"I've done drugs in my time and I don't think anyone should do drugs. I'm not going to promote it and that's why I've never admitted that I did drugs because I didn't want anyone to be influenced by it [...] I think that when articles like that are written that they influence kids whether or not it's negative it doesn't really matter, you know. It's still makes kids think, 'Oh, my rock star hero does heroin, you know. Maybe I will some day.' I think it's crap…"
-Kurt, 11 Sept 1992, MTV
You Know You're Right
(live 23-10-93)
I don't need to love again
I won't sigh and mope again
I just don't need to love again
I just don't think it's worth it
I don't really love her
I don't think I want her
Ain't gonna take to love again
It's the way your love hurts
It's the way you're mad again
I don't think I'll love again
I won't ever promise her
I don't think I want her
This time no one else
I don't bear to follow you
I don't ever promise you
Sometimes I don't love you
Think I'm tired of loving her
I don't really want love
Pain (x5)
You know you're right
You told me to follow him
Teach him that I loved him
I won't ever promise you
I won't even bother to
You gave me my first kiss
I don't think I want it now
I don't ever want again
It's all that I had to have
It's all that I wanted
It's all that I had to
I don't think I'll miss her
I don't think I want ?
Pain (x5)
This is another of Kurt's more complex songs in terms of POV and pronouns. We have an "I", a "her", a "him", and a "you" (possibly multiple "you"s). It's not super clear which pronouns refer to which subjects here, but I'll give it a try.
( Read more... )
Laminated Effect
(Fecal Matter tape, 1986)
By Kurt Cobain
Johnny was a homo
Kept his body clean
Moved to San Francisco
Caught a big disease
Raped by his Daddy
Told he was at fault
Living life unhappy
Covered up his soul
We're living in a time of change
Too many things you feel afraid
Doing things against the will of God
Maybe someday soon they'll realize they're wrong
Lucy was a lesbian
No, no fun in the sack
Moved to Acapulco
Nothing goes in her hole
Then she met Johnny
They dated, went to formal
He and she got naughty
Found out that it's normal
We're living in a time of change
Too many things you feel afraid
Doing many things against the will of God
Maybe someday soon they'll realize they're wrong
Made not born
Made not born
Made not born
Made not born
Archivist's note: For another song featuring the lyrics, "kept his body clean", click here.
This song appears to be written from at least two different points of view: the narrator, who simply tells the story of Johnny and Lucy in the verses, and a moralising, judgemental voice that condemns the protagonists of the song in the chorus.
When teenage Kurt was homeless and living at a classmate's house (sleeping on their sofa as the father of the family recalls), he attended church with them, and was briefly enthusiastic about the experience until he realised they were preaching hate.
This song is likely repeating some of the things he heard at that church in the chorus. As for the verses, they seem to illustrate Kurt's confused understanding of bisexuality: he describes both characters, male and female, as homosexual, but then depicts them discovering an attraction to each other by the end of the story.
The first verse is interesting in that some of the themes in it are repeated in Even In His Youth, a song that reads as more autobiographical than Laminated Effect. In both songs we see a father and son pair with a highly dysfunctional relationship, and in this song the relationship is much more vividly abusive than in the other.
This is typical of Kurt's lyrics; in a number of cases he wrote demos with much more painful lyrics than the finished songs ended up being (Something In The Way and Sliver being two other examples which were toned down for the final recording). In each of these mentioned cases, the lyrics Kurt changed had to do with child abuse or neglect, both of which he experienced in his own family.
The topic of incest is also repeated very blatantly in the album title, Incesticide.
Lithium (early acoustic version)
Lyrics: Kurt Cobain
I'm so happy
Cause today I found my friends
They're in my head
I'm so ugly
That's ok, cause so are you
We broke our mirrors
Sunday morning
Is everyday for all I care
And I'm not scared
Light my candles
In a daze, cause I found God
Hey hey hey, hey!
Yeah hey!
Yeah, yeah, yeah!
I'm so lonely
That's ok, you shaved your head
And I'm not sad
And just maybe
I'm to blame for all I've heard
And I'm not sure
I'm so excited
I can't wait to meet you there
And I don't care
I'm so horny
That's ok, my will is good
Hey hey hey, hey!
Yeah hey!
Yeah, yeah, yeah!
Archivist's note: In this early acoustic version of Lithium, recorded in 1990, we learn who the "you" is that Kurt is addressing in the song:

Here's a picture from 1989. Kurt was not happy with Krist's new look, comparing it to a "Nazi".
For another alternate set of lyrics for Lithium, click here.