Full version coming soon
In less than a month, Kurt Cobain‘s Montage of Heck documentary will be airing on HBO and fans will get an inside look at the man who was the frontman for the classic grunge band Nirvana.
The film will contain never before seen footage and pictures as well as some recordings that were found in a storage facility in 2013. For example this short clip above. It’s a song featured in the movie that has never been released up until this point, that finds Cobain strumming in eerie fashion. The haunting vocals can barely be made out.
In the next issue of Rolling Stone, Frances Bean Cobain opens up about her father, how the documentary came about and what she thinks of Nirvana’s legacy:
Do you remember the first time you heard a Nirvana record – and knowing that was your father? I’ve talked to Sean Lennon about this. He had a few more years with his dad that you did. But for him, the records were a road into understanding his father after he was gone.
I don’t really like Nirvana that much [grins]. Sorry, promotional people, Universal. I’m more into Mercury Rev, Oasis, Brian Jonestown Massacre [laughs]. The grunge scene is not what I’m interested in. But “Territorial Pissings” [on Nevermind] is a fucking great song. And “Dumb” [on In Utero] – I cry every time I hear that song. It’s a stripped-down version of Kurt’s perception of himself – of himself on drugs, off drugs, feeling inadequate to be titled the voice of a generation.
You can read her full article over at the magazine’s website now.
OS REWIND: A Trailer For Kurt Cobain’s “Montage of Heck” Documentary
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