Nirvana, Smells Like Teen Spirit- A Classical Musician’s First Listen and Reaction

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#nirvana #nevermind #smellsliketeenspirit #kurtcobain
A good solid Rock style piece of music, and I really “got it”! I can say, “Yeah, smells like teen spirit!”. “Oh well, whatever, never mind”, it sounds great!
Here’s the link to the original song by Nirvana:
• Nirvana - Smells Like ...
Here's the link to Schubert's An Der Musik:
• An die Musik, D. 547
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_________________________
Amy Shafer, LRSM, FRSM, RYC, is a classical harpist, pianist, and music teacher, Director of Piano Studies and Assistant Director of Harp Studies for The Harp School, Inc., holds multiple degrees in harp and piano performance and teaching, and is active as a solo and collaborative performer. With nearly two decades of teaching experience, she teaches privately, presents masterclasses and coaching sessions, and has performed and taught in Europe and USA.
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Credits: Music written and performed by Nirvana
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Пікірлер: 959

  • @Mrvictorfernandes
    @Mrvictorfernandes8 ай бұрын

    Funnily enough, Schubert's "An die Musik" was chosen as my singing assignment when I studied vocal at Toronto's Royal Conservatory of Music. While studying it I noticed the (almost) similarities in the opening vocal lines of this and "Teen Spirit" that, when I performed it live at the student recital, I sang some of Kurt's lyrics to fit over the Schubert melody, much to the chagrin and delight of various teachers and faculty in the audience that night. Seeing Ms. Shafer realize this Schubert/Cobain connection reinforced my feeling that I'm not alone in this observation. Godspeed, Amy, Vlad, and little Liesel...

  • @RaysDad

    @RaysDad

    8 ай бұрын

    I'm hearing only the most tenuous similarities between the two melodies. Maybe I need to go back and listen again (and again and again . . . ).

  • @elevenseven-yq4vu

    @elevenseven-yq4vu

    8 ай бұрын

    A "teenage spirit" might most desperately be in need of being "transposed into a better world" by music's "sweet, holy chords" (as Schober's lyrics in Schubert's song expressed it), so no wonder if some melodic parts in Nirvana's song reek of "An die Musik" ("to music"). Holde Kunst, indeed!

  • @remogatron1010

    @remogatron1010

    6 ай бұрын

    I almost broke my neck banding my head to this song back then.

  • @sabbracadabra8367

    @sabbracadabra8367

    4 ай бұрын

    Wow it is very similar!

  • @xiola_skye

    @xiola_skye

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow! Unbelievable connection... I love it!

  • @kentandersonrocks
    @kentandersonrocks8 ай бұрын

    Tom Petty noted that this song was like a scythe across the music scene, cutting down old tropes and opening the field again.

  • @PartTimeJedi

    @PartTimeJedi

    8 ай бұрын

    great analogy

  • @jdslim614

    @jdslim614

    8 ай бұрын

    Tom Petty noted..... It was an interview with VH1 not Why change your dialect bc she's a classical musician? I bet you typed with your pinky up too.

  • @ugaboj

    @ugaboj

    8 ай бұрын

    @@jdslim614 What are you talking about? What OP wrote was a completely normal sentence. How you managed to see some kind of obnoxious pretentiousness in what he said is beyond me. Not to mention that you don't even know this person, so how do you know that they 'changed their dialect' and weren't just speaking as they would normally?

  • @bygmesterfinnegan6938

    @bygmesterfinnegan6938

    7 ай бұрын

    What a delusional thinking. This song has not a gram of importance related to anything.

  • @jdslim614

    @jdslim614

    7 ай бұрын

    @@bygmesterfinnegan6938 watch out for Capt. Contrary. He always holds the opposite opinion on anything popular mmaaaaaannnnnn, even if he's never heard,watched, etc whatever he's telling you is trash. Hes a rebel.

  • @ichirofakename
    @ichirofakename8 ай бұрын

    In 1991 I was 39 years old, and I wore out my cassette of Nevermind (only cassette I ever wore out). Now in 2023 I'm 71 and this song still literally sends shivers up my spine. So it is not SOLELY teen music.

  • @spacewolfRIFF

    @spacewolfRIFF

    8 ай бұрын

    🫵🪨

  • @mina_en_suiza

    @mina_en_suiza

    8 ай бұрын

    I loved it then, I will love it forever.

  • @7king8debs79

    @7king8debs79

    8 ай бұрын

    You're my hero! I'm 41 and try hard to listen to music that is current rather than sticking to the music of my youth. How did / do you feel about Soundgarden? What modern bands do you listen to? I would suggest Turnstile being at the top of the game.

  • @ichirofakename

    @ichirofakename

    8 ай бұрын

    @@7king8debs79 Thanks for the kind words but actually I lost touch with current music trends in the late 90's. I saw Soundgarden, they are ok, but I prefer the similar Mudhoney, who actually still perform. I love Be Your Own Pet, but only the stuff before 2015. The only current performers I pay attention to anymore are Sigur Rós and Jack White. Thanks for the Turnstyle tip, I'll check 'em out.

  • @7king8debs79

    @7king8debs79

    8 ай бұрын

    @ichirofakename Sigur Ros are an incredible band. I saw them live a few years ago and almost wept. If you like that sound try 65daysofstatic - a very inventive band like Sigur. Who's the best band you've seen live?

  • @philshorten3221
    @philshorten32218 ай бұрын

    Nobody EVER played the Harp along to Smells like Teen Spirit .... UNTIL NOW! 😂😂😂

  • @rwm4738

    @rwm4738

    2 ай бұрын

    I did once during my harp phase, but that was a while back, and I try to forget about those days.

  • @herbie5263

    @herbie5263

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, so good! :)

  • @paradisefamilytravels3674
    @paradisefamilytravels36748 ай бұрын

    If you were a part of Gen X then this song changed your world. We went from hair metal and GnR on constant radio airplay to alternative music taking over in a moment. This song changed the culture completely and gave Gen X a voice and an anthem. Just what we needed! This song changed the music, fashion and attitude of the 90s completely.

  • @rhodriwilliams2891

    @rhodriwilliams2891

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nathananderson3355agreed - Nirvana seemed a logical step from the preceding decade of SST & Sub Pop; Husker Du, Black Flag, Minutemen/Firehose etc… I guess ‘Nevermind’ & ‘Ten’ just took it to a new global & mainstream level… 🤷

  • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192

    @goldenageofdinosaurs7192

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nathananderson3355Right, so it went from 10% of genX’ers to 90% of genX’ers. A seismic change..

