In Utero
(DGC)
This is the way Nirvana's Kurt Cobain spells success: s-u-c-k-s-e-g-g-s.
Never in the history of rock & roll overnight sensations has an artist,
with the possible exception of John Lennon, been so emotionally overwhelmed
by his sudden good fortune, despised it with such devilish vigor and exorcised
his discontent on record with such bristling, bull's-eye candor.
"In Utero" is rife with gibes -- some hilariously droll, others
viciously direct -- at life in the post-"Nevermind" fast lane,
at the money-changers who milked the grunge tit dry in record time and at
the bandwagon sheep in the mosh pit who never caught on to the desperate
irony of "Here we are now, entertain us." The very first words
out of Cobain's mouth in "Serve the Servants," "In Utero's"
petulant, bludgeoning opener, are "Teenage angst has served me well/Now
I'm bored and old," sung in an irritated, marble-mouthed snarl that
immediately derails any lingering expectations for a son of "Smells
Like Teen Spirit."
It gets better. In "Very Ape," a two-minute corker cut from the
same atomic-fuzz cloth as the band's 1989 debut album, "Bleach,"
Cobain gets right down to brass tacks, against a burning-rubber lead-guitar
squeal and the mantric rumble of bassist Krist Novoselic and drummer Dave
Grohl: "I am buried up to my neck in/Contradictionary lies." (Nice
pun, that.) The kiss-off quickly follows: "If you ever need anything,
don't hesitate/To ask someone else first."
Cobain slightly overplays his hand with the title of "Radio Friendly
Unit Shifter." Nirvana have been called many things over the past two
years; that, as far as I can tell, is not one of them. But Cobain cuts right
to the heart of the mire with a torrent of death-throe guitar feedback and
a brilliant metaphor for the head-turning speed with which one man can suddenly
sire a nation: "This had nothing to do with what you think/If you ever
think at all. . . ./ All of a sudden my water broke."
Frankly, Nirvana as a band and Cobain as the point man have earned the right
to spit in fortune's eye. Generation X is really a generation hexed, caught
in a spin cycle of updated '70s punk and heavy-metal aesthetics and cursed
by the velocity with which even the most abrasive pop underculture can be
co-opted and compromised. One minute, "Nevermind" is jackbooting
Michael Jackson out of the No. 1 slot; the next, grunge jock Dan Cortese
is screaming, "I love this place!" on behalf of Burger King. Even
the hippies got a summer or two to themselves in the mid-'60s before the
dough-re-mi boys horned in. So it's hardly a stretch to suggest that in
"Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle" (a slash-and-burner
named after the locally born actress, whose rebellious streak brought her
to the brink of insanity), it is really Cobain who wants to torch the town
and send the A&R hounds packing.
None of this unrepentantly self-obsessed rant & roll would be half as
compelling or convincing if Nirvana weren't such master blasters -- Novoselic
and Grohl deserve a few extra bows here -- and Cobain wasn't a songwriter
of such ferocious honesty and focused musical smarts. Cobain essentially
works according to one playbook, but it's a winner no matter how he runs
it. His songs invariably open with a slow-boil verse, usually sung in a
plaintive groan over muted strumming and a tempered backbeat. Then Cobain
vaporizes you with a chorus of immense power-chord static and primal howling.
That, in a nutshell, is "Teen Spirit" and "Come As You Are."
It also covers, to varying degrees, "Rape Me," "Pennyroyal
Tea" and "Milk It" on "In Utero."
But the devilry is in the details. "Rape Me" opens as a disquieting
whisper, Cobain intoning the title verse in a battered croon, which sets
you up beautifully to get blindsided by the explosive hook line.
In the sepulchral folk intro of "Penny-royal Tea," Cobain almost
sounds like Michael Stipe at the beginning of R.E.M.'s "Drive"
-- before the heaving, fuzz-burnt chorus comes lashing down with a vengeance.
Steve Albini's production, an au naturel power-trio snort that is almost
monophonic in its compressed intensity, is particularly effective during
those dramatic cave-ins. The word grunge, of course, doesn't do this kind
of ravishing clatter justice. But Nirvana never bought into the simple Black
Flag-cum-Sabbath hoodlum shtick anyway. From "Bleach" on, they
have specialized in a kind of luminous roar and scarred beauty that has
more to do with Patti Smith, the Buzzcocks and "Plastic Ono"-era
John Lennon.
Actually, the icy tension of the part-ballad, part-punk-rock blues "Heart-Shaped
Box" and the amorous chamber-punk urgency of "Dumb" ("My
heart is broke/But I have some glue/Help me inhale/And mend it with you")
confirm that if Generation Hex is ever going to have its own Lennon -- someone
who genuinely believes in rock & roll salvation but doesn't confuse
mere catharsis with true deliverance -- Cobain is damn near it. In "Heart-Shaped
Box," the kind of song Stone Temple Pilots couldn't write even with
detailed instructions, Cobain sets up a hypnotic coiled-spring tension between
the frayed elegance of the verse melody and the strong Oedipal undertow
of his obsession ("Throw down your umbilical noose so I can climb right
back").
The last track, "All Apologies," is another stunning trump card,
the fluid twining of cello and guitar hinting at a little fireside R.E.M.
while the full-blaze pop glow of the chorus shows the debt of inspiration
Cobain has always owed to Paul Westerberg and the vintage Replacements.
It's the last thing most people would expect from Angst Central, and it's
an inspired sign-off that shows how Nirvana have been reborn in the face
of suck-cess. "In Utero" is a lot of things -- brilliant, corrosive,
enraged and thoughtful, most of them all at once. But more than anything,
it's a triumph of the will.
DAVID FRICKE
Copyright 1997 by Rolling Stone