Dumb (song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Dumb"
"Dumb" cover
Song by Nirvana
from the album In Utero
Released September 21, 1993
Recorded March 1993 at Pachyderm Studios, Cannon Falls, Minnesota
Genre Grunge rock
Length 2:29
Label Geffen
Producer(s) Steve Albini
In Utero track listing
"Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle"
(5)
"Dumb"
(6)
Very Ape
(7)

"Dumb" is a song by the American rock band Nirvana. It is the sixth song on their 1993 album, In Utero.

Contents

[edit] History

Although the song was first released on In Utero in 1993 this Beatlesque Kurt Cobain composition dates back to 1990.

"Dumb" was debuted on September 25, 1990, when Cobain played a solo acoustic rendition on an Olympia, Washington college radio show hosted by Calvin Johnson. It was first performed in concert on November 25, 1990 at the Off Ramp in Seattle, Washington.

[edit] Other versions

After In Utero was released live versions of the song would feature a revolving door of cellists, including Lori Goldston (who played on the song's MTV Unplugged rendition) and Melora Creager, of the band Rasputina. The Unplugged version of Dumb appears on the band's 1994 album, MTV Unplugged in New York.

An electric rendition was recorded on September 3, 1991 during a John Peel session in London, England. This version was posthumously released on the 2004 Nirvana box set, With the Lights Out. The first true studio version of the song was recorded in October 1992 by Jack Endino in Seattle, but Cobain never recorded vocals for it.

The In Utero version was recorded in February 1993 by Steve Albini in Cannon Falls, Minnesota. This version, which was re-released on the band's 2002 best-of album Nirvana, features Kera Schaley on cello.

[edit] Meaning

According to Cobain, "Dumb" was inspired by the envy he feels for unintelligent and "easily amused" people, who are seemingly able to move through life without ever feeling sad or depressed. "I've met a lot of dumb people," Cobain said in an interview with Melody Maker in 1993, "they have a shitty job, they may be totally lonely...and yet, for some reason, they're happy."

In a 1993 Chicago Sun-Times interview, Cobain offered a strange alternate meaning of the song. "Actually, that was a song about a concussion," he said. "It was just one of those 4-track demo things late at night," he revealed. This was offered in response to Jim DeRogatis's idea that Dumb was about drug addiction.

[edit] Covers

"Dumb" has been covered by the following artists:

[edit] Trivia

  • Though never released as a single, "Dumb" was picked up by many alternative rock radio stations and became a modest radio hit.
  • Like some other In Utero songs, "Dumb" was extensively bootlegged long before the album was released; when Cobain played its opening chords during Nirvana's set at the Reading Festival in August 1992, a large part of the audience started to sing along, prompting Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic to joke, "Power of the bootleg, Kurt!"
  • The song is very similair in chord progression to Nirvana's earlier song "Polly" from their previous album Nevermind. Cobain was reluctant to the play the two songs back to back on their Unplugged performance in late 1993, shortly after the release after In Utero.[citation needed]

[edit] Accolades

  • Ranked #7 in Q's "10 Greatest Nirvana Songs Ever" (2004)

[edit] References

  • Azerrad, Michael. Come as You Are: The Story of Nirvana, Doubleday, New York: 1993, ISBN 0-86369-746-1
  • Dark Side of the Womb: Part 1 by the Stud Brothers, Melody Maker, August 1993


In other languages