  • @TomB91381

    @TomB91381

    8 ай бұрын

    So glad I found this, Kurt loved contradictions . You should give Oingo Boingo a listen. “Just another Day” would be one others have tried . Danny Elfman is behind it

  • @deadralynx1288

    @deadralynx1288

    7 ай бұрын

    @@nathananderson3355 no teen listened to those emo borefests in the 90s. they got a huge boost from MTV. late 80s electro would have gone the way of 70s disco if not for music television.

  • @deadralynx1288

    @deadralynx1288

    7 ай бұрын

    @@rhodriwilliams2891 nirvana was a break the glass cut from 70/80s 99% garbage music. NO person on the planet has any idea what SST & Sub Pop; Husker Du, Black Flag, Minutemen/Firehose is.

  • @gwengoodwin3992
    @gwengoodwin39928 ай бұрын

    The song is generally seen as an anthem of the alienation, disaffection, and frustration felt by teenagers in a cynical commercial world built by conscienceless adults. Not fun, but tortured. It is specifically a protest against the commercialization of rock music. Tori Amos sings a provocative, respectful cover of the song that shows it in a different light. I like the live version - just Tori and her piano and those lyrics. Live at Montreaux in 1992.

  • @soundofnellody262

    @soundofnellody262

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this tip. I love Tori Amos but never knew about this cover. I will check her live perfomance :D

  • @foreveryoungpisces7426

    @foreveryoungpisces7426

    8 ай бұрын

    Patti Smith has a version too.

  • @StonerMatt

    @StonerMatt

    8 ай бұрын

    the name of the song "smells like teen spirit" is misleading and has nothing to do with an on-purpose teenage anthem...it was a private joke with one close friend at the time, Kathleen Hannah (Bikini Kill, Le Tigre) because Cobain at the time was in a relationship with Tobi Vail (Bikini Kill drummer) who used "Teen Spirit" a discount deodorant spray adn it was a mockery by Kathleen Hannah that KC thought was fun to re-use...

  • @noncounterproductive4596

    @noncounterproductive4596

    8 ай бұрын

    @@StonerMatt According to information that I find online, Kurt Cobain did not know that Teen Spirit was a deodorant when he wrote the song. He made up his own meaning.

  • @MusicMissionary

    @MusicMissionary

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@noncounterproductive4596that makes it even cooler.

  • @jamesjohnson-en3cu
    @jamesjohnson-en3cu8 ай бұрын

    You just have to remember what it was like to be a teen… Introspective, unsure, feigning apathy, and then- releasing all that potential power you don’t really know how to channel. Like Punk, Grunge is less about composition and musicality and more about attitude. Something in the quality of Kurt’s voice was instantly relatable to the misfits of that generation.

  • @BaumiTor
    @BaumiTor8 ай бұрын

    It's amazing how you managed to discuss this song so accurately without using the term "angst" a single time. Greetings from Germany

  • @sambirch6784
    @sambirch67848 ай бұрын

    For many teens in the 90's this song had a seismic effect. I had a friend who got into Nirvana early on, when the album Bleach came out, so when Nevermind was released we were eagerly waiting. 'Teen Spirit' was the obvious hit on the album but it was full of great songs with energy, rage and disaffection. It gave a voice to a generation of people who were unhappy with their lives but struggled to express it.

  • @theelvenwtich

    @theelvenwtich

    8 ай бұрын

    I hope I am not the only one that still can't express it properly.

  • @rowenatulley852

    @rowenatulley852

    8 ай бұрын

    It had an effect on me as an adult . . .

  • @markwatson6579

    @markwatson6579

    8 ай бұрын

    This song may not have happened without Punk Rock in the late 70s so worth listening to some to put this song into context . The Sex Pistols is the place to start imo

  • @ImaDieHrderLkeMyKidBruceWillis

    @ImaDieHrderLkeMyKidBruceWillis

    8 ай бұрын

    “Bleach” is a GREAT album, btw.

  • @michaeltaylor8835

    @michaeltaylor8835

    8 ай бұрын

    That feeling is still there

  • @G60syncro
    @G60syncro8 ай бұрын

    Rick Beato in one of his videos explained how Kurt Cobain would write these super rich melodies and he would also play lots of diminished chords, leaving out the notes he would sing on top of the mix to really get that vocal through!

  • @mina_en_suiza

    @mina_en_suiza

    8 ай бұрын

    Rick Beato is wonderful.

  • @DaLeSy.

    @DaLeSy.

    Ай бұрын

    Really, I wonder why I haven't seen any diminished chords come up yet when following youtube videos for nirvana tutorials. Although I don't really know what a diminished chord looks like. I just recall a lot of power chords and open chords.

  • @mattwalsh9413

    @mattwalsh9413

    Ай бұрын

    there are no diminished chords on nevermind on the guitar. he means something else i guess. @@DaLeSy.

  • @samdeakins7176

    @samdeakins7176

    25 күн бұрын

    @@mattwalsh9413 yes the notes in the melody and bass fill out the basic chords of the guitar parts in to more interesting chords.

  • @y2jace124
    @y2jace1248 ай бұрын

    For me, its the melody writing of Kurt Cobain, its very underated in my opinion. Everytime I hear this song played on piano, it makes my eyes water with a mix of emotions. Its hauntingly beautiful.

  • @markxv2267

    @markxv2267

    8 ай бұрын

    Why do you think its very underrated?

  • @petersilva037

    @petersilva037

    8 ай бұрын

    You mean the Tori Amos version? kzread.info/dash/bejne/epV1q5WjeZrbc8Y.html&ab_channel=GeorgeBopper

  • @heidichristensen7919

    @heidichristensen7919

    8 ай бұрын

    I’ve heard some (Rick Beato for one) say they think Kurt was one of the best melody writer ever.

  • @qbsrd

    @qbsrd

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@heidichristensen7919 From a technical standpoint, Kurt Cobain songwriting skills are only recognized now. Before that, Kurt Cobain was criticized for his lack of technicality on the guitar and the fact that his song are simple to play. It took years for lot a people to recognize that to play a Nirvana song is fairly easy but to write like Kurt did is a different task.

  • @heidichristensen7919

    @heidichristensen7919

    8 ай бұрын

    @@qbsrd it’s sad. I live in Seattle, and even I didn’t appreciate Nirvana or grunge in general until about 10 years ago.

