On the 30th anniversary of Kurt Cobain’s death, people started talking about the future of Nirvana

On the 30th anniversary of Kurt Cobain's death, people started talking about the future of Nirvana

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At the beginning of April, Nirvana fans have another reason to remember the grunge icons and their leader Kurt Cobain. This year, the memories gained great media coverage, the occasion for which was the thirtieth anniversary of the suicide of the Nirvana frontman. And in a series of expected memories of the group and its leader, verbs in the future tense suddenly began to sound.

Thirty years after Kurt Cobain’s death, everyone associated with Nirvana seems to be living more or less peacefully. Courtney Love, Kurt’s widow, no longer bears the title of monster, sitting on all the group’s copyrights like a dog in a manger, the courts have subsided, mutual claims are a thing of the past. Perhaps that’s why Cobain’s loved ones are not shy about being sentimental.

Frances Bean Cobain, the only daughter of Kurt and Courtney, is now almost thirty-two years old, and, remembering her father, who passed away when she was not even two years old, she published a very touching post on the social network dedicated to the round date of his death.

“Wendy (Kurt’s mother and Frances’ grandmother – “ZD”) often pressed my hands to her cheeks and said with soothing sadness: “You have his hands.” She held them close as if this was her only chance to bring her father a little closer. I hope she holds his hands wherever they are. I wish I knew my father. Hearing the timbre of his voice, knowing what kind of coffee he likes or how he feels sitting at the table after reading me a bedtime story. I always wondered if he would catch tadpoles with me in the sultry Washington summer, if he smelled like Camel Lights or strawberry Nesquik, his favorites, as they tell me…” Frances wrote and added that thanks to the “lesson of death” from her father, she is like no one the other understands how valuable life is.

Much has been written and filmed about Cobain, but his persona remains controversial. The image created in the media and by some biographers of a very shy person, exhausted by the fame that unexpectedly befell him, as well as chronic illnesses and drugs, does not agree with everyone. There is plenty of evidence that in the last months of his life, Kurt received great pleasure from family life and fatherhood. Everything related to the musician’s suicide is still surrounded by various, sometimes completely ridiculous theories, and the media is happy to try. With music everything is much simpler.

With the album Nevermind (1991), the members of Nirvana turned grunge from a subculture into the mainstream with multimillion-dollar turnover. Obviously, this style became for popular music what punk was in the late seventies. Then primitive guitar fury thundered in a deafening response to abstruse progressive rock and cutesy disco. In the late eighties, grunge practically killed the fashion for “hairy” rock, as commercial hard and glam were then called. Contrary to popular belief, Nirvana did not remain in history as the most successful group in its style (Pearl Jam has more impressive statistics), but it was Cobain who discovered grunge to the mass public on both sides of the Atlantic, and he seemed to complete its history with his death.

“He had a charisma that still attracts people. He also had a talent for coming up with melodies,” said the band’s bassist Krist Novoselic in an interview with Mojo magazine, dedicated to the anniversary of Cobain’s death. Recalling the tour that followed the release of In Utero (1993), Novoselic says how Kurt carried the entire show despite his health problems, and is confident that Nirvana will remain in people’s memories as a very powerful group thanks to Cobain.

In 2012, Krist Novoselic, Dave Groll and Pat Smear, who had performed with Nirvana in the band’s final years, joined Paul McCartney for a benefit concert in New York. The musicians performed a new song, Cut Me Some Slack, composed during a joint studio session before the event. The appearance of Nirvana members on stage gave rise to a lot of rumors about a possible reunion of the group. The sensational ABBA Voyage show, as a technological technique to bring musicians on stage as avatars, also later became an example of possible Nirvana performances in front of the public, although with some reservation, since in the case of ABBA, digital images were created with the help of still living artists.

Novoselic still refuses to make predictions for the near future, but his irony sounds encouraging. “You never know what’s going to happen,” Crist says. “I can say: “No way,” and then suddenly: “How much?” When do we start?!” The reasoning that the musician is waiting for new opportunities to play with Groll and Smear looks a little more serious.

“I always hope,” Novoselic notes, “there was a time when I thought I would never perform these songs again. But we had a conversation and we decided, “Let’s do it, but try not to overdo it.” In general, we are waiting for the right moment.”

Published in the newspaper “Moskovsky Komsomolets” No. 29254 dated April 10, 2024

Newspaper headline:
Grunge forever

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