Skanic - Breed (Nirvana Cover)
Автор: CoverVerse
Загружено: 19 апр. 2011 г.
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From '' Last Call ''
Label: Moon Ska – MR129
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 1998
Tracklist
01. Eyesore
02. Yard Duty
03. Lovin'
Backing Vocals – Heather Bradley
04. Love City
05. Closet Case
06. Czar
07. Breed
Written-By – Kurt Cobain, Nirvana
08. Chaos
09. Last Call
10. Don't Dance Too Hard
11. Fine Mess
12. Temper
13. Song Number 13
Lead Vocals, Bass, Harmonica – Russ Schutz
Guitar [Lead], Vocals – Eric Murphy
Keyboards [Hammond], Vocals – Chuck Gross
Saxophone, Vocals – Bruce Zimmerman
Trumpet – Dan Karrer
Guitar [Rhythm] – Rick "Rude" Nunez
Bass, Vocals – Jody Sillstrop
Drums – Mark Cutkomp
Trombone – Darren W. Conway, Gabe Draguicevich (tracks: 1, 4, 6, 11, 13)
Producer – MC Schneebi
© 1998 Skanic Records
℗ 1998 Skanic
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Breed was originally released in Nevermind.
Nevermind is the second studio album by the American rock band Nirvana, released on September 24, 1991.
Produced by Butch Vig, Nevermind was the group's first release on DGC Records.
Frontman Kurt Cobain sought to make music outside the restrictive confines of the Seattle grunge scene, drawing influence from groups such as the Pixies and their use of loud/quiet song dynamics.
Nevermind became a surprise success in late 1991, largely due to the popularity of its first single, "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
By January 1992, it had replaced Michael Jackson's album Dangerous at number one on the Billboard charts.
The Recording Industry Association of America has certified the album ten times platinum (10 million copies shipped), and the album has sold over 26 million copies worldwide.
Breed's first title name was "Immodium".
Legacy
Nevermind's success surprised Nirvana's contemporaries, who felt dwarfed by its impact. Fugazi's Guy Picciotto later commented: "It was like our record could have been a hobo pissing in the forest for the amount of impact it had.
It felt like we were playing ukuleles all of a sudden because of the disparity of the impact of what they did".
In 1992, Jon Pareles of The New York Times described that in the aftermath of the album's breakthrough, "Suddenly, all bets are off. No one has the inside track on which of dozens, perhaps hundreds, of ornery, obstreperous, unkempt bands might next appeal to the mall-walking millions".
Record company executives offered large advances and record deals to bands, and previous strategies of building audiences for alternative rock bands had been replaced by the opportunity to achieve mainstream popularity quickly.
Michael Azerrad argued in his Nirvana biography Come as You Are: The Story of Nirvana (1993) that Nevermind marked the emergence of a generation of music fans in their twenties in a climate dominated by the musical tastes of the baby boomer generation that preceded them.
Azerrad wrote, "Nevermind came along at exactly the right time.
This was music by, for, and about a whole new group of young people who had been overlooked, ignored, or condescended to."
Rolling Stone wrote in its entry for Nevermind on its 2003 list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, "No album in recent history had such an overpowering impact on a generation—a nation of teens suddenly turned punk—and such a catastrophic effect on its main creator."
Nevermind has continued to garner critical praise since its release. The album was listed at number seventeen on Rolling Stone's list "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time".
Time placed Nevermind, which writer Josh Tyrangiel called "the finest album of the 90s," on its 2006 list of "The All-TIME 100 Albums."
Pitchfork Media named the album the sixth best of the decade, noting that "anyone who hates this record today is just trying to be cool, and needs to be trying harder."
In 2005, the Library of Congress added Nevermind to the National Recording Registry, which collects "culturally, historically or aesthetically important" sound recordings from the 20th century.
Track listing
All songs written by Kurt Cobain except where noted.
"Smells Like Teen Spirit" (Cobain, Novoselic, Grohl)
"In Bloom"
"Come as You Are"
"Breed"
"Lithium"
"Polly"
"Territorial Pissings"
"Drain You"
"Lounge Act"
"Stay Away"
"On a Plain"
"Something in the Way"
"Endless, Nameless" is a hidden track on some copies of the record.
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