Kurt Cobain | The Underrated Guitar Genius

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @PNWGuitar
    @PNWGuitar Год назад +418

    He was a songwriter and as a guitar player did exactly what he needed to do. Wasn't a show off and knew EXACTLY the sounds he wanted. Honestly amazing tone, catchy songs, interesting progressions and SO MEMORABLE

    • @RhettShull
      @RhettShull  Год назад +42

      Couldn’t have said it better myself.

    • @jaytrentacosta369
      @jaytrentacosta369 Год назад +4

      Kurt was genius

    • @neilmeadowcroft7569
      @neilmeadowcroft7569 Год назад +2

      @Bloom Tik Bloom 👍
      Damned's life goes on was also an influence.
      But, good artists borrow, great artists steal.

    • @neilmeadowcroft7569
      @neilmeadowcroft7569 Год назад +7

      @Bloom Tik Bloom
      Don't get me wrong, I really like Nirvana and Cobain wrote some great songs (even if they were "inspired" or "influenced" by other songs) but to claim him as one of the greatest ever players is just a tad ridiculous. Writing/playing some great songs, influencing several generations and spearheading a scene is one (well, three) things, being the greatest ever guitarist is something else and judging by the comments most others agree he wasn't.

    • @jacobeastham9505
      @jacobeastham9505 Год назад +4

      @Bloom Tik Bloom ehh I disagree. Most of the originals aren’t very good songs as a whole even if the riffs were good. Kurt’s songwriting is what made nirvana memorable.

  • @Scratch_Monsters_Golf
    @Scratch_Monsters_Golf Год назад +366

    Great guitar playing doesn’t have to be insane, technical virtuosity. If you can write parts as iconic as Kurt’s you’re a great guitarist. Period.

    • @godzillasfailingliver2393
      @godzillasfailingliver2393 Год назад +8

      needed to read this in order to pick my guitar back up

    • @WinItReigns
      @WinItReigns Год назад +1

      Exclamation point😊

    • @bobward7489
      @bobward7489 8 месяцев назад +1

      Well said!

    • @HappyHermitt
      @HappyHermitt 6 месяцев назад +1

      Which parts in particular????

    • @dvrds
      @dvrds 5 месяцев назад

      Funny how all of those parts are stolen from several indie bands and Boston

  • @controloz3310
    @controloz3310 Год назад +157

    The confidence Kurt Cobains music gave to young kids who wanted to play guitar is immeasurable. It wasn’t that it was easy, it was that it was tasteful.

  • @Guitargate
    @Guitargate Год назад +212

    I HIGHLY suggest we all take a deep dive into learning Kurt's melodies. Just magical, memorable, but simple stuff that connects seemingly un-connectable chords. So much to learn from him. Great video Rhett!!

    • @andrewjonas5523
      @andrewjonas5523 Год назад +10

      Unplugged was a master class in this exact topic…melody. A band known for their stripped down, angry and loud antics, strips it down even further and adds a cello and even an accordion….and blows the minds of a generation….again.
      The moment on where did you sleep, when he opens his eyes really wide and moans out the lyrics gives me chills every single time. That’s gotta in the tens of thousands by now. You should dig into this Mikey p.

    • @solidsender11
      @solidsender11 Год назад +3

      I agree 100%. I'm an old 60's/70's rocker and feel that he was a force of nature. Unique and compelling. One of the greats!

    • @redpractition
      @redpractition 9 месяцев назад

      @@PiedPooper-gh6cnthere are plenty of demos out there where you can listen as he wrote a song in real-time. look up the old age demo and the do re mi medley.

  • @simonjenkin
    @simonjenkin Год назад +426

    one thing that you didn't mention that's worth noting is he really understood how to use noise and dissonance in a way that never felt as inaccessible as the bands and players who influenced that aspect of his playing (namely the melvins and sonic youth, though there's definitely others). take the solo on in bloom, for example. it's dissonant and noisy and fits perfectly over the song. and i think it's *that* that made him such a great player. he understood how to blend his melodic influences like the beatles, the vaselines etc. with his noise-rock influnces like the melvins and sonic youth in a way that very few artists in the rock world have been able to

    • @sebastienharrison
      @sebastienharrison Год назад +8

      perhaps the best comment i’ve seen here

    • @ruanddu
      @ruanddu Год назад +4

      Spot on analysis!

    • @soyburglar77
      @soyburglar77 Год назад +5

      @simonjenkin
      I realize that this sentiment tends to get overused when discussing Kurt’s use of the “loud, quiet, loud dynamic”, but it really is true that whilst listening to the first couple of Pixies records, Joey’s and Charles’s influence on Kurt’s playing and overall style is very obvious. And, of course, not in a bad way.

    • @Abbaddonna
      @Abbaddonna Год назад +1

      spot on!

    • @simonjenkin
      @simonjenkin Год назад

      @@SurfingOnBrainwaves this is true, although i'd say hendrix was the only one who did it in a way that found mainstream success. but the history of the intersection between noise and melody in rock music is one that warrants its own ten part video series

  • @robashton8606
    @robashton8606 Год назад +101

    Kurt wrote _songs._ That's it. It wasn't a load of fret-wankery ego stuff, it was simple, heartfelt, sometimes brutal, sometimes touching music, and a lot of us had been waiting for half our lives for it.
    Kurt, Dave (&Chad) and Krist did all that was needed for the songs. And it worked beautifully.

