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Nirvana - Sliver: The Best of the Box (CD)

Sliver: The Best of the Box
$43.99
5 out of 5.0 stars 3 Ratings (1 Review)

Album Details: Sliver: The Best of the Box

Release Date:11/07/2005
Label:Universal Japan
UPC:4988005524980

Other Available Formats: Sliver: The Best of the Box

User Reviews: Sliver: The Best of the Box

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    Silver:The Best of the Box

    By don  Feb 23, 2006

    Pros: The last dance for Punk Rock a must have!

    Cons: Very rough and ends in tragedy

    Can one review an alblum of personal pain and suffering of inner demons and drug addiction?Kurt Cobain soul shredding record is his carthsis and attempt to remain among the living on Earth.The first songs of the disc are off tune,strung out if you wi...ll;but later the music recieves a rush or infusion of purpose.Kurt straddles"Terra Firma"and the etheral planes of hell;his soul is ravaged with addiction.Just as Edgar Allen Poe needed his Opium withdrawl to bring out the macbre of human spirit:so does Kurt with his heroin fix.This is some of the most honest music ever,albeit rough and uneven.The roots of this music lies in Punk Rock in the late 70`s and early eighties.This is not a wealthy Billy Joel singing about the struggles of the iron worker in Allentown or the mega star Bruce Springsteen writing about the tough life of an auto worker from his mansion in Rumson New Jersey.This is a demonic possession of a soul and it`s flight through a black hole meat grinder into the hands of Hades.Some have said that Megadeath`s music is what the devil would listen too;well the torture and suffering from addiction must sound like this.Kurt leaves everything in his music his heart,his soul,his sanity,his life.Listening to this is a journey through the life of Cobain.Close your eyees and hold on tight keeping one foot an Earth and the other in hell. Donald J Bernhardt J.r 2/23/2006 Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Sliver: The Best of the Box

  • All Music Guide

    Appearing a year after the longawaited threedisc With the Lights Out, which was supposed to be a clearinghouse for all existing Nirvana demos and rarities, Sliver: The Best of the Box is a singledisc compilation of highlights from that set. Of course, a comp like this needs to have collector bait in order to guarantee interest from the diehard fans, so in addition to 19 previously released cuts, this has three previously unreleased tracks, most noteworthy being the 1985 demo of "Spank Thru," recorded when Kurt Cobain's band was called Fecal Matter. The other two songs are a 1990 studio demo of "Sappy," the song first released under the title "Verse Chorus Verse" on the No Alternative variousartists album, and a "Boom Box Version" of "Come as You Are," which is a taped rehearsal take of the song recorded before Nevermind. All three of these would have fit nicely on the box (and arguably should have been there, especially "Spank Thru," which is the best of the earliest Nirvanarelated rec...ordings), and for obsessives, they're enough to warrant a grudging, hesitant purchase. The real question is, whether Sliver is worthwhile for serious fans who nevertheless for whatever reason don't want three discs of demos and outtakes. The answer is: kinda. Most of the major songs from With the Lights Out are here, but not all of them. What's missing are outtakes like "Verse Chorus Verse" (a different song than "Sappy"), Bsides like "Curmudgeon," and nonLP cuts like "I Hate Myself and I Want to Die." While it's understandable that a weird novelty like "Beans" wouldn't make the cut, the absence of these three cuts mean this comp does fall short of its billing as being "The Best of the Box," and it also makes it of less interest to fans who just want all the truly noteworthy cuts from the box. That said, this does have such great items as the outtake "Old Age," the nonLP single "Oh the Guilt," and a demo of Leadbelly's "Ain't It a Shame," plus acoustic demos of Cobain's last two songs, "Do Re Mi" and "You Know You're Right," which is enough to satisfy the curiosity of most listeners. But it has to be said that due to its source material of home recordings and lofi tapes, Sliver, like With the Lights Out, is not easy listening and demands listeners' utmost attention and if listeners are willing to concentrate that hard on Nirvana rarities, they'd probably be better off getting three discs of the stuff instead of just one. - Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Nirvana

Prior to Nirvana, alternative music was consigned to specialty sections of record stores, and major labels considered it to be, at the very most, a tax writeoff. After the band's second album, 1991's Nevermind, nothing was ever quite the same, for better and for worse. Nirvana popularized punk, postpunk, and indie rock, unintentionally bringing it into the American main... Read more