What Makes This Song Great? "Smells Like Teen Spirit" Nirvana

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  • Опубликовано: 9 янв 2025

Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @RickBeato
    @RickBeato  3 года назад +287

    For those non-musicians that have written to me you can donate to my channel through this link on my website rickbeato.com/pages/donate
    Or you can become a member of the Beato Club. My Beato Club is exactly like Patreon.

    • @thgftiigghjfryyhgjiyreg8945
      @thgftiigghjfryyhgjiyreg8945 3 года назад +2

      this is why you are on youtube. it took you decades to discover this... dork. you are the enemy of music

    • @thgftiigghjfryyhgjiyreg8945
      @thgftiigghjfryyhgjiyreg8945 3 года назад +1

      i bet rick was a genesis fan when this was released

    • @VincentSaan
      @VincentSaan 3 года назад +1

      Can you do nirvana endless nameless next?it sounds genius to me but pure noise to others

    • @jlm10181978
      @jlm10181978 3 года назад +3

      @@thgftiigghjfryyhgjiyreg8945
      enemy how?

    • @albertoleon3112
      @albertoleon3112 3 года назад +1

      Wow! I loved this video Rick. I really enjoyed it. All your videos are very professional and I learn a lot

  • @jeffreyhamilton8950
    @jeffreyhamilton8950 4 года назад +5393

    “It doesn’t matter if people know what they are doing if they can just do it intuitively” this applies to so much of life.

    • @rikardschumacher178
      @rikardschumacher178 4 года назад +106

      The difference between genius and science. Natural brio and learning.

    • @overratedprogrammer
      @overratedprogrammer 4 года назад +97

      @@patrickfreeman8257 Yes. A heart surgeon that has only studied standard operations is a lot worse than one who is so familiar with heart surgery that if something goes wrong he can fix it by intuition

    • @overratedprogrammer
      @overratedprogrammer 4 года назад +41

      @@patrickfreeman8257 I knew you were sarcastic, that's why I replied to you

    • @nadiakster
      @nadiakster 4 года назад +27

      @@patrickfreeman8257 I have to agree with @overratedprogrammer here. Sorry bud but he's right

    • @metal4ever0609
      @metal4ever0609 4 года назад +15

      @@overratedprogrammer it was too over his head

  • @zappafan5694
    @zappafan5694 4 года назад +1158

    "He doesn't know what he's doing... that doesn't matter. I know what he's doing and I'm gonna tell YOU what he's doing" it's something I would like to ear from every teacher

    • @krisfrederick5001
      @krisfrederick5001 4 года назад +4

      It's encouraging purity, I never took lessons either and write pretty good songs. Not to say learning scales is tainting originality. I am admittedly limited

    • @tedl7538
      @tedl7538 4 года назад +24

      First of all Muhammad, you left out a key phrase that began Rick;'s comment, which was, "Before everybody starts saying...." In other words, Cobain may well have understood more of the musical theory behind his playing than some would assume. He was a very smart guy and immersed in his music. Secondly, the problem is that 99% of people playing music don't have enough intuitive resources to forego studying some amount of musical theory if they want to succeed creatively and professionally. So for all you hacks out there, don't get too complacent.

    • @blipbobeep8345
      @blipbobeep8345 4 года назад +12

      THEY knew what they were doing. There's more than one way to signify music. What Rick Beato explained here about the melody is bang on. That said, it's an analysis. The process of making music can be ANYTHING, and that's the power of art.

    • @coleverret2269
      @coleverret2269 4 года назад

      and actually, he knew what he was doing, that is bs

    • @robwalker4653
      @robwalker4653 4 года назад +12

      I think the point is, Kurt may have not have learnt all the music theory like other people did. He might not have learnt all the terminology. But he knew what effect playing certain notes had because he had a musical ear. So therefore he knew what he was doing. He chose the notes for a reason.

  • @Nevets1073
    @Nevets1073 4 года назад +1256

    "And then they went around two times. Why? Because it's cool."
    This is the content I live for, Rick.

    • @MCAndyT
      @MCAndyT 4 года назад +8

      +1

    • @ginog9684
      @ginog9684 4 года назад +9

      That explains so much in rock music.

    • @ChrisRalphHoward
      @ChrisRalphHoward 4 года назад +4

      I screamed Ha! in elation when he said that.

    • @artemiojrnavarro2970
      @artemiojrnavarro2970 3 года назад

      Yeah very cool...

    • @Без_трусиков-ф1ф
      @Без_трусиков-ф1ф 3 года назад +3

      Smells like teen spirit - “Godzilla - The smashing pumpkins 1990 BOC cover”
      Come as you are - “The damned - life goes on” / “22 faces - Garden of delight” / “Killing joke - Eighties”
      Rape me - “Gwar - Pussy planet” / “Mudhoney need”

  • @dustandashes3
    @dustandashes3 3 года назад +1702

    I remember reading Kurt Cobain's biography, and to my surprise and delight, that despite his disheveled appearance and don't-care persona, i learned that he was absolutely meticulous with his music. There was a segment that described how their band practices were very serious and that Kurt wld be obsessive and intentional about every note and nuance. That he wld force the band to restart the song if there even a slight mistake. I feel like I needed to add this little detail bc Rick does address the fact that many incorrectly think Kurts music was all intuition. The man was an extremely hard working genius. For me it makes me respect and admire his work even more.

    • @elenol1310
      @elenol1310 3 года назад +61

      Exactly!!!! THIS COMMENT SHOULD BE MORE POPULAR

    • @remorcist2499
      @remorcist2499 3 года назад +47

      Has someone ever thought Kurt wasnt hard working lol? You cant make music like he did without hard work and dedication.

    • @jibicusmaximus4827
      @jibicusmaximus4827 3 года назад +97

      @@remorcist2499 his style is raw so it sounds noisey, ham fisted or improvised, the point is that it isn't, i think is point, people are making.

    • @stoicnotsad
      @stoicnotsad 3 года назад +7

      One hell of a man any generation would admire a person like that besides the age

    • @geauxcuts4496
      @geauxcuts4496 3 года назад +22

      I think he was relentlessly introspective, and was not all that he could be with his instrument. Watch them live, he screws up the guitar on the verses and solo (on slts) almost intentionally sabotaging the live performance. He writes lyrics that mean nothing, but can be interpreted to be deep. He wasn’t all that he was going to be yet.. the intuition he had about music would have flowered into something amazing had he not self destructed. His voice came up with these amazing melodies that elude to him being extremely intelligent, but the latency between him and his instrument was a bit low.

  • @gabriel222
    @gabriel222 4 года назад +1876

    When Rick is air drumming I just know it’s going to be a good day. 2:46

    • @dguyiop8
      @dguyiop8 4 года назад +9

      I hate to alarm you but he was playing an actual kit.

    • @rustyguitar09
      @rustyguitar09 4 года назад +4

      Gabriel 22 can't more agree

    • @bobstar2683
      @bobstar2683 4 года назад +15

      It would be rude NOT to air drum to this song.

    • @Jgardner2122
      @Jgardner2122 4 года назад +12

      I love when he’s playing air guitar while holding a guitar. That’s a dude that is really enjoying what he’s doing.

    • @TaxPayingContributor
      @TaxPayingContributor 4 года назад +19

      Rick air drumming is my ringtone.

  • @feedbackcoverbanduk
    @feedbackcoverbanduk 4 года назад +235

    An interviewer once said to Tori Amos, 'I love how you were able to make that song beautiful'. She responded "oh, I didn't add the beauty, that was already there"

    • @MagicJonesMusic
      @MagicJonesMusic 4 года назад +8

      Tori Amos is the female version of Kurt Cobain

    • @AnZsDad1973
      @AnZsDad1973 4 года назад +5

      @@MagicJonesMusic Kurt Cobain was the male Tori Amos. ;)

    • @jimhim585
      @jimhim585 Год назад

      Not a fan of her version.

  • @Jeffball610
    @Jeffball610 4 года назад +2284

    I don't understand 98% of what Rick says because I have no musical talent or training. However, when I watch these videos, it's more like "this is why you like this song". I also get to hear all of those nuances we all know are there, but are hidden in the mix. I love watching these even though it's way over my head :-)

    • @onearmedbandit_nz
      @onearmedbandit_nz 4 года назад +36

      Exactly this for me too.

    • @jeffpounds8372
      @jeffpounds8372 4 года назад +52

      LOL same. I have no idea what he's talking about most of the time but I love it.

    • @nefarionefarius9386
      @nefarionefarius9386 4 года назад +9

      i fell ya jeff

    • @george474747
      @george474747 4 года назад +44

      Rick should do a series of videos with a non-expert sidekick, encouraging their questions & breaking down complex points to the level of the average viewer.
      All good teachers do a lot of repitition - he should go back to basics repeatedly.

    • @ashmonkey2572
      @ashmonkey2572 4 года назад +30

      @@george474747 Problem is it's often hard to break down things to simple concepts. There might be a question for example "What is aeolian?" - There you go, you are just spending 10+ minutes explaining what aeolian is.
      You have two choices:
      1.) Stick to the analysis like Rick did and don't explain it.
      Or
      2.) explain everything like children are watching. The latter won't lead to an interesting video.
      He has some videos on theory. Maybe you should check those out.

  • @TheSuedeUzi
    @TheSuedeUzi 2 года назад +722

    For anyone who critisises Kurt Curbain for 'not knowing what he's doing' consider it like this. He was able to create these melodies organically without knowing that they had a name. Without spending 4 years of his life learning music theory. Plus let's face it, most of the people who've studied these melodies couldn't write a song that comes close to Smells Like Teen Spirit. I think that makes him a true songwriting genius.

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 Год назад +34

      Yes. If you have the talent and can create the masterpiece, objections about how you crossed that gap amount to nitpicking. And that's probably too nice a word for it.

    • @ponchiohetfield
      @ponchiohetfield Год назад +5

      Completely agree with you.

