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Courtney Love has never been less than notorious. Her intelligence,
ambition and appetite for confrontation has made her a target in a
music industry still dominated by men. As Kurt Cobain's wife she
was derided as an opportunistic groupie; as his widow she is
pitied, and scorned, as the madwoman in rock's attic. Yet Hole's
second album, "Live Through This," awoke a feminist consciousness
in a generation of teenage girls."Live Through This" arrived in
1994, at a tumultuous point in the history of American music. Three
years earlier, Nirvana's "Nevermind "had broken open the punk
underground, and the first issue of a zine called Riot Grrrl had
been published. Hole were of this context and yet outside of it:
too famous for the strict punk ethics of riot-grrrl, too explicitly
feminist to be the world's biggest rock band. And then Kurt Cobain
shot himself, four days before the album's scheduled release."Live
Through This" is an album about girlhood and motherhood; desire and
disgust; self-destruction and survival. There have been few rock
albums before or since so intimately concerned with female
experience. The album is a key document of third-wave feminism, but
the conditions that produced its particular aesthetic have
disappeared. So where did the energy of that feminism go? And why
is Courtney Love's achievement as a songwriter and musician still
not taken seriously, nearly twenty years on?
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