Hole (band): Difference between revisions
Idiotchalk (talk | contribs) m added Doll Squad i/l |
Drown Soda (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 82: | Line 82: | ||
Following the success of ''Pretty on the Inside'', Hole began working toward a second album in 1992. In the midst of this, Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain were married, and gave birth to their daughter, Frances, in the summer of that year. Amidst the events in Love's personal life, she had purportedly wanted to transition from Hole's dirty punk rock style to a more melodic, pop-influenced rock format on their next album, which bassist Jill Emery did not want to partake in. "Courtney wanted to be pop, she wanted to change. I don't mind changing, I love it, but I didn't want to go from A to Z— it just felt fake", said Emery.<ref name="vh1">''Behind the Music'': Courtney Love. Episode 212. VH1 Networks. 22 June 2010.</ref> Emery left the band shortly after Love married Kurt Cobain, and drummer Caroline Rue followed. In an advertisement to find a new bass player, Love wrote: "[I want] someone who can play ok, and stand in front of 30,000 people, take off her shirt and have fuck you written on her tits. If you're not afraid of me and you're not afraid to fucking say it, send a letter. No more pussies, no more fake girls, I want a whore from hell."<ref name="dirty" /><ref>{{cite book|title=Girl Power: The Nineties Revolution in Music|author=Meltzer, Marisa|page=47|publisher=Faber & Faber|date=2 February 2010|isbn=978-0865479791}}</ref> |
Following the success of ''Pretty on the Inside'', Hole began working toward a second album in 1992. In the midst of this, Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain were married, and gave birth to their daughter, Frances, in the summer of that year. Amidst the events in Love's personal life, she had purportedly wanted to transition from Hole's dirty punk rock style to a more melodic, pop-influenced rock format on their next album, which bassist Jill Emery did not want to partake in. "Courtney wanted to be pop, she wanted to change. I don't mind changing, I love it, but I didn't want to go from A to Z— it just felt fake", said Emery.<ref name="vh1">''Behind the Music'': Courtney Love. Episode 212. VH1 Networks. 22 June 2010.</ref> Emery left the band shortly after Love married Kurt Cobain, and drummer Caroline Rue followed. In an advertisement to find a new bass player, Love wrote: "[I want] someone who can play ok, and stand in front of 30,000 people, take off her shirt and have fuck you written on her tits. If you're not afraid of me and you're not afraid to fucking say it, send a letter. No more pussies, no more fake girls, I want a whore from hell."<ref name="dirty" /><ref>{{cite book|title=Girl Power: The Nineties Revolution in Music|author=Meltzer, Marisa|page=47|publisher=Faber & Faber|date=2 February 2010|isbn=978-0865479791}}</ref> |
||
As a result of ''Pretty on the Inside'''s success and the furious press coverage around Courtney Love and husband Kurt Cobain, Hole was signed to [[Geffen Records]] with an eight-album contract in late 1992, around the time they recruited [[Janitor Joe (band)|Janitor Joe]] bassist, [[Kristen Pfaff]] and drummer [[Patty Schemel]]. After another well-praised tour of Europe and the United States in 1993 – the first leg of which was for promotion of their single, "[[Beautiful Son]]" – Hole began work on their major label debut at Triclops Studios in Atlanta, Georgia in the fall of 1993. In |
As a result of ''Pretty on the Inside'''s success and the furious press coverage around Courtney Love and husband Kurt Cobain, Hole was signed to [[Geffen Records]] with an eight-album contract in late 1992, around the time they recruited [[Janitor Joe (band)|Janitor Joe]] bassist, [[Kristen Pfaff]] and drummer [[Patty Schemel]]. After another well-praised tour of Europe and the United States in 1993 – the first leg of which was for promotion of their single, "[[Beautiful Son]]" – Hole began work on their major label debut at Triclops Studios in Atlanta, Georgia in the fall of 1993. |
||
In March 1994, Love and husband Kurt Cobain individually checked themselves into rehab clinics in Los Angeles for purported [[heroin]] addiction.<ref name="vh1"></ref> Cobain checked himself out of rehab shortly after arriving and returned to Seattle, just a week before the release of Hole's second album. The album, titled ''[[Live Through This]]'', was released on April 12, 1994, and in tragic timing— four days prior to finding that Love's husband, [[Death of Kurt Cobain|Cobain, had committed suicide]] in their Seattle home. In the days following his death, Love mourned with fans outside their house, and a recording of her reading his suicide note was played at a memorial service in Seattle, where she arrived shortly after the ceremony to distribute some of his clothing to fans.<ref>Azerrad, Michael. "[http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/nirvana/articles/story/5937982/inside_the_heart_and_mind_of_nirvana Inside the Heart and Mind of Nirvana]." ''[[Rolling Stone]]''. 16 April 1992.</ref> |
|||
[[File:Hole - Live Through This - back.jpg|thumb|right|275px|Back cover art of ''Live Through This'', exhibiting the mislabeled closing track "Rock Star". The photo on the left is of Courtney Love during her childhood in [[Oregon]].]] |
|||
Cobain's suicide also stirred controversy surrounding the final track on ''Live Through This''— "Rock Star"— which contained lyrics that read: "How'd you like to be Nirvana?/ So much fun to be Nirvana / A barrel of laughs to be Nirvana / Say you'd rather die". The song was inexplicably taken off of the album and replaced by an outtake titled "Olympia". It is widely believed that, because the song lyrics appeared inappropriate in the wake of Cobain's suicide, the song was replaced. However, by the time the decision to remove "Rock Star" was made, the artwork and inserts for the album had already been printed, so the title "Rock Star" remains the official title of the song. |
|||
Amidst the emotional impact and hysteria surrounding Cobain's death, ''Live Through This'' was a massive critical success, and spawned a slew of successful singles: "[[Doll Parts]]", "[[Violet (song)|Violet]]", "[[Miss World (song)|Miss World]]" and "[[Softer, Softest]]". The album went multi-platinum and was hailed "Album of the Year" by ''Spin'' magazine<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tower.com/live-through-this-hole-cd/wapi/105768439|work=Tower Records|title=Live Through This|accessdate=2011-04-23}}</ref> and received unanimously rave reviews from major music periodicals.<ref>[http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=1773 ''Live Through This'' Blender Review]</ref><ref>[http://www.tower.com/details/details.cfm?wapi=105768439 ''Live Through This'' Q Review]</ref> ''[[NME]]'' called the album "a personal but secretive thrash-pop opera of urban nihilism and passionate dumbthinks",<ref>{{cite journal|work=NME|date=|pages=9 April 1994|page=40}}</ref> and ''Rolling Stone'' said the album "may be the most potent blast of female insurgency ever committed to tape".<ref>{{cite journal|work=Rolling Stone|date=29 December 1994|page=191}}</ref> |
Amidst the emotional impact and hysteria surrounding Cobain's death, ''Live Through This'' was a massive critical success, and spawned a slew of successful singles: "[[Doll Parts]]", "[[Violet (song)|Violet]]", "[[Miss World (song)|Miss World]]" and "[[Softer, Softest]]". The album went multi-platinum and was hailed "Album of the Year" by ''Spin'' magazine<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tower.com/live-through-this-hole-cd/wapi/105768439|work=Tower Records|title=Live Through This|accessdate=2011-04-23}}</ref> and received unanimously rave reviews from major music periodicals.<ref>[http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=1773 ''Live Through This'' Blender Review]</ref><ref>[http://www.tower.com/details/details.cfm?wapi=105768439 ''Live Through This'' Q Review]</ref> ''[[NME]]'' called the album "a personal but secretive thrash-pop opera of urban nihilism and passionate dumbthinks",<ref>{{cite journal|work=NME|date=|pages=9 April 1994|page=40}}</ref> and ''Rolling Stone'' said the album "may be the most potent blast of female insurgency ever committed to tape".<ref>{{cite journal|work=Rolling Stone|date=29 December 1994|page=191}}</ref> |
||
Despite the critical praise for ''Live Through This'', furious rumors circulated insinuating that Cobain had actually written the majority of the album, though the band vehemently denies this.<ref name="vh1"></ref> They did, however, state that Love convinced Cobain to provide backing vocals on "Asking for It" and "Softer, Softest" while visiting the studio, and music producers present during the recording sessions noted that Cobain seemed "completely unfamiliar" with the songs.<ref name="edwards">{{cite book|author=Edwards, Gavin|title=Is Tiny Dancer Really Elton’s Little John?: Music’s Most Enduring Mysteries, Myths, and Rumors Revealed|publisher=Three Rivers Press|isbn=978-0307346032|date=2006}}</ref> According to ''Rolling Stone'' rock journalist Gavin Edwards, Love and Cobain had written songs together in the past, but opted to not release them because it was "a bit too redolent of [[John Lennon|John]] and [[Yoko Ono|Yoko]]".<ref name="edwards"></ref> Incidentally, Love has revealed that the alternate mix of "Asking for It" featuring Cobain, was planned to be released as a single |