  • @hadz8671
    @hadz86718 ай бұрын

    Now I have heard Nirvana with harp accompaniment - my life is complete!

  • @jmuench420

    @jmuench420

    8 ай бұрын

    Not with a harp but worth a listen: kzread.info/dash/bejne/kYKgs5Osfc-XlJc.html&ab_channel=PostmodernJukebox

  • @Silver_Bullet1999
    @Silver_Bullet19998 ай бұрын

    While the song is an anthem for teenage angst, it’s also the antithesis to the complexities of the more the more skillful bands (think Metallica). This is essentially what Nirvana is. Ironically enough, Kurt Cobain highlighted what can come from mastering the basics. Basics meaning simple power chords and arpeggios based on those chords. He wrote vocal melodies that were perfect for his guitar riffs. Songs like “Heart-Shaped Box”, “Pennyroyal Tea”, “Serve the Servants”, “Lithium”, and “Drain You” all have very sophisticated, yet playful chord progressions that fun to listen, sing along, or play guitar with. These are also worth checking out at some point When you add Dave Grohl’s thunderous drums and Krist Novoselic’s heavy-hitting bass lines, and the emotion-filled vocals (and lyrics) of Kurt Cobain you get some of the most sonically pleasing, accessible and expressive music that has given a voice to the feelings and emotions of so many to this day. RIP Kurt Cobain 🙏

  • @Marnee4191

    @Marnee4191

    8 ай бұрын

    What's insane is that I was in my mid 20s when this came out and I was huge into the grunge sound (and then nu metal) as I hated the 80s rock and hair bands. (I also liked the heavy metal which we called "thrash" such as Metallica and Metal Church.) But I never had MtV, so I maybe saw half of one Nirvana video. And I NEVER KNEW KURT COBAINE PLAYED GUITAR UNTIL TODAY. I thought he just did vocals. How did I never know Kurt played guitar?! Anyway, I agree with your analysis!

  • @vonVile
    @vonVile8 ай бұрын

    The reason the song a hit is that it was nothing that was currently playing on the radio at that time. It was the end of the glam/hair heavy metal era of the 1980s. Heavy metal was becoming too corporate and safe losing its wild dark roots. Nirvana went back too the era of 1970s punk where it was more raw and chaotic. This fresh unexpected sound shook up the industry. I suggest doing "Heart Shaped Box" next.

  • @iloveresses7277

    @iloveresses7277

    3 ай бұрын

    It's almost like someone splashing cold water on your face. It's almost shocking and unexpected compared to basically anything out at the time. It forces you to take notice of it. As the song progresses you can almost feel the music industry evolving in real time and pop culture entering into a new era. Granted I was 10 when this came out so my memories of the era might be mixed with what I've learned since then but I can't help but feel that way every time I hear that song. 80s music feels like its before my era but from Nirvana on it actually feels like "my" era of music.

  • @thekaratekidpartii2169
    @thekaratekidpartii21698 ай бұрын

    This has such a sad and melancholic melody I am surprised it wasn't mentioned. In fact, I think this is what the song taps into and the reason for its popularity. Not the energy (although it has energy). And not the contrasting elements (although it certainly has contrasting elements). But rather, this gloomy depressed mood which is expressed so perfectly and unpretentiously in a song that plugs itself right into the mains of that feeling.

  • @docsavage8640

    @docsavage8640

    8 ай бұрын

    Unpretentiously? 😆 🤣 😂

  • @Babomomebeo

    @Babomomebeo

    8 ай бұрын

    @@thekaratekidpartii2169 wheels on the bus is overrated

  • @Britton_Thompson

    @Britton_Thompson

    8 ай бұрын

    ​​​​​@@docsavage8640Do you not know who wrote those lyrics? Kurt Cobain was probably the most genuinely melancholic artist since Vincent Van Gogh for Chrissakes.... I'm old enough to have lived through it so I still remember it: The mainstream's criticism of Kurt Cobain from 1991-94 was that he needed to smile more. That his dour countenance was unattractive. There were endless panels of brand managers & PR agents encouraging him to have more fun, and show more appreciation for his success. Tabloid magazines and TV shows like Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood would always have sections devoted to solving why this guy was so angry and depressed despite being rich and famous with a celebrity wife and new baby. The paparazzi followed him and Courtney relentlessly just to hopefully get a photo of him being happy when no one was looking. Let me tell ya..... few were captured. Kurt was a riddle no one could crack. The paparazzi in America was actually founded on chasing rock stars in the 80s. Nowadays they chase no-talent 304s like the Kardashians, but back in those days the public wanted to see Van Halen, Motley Crue, and Guns N Roses' backstage debauchery, or the relationships of rock stars and supermodels. The paparazzi had the in-road to rock n roll at the time. They had sources everywhere. The only constant was Kurt Cobain never being anyone but the pissed off punk rocker you saw in his music videos.

  • @markbuchanan2694
    @markbuchanan26948 ай бұрын

    i love her very vanilla innocence. definitely embracing purity outside of her comfort zone. her reactions upon hearing TS for the first time, priceless. then her breakdown of the song in her own language resinates with what many many others have said about Teen Spirit, which is a goid thing. Cause it's such a simple song, but its how it grabs you and takes you on that journey is testimony to it's brilliance. well done harp lady 😊

  • @ericbuckland3938
    @ericbuckland39388 ай бұрын

    I was 30 when Nevermind was released, and it felt like a great release, a return to my teenage years in the ‘70s. The raw energy was so welcome after the hair bands of the ‘80s. Now in my early 60’s I can still feel it. I loved your take on this! Thank you!

  • @kevinroebke8050

    @kevinroebke8050

    6 ай бұрын

    I totally get that. I was 34 at the time and had never been turned on by '80's metal. Nirvana and '90's music in general as you say, felt like a return to a '70's sensibility. My kids were teens in the '90's so I got lots of exposure through them (as well as turning them on to '60's and '70's rock).

  • @terrencekelly2508
    @terrencekelly25088 ай бұрын

    Like other posters mentioned in the comments, this song came out at the tail end of almost a decade of hair bands and glam rock. This song smashed all those stereotypes of dudes wearing hairspray and make up. It might not be the best or most sophisticated song but it was needed and us gen xers loved it!

  • @Marnee4191

    @Marnee4191

    8 ай бұрын

    "it was needed" - that's the best 3 word description of why this song and band were so effective and so loved.

