Nirvana Kurt Cobain Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Nirvana Kurt Cobain. Here they are! All 32 of them:

Practice makes perfect, but nobody's perfect, so why practice?
Kurt Cobain
He was depressed. He was addicted to heroin. And I think there comes a time when all the beauty in the world just isn’t enough.
Antony John (Five Flavors of Dumb)
Punk is musical freedom. It’s saying, doing and playing what you want. In Webster’s terms, ‘nirvana’ means freedom from pain, suffering and the external world, and that’s pretty close to my definition of Punk Rock.
Kurt Cobain
No True Talent is fully organic. Yet the superior talented have not only control of study but that extra special, little gift at birth--fueled by passion.A built in, totally spiritual, unexplainable, New Age,fuckin cosmic energy bursting love for passion. And yes,they are an even smaller percent amongst the small percent. And they are special!
Kurt Cobain
I would love to be erased from our association with Pearl Jam or the Nymphs and other first time offenders.
Kurt Cobain (Journals)
Nobody dies a virgin...life fucks us
Kurt Cobain
Come as you are. As you were. As I want you to be.
Kurt Cobain
He was able to sit in silence for long stretches without feeling a need to make small talk.
Charles R. Cross (Heavier Than Heaven: A Biography of Kurt Cobain)
I'm so happy 'cause today I've found my friends....They're in my head. I'm so ugly, but that's okay, 'cause so are you.
Kurt Cobain (Nirvana)
I think I'm dumb or maybe just happy think I'm just happy...
Kurt Cobain
I never went out of my way to say anything about my drug use. I tried to hide it as long as I could. The main reason was that I didn’t want some 15-year-old kid who likes our band to think it’s cool to do heroin, you know? I think people who glamorise drugs are fucking assholes and, if there’s a hell, they’ll go there.
Kurt Cobain (Nirvana)
Sometimes, you can't save someone from themselves.
Dave Grohl
I'm worse at what I do best. And for this gift, I feel blessed.
Kurt Cobain
Kids don't care about rock and roll as much as they used to, as the other generations have. It's already turned into nothing but a fashion statement and an identity for kids to use as a tool for them to fuck and have a social life.
Kurt Cobain
I think I'm dumb or maybe just happy think I'm just happy...
Kurt Cobain
yeah, you can't buy happiness
Kurt Cobain (Nirvana)
You can't fire me because I quit.
Kurt Cobain (Nirvana - In Utero (Guitar Recorded Versions))
The message was clear for baby boomers everywhere: Kurt Cobain was not merely some rock 'n' roll icon who couldn't handle drugs. In ways that were important to recognize, he was every parent's child.
Kurt St. Thomas (Nirvana: The Chosen Rejects)
Here's a note to the parents of addicted children: choose your music carefully. Avoid Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World", from the Polaroid or Kodak or whichever commercial, and the songs "Turn Around" and "Sunrise, Sunset" and - there are thousands more. Avoid Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time," and this one, Eric Clapton's song about his son. Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" sneaked up on me one time. The music doesn't have to be sentimental. Springsteen can be dangerous. John and Yoko. Bjork. Dylan. I become overwhelmed when I hear Nirvana. I want to scream like Kurt Cobain. I want to scream at him. Music isn't all that does it. There are millions of treacherous moments. Driving along Highway 1, I will see a peeling wave. Or I will reach the fork where two roads meet near Rancho Nicasio, where we veered to the left in carpool. A shooting star on a still night at the crest of Olema Hill. With friends, I hear a good joke - one that Nic would appreciate. The kids do something funny or endearing. A story. A worn sweater. A movie. Feeling wind and looking up, riding my bike. A million moments.
David Sheff (Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction)
Nirvana's music dragged you across the floor. You felt every crack; every speck of dirt. Their songs helped you locate the places where you ached, and in that awareness of your hurting, you suddenly knew that the bleakness was collective - not merely your own.
Carrie Brownstein (Hunger Makes Me a Modern Girl)
That night she listened to the Nirvana album again. In Kurt Cobain's voice, Irene heard a perfect and beautiful misery, a voice stretched so thin with loneliness and wanting that it should break. But his voice didn't break, and there was a kind of joy in it too.
