Kurt
Donald Cobain
(February 20, 1967 – April 5, 1994) was an American musician and artist,
best known as the lead singer, guitarist and primary songwriter of the grunge
band Nirvana. Cobain formed Nirvana with Krist Novoselic in Aberdeen, Washington
in 1985 and established it as part of the Seattle music scene, having its debut
album Bleach released on the independent record label Sub Pop in 1989.
After
signing with major label DGC Records, the band found breakthrough success with
"Smells Like Teen Spirit" from its second album Nevermind
(1991). Following the success of Nevermind, Nirvana was labeled
"the flagship band" of Generation X, and Cobain hailed as "the
spokesman of a generation". Cobain, however, was often uncomfortable and
frustrated, believing his message and artistic vision to have been
misinterpreted by the public, with his personal issues often subject to media
attention. He challenged Nirvana's audience with its final studio album In
Utero (1993).
During the
last years of his life, Cobain struggled with heroin addiction, illness and
depression. He also had difficulty coping with his fame and public image, and
the professional and lifelong personal pressures surrounding himself and his
wife, musician Courtney Love. On April 8, 1994, Cobain was found dead at his
home in Seattle, the victim of what was officially ruled a suicide by a
self-inflicted shotgun wound to the head. The circumstances of his death at age
27 have become a topic of public fascination and debate. Since their debut,
Nirvana, with Cobain as a songwriter, has sold over 25 million albums in
the U.S., and over 50 million worldwide
Kurt Donald
Cobain was born on Feb 20, 1967, at Grays Harbor Hospital in Aberdeen, Washington, to a waitress,
Wendy Elizabeth (born 1948),[ and an automotive mechanic, Donald Leland
Cobain (born 1946). His parents were married on July 31, 1965 in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. His ancestry
included Irish, English, Scottish, and German. Cobain's Irish ancestors
migrated from County
Tyrone
of Northern Ireland in 1875. Researchers have found them to have been
shoemakers, originally named Cobane, who came from the village of Inishatieve
near Pomeroy, settling in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada, and then in
Washington. Cobain had one younger sister named Kimberly, born on April 24,
1970.
Cobain's
family had a musical background. His maternal uncle Chuck Fradenburg starred in
a band called The Beachcombers, his Aunt Mari Earle played guitar and performed
in bands throughout Grays
Harbor County,
and his great-uncle Delbert had a career as an Irish tenor; making an
appearance in the 1930 film King of Jazz. Cobain was described as being a happy and excitable,
while sensitive and caring child. His talent as an artist was evident from an
early age. His bedroom was described as having taken on the appearance of an
art studio, where he would accurately
draw his favorite characters from films and cartoons such as Aquaman, the Creature from the Black
Lagoon,
and Disney characters like Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse, and Pluto. This enthusiasm was
encouraged by his grandmother Iris Cobain, who was a professional artist
herself. Cobain began developing an interest in music early in his life.
According to his Aunt Mari, he began singing at two years old. At age four,
Cobain started playing the piano and singing, writing a song about their trip
to a local park. He listened to artists like the Ramones and would sing songs like Arlo Guthrie's "Motorcycle
Song," The
Beatles'
"Hey
Jude",
Terry
Jacks'
"Seasons
in the Sun"
and the theme song to The
Monkees television show at a young age.
When Cobain
was seven years old, his parents divorced. Later in his life, he said the
divorce had a profound effect on his life. His mother noted that his
personality changed dramatically; Cobain became defiant and withdrawn. In a
1993 interview, he elaborated:"I
remember feeling ashamed, for some reason. I was ashamed of my parents. I
couldn't face some of my friends at school anymore, because I desperately
wanted to have the classic, you know, typical family. Mother, father. I wanted
that security, so I resented my parents for quite a few years because of
that."
Cobain's
parents both found new partners after the divorce. His father had promised not
to remarry; however, after meeting Jenny Westeby, he did, to Kurt's dismay.
Kurt, his father, Westeby, and her two children Mindy and James, moved into a
new household together. Cobain liked Westeby at first, who gave him the
maternal attention he desired. In January 1979, Westeby gave birth to a boy,
Chad Cobain. This new family, which Cobain insisted was not his real one, was
in stark contrast to the attention Cobain was used to receiving as an only boy;
he soon began to express resentment toward his stepmother. Kurt's mother began
dating a man who was abusive. Cobain witnessed the domestic violence inflicted upon her,
with one incident resulting in her being hospitalized with a broken arm. Wendy
steadfastly refused to press charges, remaining completely committed to the
relationship.
Kurt behaved
insolently toward adults. He began bullying another boy at school. These
behaviours eventually caused his father and Westeby to take him to a therapist,
who concluded that Kurt would benefit in a single family environment. Both
sides of the family attempted to bring his parents back together, but to no
avail. On June 28, 1979, Cobain's mother granted full custody of Kurt to his
father.
Cobain's
teenage rebellion quickly became overwhelming for his father, who placed Kurt
in the care of family and friends. While living with the born-again Christian family of his friend
Jesse Reed, Cobain became a devout Christian and regularly attended church services.
