Recommendations of the Editorial team
A post from September 13, 2016:
It sounds outrageous, but it bothered many Nirvana fans over the weekend. Kurt Cobain is said to have faked his death in 1994 and emigrated to Peru, where he has been earning his living as a musician for more than 20 years under the name Ramiro Saavedra.
The pretty robber’s pistol, which will surprise even passionate conspiracy theorists, was circulated on Monday (September 12th) by the British tabloid Daily Mail. Nirvana’s official Facebook account actually reacted to the madness.
“We are happy to have him back”
With a cynical undertone it could be read: “It’s true, Kurt is alive. He needed time to learn how to play the guitar with his right hand. Finding guitars for left-handed people is not easy. We are so happy to have him back and forgive him for all the grief that we have carried very deep in our hearts.”
It is probably much closer to the truth that Ramiro Saavedra is a professional Kurt Cobain impersonator who even won a television talent competition in Peru in 2012 for his authentic portrayal of the musician. You can see his (indeed award-worthy) skills for yourself here:
700 weeks in the charts: Nirvana’s “Nevermind” breaks a record
Nirvana’s “Nevermind” has now spent 700 weeks on the Billboard 200 charts – a record. This makes the grunge record one of only nine albums that have reached this mark.
Over 13 years in the upper ranks
The album is currently at number 120 on the leaderboard, between Linkin Park’s “Hybrid Theory” (2000) and Metro Boomin’s “Heroes and Villains” (2022). It has sold over 30 million copies to date. “Nevermind” was released on September 24, 1991 and quickly rose to the top of the US album charts. It pushed Michael Jackson’s “Dangerous” out of first place.
With the new record of 13.5 years in the top 200, the LP now joins an exclusive list of works that were also able to pass this milestone. These include:
Kurt Cobain would have thought it was shit
With songs like “Smells Like Teen Spirit”, “Come As You Are” and “Polly”, “Nevermind” had a significant influence on the success of grunge and alternative rock music in the mainstream. A development that the group around singer and guitarist Kurt Cobain didn’t like at all – because they firmly rejected “success fans”. The song “In Bloom” would later turn out to be a bitter prophecy: “He’s the one who likes all our pretty songs […] but he don’t know what it means!”
In 1993, Nirvana released the follow-up “In Utero,” produced by the post-rock icon Steve Albini. The stated goal: sound rawer, offend more. This was initially successful, but their label Geffen Records thwarted their plans and remastered the record before releasing it. Eventually, Cobain could no longer withstand the increasing pressure caused by his ever-growing popularity – depression drove the singer to suicide on April 5, 1994.