Despite the critical praise for ''Live Through This'', furious rumors circulated insinuating that Cobain had actually written the majority of the album, though the band vehemently denies this.<ref name="vh1"></ref> They did, however, state that Love convinced Cobain to provide backing vocals on "Asking for It" and "Softer, Softest" while visiting the studio, and music producers present during the recording sessions noted that Cobain seemed "completely unfamiliar" with the songs.<ref name="edwards">{{cite book|author=Edwards, Gavin|title=Is Tiny Dancer Really Elton’s Little John?: Music’s Most Enduring Mysteries, Myths, and Rumors Revealed|publisher=Three Rivers Press|isbn=978-0307346032|date=2006}}</ref> According to ''Rolling Stone'' rock journalist Gavin Edwards, Love and Cobain had written songs together in the past, but opted to not release them because it was "a bit too redolent of [[John Lennon|John]] and [[Yoko Ono|Yoko]]".<ref name="edwards"></ref> Incidentally, Love has revealed that the alternate mix of "Asking for It" featuring Cobain, was planned to be released as a single before his suicide occurred. |
||
====''Live Through This'' tour (1994-1995)==== |
|||
Almost immediately prior to the album's release, the final song, "Rock Star", was removed and replaced by the outtake "Olympia". It was widely believed at the time that this was because its lyrics, which read: "How'd you like to be Nirvana?/ So much fun to be Nirvana / A barrel of laughs to be Nirvana / Say you'd rather die", appeared inappropriate in the wake of Cobain's suicide. By the time the decision to remove "Rock Star" was made, the album artwork and various other inserts had already been printed, and since "Olympia" was put in its place, "Olympia" is labelled as "Rock Star" and serves as its official title. |
|||
⚫ | With Love mourning Cobain's death, the band pushed forward to prepare for a tour to promote the massively successful album, but it came to a halt when bassist Kristen Pfaff died that June of an apparent [[heroin]] overdose.<ref name="vh1"></ref> Hole pulled out of the upcoming [[Lollapalooza]] festival, which was also going to include Cobain's band, [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]]. The band disappeared from the media spotlight in the summer of 1994, and on September 1, played their first headlining show since the album's release at the Phoenix Theatre in Toronto, dedicating it to Kristen. The band, now with [[Melissa Auf der Maur]] on bass, recruited by Love at [[Billy Corgan]]'s suggestion, toured extensively throughout late 1994 and 1995, and the tour became notorious for its press coverage surrounding Love's fragile emotional state. |
||
Appearances included the [[KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas]], ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'', the [[Big Day Out]] festival, ''[[MTV Unplugged]]'', the [[Reading Festival]], and Lollapalooza 1995. Perhaps most infamously, the band was asked to play at ''[[MTV Video Music Awards]]'', where they were nominated for the "Doll Parts" music video.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.mtv.com/ontv/vma/1995/|work=MTV.com|title=1995 MTV Video Music Awards|accessdate=2011-07-12}}</ref> They also performed "Violet" at the awards show. Before the song, a clearly emotional Love dedicated the performance to Cobain, Pfaff, [[Joe Cole]], and [[River Phoenix]], all of whom had recently died. Love ended the performance by chanting "God bless your soul", throwing her guitar into the air, pushing over a microphone stand into the audience, and knocking over stereo equipment before exiting the stage.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.azcentral.com/thingstodo/music/articles/2010/09/09/20100909mtv-vmas-memorable-moments.html?page=4|work=10 Most Memorable Moments of the MTV Music Video Awards|author=Masley, Ed|work=The Arizona Republic|accessdate=2011-07-11}}</ref> |
|||
⚫ | With Love mourning Cobain's death, the band pushed forward to prepare for a tour to promote the massively successful album, but it came to a halt when bassist Kristen Pfaff died that June of an apparent [[heroin]] overdose. Hole pulled out of the upcoming [[Lollapalooza]] festival, which was also going to include Cobain's band, [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]]. The band disappeared from the media spotlight in the summer of 1994, and on September 1, played their first headlining show since the album's release at the Phoenix Theatre in Toronto, dedicating it to Kristen. The band, now with [[Melissa Auf der Maur]] on bass, recruited by Love at [[Billy Corgan]]'s suggestion, toured extensively throughout late 1994 and 1995, and the tour became notorious for its press coverage surrounding Love's fragile emotional state. |
||
During this time period, Love's stage antics had grown wild, garnering much attention from the press. At Lollapalooza on July 4, 1995, in [[George, Washington]], Love punched [[Bikini Kill]] singer [[Kathleen Hanna]] in the face and pelted her with candy and a burning cigarette, after Hanna had allegedly made a drug joke about Love's two-year-old daughter.<ref>{{cite book|author=Brite, Poppy Z.|title=Courtney Love: The Real Story|publisher=Simon & Schuster|year=1997|pages=210–11|accessdate=29 December 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/Content?oid=36053&category=34029|work=Portland Mercury|date=9 January 2006|title=Raising America's Sweetheart: An Interview with Courtney Love's Mother|author=Bowie, Chas|accessdate=2011-04-21}}</ref> Love went to court over the case and was sentenced to anger management classes. More controversy was stirred at a [[Pittsburgh]] Lollapalooza concert in the fall of 1995, when Love stormed offstage with the band in tears after an audience member threw [[shotgun shell]]s at her,<ref>{{cite journal|work=Los Angeles Times|date=2 August 1995|accessdate=2011-04-04|title=Hole Performance Disrupted|author=Snow, Shauna|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1995-08-02/entertainment/ca-30529_1_north-american-sales/2}}</ref> referencing unsubstantiated [[conspiracy theories]] that she may have been involved in husband Kurt Cobain's death.<ref>{{cite journal|date=3 October 1995|work=Weekly World News|page=12}}</ref> A similar event had happened several months prior— at an April 1995 show at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, Love cursed at an audience member for throwing things at her, and eventually stormed off the stage with the band after playing only four songs. |
{{listen|filename=Doll Parts.ogg|title="Doll Parts"|description=from ''[[Live Through This]]'' – This song from Hole's popular second album illustrates Hole's grunge influence as well as [[Courtney Love]]'s distinctive vocals.|format=[[Ogg]]}}During this time period, Love's stage antics had grown wild, garnering much attention from the press. At Lollapalooza on July 4, 1995, in [[George, Washington]], Love punched [[Bikini Kill]] singer [[Kathleen Hanna]] in the face and pelted her with candy and a burning cigarette, after Hanna had allegedly made a drug joke about Love's two-year-old daughter.<ref>{{cite book|author=Brite, Poppy Z.|title=Courtney Love: The Real Story|publisher=Simon & Schuster|year=1997|pages=210–11|accessdate=29 December 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/Content?oid=36053&category=34029|work=Portland Mercury|date=9 January 2006|title=Raising America's Sweetheart: An Interview with Courtney Love's Mother|author=Bowie, Chas|accessdate=2011-04-21}}</ref> Love went to court over the case and was sentenced to anger management classes. More controversy was stirred at a [[Pittsburgh]] Lollapalooza concert in the fall of 1995, when Love stormed offstage with the band in tears after an audience member threw [[shotgun shell]]s at her,<ref>{{cite journal|work=Los Angeles Times|date=2 August 1995|accessdate=2011-04-04|title=Hole Performance Disrupted|author=Snow, Shauna|url=http://articles.latimes.com/1995-08-02/entertainment/ca-30529_1_north-american-sales/2}}</ref> referencing unsubstantiated [[conspiracy theories]] that she may have been involved in husband Kurt Cobain's death.<ref>{{cite journal|date=3 October 1995|work=Weekly World News|page=12}}</ref> A similar event had happened several months prior— at an April 1995 show at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, Love cursed at an audience member for throwing things at her, and eventually stormed off the stage with the band after playing only four songs. |
||
Toward the end of the tour to promote ''Live Through This'', the band released their first [[Extended play|EP]], titled ''[[Ask for It]]'', in September 1995; it featured 1991 [[John Peel|Peel session]] recordings of "Doll Parts" and "Violet", as well as covers of The [[Wipers]]' "Over the Edge" and "[[Pale Blue Eyes]]" by [[The Velvet Underground]]. After the band's tours in 1995, a final music video for the album was filmed for "Violet", and Hole entered the studio to begin work on a new album. There were multiple attempts to record Hole's third album, and one such attempt was in New Orleans in winter 1995. Interviews with Erlandson have confirmed the authenticity of this session, and the style is thought to have been a transition between the alternative style of "Live Through This" and the band's later pop-influenced sound, however no material from the sessions has surfaced. |
