Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Sappy" is a song by the American rock band, Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist, Kurt Cobain. It was first released as a hidden track on the AIDS -benefit compilation album, No Alternative , in October 1993.
Montage of Heck: The Home Recordings is a compilation of home recordings by Kurt Cobain that were used as the soundtrack to the film Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck, released posthumously on November 13, 2015 by Universal Music. [3]
Tracks 10–12 recorded at Smart Studios in Madison, Wisconsin, in April 1990 and are sourced from the 7-inch vinyl bootleg Total Fucking Godhead. [22] "Sappy" and "Polly" can be found on Master Demo Recordings in better quality. Tracks 14 and 15 recorded for Nozems-a-Gogo on VPRO radio at Villa 65, Hilversum, Netherlands, on November 1, 1989.
A cassette demo containing three previously unheard and undocumented songs by On A Friday, the band become Radiohead in 1991, is up for auction. The six-song tape is expected to bring about $2,700.
This is a comprehensive discography of official recordings by 10 Years, an American alternative metal band from Knoxville, Tennessee. 10 Years has released 9 studio albums, 20 singles. Studio albums [ edit ]
On July 2, 2012, 10 years releases a compilation video on their website featuring another song "Knives" from their upcoming album Minus the Machine. "Backlash" music video made its premiere on July 27, 2012. [19] 10 Years revealed to fans the next single "Dancing with the Dead" from their latest record on October 25, 2012. [citation needed]
Written in 1989, the earliest known version of "Been a Son" is a solo home demo, featuring Cobain on vocals, guitar and bass. A clip of it first appeared in the 2015 Cobain documentary, Montage of Heck, directed by Brett Morgen, and the full version was subsequently released on the film's soundtrack in November 2015.
Moore says that "[o]verall, the album sounds rather pop-y", [10] and that their use of "pop hooks combined with post-pop chord progressions" gives the album a "very melodic feel". [10] Chris Morgan, in a glowing review, writes that Guitar Method is "a sleeper classic of the modern underground".