Nirvana

It all started with the Germs It all started with the Germs

A loving, low-budget film tries to revive the undead spirit of Darby Crash and L.A.'s most anarchic punk pioneers. But some things aren't easy to resurrect.
  • Slaughtering rock's sacred cows

    The Beatles, Pink Floyd and Nirvana all get a smack-down from fellow musicians in a recent Guardian feature.
  • Nothing to smile about

    Am I the only critic in the universe who doesn't love Brian Wilson's "Smile"? Plus: Free music for jazz fans, Saturday Looks Good to Me admirers and Christmas-song haters.
  • The mash-up revolution

    Destiny's Child vs. Nirvana! Britney vs. Chic! The Ramones vs. ABBA! How pop's hottest DJs are creating those wild bootleg remixes -- and why they're so hard to find.
  • Foo Fighters: "One by One"

    Ex-Nirvana member Dave Grohl's band finally puts out a record that doesn't peter out after a few tracks.
  • Responses to "Did Gen X Kill the Rock Star?"

    Readers mull the future of rock.
  • Did Gen X kill the rock star?

    Seeing Nirvana's music repurposed to sell video games reminds us of Generation X's failure to produce a rock star of lasting worth.
  • "Oh Pleez GAWD I can't handle the success!"

    Excerpts from Kurt Cobain's journals (published in Newsweek) reveal an oddball genius battling severe physical pain -- and imagining a Nirvana reunion tour sponsored by Depends.
  • "Smells Like Teen Spirit"

    Was Nirvana's angry, culture-shifting 1991 anthem really a revolution? Maybe not. But it changed my life.
  • Kurt Cobain and a dream about pop

    In an age of corporate consolidation, Kurt Cobain turned an industry upside down. And in an age of media prying, he died right in front of our eyes.
  • Never mind the hair bands, here's a Flock of Seagulls!

    The author of a new biography of Kurt Cobain looks back at the best and worst of musical decades, the 1980s.
  • Hell no, we won't WTO

    A new CD relives the night that ex-members of Nirvana, Soundgarden and the Dead Kennedys united to entertain the troops at the Battle of Seattle.
  • Sharps & Flats

    The label synonymous with "As Seen on TV" goes after indie rock. Oh, sweet, delicious irony.
  • Sharps & Flats

    If Nirvana was tight and Mudhoney was a disaster, why is the other grunge band still around?
  • Singles going steady

    From "Smells Like Teen Spirit" to "Rebel Girl," 10 songs that changed my decade.
  • Have yourself a merry Jimmy Buffettmas

    Pour yourself a drink and forget the presents. December 25 offers plenty of other reasons to celebrate.
  • Sharps & Flats

    Forget Nirvana, unrepentant Foo Fighter Dave Grohl settles down for mediocrity.
  • Sharps & Flats

    From Kiss to loungecore, Kenneth Anger to blaxploitation, Unrest anticipated '90s hipster fads way back ... in 1988.
  • Sharps & flats

    "Saturday Night Live" has 24 years of the best acts in rock 'n' roll on tape. Too bad none of that made it onto a new two-CD compilation.
  • Are Entertainment Weekly writers potheads?

    A confused and impenetrable "100 Greatest Moments in Rock" issue misses the fleeting pleasures of pop.
  • Mocking the Mayflower

    There was plenty of antagonism in the air at the start of Hole's Boston show Sunday night. But Courtney Love wouldn't have it any other way.
  • It's not the meat, it's the motion

    David Bowman reviews the Meat Puppets' re-releases
  • At home in a crowd

    Sarah Vowell's 'American Squirm' column appears every other Wednesday in Salon
  • Jonathon Richman

    Sharps & Flats is a daily music review in Salon Magazine
  • "Is This Desire" -- or just bad performance art?

    In her first release in three years, Polly Jean Harvey offers sops to a self-consciously hip underground.
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