  • @todd3812
    @todd38128 ай бұрын

    I'm in my mid-50s and this song is so raw, simple, unsophisticated, and primitive that it cuts through all the bubble gum spandex rock of the 80s. It satisfies at a deeper level. I'm proof you don't need to be a teenager to appreciate the unrefined things in life.

  • @foreignmilk5589

    @foreignmilk5589

    8 ай бұрын

    i felt the same way when the strokes first came out

  • @jonlohrenz5446
    @jonlohrenz54468 ай бұрын

    It’s interesting how you mentioned that the “hey, yay” section could have repeated a couple more times. When they wrote this song initially that’s actually how they played it. The producer Butch Vig told them to cut that part in half and they did. There is actually a rough demo version out there where they play that part longer.

  • @Marnee4191

    @Marnee4191

    8 ай бұрын

    Somebody very early on in this channel told Amy she would make a fantastic producer. And after watching so many videos, I agree.

  • @PeterTea
    @PeterTea8 ай бұрын

    The “stutter” that you refer to at the beginning of the song always had a bit of an echo of a hip hop beat where the DJ is scratching out an LP. It also has the power of a dam bursting which is about to throw a sonic tidal wave at you. 🎶 🌊

  • @ponkor
    @ponkor8 ай бұрын

    Thank-you for this review. I was 14 years old when this dropped... And it changed everything.. Myself, my friends,...we all changed. 🙏 thank you Kurt.

  • @jasonemikel

    @jasonemikel

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes. I said that out loud to myself the first time I saw this. I guess I was 20? I said, "the world just changed." And it did. Overnight.

  • @adelaideharper9201
    @adelaideharper92018 ай бұрын

    Nirvana is arguably the most influential band of the whole of the 1990s. They completely changed the face of popular music. Nirvana influenced every genre of popular music and ultimately popularized alternate rock, pop rock, and even associated metal groups. Their influence has been felt in the entirety of the "bad boy" eras of Pop, Rock, and even leaking into moody Rap and Hip Hop pieces time and again.

  • @markvanderstelt8999

    @markvanderstelt8999

    7 ай бұрын

    ya arguable is the correct word.

  • @ksqwerty1
    @ksqwerty18 ай бұрын

    Nirvana changed western culture with one song. And I’m thrilled I was there for it.

  • @ilcontefranz7746

    @ilcontefranz7746

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah but we need another Nirvana, right now.

  • @mabusestestament

    @mabusestestament

    Ай бұрын

    For a while. We’re right back where we started, in a way. Or set back even further, actually.

  • @DefenestrateYourself

    @DefenestrateYourself

    3 күн бұрын

    @@mabusestestament vague platitudes like this don’t add anything of value to the conversation. Feel free to elaborate if you have anything of substance to contribute

  • @mabusestestament

    @mabusestestament

    3 күн бұрын

    @@DefenestrateYourself Only if you say please.

  • @DefenestrateYourself

    @DefenestrateYourself

    2 күн бұрын

    @@mabusestestament dance monkey, dance

  • @houdin654jeff
    @houdin654jeff8 ай бұрын

    I’m glad you brought up the drums, I think it’s the first time on this channel that you’ve heard the work of Dave Grohl. He’s an amazing drummer, but also a vocalist and multi-instrumentalist (guitar, piano, and bass at least). After Cobain’s death, he formed his own group called Foo Fighters, actually releasing an initial album where he played every part of every track before getting together a band to play live and record other albums. Hopefully their work will show up here eventually.

  • @FirstLast-zk5ow
    @FirstLast-zk5ow8 ай бұрын

    I love how she analyzes. So in touch and unbiased. Giving a truth and honest take. While going deep at the same time. #wantmore

  • @heffatheanimal2200

    @heffatheanimal2200

    8 ай бұрын

    Yass! Really get that too. And the feeling that regardless of whether it's her sort of music, she's enthusiastic about it , the elements, the composition and what it creates. A genuine openness to learning and teaching. I can easily imagine Amy sitting down with Dave Grohl (or many other metal/rock musicians) in a studio and spending hours engrossed in deep diving

  • @baronvonaux8294

    @baronvonaux8294

    8 ай бұрын

    Are you serious? She is literally pretending to have never heard Nirvana or Smells Like Teen Spirit before. This is so obviously bullshit.

  • @steveberkery6128
    @steveberkery61288 ай бұрын

    I was 23 when I first heard this song, and I understood it immediately. Profoundly. I’m so happy it continues to have the same impact on new listeners. That is what great music does.

  • @andymccabe6712
    @andymccabe67128 ай бұрын

    This sing still sends a shiver up my spine 32 years after it's release....wonderful...!!

  • @aires69uk
    @aires69uk8 ай бұрын

    Energetic.. cinematic.. power.. this song set the tone for the early 90's.. it was a moment in time that will never come again.

  • @johnmontonye9660
    @johnmontonye96608 ай бұрын

    I love this break down. To this day I’m stirred by a memory of this song - as if a “where were you when moment.” I was from the Seattle area, so had heard grunge, been in mosh pits, so the sound wasn’t entirely new to me. But then I went off to school at the Naval Academy, where freedom gets stripped from you the first year, and they try to break you down. It was not an easy time. Being on the sailing team there, I was able to get away from it by going to the sailboat I was crew on, and studying there. One day on the boat studying, I had the radio on, and then the DJ announced “and now here’s a new track from a Seattle band, Nirvana, called ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit.’” Then that Seattle sound, and then the drums rolling in, and then for a moment it was the biggest release of stress … like I was free in lifting a big middle finger to my small world … I felt home, I felt free, I yelled and screamed in complete joy.

  • @dvpe

    @dvpe

    8 ай бұрын

    this is a breakdown... kzread.info/dash/bejne/nmWO0LmcXdaslJM.html

  • @lisawilliams8180

    @lisawilliams8180

    8 ай бұрын

    What a beautiful, vivid telling of this story! Made me tear up a bit. Thank you for sharing!

  • @Feniremmen1
    @Feniremmen18 ай бұрын

    As a kid of the 70’s, it’s recognizably the most important song of the 90’s. Everything was different before.

  • @cristianovia

    @cristianovia

    8 ай бұрын

    The year 1991 has been exceptional for bringing us a tons of iconic songs and albums and this is one of these. November Rain by Guns and Roses is even better to me, Losing my Religion by REM, One by U2, Innuendo (the whole slbum) by Queen, Under the Bridge by RHCP and Nothing else Matters by Metallica, just to name a few. What a great year of music!

