In Utero

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In Utero
In Utero cover
Studio album by Nirvana
Released September 21, 1993
Recorded February 12-26, 1993 at Pachyderm Studios in Cannon Falls, Minnesota
Genre Alternative rock, Grunge
Length 41:11 (U.S.), 68:58 (Europe)
Label DGC Records / Sub Pop
Producer(s) Steve Albini
Professional reviews
Nirvana chronology
Incesticide
(1992)
In Utero
(1993)
MTV Unplugged in New York
(1994)


In Utero is the third and final studio album from the American grunge band Nirvana, released in September 1993 by Geffen Records. 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. Frontman Kurt Cobain was aware that Nirvana risked alienating its core fanbase of punk and indie rockers with its recent superstardom, and the album's producer, Steve Albini, was key to the album's grungy production.

In Utero opened at #1 on the Billboard 200, and had hit singles with the songs "Heart-Shaped Box", "Rape Me", and "All Apologies", but also showcased the band's more corrosive and experimental side with tracks like "Scentless Apprentice", "tourette's", "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter" and "Milk It", keeping its hardcore credibility intact. While not as commercially successful as Nevermind, In Utero is often claimed by critics and fans to be the best Nirvana album.[citation needed] In 2003, the album was ranked number 439 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.

Contents

[edit] Recording

Booking in under the moniker, ' The Simon Ritchie Bluegrass Ensemble', Nirvana entered Pachyderm Studios in early 1993 to record their much-anticipated follow-up to Nevermind.

Long before the band had even approached Albini about the recording, rumors had been circulating that he was slated to produce the next Nirvana album; such was the media feeding the frenzy regarding the most successful band of the '90s and how they proposed to follow up an album which had shifted multi-millions of units. Albini eventually sent a disclaimer to the British music press refuting the allegations, only to get the call from Nirvana's management a few days later.

Though the band sensed Geffen were unhappy with their choice of producer, they had sufficient clout to record with whomever they wanted. The attraction of Albini, as a reaction to Nevermind, was that he would simply record them as they sounded. "I've always respected him as a producer, mainly, probably solely, because of The Pixies record and The Breeders record," Cobain explained. "That sound is as close to the sound that I hear in my head that I've ever found, so I just had to do it." Albini himself famously disavows the notion that he 'produces' records at all - he gets sounds rather than arrangements.

Albini did not meet the band until the first day of recording, though he had spoken to Cobain beforehand about the type of album he wanted to make. Albini claims that Cobain requested, "...a more atmospheric sound and slightly more ominous tone at times". Prior to embarking on the sessions, Albini was sent a tape of demos the band had cut in Brazil in January 1993.

Albini inserted a clause in the contract specifying that if anything were to be altered subsequently, he would prefer to do it himself; believing it impossible for someone to remix songs they themselves did not record.

The only others present for the duration of the session were Robert S Weston IV (studio maintenance technician), Carter Nicole Launt (chef) and her dog, Z. The band had insisted that no-one from Geffen or Gold Mountain visit at any point.

Although it was ostensibly a low-budget project, Albini revealed Nirvana were not above typical indulged rock star behavior. The band didn't actually show up with their equipment and instead had it shipped, then wasted the better part of three days waiting for it to arrive. Albini said the band wanted someone to Fed Ex a boombox to them instead of just going out and buying one; when Kurt began having trouble tuning his guitar, they wanted to fly in their guitar tech Earnie Bailey. "When you've got millions of dollars, maybe you go a little crazy and start doing stuff like that," Albini quipped.

Work began in earnest on February 14, 1993. The set up was the same for each song, except for the faster more abrasive ones (for example 'tourette's' and 'Very Ape') where the drumming was recorded in a kitchenette adjacent to the main recording space, which was found to have its own natural reverb.

According to Cobain, there were 30 microphones on the drums alone. Similarly, microphones were placed everywhere in the studio. "We had big old German microphones taped to the floor and the ceiling and the walls, all over the place," Cobain raved. "I've been trying to get producers to do this ever since we've been recording. I don't know anything about recording, but it just seems so obvious to me that is what you need to do. I tried to get Butch Vig to do it, I tried to get Jack Endino to do it, and everyone's response was, 'That isn't how you record'. Steve Albini proved to me on these songs, although I don't know exactly how he did it; I just knew that it had to be that way. He had to have used a bunch of microphones. It's as simple as that. Which is why live recordings of punk shows sound so good. You really get a feel of what was going on."

