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"Endless, Nameless" is a song by the American grunge band Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist Kurt Cobain, bassist Krist Novoselic, and drummer Dave Grohl. It is the 13th and final song on the band's second studio album, Nevermind , released in September 1991.
The band recorded three studio albums; Bleach, Nevermind and In Utero, with other songs available on live albums, compilations, extended plays (EPs), singles and reissues. Other songs have surfaced or are known to exist but have not been released officially.
"Nevermind" is a 2016 song by Israeli musician and singer Dennis Lloyd. It is his signature song and biggest hit single to date, having accumulated over 1 billion streams on Spotify and in June 2018, Time listed it as one of the "songs of summer".
At the time of writing Nevermind, Cobain was listening to bands such as Melvins, R.E.M., the Smithereens, and Pixies, and was writing songs that were more melodic. A key development was the single "Sliver", released on Sub Pop in 1990 before Grohl joined, which Cobain said "was like a statement in a way.
*NSYNC is back, baby. The iconic boy band released their first new single in 20 years on Friday and, true to form, it's an infectious pop banger. The upbeat anthem begins with melodic whistling ...
It is the 12th song on their second album, Nevermind, released in September 1991. It is the final listed song on the album, although most copies of Nevermind also feature the hidden track "Endless, Nameless", which occupies the same track as "Something in the Way" and begins after approximately 10 minutes of silence.
"You Never Can Tell with Friends" Rick Davies: Rick Davies: Free as a Bird: 1987 [5] "You Started Laughing When I Held You In My Arms" [e] Rick Davies: Rick Davies: B-side to "Lady" 1975 [20] "You Win, I Lose" ‡ Rick Davies: Rick Davies: Some Things Never Change: 1997 [8] "Your Poppa Don't Mind" ‡ Rick Davies Roger Hodgson: Rick Davies ...
Set against a disco sound, “Better Place” seems to nod at the passage of time since ‘NSync’s heyday and to anyone longing for the innocent times of MySpace’s Top 8, flip phones and AOL ...