Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Louder
Louder
Entertainment
Niall Doherty

In 1992, Kurt Cobain's excitement at the prospect of Spinal Tap reforming led him to dream up some outlandish stage props which could turn future Nirvana live shows up to 11

A picture of Spinal Tap posing with guitars, and a picture of Kurt Cobain looking surprised to the right

As Nirvana toured the world in the aftermath of Nevermind’s success, everybody wanted a piece of the trio. Kurt Cobain, Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl arrived Down Under for an Australian tour in 1992 battered and bruised from a gruelling year on the road in which they’d become rock superstars. This mammoth success had not been on the agenda whilst recording their now-classic second record, as Cobain told Select’s Jessica Adams. “It didn’t seem that much different than the Bleach album at the time that we were recording,” he said. “We just went into the studio every day and tried our best.”

Their best had been good enough – perhaps as Cobain saw it, too good. The frontman was not in good shape during their first and last Australian jaunt, skipping interviews and record company meet and greets and eventually cancelling a few shows because of what the label put down to stomach problems. 

But he did find the time to talk to Adams, who put it to him that fictional rockers Spinal Tap were claiming that their last Seattle gig had a huge influence on Nirvana. He took it well. “Well, that’s a pretty egotistical thing to say,” he said. “Actually, I’m really excited about them re-forming. They played their last performance in Seattle some years ago and some friends of mine found the skull they had as a prop. Now they have it in their room.”

This prompted Kurt to muse on how Nirvana might expand their own stage set-up beyond three blokes standing there and playing some of the most startlingly exciting live music in rock history. The answer, Kurt said, was a “20-foot hypnotic wheel”. And some fancy video screens: “We’re going to have a projection of the first video game they ever had,” he said. “But at the moment there’s nothing theatrical that we could think of, besides using dancers and something like that. Maybe we could throw in a brass section.” 

Unfortunately, none of this came to pass. Nirvana never did have a video screen based on Atari games, or dancers, or, umm, a brass section. And Kurt never got to speak to Spinal Tap about their claims of influence. Maybe, though, he secretly agreed.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.