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With The Lights Out
With The Lights Out

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Artist: Nirvana
Label: Geffen Records
Category: Music

List Price: $59.98
Buy New: $23.75
You Save: $36.23 (60%)



New (33) Used (29) Collectible (1) from $14.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 263 reviews
Sales Rank: 464

Format: Box Set, Enhanced
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 4
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 10.2 x 5.7 x 1

MPN: 000372700
UPC: 602498646649
EAN: 0602498646649
ASIN: B00065XJ4S

Release Date: November 23, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  Disc 1
  • Heartbreaker - Nirvana, Bonham
  • Anorexorcist
  • White Lace and Strange - Nirvana, Bond
  • Help Me I'm Hungry
  • Mrs. Butterworth
  • If You Must
  • Pen Cap Chew
  • Downer
  • Floyd the Barber
  • Raunchola/Moby Dick
  • Beans
  • Don't Want It All
  • Clean Up Before She Comes
  • Polly
  • About a Girl
  • Blandest
  • Dive
  • They Hung Him on a Cross - Nirvana, Ledbetter, Huddie
  • Grey Goose - Nirvana, Ledbetter, Huddie
  • Ain't It a Shame - Nirvana, Ledbetter, Huddie
  • Token Eastern Song
  • Even in His Youth
  • Polly

  Disc 2
  • Opinion
  • Lithium
  • Been a Son
  • Sliver
  • Where Did You Sleep Last Night - Nirvana, Ledbetter, Huddie
  • Pay to Play
  • Here She Comes Now - Nirvana, Cale
  • Drain You
  • Aneurysm
  • Smells Like Teen Spirit
  • Breed
  • Verse Chorus Verse
  • Old Age
  • Endless, Nameless
  • Dumb
  • D-7 - Nirvana, Sage
  • Oh the Guilt
  • Curmudgeon
  • Return of the Rat - Nirvana, Sage
  • Smells Like Teen Spirit

  Disc 3
  • Rape Me
  • Rape Me
  • Scentless Apprentice
  • Heart Shaped Box
  • I Hate Myself and Want to Die
  • Milk It
  • M.V.
  • Gallons of Rubbing Alcohol Flow Through the Strip
  • The Other Improv
  • Serve the Servants
  • Very Ape
  • Pennyroyal Tea
  • Marigold - Nirvana, Grohl, Dave
  • Sappy (AKA Verse Chorus Verse)
  • Jesus Doesn't Want Me for a Sunbeam - Nirvana, Kelly
  • Do Re Mi
  • You Know You're Right
  • All Apologies

Similar Items:

  • In Utero
  • Incesticide
  • MTV Unplugged in New York
  • Bleach
  • Nirvana - Live! Tonight! Sold Out!

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Nirvana may have been the biggest thing in the music world in the early '90s, but the trio maintained an uncommon devotion to core fans who knew them when they were still sleeping in a van. Fending off the adoration of punk-rock dabblers in the media and their audience while simultaneously welcoming stalwart underground-music supporters, Kurt Cobain did things on his own terms--until it all came crashing down. A decade after Cobain's 1994 suicide and the band's demise, With the Lights Out remains true to the ethos that defined the band and the alt-rock revolution that rose and fell with them.

Eschewing the standard hits-sprinkled-with-rarities mix, this lovingly compiled three-CD, one-DVD collection is made up almost entirely of previously unreleased selections. The handful of previously heard tracks are obscurities along the lines of the group's cover of "Here She Comes Now," recorded for a 1990 indie-rock tribute to the Velvet Underground. But it's not the B-sides and compilation oddities that define this idiosyncratic set; rather, its spirit is captured in the bedroom demos, radio performances, and sloppy amateur video recordings that catch Cobain and cohorts developing from just another punk- and metal-inspired bunch of grunge rockers pounding away in the bass player's mom's living room into a band that defined an era. --Steven Stolder

