3 Answers2025-10-14 14:03:48
Growing up in the late '80s punk/grunge swirl, I got obsessed with who was who in Nirvana — it felt like figuring out the cast of a small, world-changing movie. The band was started in Aberdeen, Washington by Kurt Cobain (lead vocals, rhythm guitar, and the primary songwriter) and Krist Novoselic (bass and occasional backing vocals). They recruited Aaron Burckhard as their first steady drummer in 1987; Aaron handled the earliest rehearsals and the very first local shows, so in the literal sense the original three were Kurt, Krist, and Aaron.
From there the drummer spot rotated a bit: Dale Crover from the Melvins sat in for some early sessions and demos, and then Chad Channing took over for most of the band's formative recordings and played drums on the majority of the tracks that became 'Bleach' (1989). Chad also had a hand in shaping arrangements and harmonies. Shortly after those recordings, Jason Everman joined briefly as a second guitarist and is famously credited on 'Bleach' (he helped fund the recording) though he didn’t actually play on the album. The lineup that most people remember is Kurt, Krist, and Dave Grohl (drums, backing vocals), with Dave joining in 1990 and becoming the powerhouse drummer on 'Nevermind'.
I always find the jagged, changing early lineup part of Nirvana's charm — it highlights how Kurt and Krist were the creative core from day one, but the different drummers and short-lived members helped nudge their sound into something that exploded in the early '90s. Hearing those early demos next to 'Nevermind' still gives me chills.
2 Answers2025-10-14 02:56:54
Those early Seattle garage days have always fascinated me. If you want the concise bit first: Nirvana was formed in 1987 by Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic in Aberdeen, Washington. Those two are the core founders — Kurt with his songwriting and raw voice, Krist anchoring everything with that tall, rumbling bass. They recruited local drummers after that; the first steady drummer on their roster was Aaron Burckhard, who played with them in the very early rehearsals and some local shows before other drummers came and went.
I tend to nerd out over timelines, so here’s the fuller picture I keep in my head: Kurt had been tinkering with short-lived projects like 'Fecal Matter' and was writing songs that needed a more dedicated band. Krist was the friend and classmate who clicked with those ideas and helped turn them into a proper group. From there they cycled through drummers — Aaron Burckhard in 1987–88, then brief turns by Dale Crover and later Chad Channing, before Dave Grohl showed up in 1990 and became the drummer most people think of. Their first full-length record, 'Bleach', came out in 1989 on Sub Pop, which captured that raw early energy Kurt and Krist had conjured together.
What feels important to me is how two people starting out in a small logging town could spark something that would change the rock landscape. Kurt’s melodies and lyrics, often fragile and furious at once, paired with Krist’s melodic basslines, created a chemistry that made the band more than the sum of its parts. So, when someone asks who formed the band in 1987, the short, accurate reply is Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic — with Aaron Burckhard as the first drummer to join soon after. It’s wild to think how those rough, improvised practices led to 'Nevermind' and a cultural wave a few years later; still gives me chills thinking about that shift.
3 Answers2025-10-14 02:24:29
Peeling back the very earliest chapter of Nirvana feels like unearthing a scrappy indie tale — Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic are the core of that origin story. Kurt was the singer-songwriter and the main guitarist: he handled lead vocals, rhythm and lead guitar parts, and the songwriting brain behind almost everything the band did. Krist played bass guitar; his towering presence onstage and his melodic, sometimes oddly structured bass lines were a huge part of the band’s sound even when Kurt’s voice and guitar led the charge.
The drummer seat, though, hopped around in those first couple of years. Aaron Burckhard was the first regular drummer during 1987–88 and shows/demos from that era often feature him. Dale Crover from the Melvins played with them briefly in early sessions and live spots. Chad Channing became the steady drummer from 1988 through most of the 'Bleach' era and is the one who’s on most of that album’s recordings. There are also smaller but notable contributions: Jason Everman was credited as a second guitarist on 'Bleach' (he paid for the recording and toured with them but didn’t actually play on the record), Dan Peters of Mudhoney played drums on the single 'Sliver', and of course Dave Grohl came in 1990 and became the definitive drummer for the classic trio that recorded 'Nevermind' and 'In Utero'. I still get a kick imagining those early lineups in tiny rooms — raw, imperfect, brilliant.