Albini commented on proceedings: "Nirvana had been practicing these songs pretty intently and they're just intuitive really good musicians who knew each other quite well, so the basic recording was almost effortless. All the songs were recorded with a live band take and then Kurt had a little notebook that had ideas that he wanted to try. On a couple of songs he used this broken guitar amplifier that had a really brutal sound and he was talking about how he had to keep it away from the technicians that they toured with because he was afraid that they were going fix it and then the sound go away."

Cobain is believed to have employed his Sunburst Univox Custom on most of the guitar parts. On one song he played a rare all-aluminium guitar called a Veleno, which Albini had brought along specifically. According to Albini the "strained, distorted guitar sounds" came from the use of a Fender Quad Reverb amp, with three of its four power tubes broken or missing.

Everything was recorded on a vintage 24-track analog board (Neve console). For the most part there was no studio trickery conjured up during recording; the only 'special effect' Albini could recall was on 'Milk it', "The vocal had to sound more crazy than it had up to that point, so I had to find a way to make the vocal leap forward at the end."

An average day would begin at 10 O'clock with breakfast. Recording would then begin at noon and would continue until the evening. Lunch would be delivered to the studio at mid-afternoon, with dinner around a big table in the evening. Launt recalls that Novoselic was a vegan, Grohl an all-American eater and Cobain had an erratic eating schedule, particularly liking frozen pizza. Then perhaps some TV and back into the studio until about 12, maybe to 1am. The group did not diverge from this daily routine except for a few visits to the local mall and a weekend trip to Minneapolis to see The Cows.

Albini and Weston estimate that it took 4 or maybe 5 days to record the basic tracks, a couple of days for overdubbing and a final few days mixing. They finished slightly ahead of the 2-week deadline. This is more or less consistent with other sources for this information: Gaar commented that the band booked the studio for 14 days, but according to Albini only used 12. In the Radio One documentary 'Entertain Us: The Story of Nirvana', we are told that: "The album took six days to record, and was recorded live (meaning bass, drums and guitar were recorded simultaneously). The band kept virtually everything they laid down. It took Steve Albini a week to mix the tracks."

Michael Azerrad gives few temporal details, aside from mentioning that the album was mixed in under a week, but notes that Cobain added another guitar track to about half the songs, then added guitar solos, and finally vocals.

Albini recalls: "[The band] knew the[ir] material, they'd figured out all the little details ... They were as prepared as any band I've ever worked with."

Novoselic concurs: "We had focussed intensely on rehearsing ... We had the songs down tight. So we showed up in Cannon Falls, set up our gear and started playing. We tracked almost all the songs in the first two days. Some of the songs, I think over half the songs, we did first take ... The record was recorded real[ly] fast."

Cobain later claimed in Ooz magazine that lyrics finished for only half the songs and the rest came from messing around in the studio. Yet in the biography, Come As You Are: The Story Of Nirvana, he claimed he again finished writing most of the lyrics within days of recording the vocals, culling most of them from notebooks full of poetry.

This assertion (that Cobain wrote a considerable portion of In Utero lyrics in the studio), is readily refuted. All album tracks except 'Serve The Servants', 'Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge On Seattle' and 'Very Ape' had been played live prior to recording the album, in most cases with identical lyrics, and minor additions or changes to 'Rape Me' and 'All Apologies'. Nirvana has also practised many of the songs whilst in the studio in Brazil in January 1993.

Cobain told Azerrad that 'Dumb' was written in summer 1990, just before Nirvana signed to Geffen and debuted on the 09/25/90 KAOS FM radio appearance. 'Pennyroyal Tea' was written in the apartment Cobain and Grohl shared on Pear Street, winter 1990: "Dave and I were screwing around on a four-track and I wrote that song in about thirty seconds. And I sat down for like half an hour and wrote the lyrics and then we recorded it."

The band played some practical jokes whilst mixing: they engaged in prank phone calls (to Evan Dando, Gene Simmons from Kiss and Eddie Vedder, amongst others), and indulged in some indoor pyrotechnics.

A little over a week into recording, Courtney Love flew in with baby Frances Bean. Love's presence wasn't exactly welcomed. Albini said she tried to butt in on the proceedings, but wouldn't be drawn on the details. "I don't feel like embarrassing Kurt by talking about what a psycho hose-beast his wife is," he said, "especially because he knows it already."