|||
===Hiatus and retrospective releases (1996–1997)=== |
===Hiatus and retrospective releases (1996–1997)=== |
Revision as of 05:36, 13 July 2011
Hole |
---|
Hole is an American alternative rock band that originally formed in Los Angeles in 1989. The band is fronted by vocalist/songwriter and rhythm guitarist Courtney Love, who co-founded Hole with former songwriter/lead guitarist Eric Erlandson. Hole achieved considerable commercial and critical success throughout the 1990s.
The band made a splash in the underground rock scene in 1991 with their debut album, Pretty on the Inside, which was musically and lyrically abrasive, noted for its predominant punk and noise rock influence.[1][2] Their second studio album, Live Through This (1994), which featured a more streamlined and grunge-oriented sound, received vast critical accolades upon release and has been regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time,[3][4] as well as the group's most notable work.
As the band progressed into the later 1990s, they incorporated elements of pop rock into their sound;[5] the band's third album, Celebrity Skin (1998), fused hard rock with various pop elements, contrasting to their previous styles. Celebrity Skin went on to be the band's most commercially successful album, garnering them immense critical attention as well as several Grammy nominations.
In 2009, seven years after disbanding in 2002, Love announced she was reforming Hole with former Larrikin Love guitarist Micko Larkin. Erlandson, however, stated that no reunion could take place contractually without mutual involvement between Love and Erlandson. On January 1, 2010,[6] a website promoting Hole's latest release, Nobody's Daughter, was launched, with links to various social media pages including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and MySpace. Despite the dispute between Erlandson and Love, the new Hole album was released on April 27, 2010.[7]
Overview
Hole released three official albums before their split, Pretty on the Inside (1991), Live Through This (1994) and Celebrity Skin (1998), each of which reflect a distinctive and progressive sound and approach. The band's first release, Pretty on the Inside was a no wave, noise rock and punk-influenced record, experimenting with alternate tunings. The band's second release, the critically acclaimed, Live Through This showcased a more power pop, and grunge-influenced approach, still infused with a punk rock sound. The band's third release, Celebrity Skin was prominently powerpop and pop-influenced. Hole also released a number of EPs during their career.
Hole also experienced a number of line-up changes for each album. Courtney Love and Eric Erlandson were the only constant members throughout the group's career. Pretty on the Inside was recorded with original drummer Caroline Rue and bassist Jill Emery, both of which left the band in 1992, to be replaced by Patty Schemel and Kristen Pfaff, respectively. This new line-up recorded Live Through This. Seattle musician Leslie Hardy was also a touring member for a short time, however did not contribute to any studio work, despite some reports. After Pfaff's death in 1994, Melissa Auf der Maur was recruited, at Billy Corgan's suggestion, as bassist. Prior to the recording of Celebrity Skin, Schemel left the group for reasons which remain disputed, and was replaced by Samantha Maloney, who left the group after the band's tour in 1999. Auf der Maur also left in late 1999, leaving Love and Erlandson the only two remaining members. After attempts at a fourth album, Love and Erlandson announced the split of Hole less than three years later.
In June 2009, Love – via a blog by music magazine NME – announced Hole was reforming with former Larrikin Love guitarist, Micko Larkin and Melissa Auf der Maur. Auf der Maur later said she had "no clue" of plans for a reunion, and co-founder Eric Erlandson stated via Spin magazine that no reunion could take place without his involvement, legally. Despite this, Hole was signed to Mercury Records (Island Def Jam) and released Nobody's Daughter on April 26 and 27, 2010 worldwide. The first single was "Skinny Little Bitch".
History
Background
Hole formed in Los Angeles in August 1989 by its two central members, Courtney Love and Eric Erlandson.
Love had grown up in Oregon and had a fairly troubled childhood, bouncing between foster homes and juvenile systems due to her anti-authoritarian and often reckless behavior. Her parents were both fledgling hippies; her mother came from a wealthy adoptive family, and her father had been a roadie for The Grateful Dead in San Francisco in the late 1960s. Love became legally emancipated when she was 16 and traveled to England, Ireland, and Japan on a trust fund before returning to Oregon and falling in with Portland's punk scene in the 1980s. Throughout her teenage and early adult years, Love worked as a stripper in order to support herself and briefly attended several colleges intermittently. Fascinated by music, she had several unsuccessful attempts at starting bands, mostly with friend Kat Bjelland. She started two bands in her early adulthood, both of which were fruitless; firstly, Sugar Babydoll in Portland, and later, The Pagan Babies in San Francisco; she also briefly sang in Faith No More. Love made a slight break into the entertainment industry when she landed roles in two Alex Cox films, Sid & Nancy (1986) and Straight to Hell (1987), but was dissatisfied with the experience and eventually moved to Los Angeles, intent on forming a band. Love noted that the "cathartic" nature of music is what drew her to it, and also cited traumatic life experiences as being a motivation: "Start with day one and keep going. [My life was traumatic] from the exact moment of my birth and onward. I always wanted to be in a band. The concept of life just hit me one day."[8]
Erlandson was a California native and had grown up in San Pedro. He began playing music in his teenage years, and, like Love, noted that traumatic experiences also drew him to music, one of which was finding a dead body: "I was walking along the tide pools [in San Pedro], and I found a dead body. I thought they were filming a movie, it was this body that was pure white, it had been thrashed around a few days in the water, hitting the rocks. I walked up close to it and 'oh my God!'... then I saw Kiss and Aerosmith and it was all over. I don't know. I had to be a rock star."[8] Erlandson attended Loyola Marymount University where he studied economics and marketing, and then traveled to Europe in 1988, trying to figure out "what to do with his life". He was working as a royalties manager at Capitol Records when he met Love, managing the royalties of Paul McCartney and Tina Turner.[9]
Formation and early years (1989–1990)
Hole formed after Eric Erlandson replied to an advertisement, placed by Courtney Love, in punk rock fanzine Flipside. The advertisement simply read: "I want to start a band. My influences are Big Black, Sonic Youth, and Fleetwood Mac."[10] Love had several responses to the ad, but chose Erlandson. In retrospect, she said: "He had a Thurston [Moore] quality about him. He was tall, skinny, blonde. He dressed pretty cool, and he knew who Sonic Youth were... he's an intensely weird, good guitarist, and he's the glue that kept me together."[11]
Love has joked that she took the name for the band from "my husband's favorite drinking spot",[12] but this claim is dubious since she met Kurt Cobain, her second husband, the year after Hole was formed. Love, during in an interview on Later... with Jools Holland, claimed the name was inspired by a quote from Euripides' Medea which read "there's a hole that pierces my soul." Additionally, Love has cited a conversation with her mother as being a primary influence for the band's name. In an interview with Flipside magazine in fall 1990, Love said of the band's name: "the name came from my mom. She's like, a therapist, and I said "I had a really fucked childhood", and she said "Well Courtney, you can't walk around with a big hole inside of yourself about it.""[8]
The band's first rehearsal took place in Fortress Studios in Hollywood, where Love, Erlandson and original bassist Lisa Roberts "played something noisy" while "they [Courtney and Lisa] started screaming their poetry at the top of their lungs for two or three hours."[13] Initially, the band had no percussion, until Love met drummer Caroline Rue at a Gwar show. They also recruited a third guitarist, Mike Geisbrecht, and began to perform live. Hole's first show took place at Raji's — a small club in Hollywood — in September 1989. The band played three more shows throughout 1989: at The Shamrock in Los Angeles on October 17, 1989, Nightmoves in Huntington Beach on November 11, 1989 and at Hollywood Live Club on November 17, 1989.
