Other viewers may question specific filmmaking decisions. Love responded, a bit testily, “I’m not going to listen to 108 noise cassettes!”) (Asked how it was possible that she had never listened to them, Ms. Morgen discovered had apparently never been played. Cross, whose “Heavier Than Heaven” is regarded as the definitive Cobain biography. Some of the material had been seen over the years by writers, including Charles R. Love had everything that was left, which was a lot, quickly moved into storage facilities. Recorded by Cobain when he was still unknown, the cassettes find the budding musician experimenting on the guitar (singing the Beatles song “And I Love Her,” for instance), talking on the phone, giggling, listening to 1980s pop (Kim Wilde’s “Kids in America”), working on embryonic versions of Nirvana songs (“Polly”) and relating raw stories about his anguished teenage years.Ĭobain was a pack rat, and when he died people started stealing his stuff. Morgen said the 108 cassettes he found in a Southern California storage space were the most enlightening.
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