In this clip, Butch Vig talks about the gear, songwriting, and recording process for Nirvana's hit record Nevermind.
Full Video: • Butch Vig: From Smashi...
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Link To Full Video: kzhead.info/sun/aLlyiK6cm2Z8n4U/bejne.htmlsi=2FO-ZgQw657Kz396
The fact that Butch has the original tape that Nirvana sent him, recorded on a boombox, makes it easier for me to sleep at night. Thank you Rick for the amazing questions 🙌
You can listen to them on the super deluxe nevermind
Hellyeahhh same here, he too!!
That’s worth a lot of money
What a career this guy has had.. He went from producing the world's biggest band.. To being in the new biggest band.. Super talented guy
Butch's memory for details is crazy. I've listened to a LOT of interviews with audio engineers and producers, and they often don't have nearly as detailed a memory of the recording process as Butch does. He's a pleasure to listen to. And Rick does a good job of steering the conversation but still letting Butch have space to tell his amazing stories.
💯 well-said!
You should listen to some of the interviews that Steve Albini has done re: the In Utero sessions.
As someone with an imperfect short term memory (as a result of a headinjury / caraccident) it tells me that Butch is to production what a musician is to their instrument; that he has sincere interest in the capture of the sounds (songs)...
I mean, that's a pretty memorable recording experience.
I’m sure weekly he gets asked about it lol
A good interviewer is amazing - he's the stand-in for the listener and gets to steer the conversation in interesting directions, but understands the star of the show is the person being interviewed. Rick does a tremendous job with this.
will never get tired of hearing Butch talk about recording nevermind… NEVER!
mind
Nirvana stories never get old
I love Vig’s Wiscahhnsin accent.
Does he have one?
@@inbox4 What would you call it?
That tape is priceless. Never gets old listening to Butch or anyone involved talk about the process they went thru.
6 months of hard work that changed music forever, simply incredible and mind blowing
Awesome to hear from legends who still walk amongst us
Being in that room listening to 'teen spirit' after a quick mix for the first time must have been like 😮😮😮😮
Right? How powerful that must have been.
That’s seriously like an amazing moment nothing in life can come close.
Siamese Dream is something to be proud of ❤
I love these kind of talks,it feels like being there when such vivid memories are being shared❤
Butch has a way better memory for these details than most engineers or producers I've listened to.
Nevermind was the game changer. You always hear how this album changed the atmosphere of music over night..music/culture/fashion/ etc. I hate getting order but I like many got to experience this and it was pretty cool. Been waiting 30 years for another band to do this and the fact it hasn’t happened yet makes me wonder if it ever will.
The whole reason i got so into music is because Nevermind made me feel such a way it was almost intoxicating, i went on a crazy hunt trying to find more artists that would make me feel high j by listening to them. 5 years later im a music addict, even tho nothing has come close to nvmd for me
Nevermind didn’t change anything for my boomer dad. Maybe it’s the same for you - for all you know, the modern equivalent of Nevermind already happened and you don’t know 😅
It won't
@@georgeleorgebeorge2354 I’m still into “left of the dial” music. I haven’t seen or heard anything remotely close and I’m just some random music lover. I’ve seen many interviews with artists/producers/journalists say the same thing. Nothing has come close.
@@georgeleorgebeorge2354 this.
Hey Rick, I'd be very happy to see Steve Albini on your channel. With Endino and Butch already on, he'd make it the full Nirvana producer circle haha.
Nirvana’s music ireminds me of high school. I listened to them so much back then. They were the greatest in my generation.
Same!
Thank you Rick for doing these interviews. Really means a lot to us trying to replicate iconic stuff. Truly doing an important job preserving these details for historic purposes. Tysm
What an amazing video. Such a pleasure hearing Butch talk and Rick just asking the real questions. This is a huge part of music history that otherwise might get forgotten down the line.
There’s photos of the guitar Kurt smashed while recording endless nameless. Because it’s sitting on the board Dave bought. Pretty famous photo. It was a black fender Stratocaster with a humbucker in the bridge
The guitar that Kurt played and smashed during the recording of Endless, Nameless was a black, lefty Strat with a white pick guard, not a Mosrite. There’s a somewhat well known photo of the destroyed guitar in question laying across the Neve console in Sound City after that track was recorded. Butch’s memory of the session is probably just a little fuzzy after thirty years.
