Breed (song)

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"Breed"
Song

"Breed" is a song by American rock band Nirvana and written by its frontman Kurt Cobain. It is the fourth song on their 1991 studio album Nevermind.

Background

An early Nirvana song about being trapped in middle-class America. This was a song the band developed during live performances in 1989 when they toured Europe with their Sub Pop labelmates TAD.[1] In an interview with Sub Pop founder Bruce Pavitt, he explained that this song was "hypnotic," and a stylistic breakthrough for the band. "Audiences would become ecstatic," Pavitt said. "They were experiencing Nirvana. And when you're experiencing really good, primal rock n roll, you break into a trance." [2]

Writing

Kurt Cobain wrote this when he was first starting to more deeply explore his songwriting talent, and he had begun to write about the people around him. The original version was recorded at Smart Studios with Butch Vig, and it was the most complex song of the session: it began under the title "Immodium" - named after a friend's diarrhea medicine, yet there is very little in the version recorded at Smart to connect it with the medicine. Kurt instead used the title to suggest verbal diarrhea. The riff is borrowed from 'Potential Suicide', a song by Cobain's favorite band The Wipers.

Covers

The band Otep did a cover of this song on their album The Ascension. They also made a video for the cover with the lead singer dressed up as a housewife, referring to being trapped in your home and being bossed around by "the man." [1]

References