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‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’: The Story Of Nirvana’s Timeless Anthem
Udiscovermusic ^ | September 10, 2024 | Simon Harper

Posted on 09/13/2024 5:22:05 PM PDT by nickcarraway

The breakthrough hit catapulted the trio to stardom and, much to Kurt Cobain’s despair, into the mainstream.

The story of Nirvana‘s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” is one full of contradictions. Indeed, its very inception attested to the fervent dualities that tormented its author. In early 1991, as Nirvana prepared to work on their second album, Nevermind, guitarist and singer Kurt Cobain composed the song’s recurring riff, recognizing immediately its infectious qualities as befitting his intentions for this new batch of material.

Listen to Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” as part of the 30th anniversary editions of Nevermind here.

Displeased with the oppressive, sludgy sound that had dominated their 1989 debut, Bleach, Kurt wanted to ensure that its follow-up would further expose the expressive moments that their debut harbored, allowing for songs with a stronger, more unabashed sense of melody than before. As well as being a champion of the uncompromising punk rock of Wipers and the primal power of Swans, Kurt was also a Beatles obsessive, and always sought to contrast his work’s prevailing darkness with an appreciable edge.

“[Kurt] had that dichotomy of punk rage and alienation, but also this vulnerable pop sensibility,” said producer Butch Vig, who’d be drafted in for this album’s sessions.

“All in all,” Kurt himself would later confess, “I think we sound like The Knack and The Bay City Rollers being molested by Black Flag and Black Sabbath.”

Writing Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” His design for this particular song was far more ambitious than any nihilistic punk diatribe: he wanted to write “the ultimate pop song.” As he composed it, his mind was on the use of dynamics as employed by another influence, the Pixies, in particular their tendency of “being soft and quiet [in the verse] and then loud and hard [in the chorus],” Kurt would concede. “I connected with that band so heavily.”

Introducing it to his bandmates at rehearsal, it was deemed “ridiculous” by bassist Krist Novoselic, who despaired at being made to continuously play this “Louie Louie” rip-off for over an hour. Eventually, at Novoselic’s suggestion, the song’s pace was reduced, which allowed new drummer Dave Grohl (recently hired to replace Chad Channing) to throw in some “disco flams” inspired by funk drummer Tony Thompson. (This process is why it’s the only song on Nevermind in which all three band members are credited as writers.)

It was then crudely recorded onto cassette, which was sent to Butch Vig to notify him of this latest addition to the album’s pool. “It was so fucking distorted, I could barely hear anything,” Vig later recalled. “But underneath the fuzz, I could hear ‘Hello, Hello,’ melodies and chord structures. And even though the recording was terrible, I was super excited.”

The song’s lyrics

The lyrics on that recording were largely unfinished, and would only be completed once the band were in Vig’s studio. They’d got to Sound City Studios in Van Nuys, California, in May 1991, having stuck to their guns with the choice of producer, despite the objections of Geffen Records, the major label they’d just signed to after leaving the Seattle-based indie Sub Pop – a move spearheaded by Cobain that again pitched his ambitions against his punk rock ideologies.

Once complete, the lyrics seemed to corroborate the turmoil Kurt felt in dealing with his conflicting thoughts (“I’m worst at what I do best,” he sings), and while it infuriates him (“I feel stupid and contagious”), he resigns himself to his shortcomings (“Oh well, whatever, never mind”). He also famously included a relatively inscrutable line that has been misheard since its release. (“A mulatto, an albino / A mosquito, my libido.”)

Kurt’s words were seething with anger – aimed at himself and the world around him, which he viewed as banal and artificial. “I just didn’t get them the first time I read them,” Novoselic later said of the lyrics. “And then I started listening to it in the song format, and then I had an idea of what he was talking about. He was talking about kids, commercials, Generation X, the youth bandwagon, and how he’s really disappointed in it, and how he doesn’t want anything to do with it.”

After recording just three takes of the song, the second was chosen as the master, then, emboldened by double-tracked guitars and multilayered vocals (which Kurt had to be convinced to do by Butch Vig, who cited John Lennon’s tendency to do the same), became indomitably forceful.