Cobain later renounced Christianity, engaging in what would be described as
"anti-God" rants. The song "Lithium" is about his experience while
living with the Reed family. Religion would remain an important part in
Cobain's personal life and beliefs, as he often used Christian imagery in his
work and maintained a constant interest in Jainism and Buddhist philosophy. The band name Nirvana was taken from the Buddhist concept, which Cobain
described as "freedom from pain, suffering and the external world,"
which paralleled with the punk rock
ethic and ideology. Cobain would regard
himself as both a Buddhist and a Jain during different points of his life,
educating himself about the philosophies through various sources, including
through watching late night television documentaries on both subjects.
Although not
interested in sports, Kurt was enrolled in a junior high school wrestling team at the
insistence of his father. Kurt was a skilled wrestler, yet despised the
experience. Because of the ridicule he endured from his teammates and coach, he
allowed himself to be pinned, in an attempt to sadden his father. Later, his
father enlisted him in a little
league baseball
team, where Cobain would intentionally strike out to avoid playing on the team.
Cobain befriended
a homosexual student at school, and suffered bullying from heterosexual
students who concluded that Cobain was gay. In an interview he said that he
liked having the identity of being gay because he did not like people and when
they thought he was gay they left him alone. Kurt stated, "I started being
really proud of the fact that I was gay even though I wasn't". His friend
tried to kiss him and Kurt backed away and told his friend he was not gay but
would still be friends with him. In a 1993 interview with The Advocate, Cobain claimed that
he was "gay in spirit" and "probably could be bisexual." He also
stated that he used to spray paint "God Is Gay" on pickup trucks in
the Aberdeen area. Aberdeen police records show that Cobain was arrested for spray
painting the phrase "Ain't got no how watchamacallit" on other
vehicles. One of his personal journals states, "I am not gay, although I
wish I were, just to piss off homophobes."
Cobain enjoyed creating works of art. He would
often draw during school classes, including objects associated with human anatomy. When given a
caricature assignment for an art course, Cobain drew a posing Michael Jackson. When his art
teacher told him the caricature would be inappropriate to be displayed in a
school hallway, Cobain drew an unflattering sketch of then-President Ronald Reagan.
As attested
to by several of Cobain's classmates and family members, the first concert he
attended was Sammy
Hagar
and Quarterflash at the Seattle Center Coliseum in 1983. Cobain,
however, claimed that the first concert he attended was the Melvins; he wrote
prolifically in his Journals of the experience. As a teenager living in Montesano, Cobain eventually
found escape through the thriving Pacific Northwest punk scene, going to
punk rock shows in Seattle. Cobain soon began frequenting the practice space of
fellow Montesano musicians the Melvins.
During his
sophomore year in high school, Cobain began living with his mother in Aberdeen.
Two weeks prior to graduation, he dropped out of Aberdeen High School upon realizing he
did not have enough credits to graduate. His mother gave him a choice: find
employment or leave. After one week, Cobain found his clothes and other
belongings packed away in boxes. Feeling banished from his own mother's home,
Cobain stayed with friends, occasionally sneaking back into his mother's
basement. Cobain also claimed during periods of homelessness to have lived
under a bridge over the Wishkah
River,
an experience that inspired the Nevermind track "Something in the Way". However,
Nirvana bassist Krist
Novoselic
said, "He hung out there, but you couldn't live on those muddy banks, with
the tides coming up and down. That was his own revisionism."
In late 1986
Cobain moved into an apartment, paying his rent by working at a Polynesian coastal resort
approximately 20 miles (32 km) north of Aberdeen. During this period, he
was traveling frequently to Olympia, Washington to go to rock concerts. During his visits to
Olympia, Cobain formed a relationship with Tracy Marander. The couple had a
close relationship, but one that was often strained with financial difficulties
and Cobain's absence when touring. Marander supported the couple by working at
the cafeteria of the Seattle–Tacoma
International Airport,
often stealing food. Cobain spent most of his time sleeping into the late
evening, watching television and concentrating on art projects. Marander's
insistence that he get a job caused arguments that influenced Cobain to write
"About
a Girl",
which was featured on the Nirvana album Bleach. Marander is credited with having
taken the cover photo for the album. Marander was not aware that "About a
Girl" was written about her until years after Cobain's death.
Soon after
Marander separated from him, Cobain began dating Tobi Vail, an influential DIY punk zinester of the riot grrrl band Bikini Kill. After meeting Vail,
Cobain vomited as he was so completely overwhelmed with anxiety regarding his
infatuation with her. This event would inspire the lyric: "Love you so
much it makes me sick," which would appear in the song "Aneurysm". While Cobain
would regard Vail as his female counterpart, his relationship with her waned.
Cobain desired the maternal comfort of a traditional relationship, which Vail
regarded as sexist within a countercultural punk rock community. Those who dated Vail would be
described by her friend Alice Wheeler as "fashion accessories." Kurt
and Tobi spent most of their time together as a couple discussing political and
philosophical issues. Cobain's relationship with Vail would inspire the lyrical
content of many of the songs on Nevermind. Once, while discussing anarchism and punk rock with
friend Kathleen
Hanna,
Hanna spray-painted "Kurt Smells Like Teen Spirit" on Kurt's
apartment wall. Teen
Spirit
was the name of a deodorant Vail wore; Hanna joked that Cobain smelled like it.
