Deified as the voice of his generation, Kurt Cobain lives
NEW
YORK
- Decades after Kurt Cobain's guttural rasp seduced Generation X from its
collective bedroom and into the post-punk clubs of 1990s Seattle, the late
Nirvana frontman remains a talisman for the young and disaffected the world
over.
It is a quarter-century on Thursday since grunge's
reluctant poster boy took his own life at the age of just 27, and Cobain's
former manager Danny Goldberg says he's finally ready to reflect publicly on
the legacy of an enigma and a pioneer.
In "Serving the Servant: Remembering Kurt Cobain"
-- published this week to mark the anniversary -- Goldberg remembers a Cobain
ahead of his time, whose quick wit and humanity shone through the brooding
melancholy.
"The impression of him in the media had become a
little distorted and focused disproportionately on his death, and not as much
on his life and his artwork," Goldberg said. "He was an incredibly
soulful singer; his voice conveyed a vulnerability and an intimacy that's
rare," the manager told AFP. "He tuned into something that helped
people feel less like freaks, less alone."
This empathic quality ensured that the songwriter's work
remained relevant, Goldberg said, even to teenagers born after Cobain's death,
a world away from the drizzly Pacific Northwest of his formative years.
And the universality of the singer's appeal is the reason
that T-shirts with the band's classic blank-eyed smiley logo can be seen
wherever teenagers gather, from Toledo to Tokyo.
"He's one of a handful of artists whose art transcends
his time," said Goldberg.
The depressive but singular talent who grew up in the misty
woods two hours west of Seattle morphed into a rock god seemingly overnight,
when "Nevermind," Nirvana's second of three studio albums, catapulted
the alt rock group to stratospheric fame and spawned the cult of Kurt.
Goldberg met Cobain in 1990, when Nirvana were up and
coming but hoping to take their unique blend of scruffy punk, raw metal and
Beatles-inspired melodies mainstream.
"Nevermind" did just that, becoming one of the
most successful albums of all time, with 30 million copies sold worldwide. The
instant classic booted pop star Michael Jackson from the top of the U.S. charts
and saw Nirvana shift the course of pop culture, inspiring music, fashion and
ethos.
In the three-and-half years he worked with Cobain, Goldberg
witnessed Nirvana's spectacular ascent. He was there for the singer's warm but
tempestuous relationship with mercurial fellow grunger Courtney Love, and the
birth of their daughter, Frances Bean, now 26.
Tellingly, he witnessed the interventions aimed at
loosening heroin's grip on the rock star.
Cobain's death sent shockwaves around the world, the grisly
details and the loss of a unique voice as gutwrenching as the poignant suicide
note.
"I don't have the passion anymore, and so remember,
it's better to burn out than to fade away," he wrote, referencing a lyric
by folk rocker Neil Young.
The news devastated Goldberg, and it wasn't until recently
that he began coming to terms with it: "For a long time it was too painful
for me."
"I miss him, I still love him," Goldberg said.
"I wish he were still around but I'm happy I got to know him at all."
But the former Nirvana manager, who Cobain had hailed as a
"second father," emphasized that behind the drug use and depression
the superstar was a "musical genius."
He was also a romantic goofball, Goldberg said, who
happened to be the proud owner of four pristine, sealed copies of "The
Chipmunks Sing the Beatles Hits."
Goldberg believes Cobain's "slacker" appeal --
the tattered sweater, the ditchwater-blond locks, swept frequently and
absent-mindedly from ocean-blue eyes as he flicked a hand-rolled cigarette --
drew attention from his impressive intellect.
"I always knew there was a depth to the energy and
feelings that he was playing with; it was deeper than just a great chorus --
even though he did write great choruses," Goldberg said.
His manager credits Cobain with championing women and
helping to "redefine masculinity" within the music world.
"He could be very powerful and compelling -- and at
the same time, be sensitive and caring. That was a departure from the rock
orthodoxy of the time," Goldberg said.
In his memoir Goldberg recalls a show in Argentina that
infuriated Cobain when the crowd booed the opening all-female act Calamity Jane
-- so the Nirvana star retaliated by refusing to perform the band's breakout
hit "Smells Like Teen Spirit."
"The audience didn't deserve us playing it,"
Cobain said at the time.
"He was committed to a feminist ideal and respect for
everybody, a kind of anti-macho ethos," Goldberg said, also noting
Cobain's support for gay rights. "He had a truly alternative version of
what it was to be a rock star."
Though the supernova that was Nirvana went dark when Cobain
died, Goldberg says the ripples of his brief life endure, putting him in a
league with icons like Bruce Springsteen, John Lennon and Bob Dylan.
He resists speculating on how the musician's trajectory may
have evolved had he lived, but Goldberg voiced certainty the artist would still
be innovating, saying Cobain "was always evolving, not just copying
himself."
"I just hope that whatever he was doing, I'd be able
to hang out with him," he added with a chuckle.
Source: https://japantoday.com/category/entertainment/deified-as-the-voice-of-his-generation-kurt-cobain-lives
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