Album Description
The box set spans Nirvana's entire career, from a recording of Led Zeppelin's "Heartbreaker" at the band's first show in 1987 to solo acoustic performances from singer-guitarist Kurt Cobain in 1994. With The Lights Out features a 60-page color booklet with rare photos and liner notes by Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and writer Neil Strauss. The three CDs, arranged largely chronologically contains home and rehearsal demos, including for "Smells Like Teen Spirit" (whose lyric "With the lights out" provides the set's title), "Rape Me," "Heart Shaped Box" and a trio penned by legendary bluesman Leadbelly. Heard in the 12 previously unreleased solo acoustic tracks are such gems as "All Apologies," "Lithium" and "Sliver." Six previously unreleased radio performances range from "Anorexorcist" in 1987 to "Dumb" in 1991 (two years before it was on 1993's In Utero). Along with the remaining debuts are a handful of earlier issued, though rare, b-sides and demos as well as the original Butch Vig mix of "Smells Like Teen Spirit." Highlighted on the With The Lights Out DVD is a previously unreleased video of nine songs performed in 1988 at bassist Krist Novoselic's mother's house in Aberdeen, Washington; the rare "In Bloom" Sub Pop music video, and 10 never-before-seen live performances. Noteworthy among them are debut renditions of "Pennyroyal Tea", "Smells Like Teen Spirit" both from early 1991. Also premiering is an unlikely performance of Jacques Brel and Rod McKuen's "Seasons In The Sun" shot at a Rio de Janeiro studio.


Customer Reviews:   Read 258 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars "Do Re Mi" alone is worth the entire set...   November 29, 2004
 284 out of 297 found this review helpful

For anyone who has not gotten the new 3CD/1DVD box set "With The Lights Out" from Nirvana... This set is absolutely amazing. Many of the songs and demos that are on the set I have had for years now on cassettes that have found their way to me but on this set they have been cleaned and mastered fantastically. Then there are the songs and demos that have never seen the light of day... They speak for themselves.

There is some great humor here starting right off Disc 1 with the band at their very first gig about to launch into Led Zeppelin's "Heartbreaker" and Kurt can be heard yelling in the background "I don't know this song!" Kurt's trippy demo of "Beans", with his harmonized vocal is hilarious. There are great "Bleach" era demos ("If You Must", "Pen Cap Chew"), to some killer sessions with Mark Lanegan doing Leadbelly covers. But here is where it hits the hardest...

The very last song (rumored) to have ever been recorded is a demo included here called "Do Re Mi" (sometimes referred in the past as "Dough, Ray and Me"). This demo (along with the acoustic "You Know Your Right") is the clear example of where Kurt was about to go musically... The melody is breathtaking, and the beauty of the composition is absolutely devastating knowing what was to come. The recording is Kurt himself with an acoustic guitar (probably at home, Courtney can be heard talking to him in the background as the song finishes) and the starkness of his voice with his lone acoustic sets up a landscape of undefinable melodic beauty. This song is worth the price of the entire set.

All you need to be reminded of the value of this set is to turn on the radio... Today's rock music genre is a a soul-less desolate landscape of 4th and 5th generation imitators of previous forms. This box set historically shows the most important band since the Beatles before and during the most important time in musical history since the fab four walked off the plane at JFK airport. Who else came along, sent a music genre before them to the graveyard, defined a generation, opened the gates for a whole new genre of musicains, and left a void in it's wake a generation wide? Exactly.

The bullet that killed Kurt Cobain didn't just kill a person, it blew a hole thru a rock n roll in a way that no one could have ever imagined, even more so than John Lennon. Imagine if Lennon or McCartney had died at the height of their skills? You don't have to, it happened in Seattle in 1994.

When you listen to "Do Re Mi" the "What could have been" is absolutely heartbreaking...



5 out of 5 stars NIRVANA'S BEST CD, BUT NOT FOR EVERYONE   November 27, 2004
 31 out of 33 found this review helpful

With The Lights Out is Nirvana's best release. Its combination of gritty home recordings, demos, b-sides and outtakes make any hard-core Nirvana fan love the band even more (if possible). But when I say "hard-core," I really do mean hard-core. With The Lights Out contains many unfinished songs, some poorly recorded, others too short or too long. Songs like Oh The Guilt and Curmudgeon were so overly grunge that they weren't released on Nirvana's maintstream albums. Very Ape, in the middle of a verse, was recorded over with Kurt Cobain randomly singing "A da da dum da da da da." This truly is Nirvana's greatest release, but for those who aren't regular listeners, don't waste your money.

For the fans, especially bootleggers, With The Lights Out is a dream. The set features the rarest of available bootlegs. Even the most avid bootleggers will only have 15 of these songs. Multiply that by 4 and you've got 60 extraordinarily rare songs, a bootlegger's heaven. I had only six of the tracks featured in the set, and i searched for hours. Most of the songs are better than those released mainstream. All the songs, rare or different versions, are amazing.

