Nervermind Deluxe Edition
Alt. rock landmark gets the reissue treatment on its 20th anniversary.
Paul Nolan, 17 Oct 2011

One of the most notable aspects of revisiting the peerless Nevermind on its 20th anniversary is the realisation that, for all of the album’s influence and importance, very few bands today actually sound like Nirvana. Whilst other genres – such as, say, punk-funk – have umpteen practitioners, the fuzzed-up melodic bliss of Nevermind is not really on the current musical syllabus.
I think the explanation for this apparent anomoly can be found in a quote James Dean Bradfield gave to Hot Press a couple of years ago, when he astutely observed that, “The most difficult thing to do in music is make a really convincing rock album.” It’s difficult because there is nothing to hide behind. Nirvana did not utilise electronics, kick into extended dance grooves, or utilise orchestras or brass sections. They simply played irresistible punk anthems, which showed that, just sometimes, the best are full of passionate intensity.
Their success was chiefly attributable to Kurt Cobain’s Beatles-like melodic genius. To be sure, the likes of ‘Come As You Are’, ‘In Bloom’, ‘Drain You’, ‘Lithium’ and, of course, the immortal ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ possess anger and fury in abundance, but they also boast choruses that have you leaping out of your seat with excitement. Which is not to say that Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl weren’t an integral part of Nirvana’s success – the former’s bass playing is always brilliantly inventive, whilst it’s impossible to imagine Nevermind without Grohl’s powerhouse drumming.
It’s also worth noting that Cobain’s all-round artistic talent was another significant element in Nirvana’s globe-conquering exploits. In addition to his considerable abilities as a singer, songwriter and frontman, his unique vision and flair for memorable imagery also resulted in a number of classic album covers and music videos. Which brings us to another question – just what would he have thought of a ‘deluxe edition’?
It would appear that Cobain, the classic anti-establishment agitator, harboured a fear of repeating himself artistically, and finding himself in middle-age doing “the Clapton thing”, recycling his greatest hits. There is something about the subversive, anarchic spirit of Nevermind that sits uneasily with something as mainstream and “classic rock” as a deluxe reissue. Still, a 20th anniversary edition offers as good an opportunity as any to revisit and take stock of the album itself, as well as dipping into the obligatory archive material.