In Utero
Best song: Pennyroyal
Tea
Worst song: Dumb
Overall grade: 5
On 1993’s ‘In Utero’,
Nirvana live up to the potential that I thought they maybe, kind of, might
possibly have after listening to ‘Nevermind’. They do this by releasing a set
of songs that (with one or two notable exceptions) are more enduring and more
meaningful.
That’s not to say I
think this record is amazing. My biggest problem with it, which I also feel
with its predecessor, is that it’s so crafted – ie. It doesn’t show who Nirvana
really are as a band, it just shows how Kurt Cobain wanted people to think of
the band at that point in time. Because of that, it doesn’t feel quite real. In
addition, there are a few places where he just takes things too far. His
complaints about his post-Nevermind fame, the status he’d been awarded because
of it and the expectations piled upon him regarding the followup are all mostly
justified, but he can be a bit heavy-handed as he writes about it.
So, I’ll get the
negative stuff out of the way first: I really don’t like ‘Dumb’ or ‘Tourette’s’
at all. The second of these is clearly meant to be some kind of hardcore song,
but at a minute and a half, the only point it manages to make is ‘Hey, Kurt
Cobain can scream!’ And the first of the two really lives up to its name. It
was written in 1990, before Kurt’s songwriting skills had properly developed,
which is fair enough – but why put it on the album? It should have been
consigned to the vaults.
Those are the only two
real missteps though. The closing ‘All Apologies’ is the closest Nirvana would
ever get to beautiful. Coincidentally, or perhaps not, it’s the song where he
sheds the anti-fame stance to take a look at his marriage, and it comes across
as the most sincere and heartfelt song here. The only thing better than it is ‘Pennyroyal
Tea’, one of the tracks that shows Kurt just couldn’t help adding melodies and
hooks into his songs… even as they’re as disturbing as this one, foreshadowing
his suicide next year with lyrics that make me just a little uncomfortable.
The most famous song
here is ‘Rape Me’ and its fame is more deserving than the singles from
Nevermind. You can’t really sing along to the chorus like you can the others,
but the lyrics aren’t just there to shock, they have a strong meaning.
But this isn’t just a
lyrics-based record. There’s also harder rocking tracks like ‘Scentless
Apprentice’ and ‘Radio Friendly Unit Shifter’ as well as the opener ‘Serve The
Servants’, another great song that plays to the band’s strength of fusing noise
and accessibility.
I always wonder, how do
bands pick which song from an album will be a bonus track? This album is
confused and doesn’t flow at all, so it should follow that any track could be
the bonus (in this case, bonus = unlisted and appearing only after a 20 minute
silence) except that they couldn’t. ‘Gallons
of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through the Strip’ really seems
like the only logical choice. It is different, it’s more improvised than the
others – you can even hear Kurt saying “Shall we have one more solo?” at one
point. It’s a good bonus too. If you can fast-forward through the silence, it’s
definitely worth listening to, at least for the cool effect where the band
sound really far away during the vocal portions and right up close during the
solos.
It’s a great final statement that makes me wish it hadn’t
been their final statement. I’d like to hear the kinds of songs Kurt might have
written next.
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