In Utero [Explicit Lyrics]

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential recording
Overwhelmed by sudden success, Nirvana promised to take a harsher, more abrasive route on their second major-label release. Enlisting Chicago-based noise maven Steve Albini (of Big Black fame), Kurt Cobain and company succeeded in producing a record that was violent, disillusioned, and deeply moving. Every song reads like a commentary on the cost of fame ("Serve the Servants") and the unhealthy relationship between performer and fan ("Milk It"). Of course, they might all simply be about Courtney Love. Gossip aside, there is no denying the sheer power of Cobain's songwriting, his singing, and the band's amazing, visceral power. Cobain even manages a John Lennon-like mantra at the end of the heart-wrenching "All Apologies." "All in all is all we are," he intones repeatedly, only for Cobain that's no consolation. --Percy Keegan

Music Review:

  1. INXS - Greatest Hits
  2. Kill the Moonlight
  3. Licensed to Ill
  4. Little Earthquakes
  5. Loveless
  6. Mass Romantic [Original recording remastered]
  7. Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
  8. Mermaid Avenue
  9. Minimum-Maximum [Live]
  10. Morning View

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Between Flesh and Divine

Rossini: Overtures; Il barbiere did Siviglia (Highlights)

Sonatas for Trumpet and Organ - Toccatas

Music: OM Lounge, Vol. 2

Saturday Night Live, Vol. 2 [Live] [Import]

Swing Batta Swing

Rock Acústico [Import]

The Funky Precedent, Vol. 2

Sounds of Peace

Scena: Theatre Music of Serge Prokofiev [Piano arrangements of Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, The Love for Three Oranges & Cinderella]

Speak Like a Child [Import] [Limited Edition] [Original recording remastered]

Remembrance [Import]

Shotgun

Nigel Kennedy's Greatest Hits

Yesterday's Wine