    • @baxtronx5972
      @baxtronx5972 Год назад +1

      Boston came close, but I understand.

    • @herbtube7824
      @herbtube7824 Год назад

      He ripped the riff from Boston and added his horrible sing sang vocals. Not a genius by any stretch…

    • @jonathanedwards8696
      @jonathanedwards8696 Год назад +4

      Thousands of guitar players write great melodies and rhythms without knowing anything about music theory. Take The Beatles as an example.

  • @hrvojepratezina3583
    @hrvojepratezina3583 4 года назад +418

    "It doesn't matter if people know what they are doing, if they can just do it intuitively". Right on.

  • @krbmsw
    @krbmsw 4 года назад +645

    I love how genuinely excited Rick is while talking about this song.

    • @Mrmikey0909
      @Mrmikey0909 4 года назад +10

      Same! I have seen him excited before but he loved doing this song.

    • @CoenBijpost
      @CoenBijpost 4 года назад +7

      I must admit, I took a large hit of nostalgia myself. This song signifies so much in so many people’s lives. This was the song that EVERYBODY rocked out to. The pop chicks, the nerds, the jocks, the altos, the normies, everyone. This song grabbed at the heart strings and yanked you to your feet. I was lying in bed, my wife asleep next to me and I was playing air guitar and drums with Beato this whole video through, not ashamed to add :)

    • @realbuckwell
      @realbuckwell 4 года назад +2

      I hate how he exploiting a great song for money. Hope he get copyright flagged!

    • @unboxthefuture7086
      @unboxthefuture7086 4 года назад +5

      @@realbuckwell you sir, are an intelligent individual

    • @TastyChevelle
      @TastyChevelle 4 года назад +4

      @@realbuckwell dum dum

  • @edwardteach6560
    @edwardteach6560 4 года назад +432

    "Kurt didnt know what he was doing"
    "I know what he was doing and im gonna tell you"
    Literally the reason why i watch your videos!

    • @coleverret2269
      @coleverret2269 4 года назад +10

      idk its pretty ridiculous, maybe he couldnt read and play music.. but kurt cobain DEFINATELTY knew what n F minor scale was....lmfao

    • @d-d-i
      @d-d-i 4 года назад +2

      Anyone can come up with something fantastic even without knowing how to do music properly. Relying to your instincts and trying to sound good can sometimes produce something like this.

    • @DefenestrateYourself
      @DefenestrateYourself 4 года назад

      cole verret definitely

    • @vvblues
      @vvblues 4 года назад

      @@d-d-i Yeah, but why go down the anti-intellectual rabbit hole now that you're here. You can do that or your own. Learn!

    • @maricelahernandez8327
      @maricelahernandez8327 4 года назад

      me and me I get that reference!

  • @rexx9496
    @rexx9496 3 года назад +1008

    Three decades later I'm still waiting for that Teen Spirit moment to come around again. To hear a song that just blows everyone's doors off and becomes a cultural phenomenon. I don't know if I'll ever experience something quite like that again.

    • @rickwagner3797
      @rickwagner3797 3 года назад +78

      we didn't realize how lucky we were at the time

    • @SinclairMoon
      @SinclairMoon 3 года назад +36

      You'll be waiting a long time, unfortunately.

    • @charliebegood1470
      @charliebegood1470 3 года назад +58

      With what’s being mainstreamed today idk if we will get it again

    • @pahwraith
      @pahwraith 3 года назад +48

      You already forgot about Despacito?

    • @charliebegood1470
      @charliebegood1470 3 года назад +12

      @@pahwraith that was in and out of the mainstream in a few months. Didn’t stay

  • @reneortega5248
    @reneortega5248 4 года назад +115

    The local hip hop station I listened to in the '90s played this song. I remember the DJ saying, "We don't play this kind of music but we've getting so many requests for it."

    • @crnkmnky
      @crnkmnky 4 года назад +4

      Interesting! 📞
      I assume media consolidation plays a role in why such crossover moments are becoming rare, unless the radio station changes its format.

  • @richardhoffman2681
    @richardhoffman2681 4 года назад +592

    "People say Kurt Cobain didn't really know what he was doing, that doesn't matter... I know what he was doing and I'm gonna tell you what he's doing. That's really the essence of this.. it doesn't matter if people know what they're doing if they can just do it intuitively. Kurt had an incredibly intuitive sense of melody." For us out there who get tripped up on the specific stuff but can make cool songs, thank you very much. You're a great teacher. Still doesn't hurt to keep learning.

    • @shermigz
      @shermigz 4 года назад +9

      Kurt,
      was a genius

    • @davidgarrick-j6o
      @davidgarrick-j6o 4 года назад +6

      shermigz the sky is blue..

    • @joelmacdonald6994
      @joelmacdonald6994 4 года назад +3

      Just like people like me who inherently can’t do it, there are people that inherently can do it. I’m thankful they exist, art is the single art I really see as a need(although I respect other artists and those who need that expression)

    • @milesaway3699
      @milesaway3699 4 года назад +3

      I recently listened to a podcast about Kurt’s life. The guy had SERIOUS mental issues. Made worse by drug and alcohol abuse. He was a ticking time bomb. Could he have been saved? Possibly. Kurt’s guitar playing by itself is just noise in my opinion. But add those base lines, the drums, and Kurt’s gravely, grunge, voice and it all came together. He was not dedicated to the guitar like most serious musicians. The chords are basic and easily learned. His smashing of his guitars alone tells me he was not dedicated to the instrument. In my very humble opinion he served his purpose on earth and moved on. That’s it. We all move on wether we accomplish anything or not. After all the mess and b.s. I think he lived a pretty good life. Seriously, can you imagine him wearing a tie or tending to his backyard garden? Kurt proved you can live an entire life in just a few years.

    • @johanburger6109
      @johanburger6109 4 года назад +8

      He still did it that's the point. I believe he did understand it but just couldn't explain. End of the day the morons saying that he didn't know what he was doing, I don't see those cunts writing master pieces like he did

  • @dovic86
    @dovic86 4 года назад +264

    sometimes you hear a song so many times that you forget why it's so good, but this brought me back to when I was 12 or 13 yo and listened to Smells Like Teen Spirits for the first time. now I remember why it completely blew me away

  • @BERNARJE
    @BERNARJE 3 года назад +333

    This last words “a denial!” Made me cry. How powerful and gore perfectly executed. I’m an opera singer and this is raw feeling the falling off the scream at the end… OMG!!! Hering him singing alone in your explanation… Jesus goosebumps… what an incredible song.

    • @alphie20
      @alphie20 2 года назад +12

      Oh man, do I ever hear you on this. I’m sitting here in a mess right now with those words ringing in my ears, “A denial… a denail… a denial.. a deniiiaaalllll…” So much of life is this, isn’t it?

    • @jh366
      @jh366 2 года назад

      Cobain a genius take away his grunge pedal and he probably can't even play all
      Notalent ass clown!

    • @kjadfhgioaudbfvilaeu
      @kjadfhgioaudbfvilaeu 2 года назад

      @@jh366 Ok, troll...Did you watch the same video everyone else did???

    • @4Mr.Crowley2
      @4Mr.Crowley2 2 года назад +12

      I agree with you completely - it’s a very creative shift away from the rest of the song yet sounds utterly perfect in tone and in sentiment (Rick has pointed out how rare this is in pop music when he discussed “Every little thing she does is magic” by The Police - pop songs almost always fade out with a repeated chorus or a repeated section of guitar and rarely add new material)

    • @atvena
      @atvena 2 года назад +2

      Same I well up everytime it's so powerful

  • @immikeurnot
    @immikeurnot 4 года назад +150

    "Why? Because it's cool."
    This is something that rock seems to have forgotten.
    I remember the first time I heard this song, the entire impression I had was how cool it was. Damn, it was cool.

    • @stat1stick
      @stat1stick 4 года назад +1

      Totally, man.

    • @maxonmendel5757
      @maxonmendel5757 4 года назад +4

      fucking cool as fuck bro.

    • @C-Stanz
      @C-Stanz 4 года назад +2

      bourgeois hipsters took over indie rock & made it a hierarchical clubhouse for contrived dorks.

  • @wenjinhuang2409
    @wenjinhuang2409 4 года назад +194

    I swear - The thing that makes this series even better is when the songs have great drum parts and Rick brings out his drummer face

    • @liquiddoomteam
      @liquiddoomteam 4 года назад +4

      ta-ka-ta-ka-ta-ka

    • @TheValueOfN
      @TheValueOfN 4 года назад +3

      I wish that he'd do a major feature on Drave Grohl because he's guested on so many influential songs.

    • @matej1769
      @matej1769 4 года назад +2

      The air drumming comes before air guitar in life!

    • @TokyoBlue587
      @TokyoBlue587 4 года назад

      Air guitar!

  • @stevefaul1710
    @stevefaul1710 4 года назад +423

    I was a DJ on a hit music station when this came out. It hit our audio processing like a chainsaw through cheese. Even the station manager woke up. It's not just the dynamics that work so well on this song. On hit music radio, there's a ton of volume compensating, tone shaping processing going on to make the station "louder" than the competition. (This was back when radio stations had competitors) Just playing soft, then playing loud, doesn't work. It's Nirvana's ingenious use of texture. Density. It opens with one guitar. Simple. Then the drums kick and rest of the group jumps in. LOUD. But the complexity, the density makes it FEEL louder even on overprocessed FM radio. Then the density drops. Guitar playing the fourths. The actual volume level on radio is the same, but it FEELS open, quiet, spacey. It happens several times throughout the song, and those contrasts in density, complexity, helped to push this song well beyond the expectations of the listener.

    • @UltimateHansford
      @UltimateHansford 4 года назад +22

      lol @ even the station manager woke up

    • @BrightButNeverBurned
      @BrightButNeverBurned 4 года назад +28

      Texture within the constraints of hard rock: something Kurt learned from the Pixies, and took to a more visceral place. But the great thing about KC was he went out of his way to name check his influences in interviews. He never hid them. Quite humble really.

