important anniversary tomorrow, April 8th, who knows it?
April 8th 1994...important event in modern history.
Who can name it?
Also, what were you doing then?
wild willy
SBR MVP
11-20-08
1298
#2
Nientendo came out,Just fuking tell us I give up
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5 star bomb
SBR Hall of Famer
10-12-07
5370
#3
Kurt Kobain was found dead... RIP
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#4
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wild willy
SBR MVP
11-20-08
1298
#5
Fukin guy was forgot april9th 1994 thought it would be something good.
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#6
Wily, you shouldn't talk out of your ass, the impact was felt for YEARS
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#7
i can't fukkin believe thats been 15 years, life goes by real fast
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wild willy
SBR MVP
11-20-08
1298
#8
Whore wife to many drugs,liked his music,he diden't pay my bills,heard it on the radio said shit,last I ever thought about him.
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AMBlai01
SBR Hall of Famer
09-16-08
5882
#9
ummm...hate to break it to you buddy..but it is not important day in history that this asshole blew his head off....Yeah he made good music but who gives a fukk...
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wild willy
SBR MVP
11-20-08
1298
#10
LOL
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#11
Amby, you're opinion isn't welcome here
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Fischnasty
SBR MVP
02-10-09
1931
#12
Originally posted by Brock Landers
Amby, you're opinion isn't welcome here
neither is yours broke
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AMBlai01
SBR Hall of Famer
09-16-08
5882
#13
and your scamming, barreled in, pizza delivering ass isn't welcome around here either....so I guess we are both out of line eh?
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wild willy
SBR MVP
11-20-08
1298
#14
Why don't you start breaking legs with sal,you could start by collecting on my debt. Fuking loser
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#15
RIP Kurt Cobain
1967-1994
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Boner_18
SBR Hall of Famer
08-24-08
8301
#16
I count down to April 20th every year. It's both Hitler's birthday and the anniversary of the Columbine high school shooting. Happy anniversary!!!
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Bread
SBR Posting Legend
03-16-08
23726
#17
420...get it????
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Mudcat
Restricted User
07-21-05
9287
#18
I like his music just fine but that's not the kind of thing for me where I actually remember where I was when I heard about it.
John Lennon, yes. Kurt Cobain, 'fraid not. No disrespect to Kurt but there are so many bits of news in a lifetime.
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Casi
SBR Wise Guy
02-16-09
506
#19
Not an important day in "modern history", but yes Nirvana was huge in the music biz...
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smitch124
SBR Posting Legend
05-19-08
12566
#20
October 20, 1977 for me
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pavyracer
SBR Aristocracy
04-12-07
82905
#21
Sammy and Bobby celebrated their 3 year old birthday alone with "uncle" JJ on that day.
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Willie Bee
SBR Posting Legend
02-14-06
15726
#22
$1 hot dogs at the Ballpark That Dumbya Built tonight in Arlington, Texas. Can't get any bigger than that.
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Brock Landers
SBR Aristocracy
06-30-08
45359
#23
Kurt Cobain found dead 15 years ago today
Apr 8, 2009, 02:13 PM | by Mike Bruno
Categories: Nirvana
Fifteen years ago today, I was just past the Ashland exit on Chicago's Eisenhower Expressway, on my way home from a class at UIC, when I heard the news on my Kenwood slide-out radio. I was listening to Q-101, my hometown's "alt-rock" station, and the DJ used the 30 seconds of talk time he was allotted in his pre-determined playlist to announce that Kurt Cobain's lifeless body was found at his Seattle home. Suicide. Shotgun blast to the head. Dead.
As the DJ's "sad, sad day" announcement ended and the next Cake/Stone Temple Pilots/Weezer song started up, my first reaction was a cliched disbelief. It was a month after the close call in Rome, where Cobain had "accidentally" overdosed on champagne and pills. That he now put a shotgun to his own head and pulled the trigger seemed almost too perfect an ending to the life of the sensationally miserable punk/pop star who once penned a song titled "I Hate Myself and I Want to Die." But, of course, it was real. He was dead. And I was fairly devastated. I exited the expressway at Kostner (those from Chicago know that you don't exit the Eisenhower at the sketchy Kostner Ave. stop unless you absolutely have to) and took a break to collect myself. That's it. There won't ever be another Nirvana song, another Kurt Cobain performance, or another obscure artist I'll discover because of him. It was a crushing blow for pop music, for rock and roll, and for Gen X.
My initial sadness, pity, and shock quickly took on anger and disgust when widow Courtney Love read the damn suicide note on MTV just two days later, not even waiting for his body to be cold before she began capitalizing on the Sid & Nancy-like validation her punk rock persona had just taken on. Kurt had a kid, for chrissakes, and he'd left her to be raised alone by that woman? Yes, Kurt was a mess. He was in pain, both physically and mentally. He poured that pain into his music and the screaming masses lauded him for it, constantly begged for more. Lord knows what it must've felt like to transform from a shy, awkward kid from a rainy Northwest town into a spokesman for a generation. But whether he asked for that fame or not (and there are some indications that despite his outward disdain for fame, Cobain was always very hungry for the spotlight), he had a daughter who counted on him, and it has permanently tarnished the image I have of my hero that he made that choice.
More selfishly, though, Cobain also had a fanbase that was affected very deeply by his suicide. I'm older now, and the all encompassing life-affirmation that kids derive from music on a daily basis is much harder to find. I've also spent the past 10-plus years writing about and covering music professionally, which can, unfortunately, zap some of the magic from the stacks of CDs I listen to every week. But I do believe that Cobain and Nirvana were pop music's last true game-changers, ushering in a scruffy, music-first rock and roll passion that almost instantaneously erased the abominations that were Winger and the rest of the Aqua Net hair metal goons. The Ramones and Sex Pistols had a similar effect in the 1970s, Black Sabbath and Zeppelin before them, the Beatles, Elvis. One might argue that Pavement's influence on an enduring indie-rock tradition was similarly game-changing, but either way, it's been a long time since anyone's been able to stage anything tantamount to Kurt and Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" revolution in 1991. So even though I remain angry, disappointed, and disillusioned by his suicide, today, 15 long years since I drove home from class and heard the news, I also miss the guy something fierce.
Where were you when you heard about Kurt's death? And does he still mean as much to you 15 years later?