    • @charliekevers2751
      @charliekevers2751 6 месяцев назад +2

      Def adding fret wankery to my musical vocabulary 😂

    • @101Volts
      @101Volts 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@charliekevers2751 On that subject, there's someone over at The Gear Page who has a screen name like "Wank de Plank." The "Plank" in this case being any guitar, since most guitars are made of wood.
      And minimalist playing's not necessarily "bad," nor is it necessarily "good." The same thing can be said for technical playing, and also for playing uncommon chords. The point is to make it sound enjoyable in some way, or at least make it fit the song context. (Or make it sound grating, if you want to sound annoying.)
      I still think Ricky H. Wilson (The B-52s) was more minimalist than Kurt for the first 2 B-52s albums, but he had a *sound* that was all his own.

    • @vosoryan
      @vosoryan 4 месяца назад +2

      No one said he's a bad writer. People are saying he's not a good guitarist.

  • @frank_buzzymae
    @frank_buzzymae Год назад +120

    finally being recognized as a great and underrated player. Krist is highly underrated as well. Massive bass hooks on that record. Kurt's singing, melodies, lyrics and screaming are second to none. Iconic. Always and still hold him as my #1 guitar anti-hero

    • @littlefury
      @littlefury Год назад +8

      True! Specifically, the bass line in Lounge Act is insane.

    • @neonnvv
      @neonnvv Год назад

      @mind5403 ok why did u watch it then

    • @clouds-rb9xt
      @clouds-rb9xt 11 месяцев назад +3

      @mind5403dude kurt cobain is still generally seen as a bad guitar player

    • @MichaelOdomwest16thAve
      @MichaelOdomwest16thAve 6 месяцев назад

      Him and Axl in their prime had the screams from something almost mystical.

    • @TisDansk
      @TisDansk 4 месяца назад

      @@clouds-rb9xt🤓

  • @johnsilver8059
    @johnsilver8059 Год назад +129

    He’s one of the few people who really absorbed the lessons of the Beatles and created his own distinct style of songwriting.

    • @steveeckert8396
      @steveeckert8396 Год назад +31

      Yup. He even had is own version of Yoko.

    • @jonsdavis
      @jonsdavis Год назад +9

      Really great way of putting it. I never took much notice of 'About A Girl' until the Unplugged version came out, and then I realized -- wow, Kurt *really* studied the Beatles, this almost sounds like Things We Said Today.

    • @artistaccount
      @artistaccount Год назад

      ​@@jonsdaviswhat makes you think it sounds like things we said today?

    • @HAMMERHEAD-g3h
      @HAMMERHEAD-g3h Год назад +2

      Don't forget the pixies and D7. More similar to them than the Beatles.

    • @Renav21
      @Renav21 2 месяца назад +1

      ​​@@jonsdavis he said that he was inspired from a Beatles song, I thought it was I should have known better, because of the two main chords

  • @joshuajkoplin
    @joshuajkoplin Год назад +8

    I think his solo on Smells Like Teen Spirit is awesome. Making the guitar say- Hello hello hello hello with a chorus pedal. Sweet.

  • @banditsbikeco3439
    @banditsbikeco3439 Год назад +19

    He was a brilliant singer/songwriter. I actually grew up bout 45 minutes north of where he did and where Nirvana formed. Met many people who knew Kurt, and every one said the same thing. He was a kind, sad, brilliant individual. So sad he isn’t still with us today

  • @guitarwithryan8283
    @guitarwithryan8283 Год назад +107

    Kurt's simplicity gave me the confidence to take what little talent I had out of my college bedroom and TRY. I started meeting other musicians and jamming in basements, and 3 years later I was standing on stages and signing a record contract. The technical proficiencies of genres like hair metal and thrash made me feel like I had nothing to contribute, but seeing Nirvana fronted by a guy who kept things fairly simple (and a lefty like me, no less) made me believe I might have a shot at actually doing something, and I did. I didn't get to retire to a private rock star island, but I got to see the world from a vantage point most people only ever dream of. If you can string 3 chords together, believe in yourself.

    • @jamesjeager129
      @jamesjeager129 Год назад +11

      I’m a left handed guitar player too. I really enjoy Nirvana a lot from a young age. I am a college student that play classical guitar and I do have electric guitar and I want to write songs like Kurt, but go with my own path like he did. I also love to do art drawing and he inspired me to do art besides music.

    • @HikeYourHurtOut
      @HikeYourHurtOut Год назад +2

      Great advice

  • @ianmargolycz
    @ianmargolycz Год назад +4

    I'm in the Kurt is underrated camp. There are riffs on all of the albums that are otherworldly. It's also amazing how iconic and well known those riffs are and people still don't play them correctly.

  • @bananabourbonaenima
    @bananabourbonaenima Год назад +6

    What really showed his skill as a songwriter was the Unplugged show, and how well those songs stood up when played acoustic. Most 'heavy' music kinda falls apart when played acoustic. His stuff didnt.

  • @piotrtrypus
    @piotrtrypus Год назад +34

    Kurt and Jeff Buckley were the best songwriters of the 90's. So sad they're not with us anymore, but their songs will be forever remembered. Great video Rhett, love your work.

    • @danosoprano5853
      @danosoprano5853 Год назад

      Jeff Buckley was horrible!!! He couldn't hold a candle to kurt cobain

    • @gsly6081
      @gsly6081 Год назад +10

      @@danosoprano5853 ooof what? That take is horrible man. Wow.

    • @Im_alex_h
      @Im_alex_h 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@danosoprano5853dude, listen to the song So Real or Grace and try to say that guy wasn’t an amazing songwriter

    • @mmninc.848
      @mmninc.848 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@danosoprano5853Smooth-brain perspective.