    • @enregalia5033
      @enregalia5033 4 года назад +3

      yup thats the pixies

    • @kalijasin
      @kalijasin 4 года назад

      In Seattle?

    • @Johnnydontdid
      @Johnnydontdid 3 года назад +1

      Would the label have done a "radio mix" back in '91? You know, a mix that would take into consideration the heavy processing terrestrial radio stations use? When I was signed to a major label about a decade ago, that's what they did for our radio singles. I don't think they would have done so back then, if only based on my recollection of hearing The Smashing Pumpkins' "Today" on the radio back when it was a hit in '93 or '94: that quiet guitar intro would be really loud and present, and then when everything kicked in, it just sounded quiet in comparison. (Same producer, coincidentally.) So maybe Virgin Records didn't do a radio mix; or the radio station in Chicago didn't use the right mix; or, they didn't do that back then. Just curious. Great comment, by the way.

  • @Glaamdring
    @Glaamdring 3 года назад +125

    It always amazes me, whenever I hear Kurt's voice soloed, just how strong and full his vocals are. Many rock singers rely on the sonics of the rest of the band to cover up a lack of strength, or a certain awkwardness, but Kurt's vocals sound exactly the same soloed as they do unsoloed.

  • @massib.518
    @massib.518 4 года назад +147

    Tears in my eyes at 8.27... Kurt was an incredible melody composer. The fact he probably didn't know what he was doing elevates his natural genius. Grazie Rick!

    • @pumpkinproductionmusic769
      @pumpkinproductionmusic769 4 года назад +4

      He had a big intuition about emotional, dramatic music … He was also pisces, I think that helps 😉 I just uploaded a piano version of the song…finally. 🎹 🎵

    • @ryanith2
      @ryanith2 4 года назад +2

      @@Stiegosaurus this is a message that needs to be brought to the masses. Stay in the moment and do what you naturally do. Things just turn out better that way.

  • @InvaderWeezle
    @InvaderWeezle 4 года назад +60

    "It doesn't matter if people know what they're doing if they can just do it intuitively" is one of the most inspiring things I've ever heard.

  • @MagnumMuscle1000
    @MagnumMuscle1000 4 года назад +186

    I've heard Smells Like Teen Spirit a million times, and now I just heard it for the first time, again.

    • @CountEagleHydra
      @CountEagleHydra 4 года назад +4

      Totally. Honestly I got bored of playing teen spirit on guitar despite the song being the main reason why I started guitar last year. After watching this video, I decided to start learning the fingerstyle version to listen it's beautiful melody. Smells like teen spirit is the reason why I keep wanting to learn guitar

    • @KurtCobain617-q1m
      @KurtCobain617-q1m 3 месяца назад

      Its been 10 years i haven't gotten "nirvana fatigue" whatsoever, ages like fine wine.

  • @nicolaattolico884
    @nicolaattolico884 Год назад +69

    How can you love more a song that you already love so much?
    Listen to Rick analyzing it and uncovering the beauty and the incredible talent that brought that song to life!

  • @airdromeaccount7922
    @airdromeaccount7922 4 года назад +396

    "His ear led him to those notes and that's the real genius of Kurt Kobain" best quote, Ricky!

    • @newmoon54
      @newmoon54 4 года назад

      Sadly.... Kobain had expressed his actual depressed mental leanings! If people would stop fucking around and complimenting anxiety/suicidal overtures,, and instead,, help the poor people that are on the literal edge of life.... and ............. ~!~

    • @NatureandSpirit111
      @NatureandSpirit111 4 года назад +13

      Some people’s musical intelligence comes from various senses. Doesn’t have to be built by measuring. In other words most of us know music by sight, but there are some that know music by sound, some by feeling the vibration in their fingers, or even by smell yet, they couldn’t tell you anything about music theory. There’s something incredibly spiritual about that. About those that don’t use their eyes to play at all.

    • @Corehinduism
      @Corehinduism 4 года назад +2

      @@NatureandSpirit111 love your comment
      Man.

    • @ironmonkey1512
      @ironmonkey1512 4 года назад +4

      so much great music in the 90s before the computers took over, Alice in Chains, Tool, NIN. Kurt kicked off the party...

    • @souravdebsarma8689
      @souravdebsarma8689 4 года назад +3

      @@NatureandSpirit111 your comment man. Damn.

  • @PooleyX
    @PooleyX 4 года назад +569

    It's such a familiar song but when you hear it critiqued like this it brings into perspective just how great it is. I wish I could hear it again for the first time.

    • @raisa_cherry35
      @raisa_cherry35 4 года назад +8

      Indeed 😮😮😮😮😍❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @m2goofy760
      @m2goofy760 4 года назад +23

      I feel that exactly. I can remember the exact moment I first heard this song...time...place...every single detail. The hair stood up on my neck, I was struck dumb. I NEEDED to hear this song again, would watch MTV for hours to see the video again and again when it came out, but that first moment I heard this song, I felt the earth move and I knew music would never sound the same again.

    • @proxyn01se
      @proxyn01se 4 года назад +10

      @@m2goofy760 it was so long ago.. and i was so young. but this is one of the few songs i remember hearing for the first time. n i completely agree. so much energy n so many emotions came through those speakers.. so many. but kurt's voice.. from the 'spitting nails' to that sincere n overwhelming sadness.. he sings in such an honest way that just hit me in the soul in a way that no other singer has. what i would do to experience it that way for the first time again..

    • @TheStarBlack
      @TheStarBlack 4 года назад +9

      I actually feel like I just did after hearing the vocal melodies played on guitar and piano. I never noticed how beautiful they were, I only heared the rage.

    • @Blackd0nuts
      @Blackd0nuts 4 года назад

      @@m2goofy760 Same man, exactly the same

  • @StellaJo67
    @StellaJo67 4 года назад +61

    Kurt screaming "a denial" at the end, just hearing his voice alone without the instruments gave me mega chills.

    • @renopants
      @renopants 4 года назад +1

      Same. Just incredible.

  • @jorgegomez524
    @jorgegomez524 2 года назад +176

    It never gets old. It sounds more modern now than when it came out. If that is even possible

    • @casperoomen9111
      @casperoomen9111 Год назад +9

      I know exactly what you mean
      I get a little emotional sometimes listening to this song and his work in general.
      Truly timeless
      Greatness

    • @8vseight
      @8vseight Год назад +8

      This is called timeless.

    • @JarredPearman
      @JarredPearman 8 месяцев назад +1

      It's possible because on the whole music seemed to stop evolving at that point in time. Today we have some superb musicians out there but a decent hole in the writing and composing. Stuff now just seems like a minor offshoot of what was then rather than a rich and evolving tapestry of new. Technical skill went up, creative skills went into hiding. It may have to do with how people access music today vs then, or how much time people have to immerse themselves with endless other media.

  • @henriquevalim6315
    @henriquevalim6315 4 года назад +265

    "They go around two times.
    'Why?'
    Because it's cool!"

    • @ThePurza
      @ThePurza 4 года назад

      I thought.. but.. also to make up a 16 bar pattern?

    • @NedJeffery
      @NedJeffery 4 года назад

      @@ThePurza 8 bar patterns work too ya know.

  • @brunosilviomartins
    @brunosilviomartins 4 года назад +118

    The emotion I got from watching this is the same as the emotion Rick gets when he hears that delayed kick in the chorus.
    This one gave me chillls and watery eyes. Especially at the end with Kurt screaming "a denial".
    Thanks Rick. For making me feel. For your amazing contribution to the history of rock.
    You're keeping rock alive. You don't know you're doing that. But I know. And so do all your fans. Because now, you don't just have followers. You have fans.
    Cheers, man!

    • @mattclark1278
      @mattclark1278 4 года назад +1

      Look at Rick's face. He was feeling that vocal too.

  • @Veronica_needssleep
    @Veronica_needssleep 4 года назад +60

    I just love how he goes “flat eleventh sus nine double venti with that inversion on the snare” and then just ends it with some air drumming. Because that’s really what makes this song great, you just can’t not air drum.

  • @lovelessissimo
    @lovelessissimo 3 года назад +195

    It's crazy how different Nirvana was from every other band on the radio at that time.

    • @TheChenny73
      @TheChenny73 Год назад +7

      They weren’t that different from other bands in 91. Who was different? U2 was different very different. While all the bands were doing Grunge or 80s hair band style Rock U2 was creating their own sound on Achtung Baby, Zooropa and Pop.

    • @lovelessissimo
      @lovelessissimo Год назад +13

      @@TheChenny73 I've never liked U2, and it sounds like you do, so I won't trash them. But I will say I always thought they sounded like Depeche Mode and other generic alt rock type bands.

    • @Bossanovawitcha
      @Bossanovawitcha Год назад +3

      they were just trying to copy the Pixies, but you are right, that was college / indie radio at the time

    • @michaelivens9978
      @michaelivens9978 9 месяцев назад +3

      I don't think many of the people commenting were alive when this song hit. Guns and roses were the biggest band at the time

    • @jesbair-hill
      @jesbair-hill 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@Bossanovawitcha the album Nevermind does NOT sound like the pixies lol. I get that Kurt made attempts to emulate them in certain ways stylistically when he first started writing his early Bleach songs… but the Pixies were not top Billboard artists or considered a household name when Smells Like Teen Spirit dropped. Your uncle/neighbor/cousin/teacher didn’t ALL know who the pixies were and very few ppl outside of a specific indie college radio scene could’ve named more than one song by the pixies back then. Nirvana sounded drastically different from the other top 40 hits of the very early 90s. Don’t be intentionally obtuse just to be contrarian… it’s obnoxious.