Cobain, unaware of this, initially interpreted the slogan as having a
revolutionary meaning. The slogan inspired the title to the song "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
Nirvana
Cobain had
his 14th birthday on February 20, 1981. His uncle offered him either a bike or
a used guitar. He chose the guitar. Soon, he was mastering Stairway to Heaven.
Cobain began learning guitar with a few covers, including "Louie Louie",
The Cars' "My Best Friend's Girl", and "Jesus Doesn't Want Me
for a Sunbeam" and soon began working on his own songs. During high
school, Cobain rarely found anyone with whom he could play music. While hanging
out at the Melvins' practice space, he met Krist Novoselic, a fellow devotee of
punk rock. Novoselic's mother owned a hair salon. Cobain and Novoselic would
occasionally practice in the upstairs room of the salon. A few years later,
Cobain tried to convince Novoselic to form a band with him by lending him a
copy of a home demo recorded by Cobain's earlier band, Fecal Matter. After
months of asking, Novoselic finally agreed to join Cobain, forming the
beginnings of Nirvana.
Cobain was
disenchanted after early touring, due to the band's inability to draw
substantial crowds and the apparent difficulty in sustaining themselves. During
their first few years playing together, Novoselic and Cobain were hosts to a
rotating list of drummers. Eventually, the band settled on Chad Channing, with
whom Nirvana recorded the album Bleach, released on Sub Pop Records in
1989. Cobain, however, became dissatisfied with Channing's style, leading the
band to find a new drummer, eventually settling on Dave Grohl. With Grohl, the
band found their greatest success via their 1991 major-label debut, Nevermind.
With the
lead single "Smells Like Teen Spirit" from Nirvana's second album Nevermind
(1991), Nirvana entered the mainstream, popularizing a subgenre of alternative
rock called grunge. Since their debut, Nirvana, with Cobain as a songwriter,
have sold over 25 million albums in the United States alone, and over
50 million worldwide.
The success
of Nevermind provided numerous Seattle bands such as Alice in Chains, Pearl
Jam, and Soundgarden access to wider audiences, and as a result, alternative
rock became a dominant genre on radio and music television in the United States
during the early-to-middle 1990s. Nirvana was considered the "flagship
band of Generation X", and frontman Cobain found himself reluctantly
anointed by the media as the generation's "spokesman." Cobain's
discomfort with the media attention prompted him to focus on the band's music
and, believing their message and artistic vision to have been misinterpreted by
the public, challenged the band's audience with its third studio album In
Utero (1993).
Cobain
struggled to reconcile the massive success of Nirvana to his underground roots.
He also felt persecuted by the media, comparing himself to Frances Farmer. He
began to harbour resentments for people who claimed to be fans of the band yet
refused to acknowledge, or misinterpreted, the band's social and political
views. A vocal opponent of sexism, racism and homophobia, he was publicly proud
that Nirvana had played at a gay rights benefit supporting No-on-Nine in Oregon
in 1992, in opposition to Ballot Measure Nine, a ballot measure, that if
passed, would have prohibited schools in the state from acknowledging or
positively accepting LGBT rights and welfare.
Cobain was a
vocal supporter of the pro-choice movement, and had been involved in Rock for
Choice from the campaign inception by. He received death threats from a small
number of anti-abortion activists for doing so, with one activist threatening
Cobain that he would be shot as soon as he stepped on stage.
Musical influences
The Beatles
were an early and lasting influence on Cobain; his aunt Mari remembers him
singing "Hey Jude" at the age of two. "My aunts would give me
Beatles records," Cobain told Jon Savage in 1993, "so for the most
part [I listened to] the Beatles [as a child], and if I was lucky, I'd be able
to buy a single." Cobain expressed a particular fondness for John Lennon,
whom he called his "idol" in his posthumously-released journals, and
he admitted that he wrote the song "About a Girl," from Nirvana 1989
debut album Bleach, after spending three hours listening to Meet The
Beatles!.
Cobain was
also a fan of classic rock bands, including Led Zeppelin, AC/DC, Black Sabbath,
Aerosmith, Queen, and Kiss. Nirvana occasionally played cover songs by these
bands, including Led Zeppelin's "Immigrant Song", "Dazed and
Confused" and "Heartbreaker", Black Sabbath's "Hand of Doom,"
and Kiss' "Do You Love Me?", and wrote the Incesticide song
"Aero Zeppelin" as a tribute to Led Zeppelin and Aerosmith.
Punk rock
proved to be a profound influence on a teenaged Cobain's attitude and artistic
style. His first punk rock album was Sandinista! by The Clash, but he
became a bigger fan of a fellow 1970s British punk band the Sex Pistols,
describing them as "one million times more important than the Clash"
in his journals. He was introduced to 1980s American hardcore bands like Black
Flag, Bad Brains, Millions of Dead Cops and Flipper by Buzz Osbourne, lead
singer and guitarist of the Melvins and fellow Aberdeen, Washington native.