    • @WhoDaF0ok1sThatGuy
      @WhoDaF0ok1sThatGuy 3 месяца назад

      Seems you never heard of Edguy, King Diamond, and Dream Theater😂

  • @edhornby4885
    @edhornby4885 Год назад +11

    Spot on Rhett! Also how many guitarists have written a song so popular it's been banned by guitar shops? It's Stairway, Teen Spirit, wonderwall

    • @RhettShull
      @RhettShull  Год назад +2

      Damn good point here.

    • @sleboeu
      @sleboeu Год назад +1

      And Smoke on the Water

    • @BrettThompsonPT
      @BrettThompsonPT Год назад

      And Sweet Child o’ Mine

    • @Trentstone121
      @Trentstone121 Год назад

      Enter Sandman is on that list as well.

    • @HappyHermitt
      @HappyHermitt 10 месяцев назад

      Guitar stores just don't allow cheesy songs

  • @davidpggarrett
    @davidpggarrett Год назад +5

    Damn straight, he's an absolute guitar hero. Kurt had so much rhythmical feel. That Teen Spirit riff is incredibly funky for a heavy alt-rock song.

  • @Joe_Andrus
    @Joe_Andrus Год назад +65

    Great take Rhett. The exact reason I started playing was because of Nirvana, that led to exploring the guitar further. Art is art, to be a great artist doesn't mean everything needs to be complex to be appreciated. Recently I watched the halloween Seattle gig from end to end and also recognized that Kurt didn't play sloppy live either, yeah it was noisy, sometimes he'd go off on sonic tangents, but ultimately his playing was true to the music.

    • @sebastienharrison
      @sebastienharrison Год назад +3

      live at the paramount is amazing

    • @EliteNirvana
      @EliteNirvana Год назад

      Some songs he didnt play the same ever twice like heart shaped box. U watch him or listen to diffrent sessions he never plays it the same twice yet u never know it unless u pay suoer close attention

  • @haitchkay
    @haitchkay Год назад +30

    Cobain also wrote some out there progressions that were almost Sabbath style using diminished 5ths eg Aneurysm. In Bloom is much stranger with a minor 2nd and major 7th at the end of the chorus. I also love how the main riff is in Dorian Bb minor but the verse has the b6th chord (Aeolian) which makes it sound heavier. He may not have known much about theory, but he had a great ear and created some amazing music.

    • @artistaccount
      @artistaccount Год назад

      Minor 2nd and major 7th you mean the quick b and a chords or something different??

  • @Yannplaysguitar
    @Yannplaysguitar Год назад +6

    I think Kurt had the magic 4: beautiful and deep front man presence and look, great song writing skills, crazy great vocal capacities and great guitar skills at the service of the songs… and lucky for him a great band (who were also his friends) to support him and the songs getting to the next level.

  • @jorgek92
    @jorgek92 Год назад +2

    All Apologies might be my favorite song ever, it is so simple musically (I-IV-V) and lyrically but at the same time gives you a very deep insight of the human condition. Every time I play it I feel very emotional and released.

  • @KM_1983
    @KM_1983 Год назад +5

    I don’t think he was one of the greatest guitarists but I do think he was one of THE most influential guitarist of all time.

  • @nautje
    @nautje Год назад +2

    You are so right about how influential Kurt and Nirvana were. I knew lots of kids who started bands because of them. I had already started taking classical guitar lessons the year before Smells Like Teen Spirit was released at age 12/13, but they, and Kurt in particular, were the reason why I wanted an electric guitar.

  • @prodteague
    @prodteague Год назад +36

    In my eyes he is one of the greatest songwriters of all time. The way he wrote super catchy vocal melodies on top of simple, yet almost orchestral guitar parts. Truly a generational talent

    • @robertakerman3570
      @robertakerman3570 Год назад

      To the "nth degree"! Maybe not the greatest; but inspired a whole lot.

  • @BattleDroid134
    @BattleDroid134 Год назад +2

    Kurt was my inspiration to play guitar as he showed me i didn't have to be Eddie Van Halen or Warren D Martini to play in a band. i was born in 1976 so i saw the music world change overnight because of Kurt. Many have and will deny it but facts is facts.That's where I think the hate comes from the downfall of a burnt out era of guitar Gods. This is so cool of you Rhett to do this as NO ONE gives him the credit he deserves. Again THANK YOU!

  • @vikingbluesbreaker729
    @vikingbluesbreaker729 Год назад +10

    The bleach album is where i started. It was the first record I bought myself, I heard “school” and “blew” and thought, I can do that. “About a girl” taught me chords, it was the first song I could play all the way through and the first time I could go straight into a solo and back into the rhythm seamlessly. “Smells like teen spirit” was the first “real” guitar solo I learned that people turned heads when I played it. The unplugged album taught me to play acoustic, and to play it like a different instrument than an electric, and still make it have that feel.

    • @werfolf
      @werfolf Год назад +2

      Thats exactly my Story. I want my life back! 😅

    • @vikingbluesbreaker729
      @vikingbluesbreaker729 Год назад

      Haha i think a lot of us share the same story

    • @joshuajkoplin
      @joshuajkoplin Год назад

      Bleach is my favorite album.

    • @bushleague3472
      @bushleague3472 Год назад

      Bleach was by far my favorite album. I felt like Nevermind got the commercial makeover, In Utero was more concerned with making a point than actually sounding good (which is still damn commendable), and Bleach was just the unfiltered sound of Nirvana doing what they did best.

  • @Stormchaser189
    @Stormchaser189 Год назад +55

    Kurts voice was like a drug and his guitar parts are so addictive because he subconsciously understood the hook is usually what grabs peoples ears before the lyric. His Lennon like gift for writing a melody is consistently arresting when you hear the first few bars.
    Play to inspire not to be admired is what I learnt from him.

