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Nirvana "From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah"

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Management number 203067523 Release Date 2025/09/20 List Price $17.49 Model Number 203067523
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This release contains the best of Nirvana's live material recorded between '89 and '94; tracks were culled from hours of recordings in venues ranging from small American clubs to the Reading Festival in England. While the previous live Nirvana album, '94s MTV Unplugged in New York, documented the acoustic side of the band, from the Muddy Banks... provides the counterpoint. Featured tracks include hits like "Smells Like Teen Spirit" and "Heart Shaped Box" as well as versions of "Aneurysm," "Been a Son," "School" and more.

Kurt Cobain's former bandmates Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl clearly had an agenda in compiling From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah, the second of what will no doubt be a long line of posthumous Nirvana albums. Because of its somber, intense nature, the first post-Cobain release, MTV Unplugged in New York, was largely perceived as music for a wake--an impression reinforced by MTV's constant airings of the special in the days following Cobain's suicide. But that acoustic detour aside, the Nirvana live experience was always about displaying a lust for life--not a death wish--with all the energy the musicians could muster. Wishkah offers 16 songs spanning the band's career, all delivered in the loudest, most frenzied, and sometimes the sloppiest versions imaginable. In the opening "Intro," a snippet of pre-show noise, Cobain screams his heart out in joyful contrast to the haunted screams on "Where Did You Sleep Last Night." Then the group launches into "School," which ends with the spirited chorus "Don't be sad." Indeed, it's impossible to dwell on the maudlin when listening to these renditions of "Smells Like Teen Spirit," "Sliver," "Heart-Shaped Box," and "Negative Creep"--they're too loud and too full of life. But while it should be applauded, Wishkah isn't the great lost Nirvana album--there are no unheard gems to add to the catalog--and in the end, it isn't nearly as essential as any of the band's studio albums--or even the downbeat but revelatory Unplugged--Jim Derogatis


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