In Utero

From Freepedia

For the term used in biology, see in utero.
In Utero
Image:Nirvana inutero.png
Album by Nirvana
Release September 21, 1993
Recorded February 1993 at Pachyderm Studios, Cannon Falls, Minnesota
Genre(s) Grunge
Length 41 min 11 s (US)
Label David Geffen Company
Producer Steve Albini
Professional reviews
Nirvana chronology
Image:Nirvana-Incesticide.jpg
Incesticide
(1992)
Image:Nirvana inutero.png
In Utero
(1993)
Image:Nirvana mtv unplugged in new york.png
MTV Unplugged in New York
(1994)

In Utero is the third and final studio album from the American rock band, Nirvana. It was released in September 1993.

Contents

Significance

Following the massive and unexpected commercial success of Nirvana's second album, Nevermind, in 1991, the band had intended to "return to its roots" by recording a more abrasive and less mainstream-sounding release. Singer/ guitarist Kurt Cobain had admitted his fear of alienating Nirvana's core fanbase of punk and indie rockers with its recent superstardom, and the band chose Steve Albini, a well-respected producer and member of the bands Rapeman and Big Black, to record the album. In the end, Nirvana was able to have its cake and eat it too: In Utero opened at #1 on the Billboard 200, and had hit singles with the songs "Heart-Shaped Box," "All Apologies" and "Rape Me," but also showcased the band's more corrosive and experimental side with tracks like "Scentless Apprentice" and "Milk It," keeping its punk credibility intact.

Recording

In Utero was recorded at Pachyderm Studios in Cannon Falls, Minnesota. It was recorded for a total of $24,000, and Albini took a flat rate of just $100,000, turning down royalty payments which would have given him far more. Recording sessions started on Valentine's Day 1993, and were completed in about one week (including the basic tracks and overdubs), after which Albini spent a few days mixing the songs. In total, the band used 12 of the 14 days they had booked for the studio; Cobain later described it in Michael Azerrad's Nirvana biography Come As You Are as "the easiest recording [Nirvana had] ever done." [1] Three songs, "Heart-Shaped Box," "Pennyroyal Tea" and "All Apologies," were later remixed by Scott Litt, which caused friction between the band and Albini.

Medical themes

Cobain had flirted with medical themes in the past, such as in the Nevermind song "Drain You" and in some of his paintings and collages, but never to the extent as on In Utero - the title itself is a Latin term meaning, literally, "in the uterus." The lyrics contain mentions of or references to semen, hymens, open sores, parasites, milk, and even abortion, and the album's artwork includes a photo of a pregnant anatomical angel on the front cover (with angel wings later added by Cobain), a collage of flowers, plastic fetuses and turtle shells on the back cover, and various Greek symbols of fertility on the back cover and sprinkled throughout the liner notes.

Controversy

Even before In Utero's release, the album was surrounded by turmoil. A number of articles emerged in early 1993 which suggested that Geffen Records, the band's record label, disliked the album and was reluctant to release it. When three songs were later remixed, many cited this as proof of Nirvana yielding to the label. Geffen responded with a press release in which Cobain said, "There has been no pressure from our record label to change the tracks we did with Albini. We have 100 per cent control of our music." [2]

When In Utero did hit the shelves, many feminists objected to the song "Rape Me," which Cobain defended in several interviews as being "anti-rape." Wal-Mart and Kmart refused to carry the album because of its artwork, and a "clean" version was released for them which featured an altered version of the back cover collage - "zoomed in" to omit the fetuses - and listed "Rape Me" as "Waif Me." The band defended its decision to release a censored version by pointing out that many fans in places like the Midwestern United States may not live near to record shops, and buy most of their albums from chain stores like Wal-Mart.

Trivia

  • At least four In Utero songs - "Dumb," "Pennyroyal Tea," "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" and "All Apologies" - were written in 1990, three years before the album's release. "Rape Me" was written in 1991.
  • Early titles for In Utero include Verse Chorus Verse and I Hate Myself And I Want To Die. The final title was taken from a poem by Courtney Love, Cobain's wife and singer/ guitarist of the band Hole.
  • Cobain wrote a set of liner notes for In Utero which was not used at the time, but made public in 2002 with the publication of Journals. In his notes for the "odds and sods" compilation Incesticide, he had famously attacked the homophobic, racist and sexist faction of his fanbase, which he wanted to eliminate. The unused In Utero notes were less confrontational, dealing mostly with the songs themselves. For the "Serve The Servants" entry, he wrote about the fractured relationship he had with his father, a theme addressed very clearly in the song itself. For the "Pennyroyal Tea" entry, he wrote, "It doesn't work you hippie," referring to the abortifacient after which the song is named.
  • Kera Schaley, the cellist who plays on "Dumb" and "All Apologies," has also appeared on albums by Azure Ray, Vic Chesnut, and Low. She sings and plays cello for her own band, Martyr & Pistol.

Track listing

All songs by Kurt Cobain unless otherwise noted.

  1. "Serve The Servants" - 3:34
  2. "Scentless Apprentice" (Cobain/Grohl/Novoselic) - 3:47
  3. "Heart-Shaped Box" - 4:39
  4. "Rape Me" - 2:49
  5. "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge On Seattle" - 4:07
  6. "Dumb" - 2:29
  7. "Very Ape" - 1:55
  8. "Milk It" - 3:52
  9. "Pennyroyal Tea" - 3:36
  10. "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" - 4:49
  11. "tourette's" - 1:33
  12. "All Apologies" - 3:50
  13. "Gallons Of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through The Strip" (Cobain/Grohl/Novoselic) - 7:33 (This "devalued American dollar purchase incentive track" is available only on U.K. and Australian copies of In Utero. It is a jam recorded in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in January 1993, and does not get a separate track position on the record, starting about 20 minutes after the end "All Apologies").