The band's early shows were notable for featuring lots of experimental playing, distortion, and guitar feedback— a style that would be heavily present in their eventual studio material— and Courtney Love interacting a lot with the audience. At the beginning of their third show at Nightmoves, the theme from Phantasm (1979) was played, and Love introduced the band, saying: "We're Hole. Some of you will like us, and some of you will hate us."[14] Several notable songs were performed at these shows, including the band's eventual debut single, "Retard Girl", as well as "Phonebill Song", "Berry", and "Turpentine", all of which would eventually make it onto studio recordings.
From the beginning, Hole was primarily influenced by punk, noise rock, and no wave music, which is evident from their earliest recordings. Both Love and Erlandson were big fans of the notorious LA punk band The Germs, and Love once had a "Germs burn" given to her by Germs guitarist Pat Smear (who would later play in Nirvana).[15] In a 1996 interview for a Germs tribute documentary, Erlandson said: "I think every band is based on one song, and our band was based on "Forming"... Courtney brought it into rehearsal, and she knew, like, three chords and it was the only punk rock song we could play."[15] Love also noted early on that the band was "heavily into lyrics", and that they were "the most important thing" to her.[8] The band's music also had a very pro-feminist stance, particularly from Love. In an interview on the topic, she referred to hair bands such as Poison as "drag queens" and said, "they dress up like women therefore they get to confront emotional issues. The whole feminization of men in heavy metal speaks for itself. Well, scratch that, because I want to transcend this whole 'chick thing'. Fuck this chick thing. The whole thing with music is that it's cathartic, and if it wasn't cathartic then I wouldn't want to play it."[8]
Before Hole began to develop a fanbase, guitarist Mike Geisbrecht left and was replaced briefly by Errol Stewart, who left a few weeks later. Roberts also left the group at some point in early 1990. After Geisbrecht and Roberts' departure, Hole recruited Jill Emery on bass and began recording studio material, as well as playing (and often headlining) local rock shows in Los Angeles. After several months of live performances, the band released their debut single: "Retard Girl" in 1990, and followed it with "Dicknail" in 1991, released on Sympathy for the Record Industry and Sub Pop, respectively. The band became known at the time for Love's wild onstage behavior, and her ability to really "rile up" the crowd.[11]
As the group began to make decent money as an underground band, A&R reps and music labels started to appear at their shows. After one show, the band was approached by a major music label representative, who told Love they needed a more "full sound", to which she replied "fuck off".[11] The group played shows at several legendary rock bars during this time, particularly at the Whisky a Go Go in West Hollywood and CBGB in New York.
Pretty on the Inside and tour (1991-1992)
Hole released their first full-length album Pretty on the Inside (1991) on Caroline Records. In searching for a label to release the album, the group was approached by Sub Pop and Sympathy for the Record Industry, who had previously released singles for them, but Love declined their offers. Instead, the band signed onto Caroline Records, and Love sought Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth to produce the album for her. Sending a letter, a Hello Kitty barrette, and copies of the band's early singles to Gordon, Love mentioned that the band greatly admired Gordon's work and appreciated "... the production of the SST record"[16] (either referring to Sonic Youth's album Sister or EVOL). Gordon agreed, and Gumball's Don Fleming assisted in production.
Pretty on the Inside received vast praise from underground critics, especially in the United Kingdom, where the band did an extensive tour with Daisy Chainsaw, Mudhoney, and Therapy?. Love was touted as a "darling" of the UK alternative rock scene. Hole also toured North America and the rest of Europe in support of the record. Upon the album's release, it was branded by underground music critics as "loud, ugly and deliberately shocking."[17] A 1991 review in Spin said that the album "revolves around a fascination of the repulsive aspects of L.A.— superficiality, sexism, violence, and drugs. Love is the embodiment of what drives the band: the dichotomy of pretty/ugly... The pretty/ugly dynamic also comes across in Hole's music... a song like "Teenage Whore" at first comes across like a ranting noisy rage, but underneath is a surprisingly lush melody."[11] Spin also ranked the album in their "20 Best Albums of the Year" list,[18] and it was voted album of the year by New York's Village Voice.[19] The album peaked at number 59 on the UK albums chart, and sold very well for an independent release.
The album spawned one single, "Teenage Whore", which entered the UK Indie Chart at number one, as well as the band's debut music video for the song "Garbadge Man". Musically and lyrically, the album was very abrasive, characterized by overt noise and feedback, chaotic guitar riffs, graphic lyrics, and a variation of Love's vocals ranging from whispers to guttural screaming.[20] The album also featured guitar riffs admittedly lifted verbatim from Neil Young and Bauhaus songs.[21] In later years, Courtney Love referred to the album as "unlistenable".[22]
A fair amount of drama occurred during the band's tour to promote Pretty on the Inside; on December 19, 1991, roadie Joe Cole attended a Hole show at the Whiskey A Go Go in Los Angeles with roommate/friend Henry Rollins of Black Flag, and was murdered in a robbery after arriving home from the concert.[23] Love was an acquaintance of Cole's,[23] and the band's second album would be dedicated to him. At the end of the tour, while playing in London with Mudhoney at their final show, Love had her clothes torn off of her while stage diving; an incident that would later become the inspiration for the song "Asking for It"— a similar retread of themes heavily present in the band's 1991 single, "Dicknail".
According to Love, after jumping off the stage, her dress and underwear were torn off of her by audience members, people "shoved their fingers inside of her", and she was "completely naked" when she got back onstage:[24] "I felt like Karen Finley. But the worst thing of all was that I saw a photograph of it later— someone took a picture of me right when this was happening, and I had this big smile on my face like I was pretending it wasn't happening. I can't compare it to rape because it's not the same. But in a way it was. I was raped by an audience— figuratively, literally, and yet, was I asking for it?"[24][25] Nonetheless, the band ended their tour, and, in 1992, Love met Kurt Cobain of Nirvana (the two had initially crossed paths in 1989 in Portland, Oregon), and became pregnant.