"It did affect things, definitely," Carter Nicole Launt elaborated. "I think it was stressful for Kurt. I think she put a lot of pressure on him and wasn't always as approving of the way the songs were. She was very critical of his work, and actually was kind of confrontational with people there. Yeah, it definitely was stressful. I just think it made people uncomfortable, to bring a lot of their personal things into the public arena. Because we were strangers, basically, to them. It made him uncomfortable."

On playback, however, everyone was very happy with the results. Albini remembers the scene after the tracks had been recorded: "When we played it back in the studio everyone was just giddy. I remember thinking that we had really pulled something off, like we had really made a record that was as they had imagined it in the beginning. It had a very big ominous sound, but it wasn't uncultured. It was entirely ugly but it had an ugliness built into it that I thought suited the songs really well. Everyone was ecstatic when we were listening back to it on playback."

Cobain was thrilled, and admitted, "It was the easiest recording we've ever done, hands down."

Gaar enquired of Albini whether there were any further outtakes, besides the B-sides already known, to which he responded: "I'm sure some of that stuff exists as master tapes, but I really don't know. It's normal for some stuff to be generated that doesn't get followed up on." Following the release of With The Lights Out in 2004, at least two more outtakes, titled 'Dave Solo' and 'Lullaby', are known to exist.

The total recording costs for In Utero were $24,000, and on top of that, Albini took a flat fee of $100,000 up front instead of points on record sales which Gold Mountain offered (and which would have netted him much more), since Albini considers this system to be immoral.

After Albini mixed the album, unremastered tapes were sent off to Geffen president (Ed Rosenblatt), A&R executive Gary Gersh, their lawyer and the inner circle of Nirvana's management company, Gold Mountain.

Cobain recounted Gersh's reaction in an interview for Melody Maker: "My A&R man called me up one night and said 'I don't like the record, it sounds like crap, there's way too much effect on the drums, you can't hear the vocals.' He didn't think the song-writing was up to par. And having your A&R man say that is kind of like having your father or stepfather telling you to take out the trash. I was kind of hurt by it on a personal level, because I wanted him to like it, and it was surprising to hear so many negative things about it. And he wasn't alone in his opinion. A few other people - our management, our lawyers - didn't like the record either."

Albini then received a call from a journalist, Greg Kot, in Chicago, who claimed that "several people in the Geffen hierarchy, including high-placed people", (i.e. not obstreperous publicists), had informed him that the album was awful and unreleasable and it was his [Albini's] fault. Albini suspected that Gersh had tipped off the journalist, perhaps to try to exert pressure on Cobain to remix the album.

Greg Kot then published his article in the Chicago Tribune entitled 'Record Label Finds Little Bliss in Nirvana's Latest', the theme of which was then echoed in other magazines.

Assumedly as a response to this media furore, and presumably under intense pressure from Geffen, Cobain called Albini suggesting that some of the songs perhaps ought to be remixed. Albini called Cobain back to say he did not think he could do any better than what he had already done. Novoselic then called Albini, mentioning that he also didn't think the recording sounded as good as it had done in Minnesota. Albini reiterated that he felt that they had got the best they could from the Pachyderm masters. Indeed, Albini was reluctant even to hand over the master tapes, citing that it had been agreed that the recording would be unalterable without his intervention (even though a contract was never signed).

Certainly, there is evidence that Cobain had himself changed his mind, and was not just following orders from above. "The first time I played it at home, I knew there was something wrong," he told the Melody Maker. "I wasn't interested in listening to it at all, and that usually doesn’t happen. I got no emotion from it, I was just numb. So for three weeks Chris and Dave and I listened to the record every night, trying to figure out what was wrong with it, and we talked about it and decided the vocals weren't loud enough, the bass was inaudible and you couldn't hear the lyrics. That was about it. We knew we couldn't possibly re-record because we knew we'd achieved the sound we wanted - the basic sound was typical Steve Albini, which was the sound we wanted really bad. So we decided to remix two of our favourite tracks, just as a litmus test, and we left it at that because to remix any more would've destroyed the ambience of the whole thing."

The band became determined to remix the singles 'All Apologies' and 'Heart-Shaped Box'. Albini agreed to let someone else tinker with them, given that he didn't think he could improve on them.

