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The first concert on Nirvana's tour for their third and final studio album, In Utero, was on October 18, 1993, at the Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix, Arizona. [ 55 ] [ 56 ] However, on September 25, 1993, the band had performed on television for Saturday Night Live at NBC Studios in New York City .
Live at the Paramount is a live video and album by American rock band Nirvana, released on September 24, 2011. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc as part of the 20th anniversary of the band's second album and mainstream breakthrough, Nevermind .
The Paramount concert was the band's first performance in Seattle since the release of Nevermind the previous month, and has retrospectively been described by English music journalist Everett True as "the end of an era" that showed that "incontrovertibly, Nirvana was now big news". [10]
Live at the Paramount may refer to: Live at the Paramount (The Guess Who album) Live at the Paramount, live video and album by Nirvana This ...
The Chicago Theatre, designed by the Rapps for Balaban & Katz and completed in 1921. The Uptown Theatre in Chicago, completed in 1925. Shea's Performing Arts Center, originally Shea's Buffalo, completed in 1926. The Paramount Building in Times Square, New York City, completed in 1927. The Old Dearborn Bank Building in Chicago, completed in 1928.
The Paramount Theatre, also known as the Paramount Arts Center, opened in Aurora, Illinois, in 1931. It was designed by Rapp and Rapp in the Art Deco style with Venetian elements. Over the years, it has hosted films, plays, musicals, concerts, comedy shows, and other acts. [ 1 ]
The video includes live performances, as well as interview clips, news footage and the band's home movies. [1] The live material is drawn largely from the band's 1991 Nevermind tour, with their shows at the Paramount Theatre in Seattle, Washington, on October 31, 1991, and Paradiso in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on November 25, 1991, featured most prominently.
The Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, where Nirvana performed the only known live version of "You Know You're Right," in October 1993. "You Know You're Right" was written in 1993. A boombox-recorded home demo, featuring Cobain on vocals and guitar, was released posthumously on the Nirvana box set, With the Lights Out , in November 2004.