My younger cousin brought her friend to a family party. The friend was wearing a Kurt Cobain shirt, probably from Urban Outfitters. She said it's her favorite band along with Panic! at the Disco.
I'm glad his music is popular with the younger generation and I hope it keeps on going.
My daughter wears Kinks and Ramones shirts and she does listen to the Kinks and the Ramones. She likes 70s music more than modern music. I can't blame her.
I was watching this comedian on Instagram that showed a study that all modern music is sounding the same. That's probably why. Your daughter has good ears for music.
I think the younger generation may appreciate Daniel Johnston too. He was a super weird and awkward guy. He was also Kurt’s favorite songwriter, and biggest inspiration. The Late Great Daniel Johnston is a solid compilation of his work, and there’s a documentary about his life called The Devil and Daniel Johnston.
As long as they aren't doing the thing a lot of millennials did, aka wear popular band shirts without any clue who the band was.
Before someone gets mad, I am a millennial. I saw this happen a lot growing up, and it was especially common with Nirvana shirts for some reason (I'm guessing hot topic stocked a lot of Nirvana shirts or something). It absolutely drove me up the wall.
Hell, in general, don't wear a shirt, badge, wristband or whatever if you don't know what it's saying; for all you know it could be secretly heiling Hitler and now you're an unwitting Nazi magnet.
I remember Freddie too. He hit me much harder then Cobain three years later. Freddie's death I got from the paper, but for Cobain I was watching MTV's Most Wanted with Ray Cokes, which was aired live, and he read a piece of news that a dead person was found at Kurt Cobain's house but that nothing was confirmed.
He didn't play music of the era at the dance. He would go back to 1994 and play something from today. But music hasn't really evolved since then, so nobody would be shocked. He'd end up doing some dance number while lip-syncing a studio written pop song.
Edit: ah you're talking about when he first starts playing Chuck Berry with the band. I was thinking about the end of the performance when he slips into playing heavy metal and freaks everyone out.
I remember thinking that I wasn't happy everyone was comparing him to Jimmy Hendrix, Jim Morrison, and Janis Joplin, saying he joined the 27 club. The fact that he killed himself felt like an exclusionary detail.
I don't think I even got into Nirvana until after he died. I didn't really start getting into music until high school when I was able to buy CDs (or pirate shit) and listen to the radio stations I wanted and not what my mom wanted to. Prior to high school, I only knew Garth Brooks and fuckin' Raffi songs 😩
Then again, I very much remember seeing his MTV Unplugged set. I just can't remember if it was live at the time or just a rerun.