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Kurt Cobain - Journals (Paperback, New Ed)
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Kurt Cobain - Journals (Paperback, New Ed)
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'Don't read my diary when I'm gone,' begin this alternately - or
perhaps simultaneously - compelling and juvenile journal. Of course
Kurt didn't mean it. Why else keep a diary? Indeed, in the very
next line, he says, 'I'm going to work now. Please read my diary.
Look through my things and figure me out.' The sense of
self-importance mingled with self-loathing pervades these 20-odd
(sometimes exceedingly odd!) notebooks. Here was an artist who
loved music, who knew the history of rock, and was determined to
secure his place in the pantheon, even if he had to blow his brains
out to do it. The hand-written, ring-bound pages are filled with
crossed-out drafts of songs, set lists, drawings, writings about
his plans for Nirvana, his thoughts about fame, the state of music
(it sucked), heroin addiction (that sucked too), the people who
bought and sold him and his music (they sucked), and, touchingly,
lists of his favourite songs and bands (Black Sabbath, Aerosmith,
Gang of Four, the Stooges and so on) which at least reveal a side
we can all relate to. Frankly, the spidery scrawl is a bit wearing
on the eyes, but printing the ramblings of a smackhead in legible
typeface might have revealed it for the banal navel-gazing it is.
'Words suck,' says Kurt. 'I mean, everything has been said.' But he
says it anyway, just in case. Occasionally, a barbed arrow strikes
its mark. But then what does the strike rate matter? If you're a
Nirvana fan, you're going to buy it. If not, there's probably a
real-life Donnie Darko living next door who would appreciate it
(it's even got a black cover). The last word belongs to Kurt: 'I
made about five million dollars last year.' Oh well, might as well
shoot yourself then. (Kirkus UK)
Kurt Cobain filled dozens of notebooks with lyrics, drawings, and writings about his plans for Nirvana and his thoughts about fame, the state of music, and the people who bought and sold him and his music. More than twenty of these notebooks survived his many moves and travels, and have been locked in a safe since his death. His journals reveal an artist who loved music, who knew the history of rock, and who was determined to define his place in that history. Here is a mesmerizing, incomparable portrait of the most influential musician of his time.
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