  • @CORF.
    @CORF. 4 года назад +271

    I really like this series even though I don’t understand like 90% of the music theory lol. I think it’s because you explain the feel of the songs along with the technical stuff. Example: “Flat 6th to 5th” means nothing to me but saying it sounds “haunting” and “melancholic” gives me enough of a connection point to feel like I‘m following along because I can definitely hear that.
    Appreciate all the work you put into these videos!

    • @hunterhaskins2736
      @hunterhaskins2736 4 года назад +7

      This is me too lol

    • @Clark628
      @Clark628 4 года назад +11

      U should learn some theory. Makes the music even more inspiring

    • @TheBigwheels11
      @TheBigwheels11 4 года назад +3

      Wow CORF, couldnt have said it better myself.

    • @TeemarkConvair
      @TeemarkConvair 4 года назад +2

      with you on this corf, totally

    • @herethererainbows
      @herethererainbows 4 года назад +1

      I believe that it has to do with the 5th and 6th. Instead of them just being the perfect intervals you make them flat. And that adds to the tone. You’re ear is naturally wanting a perfect 5th. And the 6th itself isn’t normally used. At least what I understand about music

  • @jansensteve06
    @jansensteve06 4 года назад +715

    One of the greatest things about "What Makes This Song Great?" is when Rick starts air drumming. :)

    • @FlavioCamus
      @FlavioCamus 4 года назад +7

      closing his eyes and air drumming !

    • @retrofly9
      @retrofly9 4 года назад +10

      One of the greatest things about youtube let alone his series :)

    • @user-lc5uh4ic1z
      @user-lc5uh4ic1z 4 года назад +3

      DAGADAGADAGADAGADAGA

    • @JoseRamirez-en4pd
      @JoseRamirez-en4pd 4 года назад +2

      Rick is young rocker at heart and that's why I keep coming back....

    • @mjafar
      @mjafar 4 года назад +2

      I turned that into a gif

  • @DoktorRS66
    @DoktorRS66 4 года назад +301

    "They go around two times... why? Because it's cool."

    • @tk20channel
      @tk20channel 4 года назад +15

      Lol, I was looking to see if anyone already posted this. I was waiting for him to give some highly technical reason, so when he said "because it's cool" I laughed so hard.

    • @UltimateHansford
      @UltimateHansford 4 года назад +1

      When he asked “why?” I said why NOT

  • @jacobseal
    @jacobseal 3 года назад +116

    This song is genius. SO simple. SO aggressive. Incredible melody. I have been listening to it for 2 decades and I still want to jump out of my chair when it comes on. Just perfect.

    • @DadiszFekete
      @DadiszFekete Год назад

      yeah but Slipknot and Rammstein is aggressive too but they are more disturbing.

    • @Alfred-Neuman
      @Alfred-Neuman 6 месяцев назад

      When I was young I learned to play guitar with Nirvana's songs. These are really good when you start learning because most of his music is pretty simple but still very powerful at the same time. Music doesn't always have to be complicated or extremely hard to play to be very good.

  • @spencbeats4694
    @spencbeats4694 4 года назад +338

    Crazy how Kurt just made this music naturally, he wasn’t trying to incorporate any science or anything into his songs on purpose they just all came out beautifully because he was just that talented and so was the rest of the band.

    • @psnetman
      @psnetman 4 года назад +31

      Whether technically or intuitively, he knew how to express emotion in a way that any listener could experience it right along with him. That's what makes it great. You're just glad to be along for the ride. . . .though good to be able to get off the ride when it's over, too, which apparently and sadly, he couldn't.

    • @danielkemble
      @danielkemble 4 года назад +26

      You can create so much when you have the creative freedom to make music by ear.

    • @inutero10
      @inutero10 4 года назад +3

      Naturally gifted

    • @evanhenriquez1836
      @evanhenriquez1836 4 года назад +1

      @@psnetman this comment was so just.....damn.....that last part is sadly tru

    • @GET2222
      @GET2222 3 года назад

      GESTALT - The sum is greater than its parts.

  • @Lucholosabe
    @Lucholosabe 4 года назад +90

    "Because it's cool" is an answer that I go to use everytime somebody make me an overrational silly question.

  • @RhymesWithCarbon
    @RhymesWithCarbon 4 года назад +126

    I was at my friend Rich’s house and he said “you gotta check this out” and he put on Nevermind. We listened to the whole thing, and when it was over I knew then my life had changed. It blew me away.

    • @danielwcrompton
      @danielwcrompton 4 года назад +1

      Same for me, I've only ever had that for two albums: Nevermind and Rage Against The Machine

    • @BoxOfCurryos
      @BoxOfCurryos 4 года назад

      Same here. I was 17 working out in my dads basement in 2016... and I put on Come As You Are. Life was never the same again.

    • @AegisJones54
      @AegisJones54 4 года назад

      After Kurt passed, my dad woke me up in the middle of the night and shaved my head. Three days later he bought me new clothes and made me burn mine in front of everyone in the neighborhood. He was afraid that because Kurt had "killed himself", that teens were going to do the same thing.
      To add insult to injury, both Kurt, and later Layne, passed on my birthday.

  • @paramitch
    @paramitch 2 года назад +24

    I love that you spotlight the main melody of this song, especially the chorus, because it's so gorgeous and has this classic melancholic progression of notes that wouldn't have been out of place by Beethoven. That beautiful core melody by Cobain is also why I think it's been covered by so many different artists and styles -- pop, jazz, blues, classical, etc.

  • @VMMDIdotCOM
    @VMMDIdotCOM 4 года назад +146

    I was in a cover band when this first came out, and we played it at a high school dance... well, the chaperones did NOT expect what happened when we hit those first chords... ALL the kids ran out to the dance floor and started a mosh pit, which the teachers and chaperones had NEVER seen before! They thought a huge fight had broke out and they ran in and pulled them all apart and kicked them out... all the while we were on stage playing with our mouths hanging open... that's a great great memory of mine!
    ...thanks Kurt! (RIP)
    ...and thanks Rick!

    • @LayMyBurdenDown
      @LayMyBurdenDown 4 года назад +2

      Head like a hole.

    • @thebigv8644
      @thebigv8644 4 года назад +4

      I was in 8th grade when this came out, same scenario we were at a school dance and this song got put on somehow and it was udder chaos!!

    • @colico14
      @colico14 4 года назад +2

      That story rules.

    • @increase9896
      @increase9896 4 года назад +2

      what a spectacular imagination

    • @VMMDIdotCOM
      @VMMDIdotCOM 4 года назад

      @@increase9896 imagination? ...not sure I follow your comment.

  • @moochercat
    @moochercat 4 года назад +47

    13:00 Rick's piano playing of this song in that slower tempo is incredibly haunting and beautiful.

    • @tauaru
      @tauaru 4 года назад +2

      That's the sign of amazing song writing, no matter the instrumentation this is incredible. It's like the songs off 808s and Heartbreaks or Johnny Cash's covers.

    • @PeteWilde
      @PeteWilde 4 года назад

      the secret chord

  • @fret2fret221
    @fret2fret221 3 года назад +1104

    So interesting hearing his vocals isolated. He was a much better singer than people give him credit for.

    • @julieolson9832
      @julieolson9832 3 года назад +20

      It just sounds like he's yelling to me. :(

    • @ohwellwhateverr
      @ohwellwhateverr 3 года назад +120

      @@julieolson9832 It’s primal, affecting, beautiful. This was a man with a lot of pain and his voice channeled it and made it into art

    • @julieolson9832
      @julieolson9832 3 года назад +17

      @@ohwellwhateverr I'll agree that it's primal and affecting and painful. And that he was channeling his pain. But pain can be conveyed with a singing voice in ways that aren't yelling and doesn't damage vocal cords.

    • @xkuei
      @xkuei 3 года назад +70

      @@julieolson9832 Singing is nothing but yelling with context... think about it

    • @julieolson9832
      @julieolson9832 3 года назад +14

      @@xkuei Not if you actually learned how to sing in a sustainable manner with control of your instrument.

  • @kleinesfilmroellchen
    @kleinesfilmroellchen 2 года назад +34

    The best part for me is just how Rick really feels the music (not just here but in all his analyses), he goes all out imitating drums and guitars because it's so captivating. I can't understand how you can listen to great music without gesturing about like a weirdo, it just shows that you're getting the music on a subcontious body level. Which absolutely applies to this song.

  • @tangiers59
    @tangiers59 4 года назад +64

    I always get chills when I hear Kurt's isolated vocal tracks for this song. So much passion and intensity.

    • @stephenrosenfelder8125
      @stephenrosenfelder8125 4 года назад +1

      Visceral is the best word I've heard used to describe Kurt.

    • @chipsterb4946
      @chipsterb4946 4 года назад

      Stephen Rosenfelder - tortured visceral angst. Does that get us there?

    • @lukevining8168
      @lukevining8168 4 года назад

      It’s about time he did some more nirvana. One of the top 5 bands of all time

  • @hottroddchevelle
    @hottroddchevelle 3 года назад +333

    My friends and I had the privilege of seeing Dave Grohl’s first show with Nirvana in Olympia WA at a place called Northshore surf club. He really did bring a lot of power to an already powerful sound, and I also remember when I first heard this song I was just obsessed with the drum beat and how innovative it sounded for such a dirty song. It was a great time to be young

    • @robbielee2148
      @robbielee2148 3 года назад +17

      I was in my 30s when Nirvana hit it big, perfect timing as I was just about to give up on rock. Nirvana was a fine mix of hard hitting pure energy & song writing genius. I will always hold up Nirvana as the greatest producers melodic music since the Beatles. The only 2 bands that IMO used repetitive phases well in more than one hit song. Having lost Kurt so young & holding so much prospect for the future of rock music will always depress me. Music needs a New Nirvana, almost had my dream come true when Paul McCartney teamed up with surviving members for a benefit concert. Rumours were flying about a possible future album, so sad it never came about.