  • @Feniremmen1

    @Feniremmen1

    8 ай бұрын

    @@cristianovia yes. Such a great year of amazing albums. REM were finally considered mainstream and were one of the bands that laid the foundation for the decade to come. I think the point about smells like teen spirit is that it really laid waste to the previous landscape. I didn’t let go of all that I loved before, but somehow anything was possible.

  • @williamsowder9573
    @williamsowder95738 ай бұрын

    They got some of their dynamics from Pixies. The pixies played very soft and very loud giving them a sharp dynamic contrast. Nirvana was a breath of fresh air for us Generation X kids. Coming off the boring hair metal of the 1980's we needed this desperately. Cheers,

  • @dottore3870

    @dottore3870

    8 ай бұрын

    Indeed. I remember an interview with Dave Grohl stating that "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was an actual Pixie's rip-off.

  • @anguskerr1872
    @anguskerr18725 ай бұрын

    Lovely reaction. This is from my generation (I'm now 58) and I still relate to it, even though it's a long time since I was a teenager! One thing I would like to mention, is that if you notice here, Kurt is singing in a lower register in the verses, and the guitar drops out to give the vocal sonic space to breathe in the song. The guitar and voice occupy similar sonic space, so it's often a trick producers use to get a vocal more room, especially with a baritone vocal. (not to say Kurt is a baritone) which would otherwise be lost in a dense mix. When the guitars come in on the chorus, the vocal is higher and more intense, and can compete with the guitars.

  • @althealligator1467

    @althealligator1467

    4 ай бұрын

    I do wonder then how, for example in Creep, you can hear the vocals so clearly? In the chorus, they're in the same, actually a bit lower register than Kurt's vocals in Teen Spirit, so with the super loud distorted guitar, why can we hear them so clearly?

  • @rogerwitte
    @rogerwitte8 ай бұрын

    I remember being very confused by all the noise when I first listened to "Nevermind". It wasn't until after I heard the "MTV unplugged" recording that I was able to return to the original recording and hear the song structure under the arrangement. I also find it interesting that while most singers who have a message in the lyrics are very careful about enunciation, Kurt Cobain is almost singing in a drawl (obviously intentionally rather than through any lack of ability).

  • @artyplantsman9900

    @artyplantsman9900

    8 ай бұрын

    Same. It took Unplugged to really turn me on to Nirvana.

  • @AlesStibal
    @AlesStibal8 ай бұрын

    For me the song is unique for its exceptional dynamics. Melancholy and perhaps even lethargy changing into unleashed push. Personally, I love drums with heavy cymbal hits and interesting pattern which allows to feel the charge when it awakes.

  • @WesleyAPEX
    @WesleyAPEX2 ай бұрын

    It should be a crime that they shortened the solo on this music video. Someone needs to go to prison for this.

  • @carcarjinks1430
    @carcarjinks14308 ай бұрын

    kurt turned nasal singing into an art form. his singing voice was basically everything a vocal teacher would tell you not to do, but he made it into his own style.

  • @TheBrian08
    @TheBrian088 ай бұрын

    Kurt was a huge fan of the Beatles since very early childhood

  • @lupcokotevski2907
    @lupcokotevski29078 ай бұрын

    The song is an expression of humanity by channelling the raw emotion of a disaffected generation of youth. Its a song with profound meaning that technique and composition alone can never convey at such scale.

  • @MordicusEgg
    @MordicusEgg8 ай бұрын

    This is a fabulous analysis! I love that Amy focused on how teens would relate to this; because I was already an adult when this became popular, I was more focused on it as a piece that was critical of the music industry, and the culture that surrounded it.

  • @dvpe

    @dvpe

    8 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/nmWO0LmcXdaslJM.html

  • @neilfraser1235
    @neilfraser12358 ай бұрын

    Watching Mary play Nirvana on her harp made my day

  • @tigerlily8447

    @tigerlily8447

    7 ай бұрын

    Who is Mary? 😂

  • @garysimonson1135
    @garysimonson11357 ай бұрын

    This song changed EVERYTHING. I was 11 and living in California at the time - but suddenly everyone was dressing like they were from Seattle. So many Grunge bands came out of Seattle and changed the culture and the fashion of the times in the early 90s.

  • @anthonyv6962
    @anthonyv69628 ай бұрын

    A couple of contributing factors that made this song so impactful are the following. In the decade before this commercial radio was dominated by hair metal bands that were dying a slow death and classic rock that appeared to be immortal. At the other end of the spectrum was Michael Jackson and other stale R&B acts that interestingly were about to be dethroned by a wave of new Hip Hop. People were ready for a new era of music, and it was bubbling just under the surface with acts like Janes Addiction and Red Hot Chili Peppers. What the Nirvana Album had that shot it to the moon was for one the production of this album. While masquerading as a grunge or punk act this album has a made for radio pop production sound. Really well produced. Not nearly as raw as the previously mentioned acts. The songs were so catchy and easy to sing along with without having to know the words. Kurt wrote songs that had a pop sensibility. Not forgetting that the rhythm section had such driving catchy grooves. It was a perfect storm of factors that sent them to the stratosphere.

  • @georgeresso6835
    @georgeresso68358 ай бұрын

    kurt had a knack for singing a melody that often times was the missing note in the chords he was playing

  • @dago87able
    @dago87able8 ай бұрын

    I simply loved this

  • @mipsungvuclam
    @mipsungvuclam8 ай бұрын

    Never thought I would hear the bass line played on a harp!😂 I love this channel!!!

  • @ericwebster28
    @ericwebster288 ай бұрын

    You should check out “Weird Al” Yankovic’sp parody of this song called “Smells Like Nirvana”. He changed the lyrics to make fun of Kurt Cobain’s lack of pronunciation and mimicked many elements of the music video with complete accuracy.

  • @dondebomm6329
    @dondebomm63298 ай бұрын

    In the late 90's I had just moved into an apartment on the 2nd with my newlywed wife. New neighbors moved in the 1st floor, two young men who loved to party into the wee hours playing loud music. Despite my requests to stop being loud by 10 pm they continued until I had enough. One early morning when knew they were hung over I decided to play my music...full blast. You guessed it, the first 30 seconds of smells like teen spirit shaking the whole building was enough to suddenly respect my requests. 😂

  • @WayneKitching
    @WayneKitching8 ай бұрын

    Now Amy must do "Smells like Nirvana" by Weird Al Yankovic.