Nicola Yoon (The Sun Is Also a Star)
Not long after I learned about Frozen, I went to see a friend of mine who works in the music industry. We sat in his living room on the Upper East Side, facing each other in easy chairs, as he worked his way through a mountain of CDs. He played “Angel,” by the reggae singer Shaggy, and then “The Joker,” by the Steve Miller Band, and told me to listen very carefully to the similarity in bass lines. He played Led Zeppelin’s “Whole Lotta Love” and then Muddy Waters’s “You Need Love,” to show the extent to which Led Zeppelin had mined the blues for inspiration. He played “Twice My Age,” by Shabba Ranks and Krystal, and then the saccharine ’70s pop standard “Seasons in the Sun,” until I could hear the echoes of the second song in the first. He played “Last Christmas,” by Wham! followed by Barry Manilow’s “Can’t Smile Without You” to explain why Manilow might have been startled when he first heard that song, and then “Joanna,” by Kool and the Gang, because, in a different way, “Last Christmas” was an homage to Kool and the Gang as well. “That sound you hear in Nirvana,” my friend said at one point, “that soft and then loud kind of exploding thing, a lot of that was inspired by the Pixies. Yet Kurt Cobain” — Nirvana’s lead singer and songwriter — “was such a genius that he managed to make it his own. And ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’?” — here he was referring to perhaps the best-known Nirvana song. “That’s Boston’s ‘More Than a Feeling.’ ” He began to hum the riff of the Boston hit, and said, “The first time I heard ‘Teen Spirit,’ I said, ‘That guitar lick is from “More Than a Feeling.” ’ But it was different — it was urgent and brilliant and new.” He played another CD. It was Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy,” a huge hit from the 1970s. The chorus has a distinctive, catchy hook — the kind of tune that millions of Americans probably hummed in the shower the year it came out. Then he put on “Taj Mahal,” by the Brazilian artist Jorge Ben Jor, which was recorded several years before the Rod Stewart song. In his twenties, my friend was a DJ at various downtown clubs, and at some point he’d become interested in world music. “I caught it back then,” he said. A small, sly smile spread across his face. The opening bars of “Taj Mahal” were very South American, a world away from what we had just listened to. And then I heard it. It was so obvious and unambiguous that I laughed out loud; virtually note for note, it was the hook from “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy.” It was possible that Rod Stewart had independently come up with that riff, because resemblance is not proof of influence. It was also possible that he’d been in Brazil, listened to some local music, and liked what he heard.
Malcolm Gladwell (What the Dog Saw and Other Adventures)
In his study of suicide notes titled…Or Not To Be, Marc Etkind contrasts the self-victimizing thinking of the late Kurt Cobain with the ownership spirit of his wife, Courtney Love. Cobain was the lead singer of the grunge rock group Nirvana. His addiction to heroin was a major factor in the death he chose—a shotgun blast to the head that was so powerful, police had to use fingerprints to identify the body. He had written a long, poetically self-pitying suicide note to his family and fans that his wife, performer Courtney Love, used to read at her own concerts. While publicly reading Cobain’s suicide note, Courtney Love interspersed his words with her own. She became strong as she read the note, refusing to be the second victim of the tragedy. She showed her anger and her spirit when she asked why he didn’t simply quit music if he was so tired of it? She referred to his letter mockingly as a “letter to the editor,” and ended the reading by yelling out to the crowd, “Just tell him he’s a [jerk], okay?…and that you love him.” Kurt had contracted down into that smallest known, and most painful element in the universe: “Me.
Steve Chandler (The Ultimate Key Steps to Self-Discipline)
Suena Nirvana, About a girl, y me asalta una frase mítica de Kurt Cobain; el hombre se enamora de la mujer a la cual desea, la mujer desea al hombre del que se enamora.
Javier Jorge (La última raya)
In the post-Nevermind universe, everything had to be filtered through the notion that this specific representation of modernity was the template for what everyone now wanted from everything, and that any attempt to understand young people had to begin with an understanding of why Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain looked and acted the way that he did.
Chuck Klosterman (The Nineties: A Book)
I loved him.' 'You didn't know him.' 'Of course I knew him. I listened to him sing every single day. The things he sings about, that's him. I know him better than I know you. He understood me.
Nick Hornby (About a Boy)
Its okay to eat fish cause' they don't have any feelings
Kurt Cobain (Nirvana)
Not a quote. See page 64 (256) to see Kurt's likes and favorite bands
COBAIN KURT
Not a quote. See page 66 (264) to see Kurt's songs.
COBAIN KURT
Het westerse consumentisme dreigt bij menigeen uit te lopen op een belevingssolipsisme waarin iedereen alles en dus ook elkaar en zichzelf gebruikt en misbruikt naar zijn 'eigen zin' en niemand nog wezenlijk op de ander betrokken is. De cynische walging over deze levensstijl wordt in de literatuur bijvoorbeeld beschreven door de populaire Franse schrijver Michel Houellebecq en was in de popcultuur al eerder uitgeschreeuwd, zij het minder bewust, door iemand als Kurt Cobain van de grungeband Nirvana, die onder de jeugd een grote populariteit genoot. Onder de kunstenaars vallen nog veel andere namen te noemen, die een verscheurd of cynisch levensgevoel tot uitdrukking brengen dat bij menigeen weerklank vindt. In de filosofie was het ruim een eeuw geleden Nietzsche die eenzaam de pijn heeft gevoeld na 'de dood van God'.
Ad Verbrugge (Tijd van onbehagen: filosofische essays over een cultuur op drift)
See page 72 (288) Top 50 bands' albums by NIRVANA <3
COBAIN KURT
Stay GAY all the way and wipe your ass with USA today
COBAIN KURT