With The Lights Out serves two purposes. First, any songs that hadn't been released finally are. Second, it tells the short history of Nirvana. The first CD is filled with raw songs, horrible vocals and guitaring, and even worse drumming. The second CD is much better. Many of the songs are put together better and they sound great. The third CD is just as amazing, but it's also very emotional. As I listened to it, particularly You Know You're Right, Kurt Cobain's voice was incredible. The emotion in that CD, the knowledge that Kurt Cobain would kill himself, it makes listening madly depressing. When All Apologies (the last song) finished, I sat in silence for a really long time. It was the first time I gave serious thought to how horrible Kurt Cobain's life had been when he killed himself. In the songs near the end, he sounded weak, almost like he out-did himself and lost his voice. But he hadn't lost his voice. These songs were still unbelievably great, even in his depression. With The Lights Out is a great CD, especially if it can evoke such emotion.

Overall, the music is great, emotional, and explains a lot about Nirvana's history. Its poorly recorded songs, which so many people complain about, are only bad for about 10 seconds in each song. These rough parts are no worse than a CD with minor scratches that makes one song have a few pops for 2 seconds. I am not trying to defend Nirvana. Some of the rough songs are horrible, but it is so brief that there really isn't any reason to complain.

The DVD is horrible except for the last three videos which are awesome. It is horribly edited, terrible sound, etc. But the last three, Jesus Doesn't Want Me For A Sunbeam, Talk To Me, and Seasons in the Sun are great. In Jesus..., Dave Grohl's symbol collapses in the middle of a concert. It is also profesionally recorded, so the sound is DVD quality. Talk to Me has good sound, and it was performed well. Seasons in the Sun is hilarious. The band spoofs it so much, pretending to get emotional. Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic are really funny. The DVD is screwed up at one point. The order is different than printed in the 60 page booklet. The In Bloom video isn't in the right place on the DVD. When i watched the DVD for the first time, I almost fell asleep. But the last three videos pull it back up to 5 STARS.

GET THIS CD IF YOU'RE A FAN.



5 out of 5 stars A must have for any true Nirvana fan.   November 24, 2004
 28 out of 31 found this review helpful

It's about time. The fans finally get their long awaited boxed set. No thanks to Courtney Love.
Anyways, it's been a long time since I've been so pleased with a music purchase. Granted, I've heard most of these "previously unreleased" songs before on my various bootleg releases, but those were all pretty awful recordings. "With the Lights Out" cleans these tracks up and makes them more listenable which was worth the $50 for me. Still, don't buy this boxed set and expect to hear "Nevermind" quality recordings.I can imagine that there will be some displeased listeners. I can picture some little kid listening to "Beans" for the first time and saying "What the hell is this? THIS doesn't sound like 'Smells Like Teen Spirit!' GRrrrrr!!!! I want my money back!" Then that same kid will write a review for Amazon saying that he is the biggest Nirvana fan ever but the boxed set sucks because he was expecting 60 brand new studio quality songs, but instead got demos and solo recordings JUST LIKE THE BACK OF THE BOX SAYS!!!
Sorry for that little tangeant. As I was saying, "With the Lights Out" is a great purchase for Nirvana fans. If you want to hear some relatively high quality recordings of Nirvana material you may not have heard before, or want to hear some different versions of the songs you know, go ahead and pick it up. If you only like the Nirvana songs they play on the radio or if "Incesticide" was too weird for you, then don't bother.



5 out of 5 stars Hardcore Nirvana Fans Rejoice!   November 24, 2004
 25 out of 27 found this review helpful

Finally a Nirvana album with most of the unreleased material they have ever made! This is a truly incredible box-set showing how diverse of a band Nirvana really were. Most of the tracks here have been heard by us hardcore nirvana fans before on bootlegs but what makes this really special is the quality of the tracks.

On disc 1 the opener is a scorching rendition of one of Nirvana influences Led Zeppelin with the cool guitar riff of "Heartbreaker"! Also included on disc 1 are some cool ledbelly covers that most people have never heard. "Aint It A Shame" is incredible! Kurt gives the vocal performance of his life on this song! Also the never before heard song "Mrs Buttersworth" is also a real highlight on disc 1. Why it was never put on their first album "Bleach" we'll never know.

Disc 2 and 3 are also include some amazing material from the never before heard "Verse Chorus Verse" Nevermind studio outtake which completely blew me away! And "Old Age" which sounds so crisp and clear here compared to the short bootleg we fans had for so long. The "Smells Like Teen Spirit" demo is also here and it gives you a sense of how much the band evolved the tune to where it now resides on the masterpiece "Nevermind" album we all know and love. To top it off we get a DVD filled with early rare performances of Nirvana when they were just an indie band on the rise. The home camera quality vibe gives you this cool underground perspective of Nirvana when they were still the best indie band out there in the late 80's to early 90's before they blew up. To end the DVD there's a really poignant moment with the band covering the beautiful song "Seasons In the Sun" with Dave Grohl playing bass with Kurt on drums and Krist on guitar. The part when Kurt sings "Goodbye my friend it's hard to die" is really sad and touching.