Mainstream success and Live Through This (1993-1995)
Following the success of Pretty on the Inside, Hole began working toward a second album in 1992. In the midst of this, Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain were married, and gave birth to their daughter, Frances, in the summer of that year. Amidst the events in Love's personal life, she had purportedly wanted to transition from Hole's dirty punk rock style to a more melodic, pop-influenced rock format on their next album, which bassist Jill Emery did not want to partake in. "Courtney wanted to be pop, she wanted to change. I don't mind changing, I love it, but I didn't want to go from A to Z— it just felt fake", said Emery.[26] Emery left the band shortly after Love married Kurt Cobain, and drummer Caroline Rue followed. In an advertisement to find a new bass player, Love wrote: "[I want] someone who can play ok, and stand in front of 30,000 people, take off her shirt and have fuck you written on her tits. If you're not afraid of me and you're not afraid to fucking say it, send a letter. No more pussies, no more fake girls, I want a whore from hell."[16][27]
As a result of Pretty on the Inside's success and the furious press coverage around Courtney Love and husband Kurt Cobain, Hole was signed to Geffen Records with an eight-album contract in late 1992, around the time they recruited Janitor Joe bassist, Kristen Pfaff and drummer Patty Schemel. After another well-praised tour of Europe and the United States in 1993 – the first leg of which was for promotion of their single, "Beautiful Son" – Hole began work on their major label debut at Triclops Studios in Atlanta, Georgia in the fall of 1993.
In March 1994, Love and husband Kurt Cobain individually checked themselves into rehab clinics in Los Angeles for purported heroin addiction.[26] Cobain checked himself out of rehab shortly after arriving and returned to Seattle, just a week before the release of Hole's second album. The album, titled Live Through This, was released on April 12, 1994, and in tragic timing— four days prior to finding that Love's husband, Cobain, had committed suicide in their Seattle home. In the days following his death, Love mourned with fans outside their house, and a recording of her reading his suicide note was played at a memorial service in Seattle, where she arrived shortly after the ceremony to distribute some of his clothing to fans.[28]
Cobain's suicide also stirred controversy surrounding the final track on Live Through This— "Rock Star"— which contained lyrics that read: "How'd you like to be Nirvana?/ So much fun to be Nirvana / A barrel of laughs to be Nirvana / Say you'd rather die". The song was inexplicably taken off of the album and replaced by an outtake titled "Olympia". It is widely believed that, because the song lyrics appeared inappropriate in the wake of Cobain's suicide, the song was replaced. However, by the time the decision to remove "Rock Star" was made, the artwork and inserts for the album had already been printed, so the title "Rock Star" remains the official title of the song.
Amidst the emotional impact and hysteria surrounding Cobain's death, Live Through This was a massive critical success, and spawned a slew of successful singles: "Doll Parts", "Violet", "Miss World" and "Softer, Softest". The album went multi-platinum and was hailed "Album of the Year" by Spin magazine[29] and received unanimously rave reviews from major music periodicals.[30][31] NME called the album "a personal but secretive thrash-pop opera of urban nihilism and passionate dumbthinks",[32] and Rolling Stone said the album "may be the most potent blast of female insurgency ever committed to tape".[33]
Despite the critical praise for Live Through This, furious rumors circulated insinuating that Cobain had actually written the majority of the album, though the band vehemently denies this.[26] They did, however, state that Love convinced Cobain to provide backing vocals on "Asking for It" and "Softer, Softest" while visiting the studio, and music producers present during the recording sessions noted that Cobain seemed "completely unfamiliar" with the songs.[34] According to Rolling Stone rock journalist Gavin Edwards, Love and Cobain had written songs together in the past, but opted to not release them because it was "a bit too redolent of John and Yoko".[34] Incidentally, Love has revealed that the alternate mix of "Asking for It" featuring Cobain, was planned to be released as a single before his suicide occurred.
Live Through This tour (1994-1995)
With Love mourning Cobain's death, the band pushed forward to prepare for a tour to promote the massively successful album, but it came to a halt when bassist Kristen Pfaff died that June of an apparent heroin overdose.[26] Hole pulled out of the upcoming Lollapalooza festival, which was also going to include Cobain's band, Nirvana. The band disappeared from the media spotlight in the summer of 1994, and on September 1, played their first headlining show since the album's release at the Phoenix Theatre in Toronto, dedicating it to Kristen. The band, now with Melissa Auf der Maur on bass, recruited by Love at Billy Corgan's suggestion, toured extensively throughout late 1994 and 1995, and the tour became notorious for its press coverage surrounding Love's fragile emotional state.
Appearances included the KROQ Almost Acoustic Christmas, Saturday Night Live, the Big Day Out festival, MTV Unplugged, the Reading Festival, and Lollapalooza 1995. Perhaps most infamously, the band was asked to play at MTV Video Music Awards, where they were nominated for the "Doll Parts" music video.[35] They also performed "Violet" at the awards show. Before the song, a clearly emotional Love dedicated the performance to Cobain, Pfaff, Joe Cole, and River Phoenix, all of whom had recently died. Love ended the performance by chanting "God bless your soul", throwing her guitar into the air, pushing over a microphone stand into the audience, and knocking over stereo equipment before exiting the stage.[36]
During this time period, Love's stage antics had grown wild, garnering much attention from the press. At Lollapalooza on July 4, 1995, in George, Washington, Love punched Bikini Kill singer Kathleen Hanna in the face and pelted her with candy and a burning cigarette, after Hanna had allegedly made a drug joke about Love's two-year-old daughter.[37][38] Love went to court over the case and was sentenced to anger management classes. More controversy was stirred at a Pittsburgh Lollapalooza concert in the fall of 1995, when Love stormed offstage with the band in tears after an audience member threw shotgun shells at her,[39] referencing unsubstantiated conspiracy theories that she may have been involved in husband Kurt Cobain's death.[40] A similar event had happened several months prior— at an April 1995 show at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, Love cursed at an audience member for throwing things at her, and eventually stormed off the stage with the band after playing only four songs.
Toward the end of the tour to promote Live Through This, the band released their first EP, titled Ask for It, in September 1995; it featured 1991 Peel session recordings of "Doll Parts" and "Violet", as well as covers of The Wipers' "Over the Edge" and "Pale Blue Eyes" by The Velvet Underground. After the band's tours in 1995, a final music video for the album was filmed for "Violet", and Hole entered the studio to begin work on a new album. There were multiple attempts to record Hole's third album, and one such attempt was in New Orleans in winter 1995. Interviews with Erlandson have confirmed the authenticity of this session, and the style is thought to have been a transition between the alternative style of "Live Through This" and the band's later pop-influenced sound, however no material from the sessions has surfaced.
Hiatus and retrospective releases (1996–1997)
Hole was thought to be on hiatus in 1996, due to Love's rising movie career which skyrocketed when she landed a lead role in The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996). Despite the reported hiatus and Love's acting career, the band recorded and released a cover of Fleetwood Mac's "Gold Dust Woman" for The Crow: City of Angels (1996), the band's first studio song to feature Melissa Auf der Maur on bass.
During the supposed hiatus, Hole released two retrospective albums: firstly, their second EP, titled The First Session (1997), which was composed of a complete version of the band's first recording session at Rudy's Rising Star in Los Angeles in March 1990, some of which had been bootlegged widely years prior. It featured the group's first ever recorded track, "Turpentine", which had previously been unreleased to the public, as well as their first single, "Retard Girl", and its two b-sides.