Osborne taught Cobain about Punk by loaning him records and old copies of the
Detroit based magazine Creem. The Melvins themselves were an important early
musical influence on Cobain, with their heavy, grungy sound mimicked by Nirvana
on many songs from Bleach.
Cobain was
also a fan of protopunk acts like the Stooges, whose 1973 album Raw Power
he listed as his favorite of all time in his journals, and The Velvet
Underground, whose 1968 song "Here She Comes Now" the band covered
both live and in the studio.
The 1980s
American alternative rock band Pixies were instrumental in helping an adult
Cobain develop his own songwriting style. In a 1992 interview with Melody
Maker, Cobain said that hearing their 1988 debut album, Surfer Rosa,
"convinced him to abandon his more Black Flag-influenced songwriting in
favor of the Iggy Pop/Aerosmith–type songwriting that appeared on Nevermind.
In a 1993 interview with Rolling Stone, he said that "Smells Like
Teen Spirit" was his attempt at "trying to rip off the Pixies. I have
to admit it. When I heard the Pixies for the first time, I connected with that
band so heavily that I should have been in that band—or at least a Pixies cover
band. We used their sense of dynamics, being soft and quiet and then loud and
hard."
Cobain's
appreciation of early alternative rock bands also extended to Sonic Youth and R.E.M.,
both of which the members of Nirvana befriended and looked up to for advice. It
was under recommendation from Sonic Youth's Kim Gordon that Nirvana signed to DGC
in 1990, and both bands did a two-week tour of Europe in the summer of 1991, as
documented in the 1992 documentary, 1991: The Year Punk Broke. In 1993,
Cobain said of R.E.M.: "If I could write just a couple of songs as good as
what they’ve written … I don’t know how that band does what they do. God,
they’re the greatest. They’ve dealt with their success like saints, and they
keep delivering great music."
After
attaining mainstream success, Cobain became a devoted champion of lesser known indie
bands, covering songs by the Vaselines, Meat Puppets, Wipers and Fang onstage
and/ or in the studio, wearing Daniel Johnston T-shirts during photo shoots,
having the K Records logo tattooed on his forearm, and enlisting bands like Butthole
Surfers, Shonen Knife, Chokebore and Half Japanese along for the In Utero
tour in late 1993 and early 1994. Cobain even invited his favorite musicians to
perform with him: ex-Germs guitarist Pat Smear joined the band in 1993, and the
Meat Puppets appeared onstage during Nirvana's 1993 MTV Unplugged
appearance to perform three songs from their second album, Meat Puppets II.
Nirvana's Unplugged
set also included renditions of "The Man Who Sold the World," by
British rock musician David Bowie, and the American folk song, "Where Did
You Sleep Last Night," as adapted by the American folk musician, Lead
Belly. Cobain introduced the latter by calling Lead Belly his favorite performer,
and in a 1993 interview revealed he had been introduced to him from reading the
American author, William S. Burroughs. "I remember [Burroughs] saying in
an interview, “These new rock’n'roll kids should just throw away their guitars
and listen to something with real soul, like Leadbelly,'" Cobain said.
"I’d never heard about Leadbelly before so I bought a couple of records,
and now he turns out to be my absolute favorite of all time in music. I
absolutely love it more than any rock’n'roll I ever heard."
Nirvana's
acoustic Unplugged set, which was released posthumously as an album in
1994, may have provided a hint of Cobain's future musical direction. The record
has drawn comparisons to R.E.M.'s 1992 release, Automatic for the People, and in
1993, Cobain himself predicted that the next Nirvana album would be
"pretty ethereal, acoustic, like R.E.M.'s last album."
"Yeah,
he talked a lot about what direction he was heading in," Cobain's friend,
R.E.M.'s lead singer Michael Stipe, told Newsweek in 1994. "I mean,
I know what the next Nirvana recording was going to sound like. It was going to
be very quiet and acoustic, with lots of stringed instruments. It was going to
be an amazing fucking record, and I’m a little bit angry at him for killing
himself. He and I were going to record a trial run of the album, a demo tape.
It was all set up. He had a plane ticket. He had a car picking him up. And at
the last minute he called and said, 'I can't come.' Stipe was chosen as the
godfather of Cobain and Courtney Love's daughter, Frances Bean Cobain."
Artistry
Dave Grohl
stated that Cobain believed that music comes first and lyrics, second. Cobain
focused, foremost, on the melodies of his songs. Cobain complained when fans
and rock journalists attempted to decipher his singing and extract meaning from
his lyrics, writing "Why in the hell do journalists insist on coming up
with a second-rate Freudian evaluation of my lyrics, when 90 percent of the
time they've transcribed them incorrectly?" While Cobain would insist on the subjectivity
and unimportance of his lyrics, he was known to labor and procrastinate in
writing them, often changing the content and order of lyrics during
performances. Cobain would describe his lyrics himself as "a big pile of
contradictions. They're split down the middle between very sincere opinions
that I have and sarcastic opinions and feelings that I have and sarcastic and
hopeful, humorous rebuttals toward cliché bohemian ideals that have been
exhausted for years."