  • @ferniek5000
    @ferniek50008 ай бұрын

    I heard this song when it first came out on MTV. I found it so deeply disturbing, I had to turn it off (against my sister's protests). It really connected with me and I could feel the pain and was discomforted by it. I appreciate it deeply still today, but also feel the trouble in it. There is power, a strong magnet there, but it has never been a happy entertainment for me.

  • @LeeKennison
    @LeeKennison8 ай бұрын

    Great reaction and analysis, glad you finally got to this one. I was certainly one of the ones advocating in the comments for you to do this during the Rock History series, since I think it is one of the more important songs to represent the 90s. While I thought it was important from a rock history perspective, I didn't think you would particularly enjoy it. So I was pleasantly surprised that you appreciated it more than I thought you would. I think having a years worth of rock listening experience has helped you appreciate it more now than you would have earlier in your journey.

  • @Marnee4191

    @Marnee4191

    8 ай бұрын

    I was thinking basically the same!

  • @LeeKennison

    @LeeKennison

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Marnee4191 Hey Marnee! Good to see you here. I haven't seen you around for awhile. Although I haven't been reading through the comments as much lately so I may have missed some you have been making.

  • @patriciamckean4682
    @patriciamckean46828 ай бұрын

    Tori Amos does a cover of this song on extended album Little Earthquakes. Just a piano and her vocals. Its stripped down and shows how beautiful this song is.

  • @ryandean3162
    @ryandean31628 ай бұрын

    Broad As. Nirvahhnahh. Super influential on the 90s and everything that came after. Kind of famous for being difficult to understand what he's singing. Weird Al's parody of this song, Smells Like Nirvana, is all about that. The first verse is "What is this song all about?/Can't figure any lyrics out/How do the words to it go?/I wish you'd tell me, I don't know." Speaking of Weird Al, I don't know if you'd ever want to do him on the channel, though he's kind of an important undercurrent of the music world for the last 40 years or so, but doesn't just do rock songs. Might be fun to give the music videos a watch on your own though. Another good one for you, given where you grew up, would be his parody video of Coolio's Gangsta's Paradise called Amish Paradise, though it's more Lancaster than other communities. His first big hit was a parody of Queen's Another One Bites the Dust called Another One Rides the Bus. Also, rather good to watch the music videos in general for any song from the 80s to the 2000s or so or whenever MTV stopped actually being MTV. They are kind of important for the time.

  • @houseson

    @houseson

    8 ай бұрын

    She should do weird al's version! Yes!

  • @bernhardkrickl3567
    @bernhardkrickl35678 ай бұрын

    Accolades aside, Grunge in general and this song in particular really shaped popular music history. Rock and Metal music wasn't the same afterwards. I was reaching the end of my teenage years when that song hit and I remember exactly how it felt: It was totally different from everything I had loved in the 80s but it felt so right! It felt like something that desperately needed to happen. A revolution.

  • @dichotomous9403
    @dichotomous94038 ай бұрын

    As a teenager, I spent 90% of my money on music, 40% of that was taking chances on bands I'd never heard. The day Nevermind came out, well before this video was released, I was at my go-to music shop looking for new music and the owner, Brandt (RIP) said I needed to check out this band, Nirvana. I asked who they sounded like. He said they don't sound like anyone. "Uh huh," I said, "No really, everyone sounds like someone. if you had to, who would you compare them to." He paused to think about it. Eventually, he came back with , "it's like Metallica meets the Beatles." I said, "I"m in."

  • @Steve-nu1md
    @Steve-nu1md8 ай бұрын

    Wow.....the harp and Kurt's voice....you bring tears to my eyes.....thank you for this understanding of the feel of the music

  • @NotBenCoultry
    @NotBenCoultry8 ай бұрын

    The thing that feels good to me about a lot of these songs is the way they release aggression and anger type moods in higher form through catharsis, but musically here it's the restrained and somewhat wobbly tension of the teenage mind (clean guitar through a flanger pedal) being blasted into surprisingly explosive release with a really good, even distorted tone. I love that it sounds like corduroy to you, we wore a lot of it in this era lmao

  • @allisonal
    @allisonal8 ай бұрын

    The lyrics always remind me now of a study I read about in an old book on physical touch between animals such as humans. They were looking at groups of strangers and people’s comfort levels with being themselves within the group. I forget the specifics of the experimental setup-they might have asked the group to work together to accomplish a task, or something like that. What they found was, people felt much more comfortable being themselves and being around this group of (vetted) strangers when the lights were off and they had to rely more on touch than vision to interface with other people. Makes sense: touch is inherently connecting, sight is inherently disconnecting-we feel other people connected to us, we see them apart from us. Maybe, scientifically speaking, that’s the function of the dim basements and school dances teenagers tend to hang out in: facilitates social connection and self-expression within the group, without reliance on any substances! Anyway, I first heard this song when I was very much the target audience, and it completely changed my worldview and the types of music I wanted to listen to. Just like it did to the music industry as a whole when it exploded onto the scene. There’s a clear “before” and “after” tied directly to this song, in my mind. Speaking of contrast, I think it’s best understood in contrast with what came directly before (whether we’re talking about cheesy 80s music, or the singsongy stuff kids might hear a lot of in grade school, etc before they gain control over their listening experience.)

  • @marysweeney7370
    @marysweeney73708 ай бұрын

    I remember being utterly motionless my heart pounding mouth open, couldn't believe what I was hearing ,I was stunned it was so good, when the song came on the radio. Real rock was back!!! Oh that tiresome, insipid 80's music was swept away with this one song. It was earth shattering at the time. I still love grunge For me, it was about the sound first, the alienation second!

  • @naysay02

    @naysay02

    4 ай бұрын

    i wasn’t even a teen and remember the song just blew me away. i was off the couch, headbanging, lurching. couldn’t help it. my first nirvana song and what an experience it was. rip kurt

  • @tenderbiscuit
    @tenderbiscuit8 ай бұрын

    One of the things I love about this song, is that at the same time it is using that "teen energy" like so many other rock songs, it is being critical of that attitude. "We're stupid and contagious, here we are now, entertain us!" Love your channel. I have been wondering lately what you might do with a song by the group Sonic Youth. In particular, their song "Schizophrenia" would be a really nice one to review, I think. Just a thought.

  • @tenderbiscuit

    @tenderbiscuit

    8 ай бұрын

    Also, I remember being 22 in a bar with a whole bunch of other young folks people clad in the uniform of that time (motorcycle jackets and long hair) and watching everyone's head start banging to this song when it came on. It was actually a really beautiful moment.