I just put this in the comment section then came across your comment😂
His memory of these sessions is WAY better than almost any engineer or producer I've ever listened to. And I listen producer interviews religiously. Most of them are maddeningly vague about old sessions. He may have a few minor details wrong, but who ultimately cares what guitar it was? That's not the point of the story.
There’s some pages from his journals that mention the mosrite being stolen along with a few other things. Someone came forward saying they bought it at a pawnshop and later sold it to someone for dirt cheap then that person figured out what it was and sold it for a fortune. It’s floated around a few different museums so yeah it was probably that black strat with the chrome humbucker ring & tune-o-matic bridge in the famous pic. I read an interview with butch mentioning the mosrite being smashed, it seems like he’s sticking to that story lol
@@johnnypaps2834 - There’s a black humbucker in the bridge position, and it appears to be slightly offset/diagonal (closer to the bridge towards the lesser horn/high-E string end of the guitar as compared to the greater horn/low-E string end). I can’t personally make out what kind of bridge is on the guitar from the photo, but the aforementioned black humbucker is the only conspicuous aspect of the guitar that sticks out as an obvious modification, to my untrained eye. The neck was completely snapped off the body at the joint, but the rosewood fretboard and length of the neck appear in tact, Fender logo on the headstock, white single coils in the neck and middle positions, white pick guard…looks like a fairly standard Strat. I first saw that photo reprinted in Michael Azerrad’s 1993 Nirvana bio “Come As You Are: the Story of Nirvana”, which came out about two years after Nevermind was released, and the author interview Vig for the book, so I’m assuming that the photo is genuine and that Vig’s memory of the guitar in question has changed over the intervening three decades, which is understandable.
No, I’m pretty sure he remembers it. A lot better than you fucking Nirvana geeks
I can’t tell you how much I enjoy Butch talking about recording Nevermind. Dave Grohl made a documentary about Sound City and the Neve mixing deck that’s got a lot cool stuff about Nevermind I highly recommend it.
This is an amazing interview, great information, Nevermind is a master piece 👌
awesome! Butch is the man. I remember when this came out I was 24 and at 56 still blown away. As a drummer it hit me in the face! love that. going to have to watch that sound city documentary again. thank uou RB
If you look, there's an interview out there where Butch is sitting at the board and he demonstrates the layers of the instruments and vocals...
Absolutely amazing interview Rick!
From Bleach to Nevermind is hard to wrap my head around. The band really put in the work over those 6months+ a really creative group and Kurt the catalyst
Being in the studio is both humbling and exciting
You've done it again Rick, once I got started listening, it was so good I had to listen to the whole thing. Great interview!
Old age is one of my favorites
YEAAA!!
This is amazing. That band and album are timeless
One of the all-time great producers. Butch managed to bring out the best in Nirvana. He didn’t overproduce it he didn’t make it “his“, he just let the band blossom, and he knew the tones and the mics and the mixes that would really draw people in. He’s up there with Matt Lange George Martin, and very limited number of other producers
This is gold.
Rick your interviews are incredible 😊
I wish someone would ask him about the guitar solo on In Bloom.
Why?
Joyous chat. Thank you.
Butch playing the tape machine and punching in on time intuitively like that is some real goated shit
Fascinating.
Great questions from Rick. Keep digging in.
Could listen to this all day. Thank you.
Mr Vig reminds me of Ted Templeton. Just genius with awesome ears.
The drums are hooks..!🤔 what an awesome perspective! Like the flams at the beginning of Smells Like Teen Spirit, of course!
Eddy of Offord of Yes,fame was raving about this album In1992. Learned about it from him. 😊so that is considered praise. 😊
This is great.
I have to believe there will be another musical revolution at some point. The sad things the way the music industry is controlled now, there probably have been several "Nirvanas" over the last 20 years and we never got to hear it.
We’re a New Grunge band bringing back the big early 90’s Grunge sound, check our channel out!
This is a great interview. Having a similar background as an artist and producer makes you an excellent interviewer. I know my suggestion here would require more editing, etc. But, as a casual listener I'd appreciate seeing a visual example onscreen of some of the recording equipment and instruments mentioned here.
Beautiful!
Fascinating talk of serious rock and roll royalty.
Thank you!
Absolute class 🤩🤘🏻
cool, ive been listening to them lately
i love hearing the details of the recording process haha
Madison youth reporting in. Butch and the other members of Spooner were my heroes as a teen. We all thought they would hit it big, especially after the 3.5 star review in Rolling Stone. But it didn't happen. They moved on to Fire Town and then finally earned their due when Shirley Manson showed up and Garbage was formed. Justice served.