Cobain
originally wanted Nevermind to be divided into two sides: a
"Boy" side, for the songs written about the experiences of his early
life and childhood, and a "Girl" side, for the songs written about
his dysfunctional relationship with Tobi Vail.
Charles R. Cross would write "In the four months following their break-up,
Kurt would write a half dozen of his most memorable songs, all of them about
Tobi Vail". Though "Lithium" had been written before Cobain knew
Vail, the lyrics of the song were changed to reference her. Cobain would say in
an interview with Musician that "some of my very personal
experiences, like breaking up with girlfriends and having bad relationships,
feeling that death void that the person in the song is feeling. Very lonely,
sick." While Cobain would regard In Utero "for the most part
very impersonal", on the album he dealt with the childhood divorce of his
parents, his newfound fame and the public image and perception of himself and Courtney
Love on "Serve the Servants", with his enamored relationship with
Love conveyed through lyrical themes of pregnancy and the female anatomy on
"Heart-Shaped Box". Cobain wrote "Rape Me" not only as an
objective discussion of rape, but a metaphorical protest against his treatment
by the media. He wrote about fame, drug addiction and abortion on "Pennyroyal
Tea", as well as women's rights and the life of Seattle-born Frances
Farmer on "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle".
Cobain was
affected enough to write the song "Polly" from Nevermind,
after reading a newspaper story of an incident in 1987, where a 14 year old
girl was kidnapped after attending a punk rock show then raped and tortured
with a blowtorch. She managed to escape after gaining the trust of her captor, Gerald
Arthur Friend through flirting with him. After seeing Nirvana perform, Bob
Dylan would cite "Polly" as the best of Nirvana's songs, and was
quoted as saying about Cobain, "the kid has heart". Patrick Süskind's
novel Perfume: The Story of a Murderer inspired Cobain to write the song
"Scentless Apprentice" from In Utero. The book is an
historical horror novel about a perfumer's apprentice born with no body odor of
his own but with a highly developed sense of smell, and who attempts to create
the "ultimate perfume" by killing virginal women and taking their
scent.
Cobain
immersed himself in artistic projects throughout his life, as much so as he did
in songwriting. The sentiments of his art work followed the same subjects of
his lyrics, often expressed through a dark and macabre sense of humor. Noted
was his fascination with physiology, his own rare medical conditions, and the
human anatomy. Often unable to afford artistic resources, Cobain would
improvise with materials, painting on board games and album sleeves, and
painting with an array of substances, including his own bodily fluids. The
artwork seen in his Journals would later draw acclaim as being of a high
artistic standard. Many of Cobain's paintings, collages, and sculptures would
appear in the artwork of Nirvana's albums. His artistic concepts would feature
notably in Nirvana's music videos; the production and direction of which were
acrimonious due to the artistic perfectionism of his visions.
Cobain would
contribute backing guitar for a spoken word recording of beat poet William S.
Burroughs' entitled "the "Priest" they called him". Cobain
regarded Burroughs as a hero. During Nirvana's European tour Cobain kept a copy
of Burroughs' Naked Lunch, purchased in a London bookstall.
Relationships
and family
Courtney
Love
Courtney Love and Cobain met on January 12, 1990, in Portland's Satyricon nightclub, when they both still led ardent underground rock bands. Love made advances, but Cobain was evasive. Early in their interactions, Cobain broke off dates and ignored Love’s advances because he was unsure if he wanted a relationship. Cobain noted, "I was determined to be a bachelor for a few months [...] But I knew that I liked Courtney so much right away that it was a really hard struggle to stay away from her for so many months." Courtney Love first saw Cobain perform in 1989 at a show in Portland, Oregon; they talked briefly after the show and Love developed a crush on him.
Cobain was
already aware of Love through her role in the 1987 film Straight to Hell.
According to journalist Everett True, the pair were formally introduced at an L7
and Butthole Surfers concert in Los Angeles in May 1991. In the weeks that
followed, after learning from Dave Grohl that Cobain shared mutual interests
with her, Love began pursuing Cobain. In late 1991 the two were often together
and bonded through drug use.
Around the
time of Nirvana's 1992 performance on Saturday Night Live, Love
discovered that she was pregnant with Cobain's child. On February 24, 1992, a
few days after the conclusion of Nirvana's Pacific Rim tour, Cobain and Love
were married on Waikiki Beach in Hawaii. Love wore a satin and lace dress once
owned by the actress Frances Farmer, and Cobain wore green pajamas, because he
had been "too lazy to put on a tux". In an interview with The
Guardian, Love revealed the opposition to their marriage from various
people: "Kim Gordon [of Sonic Youth] sits me down and says, 'If you marry
him your life is not going to happen, it will destroy your life.' But I said,
'Whatever! I love him, and I want to be with him!'... It wasn't his fault. He
wasn't trying to do that."