2 Answers2025-10-14 11:04:12
Tracing Nirvana’s early lineup is one of my guilty pleasures — that messy, shifting cast before everything locked into place for 'Nevermind' is pure rock archaeology to me. If you want the short list of people who'd been in the band but were gone by the time 'Nevermind' was recorded in 1991, the main names to know are Aaron Burckhard, Chad Channing, Jason Everman, and a handful of short-term drummers like Dale Crover, Dave Foster, and Dan Peters who filled in or recorded a song or two. Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic stayed through it all, but the drummer chair in particular was a revolving door until Dave Grohl settled in and helped shape the band’s signature sound on 'Nevermind'.
Aaron Burckhard was literally one of the first drummers in Nirvana’s earliest 1987–88 phase — he played local shows and early rehearsals but was out before the band started serious recording. Dale Crover (from the Melvins) shows up as a guest/permanent fill-in in 1988 and recorded some early demos; he’s often credited for early recordings but wasn’t a lasting member. Chad Channing is the one many people remember because he drummed on most of 'Bleach' (1989) and several practice/demo tapes; he left in 1990 after creative differences and the group’s sound starting to shift. Jason Everman is a weird footnote — he was hired and even credited on 'Bleach' (he actually paid for the recording session), but he didn’t play on the record and he was out of the lineup well before the 'Nevermind' sessions. Dan Peters and Dave Foster popped in for brief stints around 1990; Peters drummed on the 'Sliver' single, for example.
All of those departures set the stage for Dave Grohl’s arrival in late 1990 and the recorded chemistry that produced 'Nevermind' with Butch Vig in May 1991. It’s funny to think how different songs might’ve sounded with Chad or Aaron behind the kit or with Jason staying on guitar — those near-misses and personnel swaps are a big part of why Nirvana’s early history feels so alive to me.
3 Answers2025-10-14 13:40:31
Growing up around late-'80s underground tapes, I came to see the original core of Nirvana — Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic — as the fulcrum that tipped bedroom punk toward what everyone now calls grunge.
Kurt's songwriting married a sneering punk attitude with uncanny pop hooks and a guitar tone that could be crushed or crystalline depending on what the moment needed. That dynamic 'quiet-loud-quiet' blueprint owes a lot to bands like the Pixies, but Kurt personalized it with his lyrical bluntness and a raw recording aesthetic on records like 'Bleach'. Krist's bass wasn't flashy, but it anchored songs in a bulky, rolling way that made the tunes feel both tuneful and heavy; his physical stage presence and melodic choices gave the band a sense of gravity. Early drummers — Aaron Burckhard, Dale Crover (who moonlighted with them and whose band the Melvins were a huge local influence), and Chad Channing — each left sonic fingerprints: Crover brought sludgy heft, Chad gave 'Bleach' a looser, slanted groove, and Aaron contributed to the primitive crash of their earliest demos.
What I always loved is how their personalities and tastes created a template: punk's bluntness, metal's heft, and indie-pop melody all smashed together. While later figures like Dave Grohl amplified Nirvana's reach, the original lineup's DIY ethos, warped tunings, and brittle-yet-hooky songwriting were pillars of that early Seattle sound. Even now, hearing a raw Nirvana track makes me want to pick up a cheap guitar and scream along — in the best possible way.
2 Answers2025-12-27 11:15:08
If you're digging through Nirvana's live records like I do on lazy Sundays, the touring faces who show up on official live releases aren't a huge mystery but do make for a fun little puzzle. The clear standout is Pat Smear — he was the touring rhythm guitarist during the last stretch of the band and is audibly and visibly present on 'MTV Unplugged in New York' and the 'Live and Loud' footage, and snippets of shows he played on surface across the live compilation 'From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah'. Pat feels like the piece that makes the late-era live sound fuller, so whenever I rewatch or re-listen to those recordings, his parts stand out to me.
Before Pat, there were a few other players who toured or sat in for shows and who end up on official live compilations. Chad Channing, who drummed and toured with Nirvana in the late '80s, crops up on several early live cuts collected on 'From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah' — he’s the one who locks into that sludgier, more groove-based early sound. Jason Everman, credited on 'Bleach' and who toured briefly as a second guitarist in 1989, appears in some early live documentation too; he’s less audible on later-era material but he’s part of that transitional live era. Then there are the very early drummers like Dale Crover (who played live with them before Chad) and the one-off Dan Peters (who famously sat in for a show and played on the studio single 'Sliver') — bits of their live and session work are scattered across compilations and official releases like 'Incesticide' or tracks archived on 'From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah'.
