incesticide. It's what they released after NeVeRmInD to prepare their fans with their actual roots before for In Utero
You guys should really react to the album frogstomp by silverchair. They were only 15 when it was released in 1995. One of the best grunge albums.
Soundgarden - Badmotorfinger
Temple of the dog - temple of the dog
I can play Mr. Mustache on guitar. Haha I'm sure you guys have figured out I can play nearly every song even the unreleased songs. 😆👏👏👏
Yes, what a great album. As soon as I heard Nevermind, I ran out to look for more and bought Bleach and I loved the sound.
Mellon collie smashing pumpkins
My cats name is Mrs. Mustache -
love seeing younger generation appreciate Nirvana, like really appreciate them.