    • @FranciscoPalacios.CFH.
      @FranciscoPalacios.CFH. 2 года назад +1

      @@robbielee2148 New record u say, no kurt, no Nirvana

    • @AlexSirota
      @AlexSirota 2 года назад +3

      @@robbielee2148 Best comment in this thread. Nirvana was the Beatles of the late 20th century no doubt about that. I do wonder what could have been. Nobody sings like Cobain anymore, probably because they simply can't.

    • @antoniobanderas9769
      @antoniobanderas9769 2 года назад

      Yup! I remembered that place in Olympia , also Hell’s Kitchen in Tacoma and the Crocodile , Showbox and others pioneers square small venues in Seattle / Tacoma WA . Great memories , greetings from Kino Bay the Sonoran Desert , north Mexico

  • @fractalspace1111
    @fractalspace1111 4 года назад +495

    The way he can break down music theory is honestly baffling.

    • @bobkaddy4012
      @bobkaddy4012 4 года назад +6

      @@bry2k interesting but music is like art, either you have talent or you do not. Unfortunately my drawings would be stick figures--LOL

    • @christopherbell4543
      @christopherbell4543 4 года назад +4

      His enthusiasm is contagious isn't it?

    • @Yiyayiyayooo
      @Yiyayiyayooo 4 года назад +1

      That is called talent

    • @amaokoro7000
      @amaokoro7000 4 года назад

      Bob Kaddy I don’t think you can rlly claim that until you’ve put in the amount of time that they have into their craft , talented guys are probably the ones who spend the most honing that talent, every has a certain genetic potential that makes them good at certain things more than others the thing is most people haven’t worked hard enough at their passion to actually see their limits they just see any hard time as their limit, you can probably go a lot farther at some things than you would think not being necessarily the best but if a lot farther than you would think

    • @atvena
      @atvena 2 года назад

      Not really all you need is passion

  • @jamespruett2615
    @jamespruett2615 Год назад +12

    Man I love how excited Rick is in this video. You can tell how much he likes the song.

  • @boomanchu78
    @boomanchu78 4 года назад +113

    I love the “He didn’t know what he was doing” argument. So neither did The Beatles. A lot of artists don’t. I remember talking with B.C. Kochmit one time. He’s a phenomenal guitarist and great guy to boot. I was telling him about a solo he played and I loved his use of the harmonic minor. He says to me and I quote “I don’t know anything about what you just said. I just play what sounds cool in the song. But I’m glad you liked it.”

    • @WromWrom
      @WromWrom 4 года назад +23

      Or to be precise: These people know what they are doing. They just don't know how to put words to what they are doing or to analyze what they are doing, because, as Rick says, they do it instinctively..
      But they know. The creative process is to try things and keep what sounds right. Kurt Cobain knew what did sound right.

    • @OtherTheDave
      @OtherTheDave 4 года назад +1

      I’ve heard that what’s-his-name from skynard is like that too... plays super cool stuff and has absolutely no clue about the theory behind it (which is fine by me).

    • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
      @DavidSmith-ss1cg 4 года назад +7

      LOTS of people don't "know what they're doing" or what the music theory is, but they HAVE put in the time learning their way around the guitar - and around song writing. They've put in the time. They've done their homework. They KNOW what they're doing.

    • @michaelctanner
      @michaelctanner 4 года назад +1

      Carlos Santana can‘t read music either....

    • @nathandorsey9145
      @nathandorsey9145 4 года назад +1

      @@WromWrom Not only instinctually. Something Kurt, the Beatles and hell most every rock star is that they(shock) listened to and played a lot of music. Kurt might not have thought of that section in terms of chords but a guarantee you he'd heard other songs where the bass continues to make the chord changes and the guitar plays the same notes over all of them and thought it was a really cool effect.

  • @adamheywood113
    @adamheywood113 4 года назад +71

    "Why? Because it's cool."
    That's what it's all about, right there.

  • @evolv.e
    @evolv.e 3 года назад +482

    “Here we are now. Entertain us.”
    One of the best sung lines in music history.
    Great break down Rick 💯

    • @malcolmjcullen
      @malcolmjcullen 2 года назад +7

      I always thought it was "Here we are, now entertain us".

    • @jayham____fromgeorgia
      @jayham____fromgeorgia 2 года назад +5

      hello, hello>how low is pretty great as well.. one of the best

    • @4Mr.Crowley2
      @4Mr.Crowley2 2 года назад +3

      As a Gen Xer Kurt was/is our king and that statement just sums up the Gen X attitude perfectly.

    • @evolv.e
      @evolv.e 2 года назад

      @Matthew Philip exactly. I remember those commercials. That’s what makes it so great.

    • @frank9367
      @frank9367 2 года назад +3

      @Matthew Philip that’s subjective, i think the lyrics are great

  • @realheadphonecandy
    @realheadphonecandy 3 года назад +69

    I was way into Subpop in the late 80s, and while I somehow missed Bleach I was 18 so my brother and I would flip between Headbangers Ball and SNL on Saturday nights. During one flip Teen Spirit came on. It was THE seminal moment.
    I remember running to my room to find something to write on and seeing a placard from flowers some girl gave me and writing the word NIRVANA on it, not knowing how within months they would be a household band saved from the lost annals of late night MTV.
    It was Gen X’s Beatles on Ed Sullivan moment.
    This is the greatest overall rock song ever, and always will be because nothing will be like that again. It’s the modern demarcation line.

    • @ArtamStudio
      @ArtamStudio 3 года назад +5

      Your game-changer comparison nails it. Last week I introduced my younger brother to _Teen Spirit_ and by way of introduction first showed him _I Want to Hold Your Hand_ on Sullivan.

    • @dfdfdgggjhjjh5081
      @dfdfdgggjhjjh5081 2 года назад +2

      I agree, Cobain and Nirvana are on the same level talent wise as the Beatles. Of course they didn’t last long enough to build the catalogue and resume Beatles did.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 6 месяцев назад +1

      I saw the Melvins open for Nirvana in Seattle in 1990 and I didn't even know who Nirvana was. I was only interested in the Melvins show at the time. I turned to my gf and said "Nirvana? Sounds gay." Lol

    • @ally7055
      @ally7055 4 месяца назад +1

      low-key humble-brag of "flowers some girl gave me"!
      Kurt would not be pleased! Only kidding, it blew my mind as well

    • @realheadphonecandy
      @realheadphonecandy 4 месяца назад

      @@ally7055 Haha…true. Wish I could remember who it was but everything changed seeing that video.

  • @saltrequest5290
    @saltrequest5290 4 года назад +108

    I'm willing to bet mostly everyone experienced some kind of 'moment' when they first heard this song. Thank you Rick for helping us recapture that feeling almost 30 years later.

    • @Kronaphasia
      @Kronaphasia 4 года назад +1

      I didn't think it was so special, i was already listening to allot alternative music at the time that did not get the broadcast push Nirvana did. Some of it sounded like Nirvana some of it didn't the point being the music industry is very fickle with allot of talented musicians who don't get "The Big Break" or fame because of specific marketing campaigns employed by recording & distribution companies. There is only so much money & contracts to go around & if the record industry decides your it, you will be heard on rotation ad nauseum at lest at the time..............a little bit different now in the internet age of digital music & self publishing but still the record companies get to pick who they promote & we the sheeple get to gobble it up like its the next best & greatest whether its good music or not.

    • @thealexanderbond
      @thealexanderbond 4 года назад +2

      Funny how Kurt was sick of this 'great' song almost immediately, and probably wished he hadn't written it.

    • @laubowiebass
      @laubowiebass 4 года назад +2

      Yep. I remember the first time I heard this song, it was with the video in 1992. It hit a chord, even though I could barely understand the lyrics. I remember where I was and how taken I felt by it, I was 14.
      Marketing or not , the song is great in itself.

    • @Randy950
      @Randy950 4 года назад +2

      @@laubowiebass A few days after mtv started airing it they began running subtitles underneath, lol. I'll never forget that. When I first saw the video, speaking as a player for ten years already, I turned to my pregnant wife in bed and said "This is the next big band, this will be enormous." like she was at the time. I want to say Late summer 91 or so. He should still be here. The cultural loss between him, Lennon and Marley can never, ever be overstated. These are not just people we liked, but people we actually needed.

    • @laubowiebass
      @laubowiebass 4 года назад

      Randy950 indeed!

  • @FabriceCaduc
    @FabriceCaduc 4 года назад +62

    Loved the smile when you said « doesn’t matter. I know what he is doing ! »

    • @retrofly9
      @retrofly9 4 года назад +1

      The Kimi approach.

  • @christopher88719
    @christopher88719 3 года назад +150

    I was 10 when this album came out, and the crazy thing was my Dad bought it. My Dad is a boomer that would normally listen to mid-1960's music like The Beach Boys, The Lovin' Spoonful, etc. Probably the newest record he owned was Michael Jackson's Thriller. So when he bought this it was a shock to me and suddenly my Dad was cool in my eyes and we could both enjoy music together.

    • @bjornopitz6561
      @bjornopitz6561 3 года назад +2

      Ha, great story. 😊 You have kids now? The Lovin Spoonful are actually pretty cool, too. 😄

    • @steveanacorteswa3979
      @steveanacorteswa3979 2 года назад +2

      So funny, my HS yearbook, every girl "I liked listening to the Beach Boys while you drove me to school in your firebird" Having a 67 bird did wonders on the chick scene and still a boomer I love Kurt and so much of the alt 80s that were stomped on by the Jackson age

    • @jmdean_
      @jmdean_ 2 года назад

      How differently my life would've panned out if I had that experience. My dad took my guitar away for months, when I started playing Nirvana obsessively and stopped caring about my grades in school. Lol

    • @musicloverchicago437
      @musicloverchicago437 Год назад +1

      I think that tells you two things: that your dad has excellent taste in music, and the album is high quality music.

  • @nabooster
    @nabooster 2 года назад +89

    One thing I noticed about Kurt's melodies that sets them high and above most music is when broken down as by Rick here, they sound like medieval madrigals. This and 'Lithium' are prime examples.