  • @beebala3
    @beebala3 Год назад +8

    Oversaturation killed hair metal. Grunge just took its place and in time was oversaturated as well.

  • @VGmaniac104
    @VGmaniac104 Год назад +2

    Kurt Cobain was one of the greatest MELODY and CHORD PROGRESSION writers of all time. Solid rhythm guitarist, but that’s really all I can say from a technical perspective

  • @artemanan4540
    @artemanan4540 Год назад +5

    Thank you, Rhett, for paying your attention to Kurt and Nirvana music!

  • @thomasmiller2986
    @thomasmiller2986 Год назад +1

    Man you really capture the tone of “all apologies” and “come as you are” I’m impressed

    • @robbyrob1180
      @robbyrob1180 Год назад

      Especially since that guitar recording was done through a bass amp on the record

  • @prosodio
    @prosodio Год назад +49

    He played for the song and he did it great. He was a hell of a guitarist in his own context and a sound magician.

  • @ollierips
    @ollierips Год назад +14

    Analyzing Nirvana chord progressions was one of the trippier experiences in music growing up. It just didn't make sense how he would connect certain chords, but it sounded amazing.

  • @thedude877
    @thedude877 Год назад +4

    Kurt wasn't a musician per se, but a pure artist and that's what makes him stand out. Sometimes the most important thing to learn as a musician isn't theory or technique, but letting music breathe, thinking out of the box and being creative.

    • @BluesboyJagCigarBoxGuitar
      @BluesboyJagCigarBoxGuitar Год назад +1

      of course he was a musician - if you write or learn one song you're a musician.

    • @13Maria.Cortez13
      @13Maria.Cortez13 Год назад

      Kurt Cobain was his own artist, muse, musician, lyricist, vocalist, guitarist, songwriter, composer, producer, editor, author, philosopher, painter, sculpture, father, husband, bandmate,
      etc.

    • @nympholepticmonkey352
      @nympholepticmonkey352 Год назад

      Amen brother 👍

  • @MajesticHarmony
    @MajesticHarmony Год назад +11

    Music is freedom, it’s expression! Kurt did exactly what he needed to for the song, he wasn’t trying to impress anybody, he was doing diligence to the song. He showed the world that you don’t have to be Eddie Van Halen to be a good guitar player. Kurt took us out of the 80s glam into grunge, now metal music is just like 80s glam! People get so mad with how simple his music is. Simplicity and dynamics at its finest

  • @willrobertsmith
    @willrobertsmith Год назад +25

    I always liked the way his solos were sometimes just the vocal melody. Super effective and simple and above all memorable.

  • @brywestwhit
    @brywestwhit Год назад +2

    I believe there is technical ability and there is artistry and Cobain was very gifted in his guitar artistry. Great video! 🤘

  • @richclayton5785
    @richclayton5785 Год назад +18

    Thanks for recognizing a local hero! We here in Seattle are so proud of our local guitar heroes. May they all rest in peace and be remembered for generations.

  • @patrickfoster4586
    @patrickfoster4586 Год назад +2

    The incredible solo on In Bloom is what blew my mind the most regarding his style. The rubs and dissonance in that solo is just amazing and is very difficult to emulate. Cheers P[>

  • @JiminTennessee
    @JiminTennessee Год назад +9

    He is the Keith Richards of the 90's. You nailed it...a riff machine that everyone had to figure out! Such a shame we couldn't hear more from him.

    • @Johnnysmithy24
      @Johnnysmithy24 Год назад

      At least Keith Richards could put every single substance ever in his body and still be alive

  • @christinelikeschrysanthemums
    @christinelikeschrysanthemums 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for covering Kurt’s guitar playing! Your opening songs hit the point home.
    I started reluctantly listening to Nirvana in 2021, Unplugged was first and I just fell for them. Started listening to interviews ad nauseam. Nirvana was sarcastic, funny, nerdy and cool musicians. Not the scary band I thought they were when I ignored them in the 90s.
    Kurt often downplayed his guitar playing in interviews. I thought his sound was ultra unique. I kept searching and searching for any articles on his peers complementing his guitar playing (not just his song writing)… later came across some, they are hard to find.
    The only really good RUclipsrs I have found are yours and “Art of Guitar” also does a very good tribute. Thank you, thank you 🎶🙌🏻💕!

  • @carlsvensson6970
    @carlsvensson6970 Год назад +7

    I perceive Kurts guitar and voice together, as ONE instrument. They fuse and create something entirely unique.

  • @Nightwinflyer
    @Nightwinflyer Год назад

    Man, your video lit up The Gear Page! But, you are on point and your arguments are true. You specifically state that he wasn't a virtuoso player like EVH and others, but man people went off and running like you did.

  • @johnnymelancholy5279
    @johnnymelancholy5279 Год назад +15

    Kurt Cobain is the reason I picked up a guitar 🎸 not only can I relate to him musically but also personally. He was truly the last great Rockstar!! Grunge just went to sleep...it never died with Kurt! I miss him so much but yet I'm thankful people are aware and influenced by such a unique and tortured soul! ❤️

  • @MidniteSon
    @MidniteSon 3 месяца назад

    He was a genius, and underrated as a guitarist. He had a great ear for melody and could put songs together quickly.

  • @greygardens81
    @greygardens81 Год назад +7

    Nevermind came out when I was 10. Kurt is the reason I play guitar. The #1 criteria for "one of the greatest" should be whether or not they inspired millions of people to take up an instrument. Virtuosity has nothing to do with it. Cultural impact does, and by that measure he is one of the top 5 to ever do it.