The song’s title

The song title, meanwhile, retains its own paradoxical context. Not mentioned within the lyrics, the phrase dates back to the previous year, when during a night of drinking at Kurt’s apartment in Olympia, Washington, his friend Kathleen Hanna penned the immortal line ‘Kurt smells like Teen Spirit’ on his wall. It was a tongue-in-cheek reference to a can of deodorant spotted in the grocery store earlier by Hanna and her Bikini Kill bandmate Tobi Vail, an ex-girlfriend of Kurt’s. “I mean, who names a deodorant Teen Spirit?” Hanna said. “What does teen spirit smell like? Like a locker room? Like pot mixed with sweat? Like the smell when you throw up in your hair at a party?”

Despite its playful teasing, Kurt, who was unaware of the name’s origins, interpreted the graffiti another way. “I took that as a compliment,” he said, choosing it a year later to evoke the rebellious energy that fuelled his ode to the alienated.

“It has revolutionary themes, but I don’t really mean it in a militant [light],” Kurt would later say of “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” “The generation’s apathy is getting out of hand. [I’m] pleading to the kids, ‘Wake up!’”

Nirvana’s management didn’t identify with the song’s rallying cries, and therefore weren’t invested fully in its release as a single until it was delivered to college radio in August of 1991. Their expectations were soon to be confounded; “Smells Like Teen Spirit” went into heavy rotation, and then things got even bigger.

“‘Teen Spirit’ definitely established that quiet/loud dynamic thing that we fell back on a lot of the time. It did become that one song that personifies the band,” Dave Grohl said. “But the video was probably the key element in that song becoming a hit.”

The video for “Smells Like Teen Spirit”

After placing an ad for 18-25-year-old extras to appear in their music video (requesting that they “adopt a high school persona, i.e. preppy, punk, nerd, jock”), Nirvana filmed the video at GMT Studios in Culver City, Los Angeles, in a set resembling a high school gymnasium. Directed by Samuel Bayer, as the band plays to a spirited janitor and anarchy-loving cheerleaders, bored students are at first sitting subdued on bleachers. They then start to become more animated, rising to their feet, dancing and moshing before rushing the stage and trashing the band’s equipment while Kurt smashes his own guitar.

“People heard the song on the radio and they thought, ‘This is great’,” Grohl continued, “but when kids saw the video on MTV they thought, ‘This is cool. These guys are kinda ugly and they’re tearing up their fucking high school.’ So I think that had a lot to do with what happened with the song.”

The reaction to Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit”

What happened was it went stratospheric. “Smells Like Teen Spirit” hit the Top 10 in the UK and US, while the album Nevermind reached Number One in the US and around the world. The video, meanwhile, won two MTV Video Music Awards and the critical acclaim was nearly unanimous. Grunge had arrived. Though these feats were unthinkable at the dawn of 1991, the chart stats became somewhat irrelevant as the song permeated and penetrated the mainstream until its stature attained almost mythical levels, eclipsing mere sales figures in its ascent to iconic greatness.

Kurt had succeeded in realizing his vision for “Smells Like Teen Spirit”; he set out to write a revolutionary anthem for the disenfranchised youth, and now he had an army of them looking to him for answers that he didn’t have.

At odds with its popularity, Cobain’s relationship with the song soured, and it would regularly be omitted from the group’s live performances. “It’s almost an embarrassment to play it,” Kurt said in 1994. “Everyone has focused on that song so much. The reason it gets a big reaction is people have seen it on MTV a million times. It’s been pounded into their brains. But I think there are so many other songs that I’ve written that are as good, if not better… But I can barely, especially on a bad night like tonight, get through ‘Teen Spirit.’ I literally want to throw my guitar down and walk away. I can’t pretend to have a good time playing it. Once it got into the mainstream, it was over.”

The song’s legacy

Decades after its release, “Smells Like Teen Spirit” remains as potent and exhilarating as ever. A regular contender in “Greatest Songs Of All Time” lists. In summer 2021 it surpassed a billion streams on Spotify. It’s also spawned countless covers by folks as varied as Malia J and Post Malone, and garnered a parody by Weird Al Yankovic. It was, ultimately, the blessing and curse that propelled Nirvana to a degree of fame that Kurt Cobain was entirely uncomfortable with. “I have my theories on why so many people connected to it and why Nirvana became a popular band,” Dave Grohl reflected in 2021, “but mine is just a little more distorted than an actual music critic.”

“It was a zeitgeist moment, you know?” offered Butch Vig. “It turned people’s heads. Those records don’t come along very often.”


TOPICS: Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: 90s; music; nirvana; smellsliketeenspirit; wboopi

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1 posted on 09/13/2024 5:22:05 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

I don’t know why I like this song, I just do.