    • @jimhim585
      @jimhim585 Год назад +5

      Yes, yes , yes! I've always thought this! I didn't know what it was called, I just imagines someone playing a lute in a castle on a dark rainy day. Thank you.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 6 месяцев назад

      Hey it's no secret that the Beatles stole musical ideas from Bach, and Cobain was big Beatles fan.

  • @bhaumikjoshi9006
    @bhaumikjoshi9006 4 года назад +564

    Did anyone realize how many 1991 song Rick has done:
    Smells like teen spirit,Enter sandman,Garden,Jeremy,Outshined,Losing my religion,under the bridge and give it away and black

    • @michajuszkiewicz8520
      @michajuszkiewicz8520 4 года назад +57

      That's right. That was the year. Happy to have been alive and get all this in its time.

    • @njc119
      @njc119 4 года назад +4

      So?

    • @i3oosted
      @i3oosted 4 года назад +17

      Best year in music?

    • @enricopersia4290
      @enricopersia4290 4 года назад +9

      That year is a milestone for a lot of things in music, I was born in '92 so didn't see that coming, but I've heard the effects on the long run

    • @apetsel
      @apetsel 4 года назад +14

      Good point, makes me really want a couple of episodes on Pixies tunes to hear Rick's take on their influence.

  • @jackshoplock3846
    @jackshoplock3846 4 года назад +1682

    God it’s so haunting to hear Kurt’s isolated vocals

    • @annepatton8727
      @annepatton8727 4 года назад +20

      Couldn't agree more!

    • @JonShade-fy2gm
      @JonShade-fy2gm 4 года назад +29

      Almost surreal.

    • @peter2327
      @peter2327 3 года назад +44

      if you listened to the song often and loud enough (because you were 22 at the time) you could hear the vocals isolated even on the CD.

    • @kainflynn1430
      @kainflynn1430 3 года назад +35

      Don’t ever search for the isolated vocals for “You Know You’re Right.”
      The image of Kurt it reveals is devastating in hindsight.

    • @Sophienfreya
      @Sophienfreya 3 года назад +2

      Yes it is weird

  • @dr.zoidberg4313
    @dr.zoidberg4313 4 года назад +1837

    Kurt watching from above...
    "I did what now?"

    • @cyberian2007
      @cyberian2007 4 года назад +20

      He has been blocked for a week.... by big brother.

    • @kakashihatake6176
      @kakashihatake6176 4 года назад +20

      @Clint Cowan or maybe they just made it easier to play?

    • @sophiesamuels7196
      @sophiesamuels7196 3 года назад +4

      I'm sorry if I sound like a looser I'm so new but HE DIED hes a legend 😭🤚

    • @xpez9694
      @xpez9694 3 года назад +39

      he knew what he was doing... obviously all of those complicated chords dont happen by accident.

    • @400_billion_suns
      @400_billion_suns 3 года назад +27

      lol, so true... but I think on some level he knew his greatness and talents. It just didn't fit with his entire disdain for success to acknowledge and embrace it, so instead he hated himself for it. A complicated, troubled guy who was immensely gifted, and left the world as quickly as many of the other revolutionaries who came before him.

  • @mijoepa
    @mijoepa 2 года назад +18

    5:37 - 5:51 There's just something about the chord progression that resonates with me. Especially when it's played on electric guitar with reverb. Amazing.

  • @TheTapeFarm
    @TheTapeFarm 4 года назад +40

    The fact that he “didn’t know what he was doing” is what makes it even more impressive. That means it came to him naturally. Amazing breakdown Rick. Thanks.

  • @javierencinas7908
    @javierencinas7908 4 года назад +28

    "What Makes this Day Awesome?"... Rick's air drumming and his amazingly rich and thoughtful take on a song like this.

  • @johnulrich5572
    @johnulrich5572 4 года назад +61

    Rick, the way you explain the WMTSG songs make me enthusiastic about music I passed over when it came out because "I wasn't into "grunge" or what ever. I've gone back to listen to music after watching your videos, music that I thought I was too hip to listen to. Thanks, Rick. You are opening the ears of the world to new experiences.

  • @cherylwilliams6215
    @cherylwilliams6215 2 года назад +18

    I was attending UC Berkeley before this song came out. The school newspaper had a music columnist (what was her NAME??) who talked excitedly about an unknown band named Nirvana. She mentioned them in every piece she wrote. She must have felt so satisfied when the rest of the world caught on.

  • @murraywebster1228
    @murraywebster1228 4 года назад +42

    I was on the Nevermind tour in the UK when the album broke there, the tour was originally booked into 200-300 capacity clubs, we ended up after a few days changing venues nearly every day on route and some shows there were more people outside the venue than in, didn’t know at the time what I was experiencing....

    • @scizmeli
      @scizmeli 4 года назад

      Lucky u

    • @granthambeard
      @granthambeard 4 года назад

      That's awesome man, I was still listening to def Leppard at the time this went on. Blew my mind when I caught up about 3 months later haha!

  • @feltorr
    @feltorr 4 года назад +36

    "'He didn't know all that'. And he didn't need to". Love it, especially coming from a guy that understands so much about theory.

  • @spasticlabrat
    @spasticlabrat 4 года назад +55

    20:45 where he puts on his DeNiro face and starts air drumming. Classic Rick!

    • @nathangale7702
      @nathangale7702 4 года назад +3

      You’re right, he does look like DeNiro there! Never noticed before, jajaja

  • @lizaholmes8854
    @lizaholmes8854 2 года назад +12

    Great analysis and tribute!! I was a cocktail waitress in college when this came out and I remember it being blasted over and over again at the bar. The energy you would feel each time you heard it was almost overwhelming. Wow, WHAT A SONG.

  • @markfrost2579
    @markfrost2579 4 года назад +858

    Rick could breakdown jingle bells and you’d come away thinking wow what a song

    • @AvaiLeon
      @AvaiLeon 3 года назад +36

      Well I would imagine. Just because it's a short lighthearted song doesn't mean it's been memorable all this time for no reason.

    • @ellisivy4303
      @ellisivy4303 3 года назад +15

      Love this comment. Maybe we should urge Rick to do so....

    • @luigicappetta348
      @luigicappetta348 3 года назад +8

      That made me legit laugh out loud

    • @zombienursern4909
      @zombienursern4909 3 года назад +1

      @@luigicappetta348 Me, too. I can dig it.

    • @commentcopbadge6665
      @commentcopbadge6665 3 года назад

      I want him to break down the remix. Y'know, the "Batman smells..." version?

  • @eggnbaconful
    @eggnbaconful 4 года назад +108

    Every damn time Rick Beato posts a "What Makes This Song Great" video, I go and re-listen to them, only to be blown away by what I missed musically. I seriously hope your channel never leaves you tube. Thanks.

    • @52blackshadow
      @52blackshadow 4 года назад

      Amen to that Brother (or Sister haha).

  • @Dippedinsilver1974
    @Dippedinsilver1974 4 года назад +116

    I was in high school when I first heard this song. It struck me so profoundly, I remember exactly where I was and what I was doing. It was so unlike anything I’d ever heard and I LOVED it. I’d never had that experience before nor have I since.

    • @mollyhannah2003
      @mollyhannah2003 4 года назад +4

      I had this same feeling with REM and Royal Blood.

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 4 года назад +1

      I perfectly remember the first song that did that to me.: Fight Fire with Fire. I played the track again and again and again for maybe almost an hour straight, with headphones... it was around 22: 00 pm, I think I stoped just once, to clean a bit of fluff in the stylus, ah the memories

    • @stavlin007
      @stavlin007 4 года назад

      Same story. 🤘

    • @PapaWheelie1
      @PapaWheelie1 4 года назад

      What about the first time you heard Justin Bieber? Lol

    • @Relaxiknowarchie
      @Relaxiknowarchie 4 года назад

      Haha, I just posted the exact same experience!

  • @brandonbuchner1771
    @brandonbuchner1771 2 года назад +89

    I loved Weird Al's version... when Al asked Cobain if he could parody it, Cobain, familiar with Al's past work asked him "is it going to be about food?" Al responded "no... it's going to be about how nobody understands your lyrics." Lol
    I also would LOVE to hear Rick's take on a Weid Al song lol

    • @stevemoserify
      @stevemoserify 8 месяцев назад +3

      with these MARBLES in my MOUUUTH (Kazoo solo) (Tuba solo) lol

    • @peterf.229
      @peterf.229 6 месяцев назад

      the gargling solo also is pretty good lol

  • @Fabiopalmieri67
    @Fabiopalmieri67 4 года назад +106

    14:37 «His ear led him into those notes».
    Amen.

  • @OliChristenDrew
    @OliChristenDrew 4 года назад +140

    Rick's businessplan in one sentence: "I know what he's doing and I tell you what he's doing!". Yes please and thank you, Sir!

  • @stevenbyrd2188
    @stevenbyrd2188 4 года назад +134

    I was a senior in high school when this came out in 1991. Think about this: Metallica's "Enter Sandman" had just come out and everyone was listening to the Black Album literally everyday, nonstop, over and over (on cassette back then, so it kept looping on the players.) AND THEN here comes "Smells like teen spirit" and the Nevermind album. We ate, drank, slept, smoked Nirvana. It was like our parents hearing The Beatles for the first time.
    While I love Rick's incredible musical analysis of this song, lyrically and emotionally is what really set this band a part for a lot of folks like me at the time. Being a teenager and being in high school really sucks sometimes, if not all the time for some. This was music for the outcasts, the anxious, the lonely, the depressed teens who everyone talked over and never bothered to listen to. Kurt Cobain knew how that felt like. He sang for us. This album was our therapy.

    • @quinosonic82
      @quinosonic82 4 года назад +6

      I remember when enter sandman came out, too (I was a kid). And shortly after, Nevermind! ...and all the hair, glam and spandex of the era went to the bin.