  • @ivansuro
    @ivansuro Год назад +1

    Listening to Kurt play made me pick up a guitar when I was 13 years old back in the 90s. I learned my first chords while learning how to play Polly and Smells Like Teen Spirit.

  • @schooldya.
    @schooldya. Год назад +20

    I'm a fan of Kurt, but the riff from "Come as You Are" is adapted from the song "Eighties" by Killing Joke, and Kurt has acknowledged it. I appreciate your videos and your channel Rhett, thanks and best wishes.

    • @neilmeadowcroft7569
      @neilmeadowcroft7569 Год назад +4

      The riff is similar to the Damned's life goes on as well.

    • @schooldya.
      @schooldya. Год назад +5

      Thank you Neil, I had never heard "Life goes on" before and you are correct, it is the exact same riff and it precedes Killing Joke's by a couple years. Ironic that Killing Joke wanted to sue Nirvana when the riff was possibly boosted from the Damned. Also, I have to retract saying Kurt acknowledged the riff was from Killing Joke. The facts are that he was aware of the similarity and was worried of being accused but it is not clear if he formulated the riff from "Eighties" or if it is a coincidence. Also the dudes from Killing Joke have claimed not to be aware of Life Goes On.

    • @danpearce4547
      @danpearce4547 Год назад +4

      Nirvana are somewhat similar to the Pixies and Husker Du as well, still brought something unique to the table though.

    • @Trentstone121
      @Trentstone121 Год назад +2

      So what? Kurt's version was MUUUUUUCH better. It's like if we found out some random guy painted the village depicted in the mastepiece Starry Night first. No one would like Starry Night any less.

    • @menda-city1573
      @menda-city1573 Год назад +1

      Yep that is absolutely correct✔️✔️

  • @UrbanSelfSufficiency
    @UrbanSelfSufficiency Год назад +1

    I'll take a "bad" guitarist writing great songs over a"good" guitarist writing bad songs every single time.
    I agree. Kurt Cobain was the single biggest influence in making me pick up the guitar as a teenager in the 90's. Today, playing guitar is still one of the most, if not the most important interests in my life and one of the largest sources of joy... Without Kurt's influence, I may not have ever had that pleasure.

  • @JohnnyCashavetes
    @JohnnyCashavetes Год назад +14

    He's on a very short list of people who changed the world with a guitar. And he was the last one to do it.

  • @BullyMaguire4ever
    @BullyMaguire4ever Год назад +1

    I think his lead playing is underrated too. He would do noisy impressionistic solos that are cool as hell. James Iha does some in Smashing Pumpkins as well, like the solos in Glass and the Ghost Children.

  • @ThunderGod8284
    @ThunderGod8284 Год назад +8

    100% spot on, Rhett. I was the kid you talk about at the end of the video. If there was no Kurt/Nirvana I may have never picked up a guitar. I’m still blown away by the talent and songwriting.
    Think of this… Nirvana basically put out two records over the course of 2&1/2 years and we’re still talking about how great they were 30 years later! If that’s not legendary, I don’t know what is.

  • @jonasjacobsen9702
    @jonasjacobsen9702 Год назад

    These songs are incredibly memorable and catchy. So satisfying to listen to. Kurt was a genius.

  • @somethingelsedoesmatter
    @somethingelsedoesmatter Год назад +3

    I find it hard to believe that there will ever be another band that does to music as a whole what Nirvana did. They weren't the first to change the face of music, by any means, so don't get me wrong, there. But they could be the last, and for me, personally, they did it the most (if that makes sense). As a young kid, Nevermind changed my life. They've been my favourite band ever since, and even though I don't listen to Nirvana as much as I used to, and this might be the year they finally slip from my #1 spot, I will always be grateful to have been alive at the same time as this band. It shaped my love of music and got me into guitar.
    I know this video is focusing on Kurt/guitar. But another thing that made Nirvana stand out is the drums. Not even just Dave, but beats from earlier material. It's just always instantly recognizable, for me. Not just "oh, that's Nirana" but specific songs, "oh, that's Floyd the Barber" or "oh, that's Big Long Now" - even with drums isolated, it's so easy to tell what band it is, what song it is. It's not just the same beat reused over and over again. There's a lot of nuance and musicality to the various beats. It's crazy. I haven't analyzed the bass as much, but what I have, I really respect. Man, I love this band.

  • @quentinperrenoud8915
    @quentinperrenoud8915 Год назад

    Yes! It is very good that someone finally made this point.

  • @mftorino
    @mftorino Год назад +8

    I was a teenager in the early 90’s and learned to play guitar playing on top of Nirvana records. I got the Nevermind tab book, would put on the CD and learn song by the whole album. Then I did the same with Bleach and In Utero. Definitely my first guitar hero.

  • @Abbaddonna
    @Abbaddonna Год назад +1

    Thank you, Rhett! I love Nirvana very much. It's a three piece band that was solid across the board, across all 4 key elements - vocals (where Cobain shined), guitar (awesome riffs), bass (Krist Novoselic I don't think is praised enough as a bassist) and drums of course with Dave Grohl (who also provided awesome harmonies to Kurt's vocals).

  • @jacobnacho
    @jacobnacho Год назад +4

    Kurt knew how to play the guitar solo in “Heartbreaker” by Led Zeppelin

  • @ThePandaProcrastinates
    @ThePandaProcrastinates Год назад

    Good out the mainstream box thinking. Definitely makes a case for guitarist/musicians outside of this enthusiast culture! Definitely brought up some neat ideas to ponder!