  • @pnshr88
    @pnshr888 ай бұрын

    In an interview with Pharrell, Dave Grohl(Nirvana's drummer) stated that most of his beats on Nevermore were basically disco/funk beats such as the very beginning of Smells Like Teen Spirit is The Gap Bands - Early In The Morning

  • @jasonemikel

    @jasonemikel

    4 ай бұрын

    I laughed so hard at Pharrell's reaction. It was so authentic.

  • @gino88
    @gino888 ай бұрын

    Leave it to Amy to catch part of the melody might be a Schubert cover. I love it.

  • @cjonesufc
    @cjonesufc8 ай бұрын

    You just made a connection for me. I’m a huge fan of an underground rapper out of New York named Aesop Rock. He has a line in a song called “Bug Zapper” where he says… “I still row boats out of bottles without abandon To shrink into the sunset bumpin Pachelbel’s Cannon” And now I understand. Time to check out that piece.

  • @frankolivito9242
    @frankolivito92427 ай бұрын

    Thank you !! your analysis is so thourough ,it leaves no questions ! im so glad your doing this !your the best #1

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason37408 ай бұрын

    Kurt was a huge Beatles fan.

  • @curtislow255
    @curtislow2558 ай бұрын

    That sustained feedback during the third verse is the icing on the cake of this song. Always loved that part.

  • @InfinityDejavu
    @InfinityDejavu8 ай бұрын

    Thanks for this ❤❤❤

  • @paulpaul3935
    @paulpaul39357 ай бұрын

    Hi, from the same era, Noel Gallager from Oasis. Acoustic from 1995 to 1998. "Don't look back in anger"

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley8 ай бұрын

    This was a very fun and insightful video.

  • @satorimystic
    @satorimystic8 ай бұрын

    Need to take a break, now, and listen to/watch 'Weird Al Yankovic's' parody version ... it's a real kick. Enjoying your reaction and analysis (as always), and will continue ... Thanks!! ... (continued)... Great comments, reaction, and analysis. I listened to 'An die Musik ... did recognize some resemblance ... cool! Music is so like that ... a bit limited to a range of sounds, but unlimited when stretched and massaged into magical transformations, ad infinitum ... it's a wonder!

  • @BrendanAshton
    @BrendanAshton8 ай бұрын

    Great analysis and interpretation. It captures that feeling and gives the chance to release it out.

  • @chrisofnottingham
    @chrisofnottingham8 ай бұрын

    It only took me about 20 years to notice that title of the song isn't in the lyrics :-) And yet, that title is an important part of the song's mood and identity.

  • @ed.z.
    @ed.z.8 ай бұрын

    Bravo! for listening to whole piece first before breaking it down.

  • @ceebee491
    @ceebee4918 ай бұрын

    Kurt 'melody' Cobain. These songs will be sung and played for years

  • @jeremybaumeister215
    @jeremybaumeister215Ай бұрын

    "It doesn't sound shy." And we have our nominee for Understatement Of The Year award. A seriously excellent and deep analysis. cheers.

  • @jeffdoyle3468
    @jeffdoyle34688 ай бұрын

    It would be interesting to see your opinion of Sonic Youth from a musical perspective.

  • @heidichristensen7919
    @heidichristensen79198 ай бұрын

    I’ve heard a few breakdowns of Nirvanas music, but hearing from a classical viewpoint is fascinating. Going to look for your Beatles videos now!

  • @stpetie7686

    @stpetie7686

    8 ай бұрын

    Good plan. Don't stop with the Beatles, though. She has impressive insights on pretty much every song she analyzes.

  • @vintech6449
    @vintech64498 ай бұрын

    Great review. It was 1993 when I had the honor of seeing Nirvana in concert. Kurt sounds just the same in concert as he did on the album. Best concert ever!

  • @nianfiedler5291

    @nianfiedler5291

    8 ай бұрын

    I saw them as well. He certainly did not sound like he did on the album. But great show nonetheless

  • @markoconnor995
    @markoconnor9958 ай бұрын

    ❤ the analysis, btw

  • @vytallicaq.6881
    @vytallicaq.68818 ай бұрын

    Love the sauna/cold plunge analogy. That applies as well to the iconic "2112" by Rush. That one being additionally interspersed with some lovely, melodic intricacies throughout. I love your descriptive style Amy! 👏

  • @garryiglesias4074
    @garryiglesias40748 ай бұрын

    Contrast is a "trademark" of grunge, it's been used in many music, of course (Beethoven), but one of the grunge precursors on this were the "Pixies", another band to add to your list :).

  • @furryhoof647

    @furryhoof647

    8 ай бұрын

    Which song would you want her to analyze? So much variation, it's hard to choose a song that defines the Pixies sound. My vote is for Caribou. I wish more alternative rock bands had incorporated surf into their sound like the pixies did. I love the surf in Joey Santiago's guitar so much that i tried to get into actual surf music but it was too much, the Pixies just sprinkle it in, leaving me wanting more.

  • @garryiglesias4074

    @garryiglesias4074

    8 ай бұрын

    @@furryhoof647 "Monkey Goes To Heaven", "Gigantic", obviously the hit "Where is my mind", so many to mention ! :) Caribou yes, as the proud father of a canadian boy, I love this song too :).

  • @elevenseven-yq4vu

    @elevenseven-yq4vu

    8 ай бұрын

    I would recommend "Wave of Mutilation" or "Debaser".

  • @garryiglesias4074

    @garryiglesias4074

    8 ай бұрын

    @@elevenseven-yq4vu Yeah, Debaser of course, how could I forget, and I love Wave of mutilation too.. Indeed, problem is, when you really like a band's work, it's often difficult to reduce to one or two tracks, so many good stuff I'd put most as #1 :)

  • @furryhoof647

    @furryhoof647

    8 ай бұрын

    @@elevenseven-yq4vuWhile Debaser is glorious and iconic among Pixies fans, i dunno if a classical musician can appreciate it at first hearing, or ever. Wave of Mutilation is definitely one of the songs i recommend to new listeners, and Where is my mind. My very hard to choose top 5: Caribou Velouria River Euphrates (i think i'm alone on this one) Tie between Levitate Me, Nimrod's Son, Wave of Mutilation and Crackity Jones (lol i cheated)

  • @robertpetre9378
    @robertpetre93788 ай бұрын

    It’s fascinating what you can do with a couple of powerchords and an F sharp, minor pentatonic scale 😅. I remember reading in Kurt Cobain‘s autobiography heavier than heaven that he wanted to create a sound that had the melodic feel of the Beatles, and the heaviness of AC/DC, and Led Zeppelin in one.