    • @KeseyDesigns
      @KeseyDesigns 4 года назад +4

      I grew up 3 hours away from where Kurt did, and it was a poor, depressed, wet environment, that created alot of moody and uniquely different music. I am 2 years younger than Kurt, same exact age as Dave Grohl. We were all over the map with music, from eagles, Beatles, Black Flag, Violent Feemes, Pink Floyd, Kitaro, Prince, Rat, ect.....

    • @albertopsi75
      @albertopsi75 4 года назад +4

      1991 and 92 were amazing years for Rock. I was a senior too. Had the cassete!

    • @stevenbown7228
      @stevenbown7228 4 года назад +1

      Yup you totally get it Steven. Exactly how I feel.

    • @emiliomartinez1332
      @emiliomartinez1332 4 года назад +4

      91 and 92 were the last great years for rock, the Black Album was freaking amazing and the end of the year comes Nevermind and every Metalhead starts listening to grunge. I remember listening to Smelling to Teen Spirit on the radio and I just couldn't believe how great it was. I was in my senior year when it came out.

  • @bensolo3984
    @bensolo3984 Год назад +11

    This songs still blows me away. I always felt Nirvana´s melodies were unique and unprecedented, in spite of their apparent simplicity. Thank you for demonstrating it was the case.

  • @matteobonichi2843
    @matteobonichi2843 4 года назад +102

    Rick I swear I'd listen you talk about music for hours and hours. You always show an unbelievable amount of passion, love and gratitude for this supreme art, yet in this song analyisis I think you've felt these emotions even more intensely than ever, and this is almost tear inducing for a die hard fan of Nirvana and of good music in general. I hope you'll never stop doing videos!

    • @brucecall1595
      @brucecall1595 4 года назад +2

      Not to mention the fact that his passion is in depth in hard work. 12 hours work for 22 min. Vid.

  • @KevinHudsonL
    @KevinHudsonL 4 года назад +157

    I was never a big fan of Nirvana. I do like "Smells like Teen Spirit" And I do appreciate the artistry of Kurt Cobain and the rest of the band. It does, however, really annoy me when people say things like, "He didn't know what he was doing." He most definitely did know what he was doing. He may have not known the standard lexicon of what he was doing. But he definitely had an intuitive knowledge of the structure and syntax of music.
    My daughter is the same way. She does very sophisticated things with her music. But struggles with her "theory" classes. I keep trying to tell her, "Hun, you already know this. All this class is doing is teaching you to communicate to others what you intuitively know."

    • @warpticon
      @warpticon 4 года назад +18

      Unintuitive truth that often clouds any discussion of stuff like music theory: You can understand something without learning it, and you can learn something without understanding it. You learned to use adjectives long before you knew what an adjective was. You can develop an encyclopedic knowledge of a subject and be unable to apply it.

    • @PalParkTigers
      @PalParkTigers 4 года назад

      Oh u know his daughter personally?

    • @seanparker7415
      @seanparker7415 4 года назад +1

      I am not a particular fan of this song, finding it too earnest, but I do really like Heart Shaped Box a hell of a lot.

    • @jdmoncada8205
      @jdmoncada8205 4 года назад

      Love how you phrased that

    • @n__rtu8324
      @n__rtu8324 4 года назад +1

      your daughter has clearly been exposed to great music throughout her life, otherwise she wouldn't have developed that intuition... fair play mate!

  • @thomaslowe4774
    @thomaslowe4774 4 года назад +1714

    Dave Ghrol after hearing Rick's video: "So THAT's what we were playing!"

    • @wyomingptt
      @wyomingptt 4 года назад +47

      Who's Dave _Ghrol_

    • @TGJoeyT
      @TGJoeyT 4 года назад +177

      Dave Grohl after seeing this comment: "So THAT'S how you spell my name!"

    • @raisa_cherry35
      @raisa_cherry35 4 года назад +3

      @@benyoung4305 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @TheStarBlack
      @TheStarBlack 4 года назад +42

      Nah Grohl was a talented and knowledgeable musician even back then. He knew exactly what they were doing.

    • @vav413
      @vav413 4 года назад +4

      Every comment after these videos
      *Your comment*
      Lmao

  • @patrickgerona1
    @patrickgerona1 3 года назад +14

    As a lover of music, when I first heard this song it stopped me my tracks, I didn't know why, it is just that it felt different, it resonated in me. Rick, you just explained why it did...Mucho gracias...keep doing what you do....we are all the better for you.

  • @seancooper967
    @seancooper967 4 года назад +145

    That last “a denial”. Sent shivers up my spine and a tear to my eye. Powerful stuff.

    • @s1d299
      @s1d299 4 года назад +2

      I never knew that was the line. I've always heard it as "right nay-ow" ("right now"). Sheesh... I still didn't hear "a denial" until Rick isolated the vocal.

    • @RickReasonnz
      @RickReasonnz 4 года назад +1

      When I was younger, I heard it as "I deny ya!"

    • @andypammenter8528
      @andypammenter8528 4 года назад +1

      Me too mate, me too :-(

    • @richr6249
      @richr6249 4 года назад +2

      it's what made the song incredible IMHO

    • @DaBrokdikdog
      @DaBrokdikdog 4 года назад

      I always heard it as "let me die now" and even knowing that is incorrect I still hear and sing along that way.

  • @giovannisf1709
    @giovannisf1709 4 года назад +52

    I'm 40 years old, listening to this song since ever and this was like the first time again. Thank you, Rick.

  • @tonyz7189
    @tonyz7189 4 года назад +107

    Imagine Kurt writing smells like teen spirit sitting down at the piano Saying “I think I’ll try a sharp four on the d flat chord to the ninth”.
    “Intuitive” is an understatement

    • @coleverret2269
      @coleverret2269 4 года назад +1

      you think he didnt know music theory??

    • @JustLikeHeaven77
      @JustLikeHeaven77 4 года назад +3

      I just do.
      -Joker

    • @tonyz7189
      @tonyz7189 4 года назад +16

      He knew everything about music. Period. It came naturally, so he never studied it and probably couldn’t explain it. Prodigies play music and people study it.
      Hence, the word “intuitive“.
      That’s what makes him a genius. It was all natural. Get it?

    • @tedl7538
      @tedl7538 4 года назад +3

      @@tonyz7189
      No YOU don't get it, Tony. At this level of skill, ability doesn't arrive out of a vacuum. It comes from an understanding of all aspects of music, INCLUDING technique and theory. Life is not magic, despite what Trump wants you to believe.

    • @randothol9003
      @randothol9003 4 года назад

      Couldn't agree with you more !!

  • @BrandonVincent1
    @BrandonVincent1 3 года назад +7

    When you started playing the chorus melody on the keys, it really highlights the haunting sound of that entire section. Sounds so good

  • @KevinCreighton
    @KevinCreighton 4 года назад +151

    I had a friend call me up on a Thursday night in 1989. "Hey Kevin," he said, "there's a great band playing at the Sun Club tonight. Wanna go?"
    I had a big weekend planned, so I turned him down. And that's how I missed out on seeing Nirvana in a small little punk club in Tempe, Arizona.
    I made up for it a few years later by watching Soundgarden perform at The Mason Jar.

    • @void0094
      @void0094 4 года назад +3

      This is where one of my fav bands came from and played. The meat puppets haha

    • @phnigra1313
      @phnigra1313 4 года назад +3

      “You keep telling yourself that buddy”! Btw, I love Soundgarden

    • @HeadbangersLocal
      @HeadbangersLocal 4 года назад

      I live in Tempe. What club?

    • @somepoorsoul
      @somepoorsoul 4 года назад +1

      Btown78's Random videos Reread his post...

    • @user-pk4sd9dd2w
      @user-pk4sd9dd2w 4 года назад

      Anyone know where the #4 comes from? Switch into Lydian? Tks!

  • @meesam420
    @meesam420 4 года назад +65

    at the very end..when he says a denial..rick real feels it..i could see he misses that time..the good music..that sigh that strong feeling..rick i feel like that when i hear Layne staley..Chris cornell & chester bennington...

    • @HT-io1eg
      @HT-io1eg 4 года назад +3

      Syed Meesam
      Why can I ‘like’ your comment only once!!? You nailed it. You defined why we like Rick and the true emotional power of great songs like this. 1000 likes to you and thanks...

    • @LayMyBurdenDown
      @LayMyBurdenDown 4 года назад

      Amen

    • @irotinmyskin
      @irotinmyskin 4 года назад +1

      we all do

  • @Gunners_Mate_Guns
    @Gunners_Mate_Guns 4 года назад +74

    Grohl's drumming on this is a landmark in the rock pantheon.

  • @blairkelly727
    @blairkelly727 3 года назад +19

    Love this, Rick. Genius isn’t always creating something that intimidates us mere mortals; sometimes it’s creating something that sounds so straightforward and simple that anyone could do it … until they try to.

  • @NylonStrap
    @NylonStrap 4 года назад +190

    I heard a story where Kurt was adamantly against the overdubbing of his vocals until the producer told him that John Lennon overdubbed vocals as well

    • @cleopatraoatcake7364
      @cleopatraoatcake7364 4 года назад +13

      Butch Vig, Smart Studios in Madison, WI. He and his friends used to come into the bar I worked at; the people I worked with/for were part of that group. Butch became a big deal after producing Nirvana I think.

    • @thedebtbeats
      @thedebtbeats 3 года назад +18

      It’s double tracked. Kurt didn’t want to double track his voice until learning Lennon did it.
      Overdub meaning recording over a section.
      Please note I’m not policing, just sharing the info.