Frances Bean Cobain
On August
18, 1992, the couple's daughter Frances Bean Cobain was born.In a 1992
article in Vanity Fair, Love admitted to using heroin, not knowing that
she was pregnant. Love claimed that Vanity Fair had misquoted her, but
the event created a media controversy for the couple. While Cobain and Love's
romance had always been a media attraction, they found themselves hounded by
tabloid reporters after the article was published, many wanting to know if
Frances was addicted to drugs at birth. The Los Angeles County Department of
Children's Services took the Cobains to court, claiming that the couple's drug
usage made them unfit parents. Two-week-old Frances was ordered by the judge to
be taken from their custody and placed with Courtney's sister Jamie for several
weeks, after which the couple obtained custody in an exchange agreement to
submit to urine tests and regular visits from a social worker. After months of
legal wrangling, the couple were eventually granted full custody of their
daughter.
Healthy history
Throughout
most of his life, Cobain suffered from chronic bronchitis and intense physical
pain due to an undiagnosed chronic stomach condition. His first drug experience was with marijuana
in 1980, at age 13. He regularly used the drug during adulthood. Cobain also
had a period of consuming "notable" amounts of LSD, as observed by
Tracy Marander, and was "really into getting fucked up: drugs, acid, any
kind of drug", observed Krist Novoselic; Cobain was also prone to
alcoholism and solvent abuse. Cobain's cousin Beverly, a nurse, claimed Cobain
was diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder as a child, and bipolar
disorder as an adult. She also brought attention to the history of suicide, mental
illness and alcoholism in the Cobain family, noting two of her uncles who had
committed suicide with guns.
Cobain's
stomach condition was emotionally debilitating to him, and he intermittently
tried to find its cause, usually from the insistence of Love. None of the many
doctors he consulted were able to pinpoint the exact cause though some
suggested he was suffering from a rare form of cancer. He suffered from an
acute self-consciousness and developed a poor body image, due to his low body
weight; which was primarily due to malnourishment caused by his stomach
condition, medicines taken as part of treatment for cancer and poor diet
(attested to by numerous doctors), or a combination of all three.
Cobain's
first experience with heroin occurred sometime in 1986, administered to him by
a local drug dealer in Tacoma, Washington who had previously supplied him with Percodan.
He used heroin sporadically for several years, but, by the end of 1990, his use
developed into a full-fledged addiction. Cobain claimed that he was
"determined to get a habit" as a way to self-medicate his stomach
condition. "It started with three days in a row of doing heroin and I
don't have a stomach pain. That was such a relief," he related.
His heroin
use began to affect the band's Nevermind supporting tour. One memorable
example came the day of the band's 1992 performance on Saturday Night Live,
where Nirvana had a photographic session with photographer Michael Levine.
Having taken heroin beforehand, Cobain fell asleep several times during the
shoot. Cobain divulged to biographer Michael Azerrad, "I mean, what are
they supposed to do? They're not going to be able to tell me to stop. So I
really didn't care. Obviously to them it was like practicing witchcraft or
something. They didn't know anything about it so they thought that any second,
I was going to die."
Slowly,
Cobain's heroin addiction worsened. His first attempt at rehab was made in
early 1992, not long after he and Love discovered they were going to become
parents. Immediately after leaving rehab, Nirvana embarked on their Australian
tour, with Cobain appearing pale and gaunt while suffering through withdrawals.
Not long after returning home, Cobain's heroin use resumed.
Prior to a
performance at the New Music Seminar in New York City in July 1993, Cobain
suffered a heroin overdose. Rather than calling for an ambulance, Love injected
Cobain with Narcan to bring him out of his unconscious state. Cobain proceeded
to perform with Nirvana, giving the public no indication that anything out of
the ordinary had taken place.
Death
Following a
tour stop at Terminal Eins in Munich, Germany, on March 1, 1994, Cobain was
diagnosed with bronchitis and severe laryngitis. He flew to Rome the next day
for medical treatment, and was joined there by his wife, Courtney Love, on
March 3, 1994. The next morning, Love awoke to find that Cobain had overdosed
on a combination of champagne and Rohypnol. Cobain was immediately rushed to
the hospital, and spent the rest of the day unconscious. After five days in the
hospital, Cobain was released and returned to Seattle. Love later stated that
the incident was Cobain's first suicide attempt.
On March 18,
1994, Love phoned the Seattle police informing them that Cobain was suicidal
and had locked himself in a room with a gun. Police arrived and confiscated
several guns and a bottle of pills from Cobain, who insisted that he was not
suicidal and had locked himself in the room to hide from Love. When questioned
by police, Love said that Cobain had never mentioned that he was suicidal and
that she had not seen him with a gun.