All in all this box-set is truly a must-have for any hardcore nirvana fan looking to hear some incredible unheard material from the greatest band of the past 15 years.



5 out of 5 stars Here We Are Now, Entertain Us   November 25, 2004
 24 out of 24 found this review helpful

After many years of waiting, Nirvana fans have what Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, at one time refered too as "the Holy Grail Of Rock Music." That has turned out to be absolutly no understatement. This 4 disc compilation (3 CD's + 1 DVD) is a must for any rock fan. With rare demo's, solo Cobain recordings, a few live tracks, some late 80's radio perfomances, and a few B-side's thrown in also. Whether you've been a Nirvana fan for years, or are just beginning to appreciate the music of this wonderful band, you will get everything in this package. It's not all polished, it's not all perfect, it's raw. It's rock. It's Nirvana.
Most compelling on this album is disc 3. Which hosts at least 3 unreleased demo's that Cobain made just previous to a concert tour in early 1994, which ended with him in a coma in Rome. Following his release from the hospital in Rome, within weeks, the enevitable happened. Cobain swallowed a shot-gun shell in the home he shared with his wife and child. Resulting in his tragic death and a brutal punch in the gut to music as we new it.
Included with these 1994 demo's is the much talked about song: "Do Re Mi," which can clearly show some of Cobain's influence from the poppy Beatles, which he adored through his whole life. The track begins with what seems like someone banging against a wall, perhaps a suitcase, or maybe just a box, to simulate the drums that aren't present. The vocals are pristine. Serious. Haunting. The acoustic guitar that Cobain plays reflects his not so perfect, but yet delicate guitar skills. At the end of the track, if you listen carefully, you can hear the entushiastic voice of Cobain's wife, Courtney Cobain, telling him: "That Was GREAT!"
The album then goes into an acoustic version of "You Know Your Right" which was only played live once under the title, "On The Mountain," and recorded on a cold afternoon at Lange Studios in what is said to be 1 take. The lyrics are very different then the one's fans heard on the studio version that was released in the fall of 2002. The vocals are far from perfect. At times you can nearly feel the pain Cobain muct have felt as he strained his voice. His lyrics are extremly haunting, considering the suicide that followed, including the line: "I Could Never Die Again/I Won't Loose Another Friend/She Will See Another Me/When I'm Through........" The vocals then become hard to understand. Maybe on purpose. As a part of the mystery. To hide his secrets. His pain. His love.
The most hard to listen to track has to be the electric demo of "Rape Me." Which begins with the shrill cries of a 2 month old Frances Bean Cobain. On her fathers lap in the studio, he holds her up to the mic, he passes her off, maybe, to his wife perhaps, and the intro begins. The cries of the child overlapping the vocals of a man she'd never really know. During the second refrain they return. Louder and even harder to listen to. Father & child crying out together. In the angst of a child who wants her bottle, maybe just a diaper change. In the angst of a man who just wanted to disappear.
There's also some funny tracks though. Including "Mrs. Butterworth" on disc 1. Where Cobain goes on a tirade about Ply Wood, Burlap, & Seashells. Only to end his story of a beach trip with the ever sarcastic: "But I'm still sleeping on that P*ss stained mattress," before ripping back into the song.
The DVD features rare performences & private band footage. Including a 1988 rehersal taped @ the home of bassist Krist Noveselic's mother. The Sub Pop video of Neverminds "In Bloom." The debut performence of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" and a rare look inside the studio with the band as they record "Season's In The Sun" in Rio de Jeniro, Brazil. This performance includes a rare mix-up of the band lin-up. Cobain trading in his guitar for his first insturment, the drums. Drummer Dave Grohl (also of the Foo Fighters) moves outta the drummers seat to pick-up a bass. Krist Noveselic, takes off the weight of his bass for an all white Fender Strat. The music is at it's best. What we loved. What we lost. Cobain has freshly dyed brown hair. Wearing a ratty old sweater. His boyish giggle can be heard through his vocals towards the end of the song. A rare smile spreading across his face. It's an emotional final farewell from an epic part of musical history. As Cobain sings: "Goodbye Papa It's Hard To Die/When All The Birds Are Singing In The Sky." You just have to wonder.
Why couldn't something as simple as a bird save him?


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