Novoselic elucidates why he felt this was necessary: "But you know why we had to remix 'Heart-Shaped Box'? You should hear the original version of that song, the guitar solo had this effect on it, it just sabotages the whole song. Steve and Kurt were colluding! I would go to Kurt, "Why are you this beautiful song by putting this hideous abortion in the centre of it?". He'd be like, "Well I think it sounds cool". I don't even remember what their arguments were, some statement against commercial radio or something, the popular mainstream aesthetic ... I dunno! I guess I finally got my way. Scott Litt was an opportunity to change things."

Nirvana did remix 'All Apologies' and 'Heart-Shaped Box' (recording another acoustic guitar part and backing vocals for Heart-Shaped Box) at Seattle's Bad Animals studio in early May. 'Pennyroyal Tea' was also remixed, but this remix was only released on Wal-Mart/K-Mart versions of the album and the Pennyroyal Tea single.

Newsweek then ran a story, following on from Greg Kot's, about how the record label were forcing Nirvana to remix the songs. Geffen released a statement, quoting Kurt: "There has been no pressure from our record label to change the songs we did with Albini. We have 100% control of our music. The band felt that the vocals were not loud enough on a few of the tracks. We want to change that." Nirvana retaliated against Newsweek saying that they had gone on "totally erroneous information". This letter was reprinted in Billboard as a full-page advertisement. A Geffen press-release also saw the President, Ed Rosenblatt, stress that they would release whatever the band brought them.

The veracity of the above paragraph is difficult to assess: it may well be the case that the band realised that their anti-commercial stance was untenable. Love, presumably, would have been influencing Cobain to remix in a more radio-friendly direction. The pressure from Geffen (via Gersh) must also have been a decisive factor.

In Utero was then mastered at Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering in Portland, Maine. According to Azerrad, apart from the minor modifications to 'Heart-Shaped Box' and 'All Apologies' (with Scott Litt), the rest of album was left as it was recorded, and all that was done at final remastering stage was to sharpen up the bass and boost the vocals by 3 decibels.

However, according to Albini, a lot of remastering was done, with the process taking days instead of his usual few hours. He opined: "The mastering session that was done took several days, at a studio where the mastering engineer is famous for being very manipulative of the material. A normal album mastering session is a couple of hours. So obviously they thought they should butcher it in some way to try to satisfy these people and to try to satisfy their own expectations. The dynamic range was narrowed, the stereo width was narrowed, there was a lot of mid-range boost EQ added, and the overall sound quality was softened. And the bass response was compromised to make it sound more consistent on radio and home speaker. But the way I would describe it I non-technical terms is that they fucked it up. The end result, the record in the stores doesn't sound all that much like the record that was [recorded by me]."

Weston was similarly negative: "[The band wanted to] change the overall sound of the album. The stereo doesn't sound as wide. The guitar has been flattened out a bit. On the original mixes the guitar would just leap out". He felt that they had done a lot in the mastering. Albini felt the same, and was disappointed with the end result.

Novoselic, however, thinks differently: "It's a beautiful record. I'm really proud of it".

[edit] 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 TAM (Transparent Anatomical Mannikin), an anatomical model on the front cover (with added angel wings), 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.

[edit] Controversy

Even before In Utero's release, the album was surrounded by turmoil. A number of articles emerged in early 1993 which suggested that DGC Records, the band's record label, disliked the album and was reluctant to release it. When three songs were later remixed ("All Apologies," "Pennyroyal Tea," and "Heart Shaped Box") 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 percent control of our music." [1]

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", though the lyrics of the song remained unchanged. The band defended its decision to release a censored version by pointing out that many fans outside major urban areas may not live near record shops, and buy most of their albums from chain stores like Wal-Mart.

[edit] 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 blues song "Where Did You Sleep Last Night" as B-sides, was planned for a May 1994 release, but was cancelled following Cobain's death in April 1994. A few copies were released prematurely, and today can fetch a hefty sum from collectors. Though never released as a single, the song "Dumb" was picked up by many alternative rock radio stations, and became a modest hit.

[edit] Miscellanea

  • Early titles for In Utero included "Verse Chorus Verse" and "I Hate Myself And I Want to Die" (the latter was abandoned when the band became concerned that fans might not understand it was a joke). 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.
  • In a 1993 interview with a French magazine, Kurt Cobain said that King Crimson's Red had influenced In Utero, particularly the distortion sounds and recording dynamics that were finally used.