Great interview ...Thank You guys!!
Butch please make another Grbage band or produce more bands we need that sound of the 90´s
Amazing people and amazing album.
Awesome.
"Yeah, I have the original demo cassette of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" in a box somewhere." Probably could sell it for 5 mil, but it's the memories that count !
the snare drum in this album is off the hook, made by tama and to this day, never replicated
No
I'd really like to know how he did the solo in In Bloom. There's nothing like it to this day, the strings are just screaming like scratching g.i sheets. Its like uncontrolled feedback yet at the same time melodic and angry
ew
Kurt's Mesa was a Mesa Boogie Studio preamp, 99% sure he was sticking his Boss DS2 and Tech 21 SansAmp Classic for distortion in the clean channel.
by listening to Butch talk you know he is a true OG he knows his game, great producer
CAN YOU IMAGINE BUTCH PRODUCING OUR NEW ALBUM? WOW
No
Love this series! 😎🤓
I wonder if Butch or Nirvana ever considered that people might be analyzing this record like the Zapruder film 30+ years later.
Butch also has Full Raw OG 1 version of Nevermind never been released or leaked some snippets are played on the nev counsel during nevermind classic albums doc where butch plays the raw tracks with certain takes & overlays isolated while describing the sessions, that’s the version of nevermind i want leaked the most. Its basically an unreleased reel 1 of the whole album mix.
Its been released since ages, its the devonshire mixes
One part of this work of art and ground breaking music that often doesnt get enough credit was butch on the console.kurt dave , krist and butch made a timeless work of art. Without one of those factors it would not have been what it became. An album is always a group effort especially all the ones that are timeless.
Butch's transparent producing doesn't bring attention to itself. Like great film directing: you don't notice it. But it's the rudder.
All great producers no one thing. How to get the most out of the band and capture what they truly sound like live.
Why didn't "Even In His Youth" make it onto the album?
YES......yes Yes....and.... Yes
Wow that was a great interview. Butch is such a , cool guy. Thanks for that one ,Rick.
And Kurt had pulsonic vintage greenbacks as speakers that's why it sounds so rich and full,there is a good KZhead video of nirvana's studio tone where he totally finds the exact speakers Kurt used
I've seen it. VERY interesting video!
Top years
I ❤ BUTCH VIG
I ❤Nirvana More because of The fact that their 4 studio albums, sound and are different sides of The band also. Like movies or paintings Different
Beato!!!!
Hey Butch, far and away the best recordings of Nirvana. You did great buddy!
The lesson is this, children: chaos and melody, floating on the clouds of a good backbeat, make a perfect f’ing (edited) song. You’re very welcome. Now… go get creative. 🌞☕️
Amazing interview, amazing engineer. 🤟
great story..
I knew the clean stuff was an AC-30, the fact that Kurt used Mesa for the hard stuff is impressive. Now I’m not so sure I wanna use my Marshall’s anymore for heavy stuff. I’m gonna buy a 1/2 stack of Mesa either double or triple rectifier 100 watt. Metallica uses Mesa too, so I was leaning towards the change. I always knew this about Mesa, what ever list price is you have to pay, the music store can’t lower it or they will lose their distribution rights. That was my only turnoff to the new product, but oh well, I’m just gonna pay it.
Butch is so cool
This is brilliant 👏👏👏😎🥂
💜💜💜
Vig is going to sell that tape for one billion dollars.
The album that saved Sound City.
Good talk.
That’s fire
The gear talk, frankly, goes over my head but, as a drummer, I enjoyed this interview immensely. So glad to hear that Grohl didn't play to a click because I loathe it myself.
When you’re in the studio and the engineer asks you to play to a click after a couple takes it’s definitely a dagger in the heart 😂
You have to break hearts to get greatness.
Thank u Rick for archiving all this music history!
Great content, conversation, and hair from these fellas
Not surprised Butch produced wasting light, such a badass album
Krist's ex-wife Shelli Hyrkas took at least a few photos of the Nevermind sessions that can be found around the internet.
It was in bloom that was tracked first butch
I had the psp vmd of this. Wish I wouldn't have sold it
WHAT? Of this?
The magic and mystery in the creation of pop/rock music, the kinda stuff they describe here, is completely gone nowadays.
How do I find " song in D " ?