    • @kj4ilk
      @kj4ilk 3 года назад

      its true but Vig told him the Beatles used to do it i think there's a Video on Vig actually talking about it

    • @richardhall5489
      @richardhall5489 3 года назад +9

      If you listen really close you can actually hear John Lennon in the mix ;)

    • @jkb1O5
      @jkb1O5 3 года назад

      *doubled

  • @MikeLuke
    @MikeLuke 4 года назад +31

    I was 13 when „Nevermind“ was released and it changed my life.
    Rick, that was probably the best WMTSG ever. One really feels how much you love that song. What a masterpiece in music history! And how you end this episode with the melody on the piano is simply outstanding. I feel sad now. But sad in a good way.

    • @seanparker7415
      @seanparker7415 4 года назад

      It is a great example of WMTSG, I agree, I am not a particular fan of this song but Rick's study of it really gave me an appreciation for it - especially the melody which is really obvious when played on piano.
      The video was quite melancholy in an understated way I guess because of the fate of Cobain.

    • @CJMcMullet
      @CJMcMullet 4 года назад +2

      "Sad in a good way" - nostalgia my friend, you wanna go back to the good ol grunge days!

    • @Shadezman76
      @Shadezman76 4 года назад +2

      I was a Freshman in HS in 90'/91' and watched this video on MTV all the time and listened to it on the radio everytime it came on. It definitely brings a nostalgic feeling on when he breaks it down. If I only I had picked up a guitar back then my ability to play would be much more advanced than it is now. It wasn't till I was 27 when I discovered the other side of music picking up my then roommates acoustic guitar. Now I can only hope one of my kids will pick it up inspired by Dad and all the great music throughout history

    • @spideliciousx9822
      @spideliciousx9822 4 года назад +2

      Yeah I was about the same age, 13-14 and remember seeing that video vividly !!!!! A lifetime memory there!

  • @beaudure01
    @beaudure01 4 года назад +64

    Those haunting 9ths and 11ths explain why Tori Amos was able to do such a compelling cover.

  • @851852093114208513
    @851852093114208513 3 года назад +61

    I think Kurt was an absolute genius lyricist. I mean he said the lyrics were just written in the moment and didn't mean anything but like... the chorus, sung from the perspective of his audience, "Here we are now, entertain us," then sung from his perspective, "I feel stupid and contagious," like he's saying "Who the hell am I that you people are listening to me?" then he starts having what sounds like it could be a profound thought in the final chorus, "I found it hard, it's hard to find.." and he kind of just gives up "Oh well, whatever, never mind." like... I don't know, I absolutely love those lyrics. This isn't my favorite Nirvana song, but you just have to admit it's amazing in basically every way.

    • @rscott2247
      @rscott2247 Год назад

      I hear what your saying. I too like the song & album but its not my favorite. Bleach is my favorite cd despite not like every song and Radio unit friendly shifter is probably my favorite tune !

    • @jonathanedwards8696
      @jonathanedwards8696 Год назад

      Great music doesn't need vocals or lyrics.

    • @JanaXV
      @JanaXV Год назад +2

      It has meaning. Right now I only remember the lyrics of Smells like teen's spirit:
      Load up on guns, bring your friends
      It's fun to lose and to pretend
      _Making fun of the 'cool kids'_
      She's over bored and self-assured
      Oh, no, I know a dirty word
      _Making fun of cheerleaders_
      With the lights out, it's less dangerous
      _Probably mocking children/maybe also him as a child, being afraid of the dark_
      Here we are now, entertain us
      _Probably a dig at hair-metal who were more show = entertainers than anything_
      I feel stupid and contagious
      _He feels like a loner as he's different_
      A mulatto, an albino
      A mosquito, my libido, yeah
      _Krist, Kurt, Dave, a rhyme for good measurement_
      I'm worse at what I do best
      _what he likely heard all his childhood_
      And for this gift I feel blessed
      Our little group it's always been
      And always will until the end
      _a sarcastic dig at all those people who told him they're better than him_
      And I forget, just why I taste
      Oh yeah, I guess it makes me smile
      _probably because of his stomach? or an inside joke I don't know of_
      I found it hard, it's hard to find
      Oh well, whatever, never mind
      _I'm a loser, but I don't care_
      A denial, a denial
      _Goes both ways, he's been denied 'into society' and he's refusing to adapt to be part of it._
      I mean he's not here to tell me I'm wrong, but I pretty much think I got this right. He also gave the lyrics meaning by how he sang/played the song, which could be the opposite of the lyrics at times.

    • @dazednconfused-r4o
      @dazednconfused-r4o 6 месяцев назад

      Not only that, but starting an album off with "Load up on guns, bring your friends" creates such tension, as if something huge is going to happen. And it happens

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 6 месяцев назад

      @@JanaXV You pretty much nailed it. The "taste" reference is about heroin but I guess you probably knew that. "Tasting" is when you use occasionally and are trying not to get hooked on it. Few people succeed. It's too good.

  • @Compassiron1
    @Compassiron1 4 года назад +121

    Watching Rick say ‘UGH!’ And punching the air talking about Dave’s drumming is what makes this channel great! Haha. Love this guy and these vids. 3:55 is where its at

    • @JC-11111
      @JC-11111 4 года назад +2

      As I was reading this, he started doing it. 👍🤣

    • @davidgomersall7185
      @davidgomersall7185 4 года назад

      Dave Grohl is rightly regarded as one of the greats of rock drumming. He proves that feel is more important than technical virtuosity (or "showing off" if you prefer). He's one of those drummers that you can immediately pick out, whoever he is playing with, not because he plays over the band but because his drumming has such a distinct feel to it. His work with QOTSA on Songs for the Deaf is just brilliant

  • @theplanforlife
    @theplanforlife 4 года назад +134

    I'm black, grew up in a black neighborhood, and I remember my older brother's friends playing this song. They were mostly into R & B, Rap, and Hip-hop. That is how big the song was at the time.

    • @johnjacobs1625
      @johnjacobs1625 4 года назад +10

      Music is colorblind. Gotta love it! I was on a Navy ship and played Bob Seger, Night Moves. The brothers loved it. So did everybody else.

    • @crnkmnky
      @crnkmnky 4 года назад

      @@johnjacobs1625 Were you a deejay?

    • @johnjacobs1625
      @johnjacobs1625 4 года назад +1

      @@crnkmnky No. At that time I was a temp. working in the Dry Cleaning Plant on the Aircraft Carrier. My normal job was working on the electrical systems of the F-14 Tomcats. We were allowed to play what ever music we wanted to listen to, as long as we got our work done. And we Jammed!

    • @yxnggod9444
      @yxnggod9444 4 года назад +2

      I’m black and all I listen to is rap and R&b, I even make it. But this is the best song ever made in my opinion

    • @jeffkuper8139
      @jeffkuper8139 4 года назад +1

      @@yxnggod9444 Have you checked out Lost in Vegas reactions? Love those guys. Especially when they do Tool or Metallica. This song forever changed me and my perception of what music could be and I'm forever grateful but there are better songs out there if, as George says, you are a free thinker.

  • @frankdstrack
    @frankdstrack 4 года назад +70

    I live just down the street from his old house in Seattle, and its astounding how many young kids still come out to visit "Kurt's bench" in the park nextdoor. He continues to touch the young, angsty generations.

    • @RivLoveshine
      @RivLoveshine 4 года назад

      Cool. Have you ever seen someone sit on the bench? I would assume no one would sit on it because of the tribute graffiti.

    • @alexk4020
      @alexk4020 4 года назад +1

      @@ralphbaldez6408 Or possibly Joe Biden...

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 4 года назад +2

      @@ralphbaldez6408 Or Joe Biden.

    • @dougrobinson8602
      @dougrobinson8602 4 года назад +1

      @@alexk4020 Dam. Beat me to it!

    • @MegaHannaz
      @MegaHannaz 4 года назад

      Visited his house and that park just over 2 years ago when I went to Seattle for the first time.
      Got some photos on the park bench with my then 5mth old daughter. Going to frame them one day and give them to her as a gift. One off the bucket list for me! 👍

  • @treff9226
    @treff9226 2 года назад +144

    Kurt's that rare singer who can literally scream and NOT lose melody or tunefulness.

    • @vsaucepuppet697
      @vsaucepuppet697 Год назад +8

      exactly! he was able to express himself very viscerally while still being beautifully melodic

    • @treff9226
      @treff9226 Год назад +7

      @@vsaucepuppet697 totally melodic! Well said, my friend! That's the whole thing with Nirvana - raw, punky, loose, and yet always tuneful and catchy as hell! Kurt sang as if he was pouring out every ounce of his soul - true artist! Cheers!

    • @jlouis4407
      @jlouis4407 Год назад +4

      Black Francis

    • @treff9226
      @treff9226 Год назад +2

      @@jlouis4407 Pixies HUGE inspiration for Kurt, and really diggin' The Pixies latest albums - talk about a welcome return! Also am a huge fan of Frank Black' solo stuff - got all of his albums! The man is one of a kind, extremely creative and marches to his own drummer, yet his songs are filled with interesting hooks and melodies! Any group, and there are a plethora of alternative groups, and even some metal, owe their "quiet, loud, quiet song structures to The Pixies! Kim Deal was a badass, as well! You liking the modern day material from Pixies? Cheers!

    • @ponchiohetfield
      @ponchiohetfield Год назад +2

      Don't forget Serj Tankian

  • @Ren-X
    @Ren-X 4 года назад +17

    Wow, well I wasn't expecting that to make me cry. Just hearing the vocals alone, really hit me. Took me right back to hearing first as a kid

  • @punkmusicmetal
    @punkmusicmetal 4 года назад +38

    I don't care how overplayed this song is, it will forever be memorable, classic and timeless. Thanks for doing this one Rick!

  • @saharshjordan
    @saharshjordan 4 года назад +51

    When played on a piano this song sounds so emotional and the original is so aggressive...a great melody sounds amazing on every instrument

    • @IRex-wm9pd
      @IRex-wm9pd 4 года назад +1

      When he slows it down and plays it lightly on the keyboard it almost sounds like something Beethoven would have written in a depressed moment.