2 posted on 09/13/2024 5:23:06 PM PDT by CaptainK ("No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up” -)
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To: nickcarraway

Well we’re singing, and we’re playing, but you can’t tell, what I’m saying.

Weird Al.


3 posted on 09/13/2024 5:28:06 PM PDT by ifinnegan (Democrats kill babies and harvest their organs to sell)
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To: ifinnegan

Apparently, Kurt Cobain loved Weird Al’s version.


4 posted on 09/13/2024 5:31:20 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Knocked Michael Jackson out of the #1 spot, I believe.


5 posted on 09/13/2024 5:37:35 PM PDT by gundog (It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. )
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To: nickcarraway

Timeless anthem?

WTH does it even mean?


6 posted on 09/13/2024 5:38:03 PM PDT by Gary from Dayton (Army Vet 1986-1991 unburdened by what I was burdened by before.)
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To: nickcarraway

kurt kabang...


7 posted on 09/13/2024 5:38:38 PM PDT by heavy metal (smiling improves your face value and makes people wonder what the hell you're up to... 😁)
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To: nickcarraway
I'm a child of the 1960s...absolutely the greatest decade for music. The Stones,Beatles,Yardbirds,Who...the greatest by far! But I must admit that Smells Like Teen Spirit is a true classic...as is the video that went with it.
8 posted on 09/13/2024 5:45:10 PM PDT by Gay State Conservative (Import The Third World,Become The Third World)
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To: nickcarraway

I never liked the album. There were bands like pavement and etc breaking huge ground back then and Nirvana was mediocre.


9 posted on 09/13/2024 5:46:17 PM PDT by struggle
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To: nickcarraway

Was never a fan of Nirvana... The only reason they’re popular is the suicide


10 posted on 09/13/2024 6:03:20 PM PDT by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: maddog55

“ The only reason they’re popular is the suicide”

Wow.

No.

I mean, cmon.


11 posted on 09/13/2024 6:07:53 PM PDT by Fuzz
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To: maddog55

lol… whaaat? I was 13 when Nevermind came out and it was insanely popular, just like In Utero was. Unplugged was massive and one of the best albums of the 90’s. Had he lived, they may have never topped their previous music, or they may have, we’ll never know. His death made him a legend, but the music was widely popular and had staying power regardless.


12 posted on 09/13/2024 6:13:11 PM PDT by Levy78 (Reject modernity, embrace tradition. )
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To: Gay State Conservative

Some decent bands you listed there, none of whom top The Doors :-)


13 posted on 09/13/2024 6:14:42 PM PDT by Levy78 (Reject modernity, embrace tradition. )
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To: nickcarraway
Nirvana was pretty good. I recently learned Dave Grohl was the drummer.

He was so worried about Trump playing one of his songs at a rally, he forgot to keep his zipper up and got his side piece pregnant. I feel bad for his wife and daughters. What a jerk he turned out to be.

14 posted on 09/13/2024 6:15:06 PM PDT by HonkyTonkMan ( )
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To: Levy78

Alice In Chains was so much better than Nirvana.


15 posted on 09/13/2024 6:16:52 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

The endless argument between my wife and I. I love Alive In Chains, but Nirvana hits for me a little deeper.


16 posted on 09/13/2024 6:18:59 PM PDT by Levy78 (Reject modernity, embrace tradition. )
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To: dfwgator

*Alice In Chains


17 posted on 09/13/2024 6:19:34 PM PDT by Levy78 (Reject modernity, embrace tradition. )
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To: Fuzz

Opinion...they sucked as far as I’m concerned.


18 posted on 09/13/2024 6:22:25 PM PDT by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: Levy78

Never a fan. I thought they sucked. My opinion anyway. To each his own.


19 posted on 09/13/2024 6:23:28 PM PDT by maddog55 (The only thing systemic in America is the left's hatred of it!)
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To: nickcarraway
Out of context it seems a strange selection for Great Songs, but it was. It's rough, angry, and filled with self contempt and wouldn't be remembered at all except that it was a watershed for the music of the time. Like punk, it isn't supposed to be pretty. What bothered Cobain about singing it as a hit was that do to so was to embrace what it was supposed to be rejecting.

So there I was, got a new job in Seattle after years abroad, walking through downtown toward Belltown, and I see this marquee that says "Courtney Killed Kurt", and heaven help me, I thought it was the name of a band...

20 posted on 09/13/2024 6:23:47 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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