  • @DustySoul257

    @DustySoul257

    7 ай бұрын

    "Heavier Than Heaven" is NOT an autobiography. Charles R. Cross, a well regarded music publisher, journalist, and historian in Seattle wrote the biography about Kurt. I gave him a few suggestions in advance on who to interview in Aberdeen for his book, as Aberdeen is my hometown.

  • @JeffM---
    @JeffM---7 ай бұрын

    The Christa Ludwig link was beautiful, thank you.

  • @Franny90.
    @Franny90.8 ай бұрын

    I saw you also have a lot of Beatles videos on your channel. Kurt was also very inspired by them.😊 Thank you for this analysis.

  • @ryanstansfield5156
    @ryanstansfield51568 ай бұрын

    Great reaction and reflections! Another part II think is important is, for those teens for whom this track resonates, this song is really accessible to play for those starting their musical journeys (like many Nirvana songs!). So, not only is it a release of teenage angst because of listening to it, but also because young musicians can pick up an instrument, play it quite easily, and release that angst through being part of the music and connecting more cathartically. For me and I'm sure many others, these were the first rock songs I learned.

  • @annelouisemaclellan485
    @annelouisemaclellan4858 ай бұрын

    They actually did do they “hey yay” part multiple times when the song was first conceived. Butch Vig the producer suggested making it shorter for maximum impact and catchiness 🙏🏼

  • @dizzle7558
    @dizzle75584 ай бұрын

    Excellent breakdown💯

  • @PowderedToastMan477
    @PowderedToastMan4778 ай бұрын

    When i heard that song in the 90s, i knew we were on the top of times and it all would go down from here.

  • @-R.Gray-
    @-R.Gray-8 ай бұрын

    Before moving on, just for a laugh, and to see the attention to detail he puts into his parodies, see Weird Al Yankovic's "Smells Like Nirvana". You might have heard the word nirvana in a different context. It is the term for the ultimate state beyond all suffering that Buddhists aspire to, but like the word "Zen", it gets used out of context.

  • @floretionguru2977
    @floretionguru29778 ай бұрын

    Love your wonderful reactions and insightful analysis- now you have a frame of reference for Weird Al's Smells Like Nirvana :). ps I much prefer you watch a video first as you do here without commenting too much and then returning as I think it has an effect when there are a lot of interuptions.

  • @mirkus21
    @mirkus218 ай бұрын

    There are many songs from Nirvana that I like more than this... but this hit the spot that makes somehow great or big and gather the people!!! Thank you for your work!!! Much appreciated!!! From Argentina...

  • @squirlygeorge
    @squirlygeorgeАй бұрын

    Your breakdowns are amazing. I've never really been a fan or had the attention span to listen to a longer form analysis but you have a way I find really interesting. I will be watching more and I'm really glad you found Rock music in all it's forms 💥

  • @ericwilliams1031
    @ericwilliams10318 ай бұрын

    This song single handedly ended 80s hair metal.

  • @grassygnoll3345

    @grassygnoll3345

    8 ай бұрын

    It was like a bomb going off in your face. I'd been waiting for it without knowing what it was I wanted.

  • @redgoals5701

    @redgoals5701

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank god.

  • @n.d.m.515

    @n.d.m.515

    8 ай бұрын

    I only partly agree with this. The hair band music was already in decline, much as grunge and alternative died in the late 90s when corporate pop and rap took over.

  • @sanga11000
    @sanga110008 ай бұрын

    Thank you a lot for what you are doing! The connexion you made with Shubert makes a lot of sense. Cobain was kind of a romantic, veery touching in his way to express pain and dispair. By the rhe way, have you noticed the yodeling in his singing? Greetings from France!

  • @DonTrump-sv1si
    @DonTrump-sv1si8 ай бұрын

    The only thing about hearing this song, for the first time, now in 2023, is that there has been so many bands that have mimicked this sound. You have to realize when this song hit the airways, back in 92, no one had ever heard anything even remotely like this. Just the shock factor of something so powerfully distorted, with drums that sounded like they were drilling your head was enough to change music. Now hearing something like this isnt so shocking. Even if you havnt heard this before im sure you heard something similar.

  • @nialld2638
    @nialld26388 ай бұрын

    Changed my life, that song. That band

  • @jem77469
    @jem774698 ай бұрын

    "Rather like corduroy... there's a thickness and softness to it." Some would say it's like FLANNEL. Forgive me, Kurt.

  • @juanbecerra7138
    @juanbecerra71388 ай бұрын

    I was a fan but it took years for me to recognize the beauty of the arrangements. The orchestral treatment of Heart Shaped Box on HBOs Westworld soundtrack made me go back and relisten. Maybe not for an episode but worth listening too.

  • @stevenmcmahon6110
    @stevenmcmahon611028 күн бұрын

    I've been watching your videos for a couple of months now, I love them. All the music you are reviewing, is music I grew up with. It's great to see a classical musician look at this music technically and see the beauty in rock music that other classical musicians would disregard because it's different from what they've heard most of their life. I'd love to have long discussions about music with you but that'll never happen because we come from completely different lives, but that is what's great about your videos. Love your videos, keep doing what you're doing

  • @TsunamiBeefPies
    @TsunamiBeefPies8 ай бұрын

    I love that you want more of the "Hey" break in the song! As the saying goes, "Always leave 'em wanting more." It's also the only break the song takes from that four-chord pattern, so of course you want more of it. It's one of the reasons that people listened to the song again and again and again... Dave Grohl tells the story in his book about the first time Nirvana played the song in public. They weren't sure whether it would go over or not. Kurt announced the song and there was literally no reaction from the people in the bar where they were playing. But when they hit the chorus for the first time, he says, "the room exploded," and people were jumping and pumping their fists in the air. They knew they had found something very big indeed. Thanks, Amy!

  • @DustySoul257

    @DustySoul257

    7 ай бұрын

    I know a few of those lucky folks who were at the O.K. Hotel that evening. I didn't get a chance to see them at the Seattle clubs when they were starting out. I only saw them twice - at the Seattle Center Coliseum, and later at Pier 48, where they performed for the MTV New Years Eve special that was letter released as the DVD "MTV Live and Loud". P.S. I just remembered to add I was invited and did attend their record release party for "Nevermind", held at the Re-Bar on Friday, September 13th of 1991, and I was at ground zero for that infamous food fight.

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