  • @Texasbluesalley
    @Texasbluesalley Год назад +3

    Man... I can still remember where I was and who I was with when Smells Like Teen Spirit came out. It hit like a truck. Ironically, I have no idea what was on the radio in the months leading up to that, but when that song came on, it demanded attention like nothing else before it.

  • @jesbair-hill
    @jesbair-hill Год назад

    THANK YOU!!! “Come as you are” is the first song I ever learned on electric guitar - the solo on that track still gives me chills when it comes on my Apple Music shuffle lol. It’s so simple and accessible but so beautiful and as you said, memorable. Thank you for giving Kurt (an absolute icon) the props he 100% deserves!

    • @HAMMERHEAD-g3h
      @HAMMERHEAD-g3h Год назад

      He didn't write it. He took it from another band and slowed it down. Well documented.

  • @nickforcillo
    @nickforcillo Год назад +4

    Once again, you are absolutely correct sir… I lived in Hollywood and was in a band in the late 80s early 90s… My band played with Poison, Guns & Roses, Warrant…pretty much that whole scene.. what I remember is that there was a buzz about Nirvana months before that album came out… I remember a bunch of my buddies going to Tijuana because they were playing some bar down there… This goes back to when you could go to Tijuana and come back into the country with just a drivers licenseI😂 I didn’t go, but sure herd about it after… I remember when the album came out… Yes I said album😂.. I took a listen and thought… Well this is different, what a weird guitar sound… Kind of a garbled distortion… Of course I was used to all the guitar tones that everybody was using in those days… but I do remember that I thought the simplicity was refreshing… some of my buddies were saying “ Dude, this guy can’t even play guitar”…..they had no idea what was about to smack them square in the face🤣

    • @FIGGY65
      @FIGGY65 Год назад

      I heard an interview with the very same tale, of the pending release of this Nirvana album.
      Some ICON rock star was overseas, backstage, between sets of his concert. He was warned by a band mate that once we get back to the states next week, this Nirvana album is being launched-It will be changing the face of music !
      I just for my life can’t recall the artist/band I am referring to!

  • @NihinduAngana
    @NihinduAngana Год назад

    Thanks for the video Rhett!! Nirvana is my favorite band and Kurt made me fall in love with the guitar!!

  • @hunterwright8459
    @hunterwright8459 Год назад +5

    I agree, too many people get caught up in technical ability. At the end of the day, it's simply about the music. And Kurt blessed us with so much great music. RIP

  • @PhatLvis
    @PhatLvis Год назад +1

    The secret to the Come As You Are sound is that the bass is double tracked - one track an octave up - and the bass doesn't mirror the whole guitar part, as it omits the minor third plucks and the fifths, just playing the root notes and the walks. This accent-bass layered with Cobain's Small Clone lick creates the whole picture of the riff, most easily dissectible in the song's intro.
    Incidentally, as Shull alluded to, one trait that makes many Cobain compositions stand out is that he frequently eschewed writing in one key and utilized (probably inadvertently) chromaticism - which gives a somewhat odd/unique feeling to the tunes. For instance, In Bloom is composed of 11 different power chords, each with a different root note, meaning the song's basic structure uses All of the 12 notes.

  • @SoulForty5Music
    @SoulForty5Music Год назад +4

    Def he had a unique ability to create iconic melodies.. His chord progressions were damn good too... i really wasnt a fan of hair metal, so when Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden and Alice in Chains all came out of nowhere in 1990's.. I was very much ready for it

  • @dnssvdr
    @dnssvdr 7 месяцев назад

    I don’t think he’s a genius in the traditional sense of the word, but he did inspire me to play a guitar. Something Eddie Van Halen (for example) could never accomplish because I’d always feel intimidated. Cobain made guitar playing accessible to me, and that in itself is wonderful. Thank you, Mr. Cobain.

  • @mrwizardalien
    @mrwizardalien Год назад +8

    I understand why iconicness/popularity/influence or even memorability is held as such a high part of the term "greatest X" by so many people, but I think there are times when that gets focused on too much. I think it's ok for someone to be one of the greatest songwriters and creatives ever, while playing guitar, without them needing to be the greatest guitarist of all time.

  • @GlynDwr-d4h
    @GlynDwr-d4h Год назад +1

    Play the Wipers' Over The Edge riff backward and move it down the fret board then play it with the timing of Boston's More Than a Feeling and you'll hear where Smells Like Teen Spirit came from. Kurt loved the Wipers and that's probably their best known guitar riff. I also suspect that the Wipers stole the riff from Tsunematsu Masatoshi, who was the guitarist for a Japanese punk band called Friction. They were kind of like the Japanese Sex Pistols.

  • @hbengineer
    @hbengineer Год назад +13

    Thank you for doing this video Rhett!!! It’s incredibly tragic that his life ended the way it did…ugh…what could have been…

    • @gund2281
      @gund2281 Год назад +1

      I've felt this way a lot in my life as well. "What could have been," However, something kind of pulls me back from that because the way his life ended was at least partly a product of who he was. If he hadn't been as troubled as he was, his art may not have been as great. It' kind of a sad thought but I think there is at least SOME truth to it especially if we look at how many truly great musicians have died similarly young as Kurt.

    • @hbengineer
      @hbengineer Год назад +1

      I do understand your feelings on this but I think there are enough other incredibly talented and incredibly tortured musicians out there that we don’t have to accept this kind of tragedy as any sort of normal part of music… It’s unfortunate that it seems to happen way too often…

    • @gund2281
      @gund2281 Год назад

      @@hbengineer oh no I'm not saying we need to just "accept" anything. I'm just pointing out what I see in the situation. I don't KNOW that he wouldn't have been as creative without his personal issues, it's just a correlation one notices when we look at the history of popular music.