[edit] 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
  • "Gallons of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through the Strip" (Cobain/Grohl/Novoselic) – 7:33 (This "devalued American dollar purchase incentive track" is available on European and Australian copies of In Utero, as well as various other non-U.S. pressings. It is a jam recorded in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in January 1993, and does not get a separate track position on the disc, starting about 20 minutes after the end of "All Apologies").

[edit] Early track listings

[edit] I Hate Myself and I Want to Die

  • This was the first draft of the album completed shortly after recording was completed. This was before "Pennyroyal Tea," "Heart-Shaped Box," and "All Apologies" were remixed. Also before several name changes, and removal of tracks. Unused drafts of In Utero's track listings can be found in the posthumously released Journals of Kurt Cobain.
  1. "Serve the Servants"
  2. "Scentless Apprentice")
  3. "Heart-Shaped Coffin" (later retitled "Heart-Shaped Box")
  4. "Pennyroyal Tea"
  5. "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle"
  6. "Eustacian Tube Turrets" (later retitled "tourette's)"
  7. "Dumb"
  8. "Rape Me"
  9. "Very Ape"
  10. "Milk It"
  11. "Four Month Media Blackout" (later retitled "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter")
  12. "Sappy" (was to be retitled "Verse Chorus Verse" but was omitted)
  13. "La La La (Alternateen Anthem)" (later retitled "All Apologies")

[edit] Verse Chorus Verse

  • This version was not much different then the first version however several name changes of songs were included. Also the title of the album.
  1. "Serve the Servants"
  2. "Chuck Chuck Fo Fuck" (Cobain/Grohl/Novoselic, later retitled "Scentless Apprentice")
  3. "Heart-Shaped Box"
  4. "Pennyroyal Tea"
  5. "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle"
  6. "The Eagle Has Landed" (later retitled "tourettes")
  7. "Dumb"
  8. "Very Ape"
  9. "Milk It
  10. "I Hate Myself and I Want To Die"
  11. "Rape Me"
  12. "Nine Month Media Blackout" (later retitled "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter")
  13. "Verse Chorus Verse" (also called Sappy omitted before release)
  14. "La La La (Alternateen Anthem)" (later retitled "All Apologies")

[edit] Track listing changes

  • The final version is much different than the first two versions aside from name changes. "Heart Shaped Box," and "All Apologies" were remixed for the album. "tourette's" was moved from 6 to 11, and its name was changed. "La La La (Alternateen Anthem)" was changed to "All Apologies." "Pennyroyal Tea" was remixed like "All Apologies," and "Heart Shaped Box," but the remixed version was not included the album, also the track number changed. "Nine Month Media Blackout" was changed to "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter." And finally "Verse Chorus Verse" was omitted and "Gallons of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through the Strip" was included.

[2]

[edit] Recording sessions for In Utero

[edit] Rio demos

  • In late January after playing the "Hollywood Rock Festival" the band had booked time in a studio to lay down some tracks that would become In Utero. They booked Seattle producer Craig Montgomery to produce the sessions. Many songs from the session were released on bootlegs, With the Lights Out, or b-sides. The songs recorded at this time are as follows:
  1. "Heart-Shaped Coffin" (later retitled and re-recorded as "Heart-Shaped Box")
  2. "Chuck Chuck Fo Fuck" (later retitled and re-recorded as "Scentless Apprentice")
  3. "Milk It" (later re-recorded for In Utero)
  4. "Moist Vagina" aka "MV" (re-recorded for "All Apologies" single)
  5. "I Hate Myself and I Want to Die"
  6. "Perky New Wave" (later retitled and re-recorded as "Very Ape"}
  7. "Gallons of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through the Strip" (included on some versions of In Utero.
  8. "The Other Improv"
  9. "Onward into Countless Battles" (Unleashed cover)
  10. "Seasons in the Sun" (Terry Jacks cover)

[edit] Pachyderm studios

The songs on In Utero all came from this session. It was produced by Steve Albini. The songs from this session were made with professional quality, and a much higher quality then those from Rio. The sessions also featured Cara Shaley on cello. Tracks 1-12 released on In Utero'.