The same year, the band released their first compilation album, My Body, The Hand Grenade (1997), which was produced chiefly by Eric Erlandson; Love designed the packaging and artwork on the album.[41] The album was composed as a retrospective on the band's career, featuring early singles, mid-period b-sides and recent live tracks, illustrating their path from a "tiny L.A. basement studio into alternative rock superstardom".[41] One outtake from the Live Through This recording sessions which was included on this release was the controversial song, "Old Age". The history and writer of this song was the subject of controversy among Courtney Love detractors who believed Kurt Cobain had written Hole's second album, an allegation for which no evidence has ever surfaced. It was eventually learned "Old Age" had been written by Kurt Cobain for the Nevermind sessions in 1991, then given to Hole, whereupon its lyrics were rewritten by Love, who "tried to make it goth".[42] Another song featured on the album was "20 Years in the Dakota", which discussed Yoko Ono's struggles as John Lennon's wife, a position which Love herself has been frequently compared to, due to the perception that Ono drew Lennon away from The Beatles and that Love drew Cobain away from Nirvana. The album also featured a demo version of "Miss World", as well as recordings from a 1995 MTV Unplugged performance.
Although Hole as a band did not perform during 1996 and 1997, members of Hole performed separately, including Love's guest appearance at a Smashing Pumpkins' show in February 1996, at which she performed "Silverfuck" and "Farewell and Goodnight", with Smashing Pumpkins' frontman, and former boyfriend, Billy Corgan. Auf der Maur and Schemel also performed a show in Toronto in July 1996. Erlandson also collaborated with Thurston Moore of Sonic Youth and director Dave Markey in the short-lived project, Rodney & the Tube Tops, with whom he released one single.
Celebrity Skin and disbandment (1997–2002)
Hole's third studio album, Celebrity Skin (1998) adopted a complete new sound for the band, which had become known for its grunge and punk rock roots. Featuring a more pop-oriented sound, Celebrity Skin was a critical success with strong sales and successful singles, including the title track, "Celebrity Skin", "Malibu", and "Awful". Eric Erlandson told Rolling Stone, "I still think a lot of Celebrity Skin is my Johnny Thunders influence coming up – which Courtney just fucking hates."[43]
The album was recorded in Conway Recording Studios in Los Angeles throughout 1997, after many "fruitless attempts" in Miami, London and New York. Although Patty Schemel is listed as drummer in the liner notes of the record, she did not actually appear on the record as she had left the band prior to the main recording sessions and was in turn replaced by a session drummer (the band would eventually recruit drummer Samantha Maloney for the tour). The studio work on Celebrity Skin took almost a year and a half— according to Erlandson, Courtney was more focused on song-writing and singing and "did not care about her instrument". Eric also noted that Billy Corgan, who co-wrote a large portion of the album, played bass on "Hit So Hard".[13]
In reaction to public speculation that Kurt Cobain had written the band's second album, Celebrity Skin's liner notes listed explicitly every musician's contribution to the record, specifying authorship for every song. Love wrote a comprehensive amount of the lyrics, while Erlandson, assistant-producing alongside Michael Beinhorn, had a hand in every song. Co-songwriters on the album also included Melissa Auf der Maur, Patty Schemel, Jordon Zadorozny of Blinker the Star, and Charlotte Caffey of The Go-Go's, each contributing pieces to a number of songs, however the most notable contributor was Billy Corgan, who co-wrote five of the twelve songs on the album.
Nonetheless, as with the rumors surrounding the writing credits on Live Through This, unwarranted controversy stirred over the writing credits. Upon its release, Corgan made references that he should have "been given credit" for writing the entire album.[44] One journalist took note of the controversy when reviewing the album, stating: "Back in 1994, the acclaim for Live Through This was undercut by whispers that Love's late husband wrote the album. Combine those conspiracy theories with the unfounded but persistent rumor that Cobain was actually murdered, and it is no surprise that, in the song "Celebrity Skin", Love calls herself a walking study in demonology."[44]
The album received unanimously positive reviews, with praise from music periodicals such as Rolling Stone, NME, and Blender,[45][46][47] as well as a four-star review from the Los Angeles Times,[48] calling it a "wild emotional ride" sure to be "one of the most dissected and debated collections of the year."[48] The album charted incredibly well, peaking at number 9 on the Billboard 200, and garnering the band its first and only number 1 single, "Celebrity Skin", which topped the Modern Rock Tracks. "Malibu" was the album's second successful single, making it to number 3 on the Modern Rock Tracks. Commercially speaking, Celebrity Skin went on to be the band's greatest success.
In the winter of 1998, Hole went on tour to promote Celebrity Skin, and made further appearances at festivals throughout 1999 after an extensive American and European tour. Hole and Marilyn Manson toured together, with Manson promoting his then-recent album, Mechanical Animals. Hole dropped out of the tour nine dates into it, due to both the majority of the fans being Manson's, who were not very interested in the Hole performances, and the financial arrangement for the bands (50/50 cost and revenue splitting) as a reason for discontinuing the tour (Hole had relatively little production costs and ending up paying a large amount for Manson's high cost production)".[49] Nonetheless, Melissa Auf der Maur considered the tour "the best [we] ever were as a live band", and documented the Celebrity Skin concerts by taking photographs, several of which were featured in National Geographic music editorials.[50] As noted by Auf der Maur, it was a "daily event" for Love to invite audience members onstage to sing with her for the last song at nearly every concert performed during the tour.[50]
On June 18, 1999 during Hole's set at the Hultsfred Festival in Sweden, a 19-year old girl died after being crushed by the mosh pit behind the mixing board. The band did not comment on her death.[51] Hole played its final show at Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver on July 14, 1999. A few months later, Auf der Maur quit Hole and went on to become a touring bassist for The Smashing Pumpkins. Despite being the only two remaining members of the group, Love and Erlandson still continued with Hole. The band's final release was a single for the movie Any Given Sunday (1999). "Be a Man", released in March 2000, was an outtake from the Celebrity Skin sessions, and was another song co-written and included bass-work by Corgan.
Love and Erlandson officially disbanded Hole via a message posted on the band's website in 2002. Their more than decade-long run as a band produced three studio albums that generated sales of 8 million in total.[citation needed] After the split, the four musicians each took on projects of their own. Erlandson continued to work as a producer and session musician, eventually forming the experimental group RRIICCEE with controversial artist, Vincent Gallo and Love began a solo career, releasing her debut, America's Sweetheart in 2004. Melissa Auf der Maur also embarked on a solo career, and released her self-titled debut album in 2004, which also included Erlandson on lead guitar on the track, "Would If I Could." Her second album, Out of Our Minds, was released on March 30, 2010.
Hole's original body of work includes thirteen singles, six Grammy nominations, three LPs, three EPs, one compilation album and 10 music videos.
Reformation and Nobody's Daughter (2009–present)
On June 17, 2009, NME posted two in-depth blogs, and links to two interviews, of Courtney Love announcing the reunion of Hole. The article was primarily focused on Love's upcoming solo release, Nobody's Daughter, yet it claimed with the "rock Courtney back in action, this music could only come out under one name, Hole". According to the blog post, Melissa Auf der Maur would once again be bassist, with Micko Larkin replacing Eric Erlandson, and a drummer was not mentioned. There was also mention of "tours next year".[52] However, days later, Melissa Auf der Maur, interviewed in Toronto where she was appearing at the North by Northeast music festival, said she had "no clue" about the band's reported reunion and denied the NME claim she had, or was asked to, contribute vocals to the album or had been asked to tour with the purportedly reunited band saying, "I actually don't know [about the reunion]...I arrived at [the music festival in Toronto] and I heard that Hole were getting back together from people sending me links," she said. Auf der Maur did, however, state that she had been asked by Love to do harmonies on the album, but nothing else.[53]
Eric Erlandson stated in a Spin magazine that contractually no reunion can take place without his involvement, therefore Nobody's Daughter would remain Love's solo record, as opposed to a "Hole" record. Love then responded to Erlandson's comments in a Twitter post, claiming that "he's out of his MIND, Hole is MY band, MY name, and MY Trademark". Shortly after this quarrel Love began posting new Hole logos, stage ideas, and guitar pick ideas on her Facebook page, implying, though not confirming, that Hole had reformed.
