Entertainment Weekly - February 24 - March 3, 2017

(Axel Boer) #1
In honor of what would have been the Nirvana frontman’s 50th birthday on Feb. 20,
three artists reflect on the towering impact and lasting legacy of the grunge icon

Kurt Cobain,


Remembered


TOVE LO

I was 11 when I bought
my first Nirvana
album. I boughtMTV
Unpluggedbecause
I’d heard “Polly,” and
then I bought all the
other albums. I obvi-
ously write pure pop,
and it’s not in any way
as hard as Nirvana,
but what inspired me
the most was the
rawness of it. He sang
about the dark stuff;
where I grew up, you
didn’t talk about
anything like that.
You kept all the dark-
ness to yourself.
That’s what I loved:
It was okay to feel the
pain a little bit.

LAURA JANE GRACE
AGAINST ME!

I was an Army brat...
so I lived overseas
without MTV and
moved back to the
U.S. when I was about


  1. It was right around
    when they were
    playing Michael Jack-
    son’s “Black or White”
    and Red Hot Chili Pep-
    pers’“GiveItAway”
    all the time. And then
    they played “Smells
    Like Teen Spirit,” and
    that was just so
    different than anything
    else on [MTV]. At first
    it was hard to even
    understand it: Do I like
    this? Why do I like
    this?... [Nevermind]
    will forever be one
    of my all-time
    favorite records.


DIPLO

Kurt Cobain was
a legend. He passed
away before the
music industry turned
in such a chaotic and
nasty way. He was the
guy who made music
and thought about it
later. It was pure.
You can’t have that
anymore. You have to
do marketing and
research.... There’s
no such thing as a
pure punk attitude. If
he had been around...
I don’t know if he
would have been able
to withstand the pres-
sures of the industry.

Reported by Nolan Feeney and Madison Vain

COBAIN: JULIAN BROAD/GETTY IMAGES; TOVE LO: JON KOPALOFF/FILMMAGIC; GRACE: D DIPASUPIL/GETTY IMAGES; DIPLO: TAYLOR HILL/FILMMAG


IC;

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