Smells Like Teen Spirit is very popular in mashups. When EMI sent a takedown notice for NirGaga, it just inspired them to make a whole bunch more mashups.
I like Smells Like Rockin' Robin.
Anya ,'Dirty Girls'
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Smells Like Teen Spirit is very popular in mashups. When EMI sent a takedown notice for NirGaga, it just inspired them to make a whole bunch more mashups.
I like Smells Like Rockin' Robin.
(Smells Like) Teen Spirit always makes me think of deodorant.
Well, if you have feeling about these songs, it's not too late to vote! [link]
(Smells Like) Teen Spirit always makes me think of deodorant.
With good reason.
I voted for the ladies. Now, it wasn't an easy choice, because the other two songs evoke Pavlovian responses for me (oh, the opening hook on "Sweet Child") but I had to represent for the women. And besides, I never truly appreciated "Teen Spirit" until I heard it covered by Tori and could actually understand the lyrics.
(Smells Like) Teen Spirit always makes me think of deodorant.
With good reason.
Right, that ad campaign was partly the inspiration for the song. It was something Kathleen Hanna had spray paint graffittied on the wall, and Kurdt used it.
Kathleen Hanna tells the story: [link]
Kathleen Hanna tells the story: [link]
That is a great story. Sharpie, not spray paint.
I do know that Cobain did not know that "Teen Spirit" was deodorant when he wrote the song. So its meaning was a bit more enigmatic for him.
Interesting interview with Gillian Welch.
I'm always interested in long fallow periods in an artist's career, and she talks a lot about the eight year gap between albums.
Dylan wrote about that a lot in Chronicles too, and that was some of my favorite stuff. But it's also something I've thought about in relation to the writer Fritz Leiber and the poet Rilke and Joseph Heller. What must it be like to achieve great things and then have it desert you or thwart you for half a decade or more? And then to find that groove again?