In December 2009, three upcoming shows were announced in New York, Milan and Amsterdam, at The Standard Hotel's Boom Boom Room, the Magazzini Generali and Paradiso respectively,[54][55] though flyers from the New York show credit the performer solely as Courtney Love. The official Paradiso website issued a press release the same month stating Melissa Auf der Maur would partake in the show, but when asked by a fan on her official Facebook fan page, Auf der Maur claimed that "[this] mysterious press release is news to me [...] putting my detective hat on now [...] more on this soon." The Paradiso's website claimed in January 2010 that "many quarrels are settled."[55]
Auf der Maur stated in an interview with New York Magazine in April, 2010: "Even in rock and roll, I believe there's a right and wrong. I'm still close friends with Eric [Erlandson, co-founder and former guitarist of Hole], and he's the only one who can do anything on his end about it. He's a peaceful man who has made great efforts in his own life to find peace. I feel protective of the legacy of Hole and my memories in it. It wasn't even so much about doing a reunion. I told Courtney, 'I support the retrospective of everything done in that time. If and when you're ready to look at that, I'll support it.' What's so funny is that she can come out and say that I asked her to do a reunion. That's not exactly what was said. What I said was that I think a retrospective would be incredibly valuable right now and that's obviously not where she's at. ... I've always wished the best for her. I want her to be happy. I want her to be musical. I care about her well-being. When she gets an idea in her mind, that's what she stays with regardless of what other people think or feel. I put my foot down when she shockingly declared Hole was playing its first shows. All I was really trying to say was that I hope it doesn't blow the opportunity for a real reunion and retrospective. You can’t just do Hole Two again later." [56]
Hole launched a new website, and an official Facebook page on January 1, 2010. The band played its first performance since the reunion on February 12, 2010 on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross playing "Samantha". On February 17, 2010 they played a full set at the O2 Shepherds Bush Empire, with support from Little Fish.[57] Further shows were performed at 02 Academy Brixton and SPIN's annual SXSW music festival, with further dates being added for the United States and United Kingdom in April and May 2010. Television appearances, in efforts to promote the upcoming album, include performing on Late Show with David Letterman on April 27, Jimmy Kimmel Live! on April 29 and on Later with Jools Holland on the 4th of May. On March 16, the first Hole single in ten years, and first from Nobody's Daughter was released, titled "Skinny Little Bitch". It was the most added song on alternative radio and the second most added song on active rock in early March in the United States, debuting at #32 on Billboard's Alternative Singles Chart.
Nobody's Daughter was released on April 26 and 27, 2010 worldwide through Mercury Records, and was received by music critics with moderately positive acclaim.[58] Rolling Stone gave the album three out of five stars, but noted "[while Love] was an absolute monster vocalist in the nineties, the greatest era ever for rock singers... She doesn't have that power in her lungs anymore — barely a trace. But at least she remembers, and that means something in itself." The magazine also referred to the album as "not a true success", but a "noble effort".[59] Love's voice, which had been noticeably raspier (likely due to years of scream-singing, drug abuse, and smoking) was compared to the likes of Bob Dylan.[60]
NME, however, gave the album a 6/10 rating, and Robert Christgau rated it an "A-", saying, "Thing is, I can use some new punk rage in my life, and unless you're a fan of Goldman Sachs and BP Petroleum, so can you. What's more, better it come from a 45-year-old woman who knows how to throw her weight around than from the zitty newbies and tattooed road dogs who churn most of it out these days. I know--for her, BP Petroleum is just something else to pretend about. But the emotion fueling her pretense is cathartic nevertheless."[61]
On March 28, 2011, Love, Erlandson, Patty Schemel and Auf der Maur appeared at the New York screening of Schemel's documentary Hit So Hard: The Life & Near Death Story of Patty Schemel at the Museum of Modern Art.[62] The appearance was first time in thirteen years that all four members appeared together in public. Schemel has expressed a desire to record with Love, Erlandson and Auf der Maur stating "nothing has been discussed, but I have a feeling."[62] After the screening, the four took part in a Q&A session where Courtney Love stated "so for me, as much as I love playing with Patty — and I would play with her in five seconds again, and everyone onstage — if it's not moving forward, I don't wanna do it. That's just my thing. There's rumblings; there's always bloody rumblings. But if it's not miserable and it's going forward and I'm happy with it… that's all I have to say about that question."[63]
In May 2011, a video for "Samantha" was shot. It was the first promotional video for Nobody's Daughter, over a year after its release, and Hole's first official music video in eleven years, after "Be a Man" in 2000.
Members
Current lineup
- Courtney Love – lead vocals, rhythm guitar (1989–2002, 2009–present)
- Micko Larkin – lead guitar (2009–present)
- Shawn Dailey – bass (2009–present)
- Stu Fisher – drums, percussion (2009–present)
Former members
- Eric Erlandson – lead guitar (1989–2002)
- Samantha Maloney – drums, percussion (1998–2000)
- Melissa Auf der Maur – bass, backing vocals (1994–1999)
- Patty Schemel – drums, percussion (1993–1997)
- Kristen Pfaff – bass, backing vocals, piano (1993–1994)
- Leslie Hardy – bass, backing vocals (1992)
- Jill Emery – bass (1991–1992)
- Caroline Rue – drums, percussion (1989–1992)
- Lisa Roberts – bass (1989–1990)
- Errol Stewart – guitar (1989 1990)
- Mike Geisbrecht – guitar (1989)
Timeline
Discography
- Studio albums
- Pretty on the Inside (1991)
- Live Through This (1994)
- Celebrity Skin (1998)
- Nobody's Daughter (2010)
- EPs
- Ask for It (1995)
- The First Session (1997)
- Compilation albums
- My Body, the Hand Grenade (1997)
- Icon (2011)
Chart positions
US & Canada Billboard Album Chart peak positions
Year | Album | Chart | Peak position |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | "Live Through This" | US Billboard 200 | 52 |
1995 | "Ask For It" | US Billboard 200 | 172 |
1998 | "Celebrity Skin" | US Billboard 200 | 9 |
1998 | "Celebrity Skin" | Top Canadian Albums | 3 |
2010 | "Nobody's Daughter" | US Billboard 200 | 15 |
2010 | "Nobody's Daughter" | Top Canadian Albums | 11 |
2010 | "Nobody's Daughter" | Alternative Albums | 2 |
2010 | "Nobody's Daughter" | Rock Albums | 6 |
2010 | "Nobody's Daughter" | Digital Albums | 8 |
US & Canada Billboard Singles Chart peak positions
Year | Single | Chart | Peak position |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | "Doll Parts" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 4 |
1994 | "Miss World" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 13 |
1995 | "Violet" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 29 |
1995 | "Softer, Softest" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 32 |
1995 | "Asking For It" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 36 |
1995 | "Doll Parts" | US Billboard Hot 100 | 58 |
1996 | "Gold Dust Woman" (cover) | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 31 |
1998 | "Malibu" | US Billboard Hot 100 | 81 |
1998 | "Celebrity Skin" | US Billboard Hot 100 | 85 |
1998 | "Celebrity Skin" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 1 |
1998 | "Malibu" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 3 |
1998 | "Awful" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 13 |
1999 | "Malibu" | US Billboard Adult Pop Songs | 37 |
2010 | "Skinny Little Bitch" | US Billboard Rock Songs | 29 |
2010 | "Skinny Little Bitch" | US Billboard Alternative Songs | 19 |
Awards and nominations
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | Celebrity Skin | Best Rock Album | Nominated |
1999 | Celebrity Skin | Best Rock Song | Nominated |
1999 | Celebrity Skin | Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group | Nominated |
2000 | Malibu | Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group | Nominated |
Year | Nominee / work | Award | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Doll Parts | Best Alternative Video | Nominated |
1999 | Malibu | Best Cinematography in a Video | Nominated |
See also
|
References
- ^ Cracked, George (April 2002). "The Noise Rock: F.A.Q." Monochrom: Cracked Webzine. Retrieved February 1, 2011.