Singles

"Heart-Shaped Box" was released as In Utero's first single in August 1993, and features "Milk It" (CD only) and "Marigold" as B-sides. The second single was a split for the songs "All Apologies" and "Rape Me" (both A-sides), and was released in December 1993 with "Moist Vagina" as the B-side. A third single, for the song "Pennyroyal Tea" and featuring "I Hate Myself And Want To Die" and the band's MTV Unplugged rendition of the folk song "Where Did You Sleep Last Night" as B-sides, was planned for a May 1994 release, but was cancelled following Cobain's apparent suicide in April 1994. A few copies were released prematurely, and today can fetch a hefty sum from collectors. All singles were released outside of the U.S. only. British copies of the "All Apologies"/"Rape Me" single list "Moist Vagina" as "MV" on the cover. Though never released as a single, the song "Dumb" was picked up by many alternative rock radio stations, and became a modest hit.

Charting singles

Year Single Chart Position
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official UK Singles Chart No. 5
1993 All Apologies/Rape Me Official UK Singles Chart No. 32
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official Irish Singles Chart No. 6
1993 All Apologies/Rape Me Official Irish Singles Chart No. 20
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official New Zealand Singles Chart No. 9
1993 All Apologies/Rape Me Official New Zealand Singles Chart No. 20
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official Australian Singles Chart No. 17
1993 All Apologies/Rape Me Official Australian Singles Chart No. 58
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official French Singles Chart No. 37
1993 All Apologies/Rape Me Official French Singles Chart No. 20
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official Sweden Singles Chart No. 16
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official Belgium Singles Chart No. 31
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Official Holland Singles Chart No. 32
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Modern Rock Tracks (US) No. 1
1994 All Apologies Modern Rock Tracks (US) No. 1
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Mainstream Rock Tracks (US) No. 4
1994 All Apologies Mainstream Rock Tracks (US) No. 4
1994 All Apologies/Rape Me Hot 100 Brasil No. 94
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Triple J Hot 100 No. 20

Album Charts

Year Album Chart Position
1993 In Utero Billboard Top 200 No. 1
1993 In Utero Official UK Albums Chart No. 1
1993 In Utero Official Sweden Albums Chart No. 1
1993 In Utero Official Australian Albums Chart No. 2
1993 In Utero Official New Zealand Albums Chart No. 3
1993 In Utero Official Finland Albums Chart No. 5
1993 In Utero Official Norwegian Albums Chart No. 7
1993 In Utero Official Austrian Albums Chart No. 8
1993 In Utero Official Spanish Albums Chart No. 13
1993 In Utero Official Japanese Albums Chart No. 13
1993 In Utero Official German Albums Chart No. 14
1993 In Utero Official Switzerland Albums Chart No. 16

Accolades

  • Ranked #3 in Spin's "Best Albums of 1993" (1993)
  • Ranked #3 in Rolling Stone's "Album of the Year - Critics Pick" (1993)
  • Ranked #5 in Entertainment Weekly's "Top Albums of the Year" (1993)
  • Ranked #1 in Kerrang!'s "100 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die - Editors Choice" (1998)
  • Ranked #2 in Kerrang!'s "100 Albums You Must Here Before You Die - Readers Choice" (1998)
  • Ranked #20 in Q's "Best 50 Albums of Q's Lifetime" (1999)
  • Ranked #13 in Spin's "50 Most Essential Punk Records" (1999)
  • Ranked #18 in Spin's "90 Greatest Albums of the 90s" (1999)
  • Ranked #2 in Magnet's "Top 60 Albums, 1993-2003" (2003)
  • Ranked #13 in Pitchfork's "Top 100 Albums of the 1990s (Redux)" (2004) [3]

Personnel

  • Nirvana
  • Karen Mason - Photography
  • Steve Albini - Engineer
  • Adam Kasper - Assistant Engineer
  • Scott Litt - Mixing
  • Bob Ludwig - Mastering
  • Charles Peterson - Photography
  • Bob Weston - Technician
  • Kera Schaley - Cello
  • Michael Lavine - Photography
  • Robert Fisher - Art Direction, Design, Photography
  • Neil Wallace - Photography
  • Alex Grey - Illustrations

Clips

Image:Gnome-speakernotes.png
"Dumb" (info)
"Dumb" by Nirvana
Problems listening to the files? See media help.


Sales

American sales: 5 million (5x Platinum)

UK sales: 100,000 (Gold)

Canadian sales: 600,000 (6x Platinum)

Japanese sales: 7 weeks, 85,570 (22 September 1993) & 1 week, 749 (21 October 2004)

External links

Nirvana
Kurt Cobain | Dave Grohl | Krist Novoselic
Aaron Burckhard | Chad Channing | Dale Crover | Jason Everman | Pat Smear
Albums and EPs
Bleach | Blew | Nevermind | Hormoaning | Incesticide | In Utero | MTV Unplugged in New York | From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah | Nirvana | Sliver: The Best of The Box
Box Sets
Singles | With the Lights Out
Singles
"Love Buzz" | "Sliver" | "Smells Like Teen Spirit" | "Come As You Are" | "In Bloom" | "Lithium" | "Heart-Shaped Box" | "All Apologies" | "Pennyroyal Tea" | "About a Girl" | "You Know You're Right"
Other Related Articles
Grunge music | Generation X | Courtney Love | Heavier Than Heaven | Kurt & Courtney | Last Days | Tom Grant
Categories
Category:Nirvana | Category:Nirvana albums | Category:Nirvana singles | Category:Nirvana songs


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