  • @glyndwr15
    @glyndwr15 Год назад

    Listen to the song Over the Edge by the Wipers. Play that riff but reverse it and move it down to the first fret. That's basically where the Teen Spirit riff came from. It's the same shape on the fret board. He changed the timing of it, but it has the same energy. Kurt loved the Wipers and talked about them in interviews all the time.

  • @MichelLamblin
    @MichelLamblin Год назад +7

    Come As You Are was probably the first guitar song an entire generation learned. Before you could even play an E or G chord, you learned 0 0 1 2, etc., and oh man, the satisfaction of being able to play A SONG - and not just any song, but a song from the biggest band in the world - unbeatable.

    • @robashton8606
      @robashton8606 Год назад

      Don't get me wrong here, I _love_ Nirvana, but that riff owed a HUGE debt to Killing Joke's "Eighties".

    • @ericmills9839
      @ericmills9839 8 месяцев назад

      @@robashton8606 Which sounds as lot like The Damned's Life Goes On. There's a good video on this that notes while Killing Joke says they never heard it, they do admit to be influenced by another song that was also similar in the same era. The idea presented is that it's so basic it's easy to find similarities but it's all about the execution I suppose.

  • @MC-mi4ck
    @MC-mi4ck Год назад

    I was 11 when Nevermind came out. Started playing guitar at 12 and haven’t stopped since. He was a huge influence on me. Still love his writing and playing.

  • @danmorrison8746
    @danmorrison8746 Год назад +6

    This might be my favorite video of yours. The chorus of Smells Like Teen Spirit is a power move. The vocal melody is so expressive it only needs the simplest harmonic foundation. Kurt was a true master and Krist and Dave were as well.
    I also adore the live material available - Nirvana was even more wild and ferocious than in the studio.

  • @RussellR1982
    @RussellR1982 Год назад

    Kurt was a big reason in the 90s to why I picked up a guitar 30 years later he's still the reason I pick up my guitar 🤘🤘🤘

  • @schizoidmen
    @schizoidmen Год назад +7

    Wow! that is really stretching it a bit

  • @stilldisorder
    @stilldisorder Год назад

    I started playing guitar around the time Niravana was around, but I was listening to other things at the time. Later on in life I have grown to appreciate him as not only a great songwriter, but a great guitarist who was a feral beast live. That’s the kind of energy that can inspire a generation.
    Thanks for this video, Rhett!

  • @benfowler2127
    @benfowler2127 Год назад +6

    I am in the group of people who started playing guitar because of Nirvana. Though for myself it wasn’t just Nirvana and Kurt, but their music was some of the first things I learned to play for sure.

  • @DerekHunt
    @DerekHunt Год назад

    Now that we are thirty years removed, we can appropriately start analyzing the impact, which as Rhett so profoundly expressed, the importance and DNA inserting inspiration. I didn't realize it at the time, I was still playing death metal, but the breadth of work is like a Charcuterie board of guitar and melodic blossoms. Three albums (four if you include unplugged) and it's perfect. The band did something that only The Beatles accomplished, by releasing a small st of songs that influenced all of popular music going forward. Artistry at this level is never taken for granted, and his depression and sadness just happened to leave us with a gift. Hopefully people will take that sadness, and find joy and bliss in way Kurt never could have imagined. The act of inspiring millions to find art, express that hidden voice is a gift that almost no human is even capable of achieving. Thanks Kurt, how many songs did you inspire and now glide gently across the breeze. This is gift of art.

  • @KB24toogood
    @KB24toogood Год назад +4

    Wow this is one of my favorite videos on your channel Rhett. As a newer guitar player but big Nirvana fan, I get tired of people telling me that Kurt Cobain wasn’t a great guitar player. Keep up the good work man!

  • @borgesstd
    @borgesstd Год назад

    I was born in 96 and smels like teen Spirit was the First song i learned when i started olaying the electric guitar 10 or 12 years ago. He was one of the gratest for sure!!!

  • @foresterblack
    @foresterblack Год назад +4

    Nirvana literally changed the course of my life in 1995. I went from listening to whatever was popular in the UK charts, and techno music, wearing tracksuits and too much hair gel to becoming a long haired, ripped jeans and flannel rocker overnight. That led me down the rabbitholes of punk, classic rock, blues, soul, and so on.
    I owe my time overseas, my previous relationships, my guitars, my motorbikes, my friends, my job and my amazing wife to this band and it all started with that bizarre chord at the start of Serve the Servants.

  • @Headwyres
    @Headwyres Год назад

    Steve Vai in his 2017 interview decribes the guitar sound of Kurt Cobain is like a giant orchestra and its hard to imitate that...

  • @johngammon963
    @johngammon963 Год назад +18

    Nirvana are my favourite band, as a fully formed artist Kurt was top class. I'm addicted to watching them live, they're like Led Zeppelin in that respect. A completely awesome live band.

  • @mikefromusa6902
    @mikefromusa6902 Год назад +1

    This video makes me feel like a virtuoso. Thanks

  • @dalenixon9715
    @dalenixon9715 Год назад +4

    Absoloubtly. Kurt's playing is a huge influence. He is the reason I picked up guitar and started writing and playing in bands. The great thing is you could form a band and in no time at all you could play Nirvana songs together. Kurt also made noise and feedback like no one else. His voice and songwriting was awesome. His playing just delivered exactly what was needed, nothing more, nothing less.