Love
arranged an intervention regarding Cobain's drug use on March 25, 1994. The ten
people involved included musician friends, record company executives, and one
of Cobain's closest friends, Dylan Carlson. The intervention was initially
unsuccessful, with an angry Cobain insulting and heaping scorn on its
participants and eventually locking himself in the upstairs bedroom. However,
by the end of the day, Cobain had agreed to undergo a detox program. Cobain
arrived at the Exodus Recovery Center in Los Angeles, California on March 30,
1994. The staff at the facility were unaware of Cobain's history of depression
and prior attempts at suicide. When visited by friends, there was no indication
to them that Cobain was in any negative or suicidal state of mind. He spent the
day talking to counselors about his drug abuse and personal problems, happily
playing with his daughter Frances. These interactions were the last time Cobain
saw his daughter. The following night, Cobain walked outside to have a
cigarette, and climbed over a six-foot-high fence to leave the facility (which
he had joked earlier in the day would be a stupid feat to attempt). He took a
taxi to Los Angeles Airport and flew back to Seattle. On the flight, he sat
next to Duff McKagan of Guns N' Roses. Despite Cobain's own personal animosity
towards Guns N’ Roses and specifically Axl Rose, Cobain "seemed
happy" to see McKagan. McKagan later stated he knew from "all of my
instincts that something was wrong." Most of his close friends and family
were unaware of his whereabouts. On April 2 and April 3, 1994, Cobain was
spotted in various locations around Seattle. On April 3, 1994, Love contacted
private investigator Tom Grant, and hired him to find Cobain. Cobain was not
seen on April 4, 1994. On April 7, 1994, amid rumors of Nirvana breaking up,
the band pulled out of that year's Lollapalooza music festival.
On April 8,
1994, Cobain's body was discovered at his Lake Washington home by an electrician
named Gary Smith who had arrived to install a security system. Apart from a
minor amount of blood coming out of Cobain's ear, the electrician reported
seeing no visible signs of trauma, and initially believed that Cobain was
asleep until he saw the shotgun pointing at his chin. A note was found,
addressed to Cobain's childhood imaginary friend "Boddah", that
stated that Cobain hadn't "felt the excitement of listening to as well as
creating music, along with really writing . . . for too many years now". A
high concentration of heroin and traces of diazepam were also found in his
body. Cobain's body had been lying there for days; the coroner's report estimated
Cobain to have died on April 5, 1994.
A public
vigil was held for Cobain on April 10, 1994, at a park at Seattle Center
drawing approximately seven thousand mourners. Prerecorded messages by Krist
Novoselic and Courtney Love were played at the memorial. Love read portions of
Cobain's suicide note to the crowd, crying and chastising Cobain. Near the end
of the vigil, Love arrived at the park and distributed some of Cobain's
clothing to those who still remained. Dave Grohl would say that the news of
Cobain's death was "probably the worst thing that has happened to me in my
life. I remember the day after that I woke up and I was heartbroken that he was
gone. I just felt like, 'Okay, so I get to wake up today and have another day
and he doesn't.'" He also believed that he knew Cobain would die at an
early age, saying that "sometimes you just can't save someone from
themselves," and "in some ways, you kind of prepare yourself
emotionally for that to be a reality." Dave Reed, who for a short time was
Cobain's foster father, said that "he had the desperation, not the
courage, to be himself. Once you do that, you can't go wrong, because you can't
make any mistakes when people love you for being yourself. But for Kurt, it
didn't matter that other people loved him; he simply didn't love himself
enough."
A final
ceremony was arranged for Cobain by his mother on May 31, 1999, attended by
both Courtney Love and Tracy Marander. As a Buddhist monk chanted, his daughter
Frances Bean scattered his ashes into McLane Creek in Olympia, the city where
he "had found his true artistic muse."
Cobain's
artistic endeavors and struggles with heroin addiction, illness and depression,
as well as the circumstances of his death have become a frequent topic of
fascination, debate, and controversy throughout the world. He is one of the
well known members of the 27 Club.
Legacy
Cobain has
been remembered as one of the most iconic rock musicians in the history of
alternative music. He was ranked by Rolling Stone as the 73rd greatest
guitarist and 45th greatest singer of all time, and by MTV as 7th in the
"22 Greatest Voices in Music". In 2006, he was placed at number
twenty by Hit Parader on their list of the "100 Greatest Metal
Singers of All Time". Reflecting on Cobain's death over ten years later, MSNBC's
Eric Olsen wrote, "In the intervening decade, Cobain, a small, frail but
handsome man in life, has become an abstract Generation X icon, viewed by many
as the 'last real rock star' [. . .] a messiah and martyr whose every utterance
has been plundered and parsed".
In 2005, a
sign was put up in Aberdeen, Washington, that read "Welcome to
Aberdeen – Come As You Are" as a tribute to Cobain. The sign was paid
for and created by the Kurt Cobain Memorial Committee, a non-profit
organization created in May 2004 to honour Cobain. The Committee planned to create
a Kurt Cobain Memorial Park and a youth center in Aberdeen. Because Cobain was
cremated and his remains scattered into the Wishkah River in Washington, many
Nirvana fans visit Viretta Park, near Cobain's former Lake Washington home, to
pay tribute. On the anniversary of his death, fans gather in the park to
celebrate his life and memory.
In 2006,
Cobain took the place of Elvis Presley as the top-earning deceased celebrity,
after the sale of the Nirvana song catalogue. Presley reclaimed the spot in
2007.
Controversy
erupted in July 2009 when a monument to Cobain in Aberdeen along the Wishkah River
included the quote "...Drugs are bad for you. They will fuck you up."
