| Bleach | |||||
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| Studio album by Nirvana | |||||
| Released | June 15, 1989 | ||||
| Recorded | December 1988–January 1989 at Reciprocal Recording in Seattle, Washington | ||||
| Genre | Grunge, hardcore punk | ||||
| Length | 42:14 | ||||
| Label | Sub Pop Geffen Records (outside US) |
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| Producer | Jack Endino | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Nirvana chronology | |||||
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Bleach is the debut album by the American alternative rock band Nirvana. It was released on June 15, 1989 on the independent record label Sub Pop. Bleach originally sold only 30,000 copies, but following the enormous success of the band's second album, Nevermind (1991), fans discovered Nirvana's little-known debut. It has now been certified platinum in the United States.
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The main sessions for Bleach took place at Reciprocal Recording Studios in Seattle, Washington, with local producer Jack Endino manning the board. Nirvana began recording on December 24, 1988, and spent five hours there that day.[1] The band recorded again on December 29-31, and on January 14 and 24.[2] Ultimately Endino billed the group for 30 hours of recording time. Three of the album's songs–"Floyd the Barber", "Paper Cuts", and the CD-only track "Downer"–were recorded during a previous session at Reciprocal Studios in 1988, featuring Dale Crover on drums. Despite attempts to re-record them with new drummer Chad Channing, the band ultimately decided to remix the versions recorded with Crover for the final version of Bleach.[3] One song recorded at the sessions, "Big Long Now", was omitted from the album because vocalist/guitarist Kurt Cobain felt "there was already enough slow heavy stuff on Bleach, and he "didn't want that song to go out", according to Endino.[2] The album was edited and sequenced, but Sub Pop head Bruce Pavitt ordered that the album be completely resequenced. The release of the album was delayed for several months until Sub Pop borrowed money to issue it.[3]
The recording sessions cost US$606.17. Jason Everman, a guitarist who was impressed by the band's demo with Dale Crover, supplied the money to cover the cost. He eventually joined Nirvana as a second guitarist.[3] Everman received a credit on the album sleeve, even though he did not perform on the record. Bassist Krist Novoselic explained, "We just wanted to make him feel at home in the band."[4]
According to vocalist/guitarist Kurt Cobain, the music on Bleach was intended to fit into the grunge style promoted by Sub Pop. "There was this pressure from Sub Pop and the [grunge] scene to play 'rock music'", Cobain said. "Strip it down and make it sound like Aerosmith." Cobain felt he had to fit the expectations of the grunge sound in order to build a fanbase, and so he purposefully suppressed his arty and pop songwriting traits when crafting the record.[5]
Cobain told Spin in 1993, "With Bleach, I didn't give a flying fuck what the lyrics were about", and claimed that eighty percent of the lyrics were written the night before recording.[6] Cobain often was still working on them on the drive to the recording studio.[3] He explained, "It was like I'm pissed off. Don't know what about. Let's just scream negative lyrics, and as long as they're not sexist and don't get too embarrassing it'll be okay. I don't hold any of those lyrics dear to me."[6] Nirvana biographer Michael Azerrad noted that nevertheless many of the songs on the album were reflective of Cobain and various incidents in his life.[7] "Mr. Moustache" was inspired by Cobain's dislike of macho behavior,[8] while "School" was a critique of the Seattle music scene, particularly Sub Pop.[9]
Sub Pop pressed the first 1,000 copies on white vinyl, the next 2,000 on black, and all subsequent pressings were on red and blue. The first 3,000 copies of the record came with a poster, featuring Jason Everman. The vinyl pressings did not include "Big Cheese" or "Downer".[10] In the United Kingdom, the record was released on Tupelo Records in June 1989. The first 300 Tupelo copies were pressed on white vinyl; the next 2,000 copies were on dark green. The rest of the Tupelo copies were on black vinyl. The Tupelo copies did contain "Love Buzz", but "Big Cheese" was listed on the label and sleeve instead. They also did not contain "Downer".[10] In Australia, Bleach was released on Waterfront Records and later re-issued on various colored covers and colored vinyl prior to 1992.[11] Sub Pop released a remastered version of the album on CD and cassette in April 1992.[10]
The album's working title was Too Many Humans.[12] It was officially named Bleach in February 1989 after the band's frontman Kurt Cobain found an AIDS prevention poster while Nirvana was driving through San Francisco. The poster advised heroin addicts to bleach their needles before use, featuring the slogan "Bleach Your Works."[3]
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All songs were written by Kurt Cobain, except where noted.
| Year | Chart | Position |
|---|---|---|
| 1992 | Official Finland Albums Chart | 24 |
| 1992 | Official German Albums Chart | 24 |
| 1992 | Official Austrian Albums Chart | 26 |
| 1992 | Official New Zealand Albums Chart | 30 |
| 1992 | Official UK Albums Chart | 33 |
| 1992 | Official Australian Albums Chart | 34 |
| 1992 | Official Japanese Albums Chart | 46 |
| 1992 | The Billboard 200 | 89 |
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