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Nevermind
Users Say
369 ratings
Album Reviews: 18
Album: Nevermind
Artist: Nirvana
Release Date: 9/24/1991
Genre: Rock/Pop
Tags: nevermind, nirvana, kurt cobain, grunge, smells like teen spirit, lithium, come as you are, in bloom

Nevermind was never meant to change the world, but you can never predict when the zeitgeist will hit, and Nirvana's second album turned out to be the place where alternative rock crashed into the mainstream. This wasn't entirely an accident, either, since Nirvana did sign with a major label, and... [+] Expand

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Nevermind by Nirvana!

Recent User Reviews

Glitterrock1 person agrees
Oh... nevermind (hi hi !!)
FULL REVIEW
posted May 4, 2005
Nenermind!!!!
FULL REVIEW
posted May 30, 2005
Nevermind is such a great album loaded with Furious Fret Work Relentless Riffs and Face Melting guitar solos its just crazy awesome music from such a great band and so inspirational Return to the shred baby
FULL REVIEW
posted Feb 23, 2007
One Of The Greatest
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posted Jul 13, 2005
masterpiece
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posted Sep 1, 2005
This was the Sgt.Pepper's of our generation. It just changed the whole musical landscape.
FULL REVIEW
posted Nov 22, 2005
punkette_misfit1 person agrees
one of the most important albums in rock history
FULL REVIEW
posted Dec 7, 2005
Amazing cd, but in my mind not the poster child for the generation
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posted Nov 25, 2005
Great album!
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posted Jun 29, 2006
A master piece but
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posted Aug 3, 2006

Critic's Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Nevermind was never meant to change the world, but you can never predict when the zeitgeist will hit, and Nirvana's second album turned out to be the place where alternative rock crashed into the mainstream. This wasn't entirely an accident, either, since Nirvana did sign with a major label, and they did release a record with a shiny surface, no matter how humongous the guitars sounded. And, yes, Nevermind is probably a little shinier than it should be, positively glistening with echo and fuzz-box distortion, especially when compared with the black-and-white murk of Bleach. This doesn't discount the record, since it's not only much harder than any mainstream rock of 1991, its character isn't on the surface, it's in the exhilaratingly raw music and haunting songs. Kurt Cobain's personal problems and subsequent suicide naturally deepens the dark undercurrents, but no matter how much anguish there is on Nevermind, it's bracing because he exorcises those demons through his evocative wordplay and mangled screams -- and because the band has a tremendous, unbridled power that transcends the pain, turning into pure catharsis. And, that's as key to the record's success as Cobain's songwriting, since Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl help turn this into music that is gripping, powerful, and even fun (and, really, there's no other way to characterize "Territorial Pissings" or the surging "Breed"). In retrospect, Nevermind may seem a little too unassuming for its mythic status -- it's simply a great modern punk record -- but even though it may no longer seem life-changing, it is certainly life-affirming, which may just be better.
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