The city ultimately decided to sandblast the monument to replace the expletive
with "f---", but fans immediately drew the letters back in.
Books and films on Cobain
Prior to
Cobain's death, writer Michael Azerrad published Come as You Are: The Story
of Nirvana, a book chronicling Nirvana's career from its beginning, as well
as the personal histories of the band members. The book explored Cobain's drug
addiction, as well as the countless controversies surrounding the band. After
Cobain's death, Azerrad re-published the book to include a final chapter
discussing the last year of Cobain's life. The book is notable, as it involved
the band members themselves, who provided interviews and personal information
to Azerrad specifically for the book. In 2006, Azerrad's taped conversations
with Cobain were transformed into a documentary about Cobain, titled Kurt
Cobain: About a Son. Though this film does not feature any music by
Nirvana, it has songs by the artists that inspired Cobain.
In the 1998
documentary Kurt & Courtney, filmmaker Nick Broomfield investigated
Tom Grant's claim that Cobain was actually murdered. He took a film crew to
visit a number of people associated with Cobain and Love; Love's father,
Cobain's aunt, and one of the couple's former nannies. Broomfield also spoke to
Mentors bandleader Eldon "El Duce" Hoke, who claimed Love offered him
$50,000 to kill Cobain. Although Hoke claimed he knew who killed Cobain, he
failed to mention a name, and offered no evidence to support his assertion.
Broomfield inadvertently captured Hoke's last interview, as he died days later,
reportedly hit by a train. However, Broomfield felt he hadn't uncovered enough
evidence to conclude the existence of a conspiracy. In a 1998 interview,
Broomfield summed it up by saying,
"I
think that he committed suicide. I don't think there's a smoking gun. And I
think there's only one way you can explain a lot of things around his death.
Not that he was murdered, but that there was just a lack of caring for him. I
just think that Courtney had moved on, and he was expendable."
Journalists Ian
Halperin and Max Wallace took a similar path and attempted to investigate any
possible conspiracy for themselves. Their initial work, the 1999 book Who
Killed Kurt Cobain? argued that, while there wasn't enough evidence to
prove a conspiracy, there was more than enough to demand that the case be
reopened. A notable element of the book included their discussions with Grant,
who had taped nearly every conversation that he had undertaken while he was in
Love's employ. Over the next several years, Halperin and Wallace collaborated
with Grant to write a second book, 2004's Love and Death: The Murder of Kurt
Cobain.
In 2001,
writer Charles R. Cross published a biography of Cobain titled Heavier Than
Heaven. For the book, Cross conducted over 400 interviews, and was given
access by Courtney Love to Cobain's journals, lyrics, and diaries. Cross'
biography was met with criticism, including allegations of Cross accepting
secondhand (and incorrect) information as fact. Friend Everett True, who
derided the book as being inaccurate, omissive, and highly biased; he said Heavier
than Heaven was "the Courtney-sanctioned version of history" or,
alternatively, Cross's “Oh, I think I need to find the new Bruce Springsteen
now” Kurt Cobain book. However, beyond the criticism, the book contained many
details about Cobain and Nirvana's career that would have otherwise been
unnoted. Additionally, in 2008 Cross published Cobain Unseen: Mosaic of an
Artist, a compilation of annotated photographs and creations and writings
by Cobain throughout his life and career. In 2002, a sampling of Cobain's
writings was published as Journals. The book fills 280 pages with a
simple black cover; the pages are arranged somewhat chronologically (although
Cobain generally did not date them). The journal pages are reproduced in color,
and there is a section added at the back with explanations and transcripts of
some of the less legible pages. The writings begin in the late 1980s and were
continued until his death. A paperback version of the book, released in 2003,
included a handful of writings that were not offered in the initial release. In
the journals, Cobain talked about the ups and downs of life on the road, made
lists of what music he was enjoying, and often scribbled down lyric ideas for
future reference. Upon its release, reviewers and fans were conflicted about
the collection. Many were elated to be able to learn more about Cobain and read
his inner thoughts in his own words, but were disturbed by what was viewed as
an invasion of his privacy.
Gus Van Sant
loosely based his 2005 movie Last Days on the events in the final days
of Cobain's life. In January 2007, Courtney Love began to shop the biography Heavier
Than Heaven to various movie studios in Hollywood to turn the book into an A-list
feature film about Cobain and Nirvana. The video game Guitar Hero 5
features Cobain as a playable character. However, the inclusion of Cobain
incensed surviving bandmates Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl and wife Courtney
Love, expressing their dismay at the ability to use Cobain with any song,
including those sung by female vocalists.
In 2009, ECW
Press released a book titled Grunge is Dead: The Oral History of Seattle
Rock Music. It was written by Greg Prato, featuring portions about Nirvana
and Kurt Cobain's life and death (including new interviews with bandmates and
friends), as well as exploring the history of grunge in great detail. A picture
of Cobain from the Bleach era is used for the book's front cover, and
its title comes from a shirt that Cobain was once photographed wearin
ldcuongvs - famous rockers blog
Thanks for your collection. They help me alot. I can understand more about rock.
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