  • @Slipknotfan2012
    @Slipknotfan2012 7 месяцев назад

    Kurt cobain did actually play the grunge pedal it was on his pedal board for most of December 1993 you can hear it when listening to the live and loud show

  • @daveinaz5254
    @daveinaz5254 Год назад +4

    Kurt Cobain and Nirvana almost single-handedly changed rock music overnight when Nevermind was released. I remember hearing it for the first time as a 20 year-old and thinking that rock music would never be the same again after that. Love him or loathe him, he changed how a LOT of us would look at music from then on.

  • @szilardszabo7135
    @szilardszabo7135 Год назад

    I loved it! Fully agree with your statement about Kurt’s greatness. His pic is next to Hendrix on my wall… Love your channel, keep going! Greetings from Hungary✌️

  • @sebastienharrison
    @sebastienharrison Год назад +16

    spot on rhett, you don’t have to be technically gifted to be one of the best guitar players, it’s about how you use the guitar to serve its purpose in the best possible way

    • @ralvknights
      @ralvknights Год назад +1

      Agree on some degree. But virtousity is what we should strive for too. Some develop it some of us have to live with our own struggles. But I agree.. we can have great players that do not focus on technique.

    • @CD-gk9ix
      @CD-gk9ix Год назад +2

      @@ralvknights depends what ya wanna do.
      Yngwie is considered a virtuoso. And no one cares. The only who one cares is Yngwie.

    • @Douglas_I
      @Douglas_I Год назад +4

      No you don't have to be technically gifted but you do have to be able to play great guitar parts and with Kurt there's no evidence that he could do that. He wrote some catchy and really good songs and riffs but that's not what makes you knew if the greatest guitar PLAYERS, that makes you a great guitar/song writer.

    • @snorkman2
      @snorkman2 4 месяца назад

      ​@Douglas_I 99% of guitarist can't even play teen spirit right, if they can't get something real easy exactly right, is that any better then getting something very complicated 99% right?

  • @byretos3
    @byretos3 Год назад

    Agree 100%, One thing it´s be a mulitalent Guitarrist who can play 100 notes in a second but A real musucian in my opinion can create something unique that change our perspective respet to music and obviously create a real memorable moments in our lives even with 2 simple chords, Cobain had something unique, a vision really simple of music and the same time the spark to make progressions that break any logic formula of making songs. Sorry my bad English

  • @andrewransom6489
    @andrewransom6489 Год назад +4

    If you consider the number of people Cobain inspired to pick up a guitar, the number of garage bands that started because of him, and the impact of simple riffs, then he is absolutely one of the greats

  • @melihkaleciklioglu
    @melihkaleciklioglu Год назад

    Love how your inner Rick shows off while demonstrating the songs haha
    On a real note though, even though i started playing guitar in my early twenties and Nirvana hasnt been a direct influence for me in that way, all my friends who did play at a younger age were, especially my best friend.
    And i owe my first "band experience" to "teen spirit" too, even though it was just a couple of us sneaking into the music room at school after classes were over. All we did for a few weeks was show up and play that song and have an absolut blast doing it.

  • @hugoarend4743
    @hugoarend4743 Год назад +3

    Great guitar playing is all about texture, tone and cool /memorable riffs. Kurt had it all in abundance… On top of that, one of the greatest poets/songwriters of the 20th century… So… I second it, Mr. Schull. 🤘🏼 🎸 🔥

  • @sorryimsosad
    @sorryimsosad 9 месяцев назад

    “Kurt could’ve play this anthemic solo”. Maybe. But most of his solos are either a bunch of randomness w emotion or the melody which is why I love him.

  • @nvinceable17
    @nvinceable17 Год назад +5

    I think people often overlook the other side of Kurt as a guitar player in these conversations, that being his abilities as a live performer. Most people can play a Nirvana riff but try doing it live in front of hundreds of thousands of adoring fans while wildly thrashing around as if you were engulfed in flames with so much charisma that the audience is completely transfixed by what they are experiencing. Kurt did this as well as anyone ever has and ever will.

    • @surfdigby
      @surfdigby Месяц назад

      Kurt had very confident hands. His fingers could play riffs that were at odds with what he was singing, which is something that many people cannot do.

  • @Pbnj1379
    @Pbnj1379 Год назад

    His tone influence is undeniable. I have a DS-1 and Small Clone because of him. 6:37

  • @dannyholloway2007
    @dannyholloway2007 Год назад +3

    I am so glad that great guitar players like you and Ric Beato are giving Kurt so much love on RUclips. As so many young and future guitar players saw the Beatles on Ed Sulivan, I was born in nineteen Ninety, and one of my earliest memories was walking in the living room in my diaper and seeing Kurt thrashing on MTV. Other than my father and David Gilmore, Kurt was one of my biggest influences. I whole heartedly agree with your analysis of him, I love Eddie Van Halen and Hendrix, Kurt Cobain knew what sounded good for the type of music he played just as much as they did.

  • @DrJeebles
    @DrJeebles Год назад

    I was just turning 11 years old when Nevermind was released and it honestly changed my life. If there was one album which made me want to play guitar it was Nevermind.
    Btw, if Josh is an amateur pedal enthusiast, I would hate to see what it looks like to be serious.
    Great video, as always, Rhett. Keep it up.

  • @Ch4roon
    @Ch4roon Год назад +5

    seriously ? I grew with that band and i love them but Kurt is certainly not a great guitarist, not even, in the top 100 0000 ! He didn't even know his scales ! x"D you made my day

    • @Johnnysmithy24
      @Johnnysmithy24 Год назад

      Exactly

    • @Trentstone121
      @Trentstone121 Год назад

      Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
      "Know his scales"!
      Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!

    • @weylinnecaise3964
      @weylinnecaise3964 Год назад

      Are you sure? do your homework.

  • @JFrit67
    @JFrit67 Год назад

    Totally agree. Well done.