Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Nirvana: Live! Tonight! Sold Out!! is a live video by the American rock band Nirvana , directed by Kevin Kerslake , and released on November 15, 1994, on VHS and laserdisc .
It spent 25 weeks on the chart and became the band's sixth platinum album in the US since 1991. [2] The album's first promotional single , for the song " Aneurysm ," reached number 11 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and number 13 on its Modern Rock Tracks chart , while its music video topped the charts on Much Music in Canada.
Incesticide is a compilation album by the American rock band Nirvana.It consists of their 1990 non-album single "Sliver", B-sides, demos, outtakes, cover versions, and radio broadcast recordings, and as such is not the official follow-up to the band's breakthrough album, Nevermind. [1]
"Cut Me Some Slack" is a rock song by Paul McCartney and former members of Nirvana. Released in 2012 on YouTube and the following year on the soundtrack to Dave Grohl's documentary film Sound City, the song won the Grammy award for Best Rock Song in 2014.
"Serve the Servants" is a song by the American rock band Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist, Kurt Cobain.It is the first track on their third and final studio album In Utero, released in September 1993.
The first video features live performance footage, the second is a concept video depicting the band playing inside a house while the walls and insides are slowly being torn down, showing a resemblance to Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" music video, which the "Meant to Live" video has been compared to, and a third video is mixed into clips ...
"Blew" and "Love Buzz" were previously released on Nirvana's 1989 debut album Bleach, but "Love Buzz" was not included on the original 1989 UK version. In its place was "Big Cheese", the B-side to the US "Love Buzz" single. Therefore, the Blew EP was the first time that "Love
"You Know You're Right" was the fourth Nirvana song to enter the Billboard Hot 100 chart, reaching number 45. [26] It was their fifth song to reach number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, [ 27 ] where it remained for four consecutive weeks, the longest of any Nirvana song. [ 28 ]