- ^ "Pretty on the Inside". CD Universe. Retrieved June 30, 2010.
- ^ "Rolling Stone's Greatest Albums of All Time". Rolling Stone. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
- ^ "The All-TIME 100 Albums". Time. Retrieved July 5, 2010.
- ^ "Hole at AllMusic.com". All Music. Retrieved March 15, 2010.
- ^ "Nobody's Daughter: Official Album Website".
- ^ "Courtney Love Denies Name Change". Spinner. April 22, 2010. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e The First Session (Media notes). Sympathy for the Record Industry, Flipside Magazine. 1995.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameters:|albumlink=
and|publisherid=
(help); Unknown parameter|artist=
ignored (|others=
suggested) (help); Unknown parameter|bandname=
ignored (help); Unknown parameter|notestitle=
ignored (help) - ^ Mason, Darryl (1995). "Hole: A New Lease of Life". The West Australian (January 1995).
- ^ Brite, Poppy Z. Courtney Love: The Real Story. Simon & Schuster.
- ^ a b c d Halperin, Ian. Who Killed Kurt Cobain?. Citadel Press. pp. 54–56.
- ^ Rock Docs : The Return of Courtney Love | VSPOT Video Clips, Photos, Episodes and Online Message Boards from the Reality TV Show | VH1.com
- ^ a b http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/holestudiochronology/08-xx-89.htm&date=2009-10-26+00:08:03 Cite error: The named reference "holestudiochronology" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Love, Courtney. Hole, Third Show at Nightmoves in Huntington Beach, California. 11 November 1989. "We're Hole. Some of you will like us, and some of you will hate us." (Bootleg recordings of these two shows circulate on the internet often.)
- ^ a b Erlandson, Eric. The Germs: A Tribute. 1996. [1]
- ^ a b Love, Courtney. Dirty Blonde: The Diaries of Courtney Love. Faber & Faber, Inc.
- ^ "Rock On the Net: Hole/Courtney Love". Rock on the Net. 1997. Retrieved August 5, 2010.
- ^ Template:Cite article
- ^ Strong, Martin Charles. The Great Rock Discography. Canongate Books. p. 696. ISBN 1841955515.
{{cite book}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Artists: Hole". Rock On The Net. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
- ^ Love, Courtney (September 1, 1994). (Interview). Interviewed by Loder, Kurt.
A lot of the songs are complete Bauhaus rip-offs.
{{cite interview}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help); Unknown parameter|program=
ignored (help)— The Hole Story - ^ Cooper, Leonie (March 24, 2011). "10 Things We Learn About Kurt Cobain And Courtney Love From Hit So Hard". NME. Retrieved March 27, 2011.
- ^ a b Brite, Poppy Z. Courtney Love: The Real Story. Simon & Schuster. p. 125.
- ^ a b Des Barres, Pamela (March 1994). "Rock and Roll Needs Courtney Love". Retrieved September 9, 2010.
- ^ Love, Courtney; France, Kim (June 3, 1996). "Led by Alanis Morisette and Courtney Love, a whole new breed of feminism is standing atop the pop cultural heap". New York Magazine (June 1996): 41.
{{cite journal}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ a b c d Behind the Music: Courtney Love. Episode 212. VH1 Networks. 22 June 2010.
- ^ Meltzer, Marisa (February 2, 2010). Girl Power: The Nineties Revolution in Music. Faber & Faber. p. 47. ISBN 978-0865479791.
- ^ Azerrad, Michael. "Inside the Heart and Mind of Nirvana." Rolling Stone. 16 April 1992.
- ^ "Live Through This". Tower Records. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
- ^ Live Through This Blender Review
- ^ Live Through This Q Review
- ^ NME: 40.
{{cite journal}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help); More than one of|pages=
and|page=
specified (help) - ^ Rolling Stone: 191. December 29, 1994.
{{cite journal}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ a b Edwards, Gavin (2006). Is Tiny Dancer Really Elton’s Little John?: Music’s Most Enduring Mysteries, Myths, and Rumors Revealed. Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0307346032.
- ^ "1995 MTV Video Music Awards". MTV.com. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ Masley, Ed. The Arizona Republic http://www.azcentral.com/thingstodo/music/articles/2010/09/09/20100909mtv-vmas-memorable-moments.html?page=4. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ Brite, Poppy Z. (1997). Courtney Love: The Real Story. Simon & Schuster. pp. 210–11.
{{cite book}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ Bowie, Chas (January 9, 2006). "Raising America's Sweetheart: An Interview with Courtney Love's Mother". Portland Mercury. Retrieved April 21, 2011.
- ^ Snow, Shauna (August 2, 1995). "Hole Performance Disrupted". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
- ^ Weekly World News: 12. October 3, 1995.
{{cite journal}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ a b Liner notes, My Body, The Hand Grenade (1997). City Slang Records
- ^ Love, Courtney. Extracts from an interview with Melody Maker, October 1997.
- ^ Eric Erlandson – Hole
- ^ a b "Hole flaunts survival with polished Celebrity Skin". CNN. September 4, 1998. Retrieved May 20, 2011.
- ^ Hole : Celebrity Skin - Album Reviews - NME.COM
- ^ Rolling Stone Music | Top Artists, News, Reviews, Photos and Videos
- ^ Celebrity Skin - Blender
- ^ a b Hilburn, Robert (September 6, 1998). "Love Adds Glow To 'Skin'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved May 20, 2011.
- ^ MTV Interview (1991)
- ^ a b "Music On... Photography by Melissa Auf der Maur: Courtney Love in Crowd Onstage". National Geographic. Retrieved May 20, 2011.
- ^ Aftonbladet nyheter: Här dog 19-åringen
- ^ "The Return Of Hole – Courtney Love's In-The-Studio Video Diary - In The NME Office - NME.COM - The world's fastest music news service, music videos, interviews, photos and free stuff to win". Nme.Com. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ^ "Melissa Auf Der Maur Says Hole "Reunion" Not Really a Reunion". June 23, 2009. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|1=
(help) - ^ "The Standard Official Website". The Standard.
- ^ a b "Hole". The Paradiso.
- ^ "Hole's Melissa Auf der Maur on Her New Album, OOOM, and Breaking Away From Courtney Love". New York Magazine/Canadian Press. April 7, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
- ^ "Wednesday February 17, 2010". LastFM. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ "Pop & Hiss". Los Angeles Times. April 27, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
- ^ Sheffield, Rob (April 26, 2010). "Rolling Stone review: Nobody's Daughter". Retrieved July 11, 2011.
- ^ Petrusich, Amanda (April 27, 2010). "Nobody's Daughter". Pitchfork. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
- ^ "Robert Christgau: CG: Hole". Robert Christgau. Retrieved July 11, 2011.
- ^ a b "Hole Reunites For Drummer Patty Schemel's Documentary Premiere | Billboard.com". Billboard. March 28, 2011. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Love, Courtney. Extracts from a questions and answers session at the screening of Hit So Hard: The Life and Near Death Story of Patty Schemel at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, March 28, 2011. A video of the session is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4IgMz2vIR1E
External links
- Use mdy dates from August 2010
- Alternative rock groups from California
- Musical groups established in 1989
- Musical groups disestablished in 2002
- Musical groups reestablished in 2009
- Sympathy for the Record Industry artists
- Musical groups from Los Angeles, California
- Musical quartets
- Grunge musical groups
- Riot grrrl