  1. "Serve the Servants"
  2. "Chuck Chuck Fo Fuck" (later retitled "Scentless Apprentice")
  3. "Heart-Shaped Box"
  4. "Rape Me"
  5. "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle"
  6. "Dumb"
  7. "Perky New Wave" (later retitled "Very Ape")
  8. "Milk It"
  9. "Pennyroyal Tea"
  10. "Radio Friendly Unit Shifter"
  11. "tourette's"
  12. "La La La" (later retitled "All Apologies")
  13. "Marigold" (released on "Heart-Shaped Box" single and Skin and Bones by Foo Fighters)
  14. "Moist Vagina" (released on "All Apologies"/"Rape Me" single, credited as "MV")
  15. "Sappy" (retitled "Verse Chorus Verse" and released uncredited on No Alternative)
  16. "I Hate Myself and I Want to Die" (released on Beavis and Butthead compilation, as well as "Pennyroyal Tea" single)
  17. "Dave Solo"
  18. "Lullaby"

[edit] 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 Portugal Album Charts No. 4
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 Holland Albums Chart No. 10
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
1993 In Utero Official Hungarian Albums Chart No. 40

[edit] 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 Finland Singles Chart No. 14
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 (U.S.) No. 1
1994 All Apologies Modern Rock Tracks (U.S.) No. 1
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Mainstream Rock Tracks (U.S.) No. 4
1994 All Apologies Mainstream Rock Tracks (U.S.) No. 4
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Hawaiian Island Charts No. 3
1993 Rape Me Hawaiian Island Charts No. 3
1993 All Apologies Hawaiian Island Charts No. 1
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Australian Alternative Music Chart No. 1
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Triple J Hottest 100 No. 20
1994 All Apologies/Rape Me Hot 100 Brasil No. 94
1993 Heart-Shaped Box French Airplay Charts No. 52
1993 All Apologies French Airplay Charts No. 21
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Polish Airplay Charts No. 13
1993 All Apologies Polish Airplay Charts No. 2
1993 Heart-Shaped Box Slovakian Airplay Charts No. 4
1994 Rape Me Slovakian Airplay Charts No. 16
1994 All Apologies Latvian Airplay Charts No. 3
1994 Rape Me Latvian Airplay Charts No. 12
1994 Pennyroyal Tea Latvian Airplay Charts No. 20

[edit] Accolades

  • Ranked #3 in Spin's "Best Albums of 1993" (1993)
  • Ranked #1 in Rolling Stone's "Album of the Year - Critics Pick" (1993)
  • Ranked #5 in Entertainment Weekly's "Top Albums of the Year" (1993)
  • Ranked #13 in Mojo magazine's top 100 albums of 1993 (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 Hear 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 #439 in Rolling Stone's "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" (2003)
  • Ranked #13 in Pitchfork's "Top 100 Albums of the 1990s" (2003) [3]
  • Ranked #22 in Q's "Best 100 Albums Ever" (2006)

[edit] Sales

  • American sales: 5 million (5 x 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)
  • New Zealand: 1993, Platinum.

[edit] Credits

Re-released: Nevermind & In Utero collectors boxset 1999.
Re-released: Nevermind & In Utero collectors boxset 1999.
Re-released: Incesticide & In Utero collectors boxset 2004.
Re-released: Incesticide & In Utero collectors boxset 2004.

[edit] Pressings and re-releases

  • The first vinyl pressing of In Utero came on clear vinyl. There were 15,000 of these records pressed.
  • In Utero was reissued by British label Simply Vinyl, and as a gold CD by Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab.
  • In 1999 In Utero was re-released in a collectors boxset along with the 1991 album Nevermind.
  • In 2003 what is believed to be the original Albini mix of In Utero was issued as a vinyl-only release by Universal Records in the UK. This is believed to be the result of a mistake at the factory when the wrong master tapes were used to have the album recut. The discs were manufactured in Germany. They can be indentified by the numbers A33 9124 536 S1 320 pressed into the deadwax, or the catalog numbers 424 536-1 on the disc.
  • In 2004 the In Utero album was re-released in Europe in a collectors boxset with the 1992 album Incesticide.

[edit] Samples

[edit] Notes and references

    • Azerrad, Michael. Come as You Are: The Story of Nirvana, Doubleday, New York: 1993, ISBN 0-86369-746-1
    • Gaar, Gillian G. In Utero, Continuum International Publishing Group: 2006, ISBN-10: 0826417760

    [edit] External links