Strollerderby

Baby Penis Album only five bucks

Posted by Brett Singer

Thanks to Mike's brilliant post linking to the NPR interview with the kid who is nekkid on the cover of Nirvana's breakthrough CD, I will forever think of 'Nevermind' as The Baby Penis Album. (Kids, "albums" were these shiny black things with a hole in the middle… oh well, whatever, never mind.)

If Mike's post made you nostalgic for the nineties (that was a really tough sentence to write), you can do it fairly cheaply: Amazon has the MP3 version of Nevermind on sale for only five dollars. (I'd say something about Amazon being the man who sold the world, but that's a different album.)

I myself did not smell the teen spirit when Kurt Cobain's magnum opus took the world by storm in 1991, but at these prices, maybe I'll check it out. Who says I'm not hip?

image: Amazon.com

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The Dark Knight -- parents strongly cautioned (to go see it)


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Comments

 

Sylviamerrick said:

I heard this interview and the first thing the reporter said was - this kid is now 17....that means you're old - (not a direct quote but it's something like that). He's 17!!!! It's even weirder to think of how long the Foo Fighters have been around. They've been around over 10 years and released 6 albums! They've done more albums then Nirvana ever did. I wonder if in 20 years who will be better remembered.

July 27, 2008 12:25 PM
 

Brett Singer said:

That's a good point. The Foo Fighters have become a really popular band. Nirvana does seem to have some staying power, more than a lot of the other bands that got big at the same time. Like Pearl Jam - they're still around, but not nearly as big as they were.

July 27, 2008 12:47 PM
 

Kaz said:

I heard the other guys in The Beatles went on to do some albums after Paul McCartney left the band, too...

Man Who Sold The World was originally Bowie, no?

July 27, 2008 2:23 PM
 

Brett Singer said:

I know it's unfair but I hope Nirvana never reaches the level of The Beatles. There's just not enough material. Then again, Rolling Stone still puts Kurt Cobain on the cover even after his death, so who knows.

Man Who Sold The World was indeed Bowie, thanks for pointing that out. Nirvana's "unplugged" version (I think that's the one) was a big hit for Kurt & Co. though.

July 27, 2008 2:40 PM
 

Kaz said:

I actually really dig their unplugged show, even though I am not a huge Nirvana fan. Certainly better than McCartney's snooze-fest of an unplugged show...

But yeah, I am not sure anyone can reach the level of The Beatles. I think the way we get music these days just won't allow for the level of fandamonium they had.

July 27, 2008 8:04 PM
 

km said:

Nirvana--or really any band--could not reach the level of the Beatles.  They are the Beatles, for gods sake, and even if you don't listen to them, they are one of the most influential bands in the history of rock music.

But for alot of us, Nirvana captured the angst of being a teenager (I was 13 when Nevermind was released, but didn't fully appreciate Nirvana for a few more years.  My husband, however, was 17 then, and Nirvana was almost as big an influence on his life as Star Wars.)  In a way, they were almost our Beatles--a band our parents didn't get (much like the way my gram didn't get the Beatles when my dad was listening to them), but a band that touched our souls so deeply and so profoundly, it was like our lives set to music.

I think we tend to take the Beatles for granted.  We forget that they weren't universally accepted, and that many people (esp. once the Beatles moved out of "Love Me Do" territory) found the Beatles to be loud and obnoxious (I'm sure we've all heard about the furor over the "Bigger than Jesus" comment).  The Beatles were pioneers, setting the stage for music we couldn't have imagined, including Nirvana.  But Nirvana, too, was groundbreaking, bringing the flannel-driven music to the masses, which was ultimately the un-doing of Kurt Cobain, but also the salvation of thousands of unpopular teenagers who previously thought they were alone in their miserable, suburban lives.

July 28, 2008 11:32 AM
 

Brett Singer said:

Good point, km. I wasn't a big Nirvana guy, partly because I was older when they hit it big, but mostly because I was already into much harder and angrier music (Black Flag, Dead Kennedys, Murphy's Law). I also admit that I got sick of hearing "Teen Spirit" every five minutes, although I acknowledge now that it's a great song. I actually downloaded the album from Amazon and I liked it more than I thought I would. Obviously I'd heard a lot of the songs already but not all of them.

July 28, 2008 2:53 PM

About Brett Singer

Brett Singer is a writer and father living in Manhattan with his wonderful wife and two terrific sons (referred to here as Thing 1 and Thing 2). He writes about music for the Boston Phoenix, parenting for Babble and daddytips.com, and other topics for anyone else who will have him.

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