Beyond names, I love that these live releases capture the band as a changing organism: different drummers, the addition of Pat's guitar, guest musicians like the cellist Lori Goldston on 'MTV Unplugged in New York' — she wasn't exactly a full-time touring member, but her presence on that live album is unforgettable. If you want the short touring-member checklist for official live appearances: Pat Smear, Chad Channing, Jason Everman, Dale Crover, and Dan Peters show up across the various live albums and compilations. Listening through them in sequence is like watching the band morph onstage, and frankly it never gets old to hear how each player nudged the live sound in a slightly new direction.
2 Answers2025-12-27 16:10:24
Back in the late '80s the band that became Nirvana felt more like a revolving cast than the trio most people picture. Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic were the constant heartbeat—Kurt on guitar and vocals, Krist on bass—but before the worldwide splash with 'Nevermind' they cycled through a parade of drummers and a brief second guitarist. The very first drummer to play with Kurt and Krist was Aaron Burckhard, a raw, chaotic presence who played on some of the earliest shows and rehearsals around 1987. Those early practices were more about loud experiments than polished songs, and you can hear that rough edge in the earliest demos that circulated in the Seattle scene.
Dale Crover from the Melvins popped in early on too; he recorded with them and helped shape their first proper studio feel on some 1988 tapes. After a handful of people came and went, Chad Channing became the most stable drummer through the 'Bleach' era—he’s the one who played on the 'Bleach' album (1989) and added a heavier, more restrained groove that anchored songs like 'About a Girl' and 'Negative Creep'. There was also Dave Foster for a brief spell and Dan Peters from Mudhoney, who famously played drums on the single 'Sliver' in 1990 for one night and one recording session. Then there’s the odd case of Jason Everman, who was credited as a second guitarist on 'Bleach' and even paid for the recording sessions, but he didn’t actually play on the album and was soon let go—later he went on to other life chapters entirely.
All of these early members left fingerprints on Nirvana’s sound before the commercial breakthrough. The darker, dirtier tone of 'Bleach' owes a lot to the rotating drummers and the punk/grunge nexus of Seattle musicians who guest-played and produced them; producers like Jack Endino also helped sculpt that sound. When Dave Grohl joined in 1990, his tight, powerful drumming and steady presence helped push the band into a new phase that culminated in 'Nevermind'. But I still love going back to those pre-breakthrough recordings—there’s an urgent, scrappier energy in them that feels like a band still discovering itself, and those early members were crucial to that discovery.
3 Answers2025-12-28 16:48:18
I get excited talking about this because digging through Nirvana’s catalog for demos and bonus material feels like treasure hunting.
If you want the big sources of demos and bonus tracks, start with 'With the Lights Out' — that 2004 box set is basically overflowing with home demos, early takes, alternate versions and unreleased songs. There's also 'Sliver: The Best of the Box', which condenses a lot of those rarities into a single-disc collection if you don’t want the full box. 'Incesticide' (1992) is another essential: it’s a compilation of B-sides, rarities and early versions that originally collected stuff that didn’t appear on the studio LPs.
On the studio-album side, all three major LPs got deluxe/anniversary treatments that include bonus material. 'Bleach' deluxe editions and reissues often add demos, Peel session cuts and extra live tracks. 'Nevermind' deluxe/anniversary releases include outtakes, early versions and demos from the sessions and related live material. 'In Utero' has 20th-anniversary and other reissues with demos, alternate mixes and live recordings. 'MTV Unplugged in New York' later reissues sometimes add rehearsal or alternate takes as bonus material.
Beyond that, the 2002 compilation 'Nirvana' included the previously unreleased studio track 'You Know You’re Right', and various singles and EPs (and things labeled BBC/Peel Sessions) often carry demo-y or alternate versions. If you’re collecting, look for words like “deluxe”, “anniversary”, “box set”, “outtakes” or “sessions” — that’s where the demos hide. I love how those rough recordings reveal Cobain’s songwriting process; they make the songs feel even more human to me.