![]() ![]() Nirvana certainly never made another album like it. Sadly, both expanded versions fall into the latter category, with material ranging from "interesting" to "historical curiosity" to "of zero value to even superfans." But this mish-mash of sketches, practice-space woodshedding, and alternate-but-not-very mixes does help explain what makes Nevermind so unique. The only question is whether these reissues- a single-disc remaster, a 2xCD "deluxe" version, and a 4xCD+DVD "super-deluxe" edition- are that rare essential repurchase that makes you hear an album you've possibly exhausted in new ways, or if it's just another mediocre jumble of odds and ends that inadvertently reveals the flaws and blemishes carefully excised from the original 12-song set. But Nevermind is 20 this week, still a pretty respectable number in a world where any milestone marks an excuse to shift a few more units. After all, "super deluxe" reissues of classic albums don't even have to be tied to an anniversary these days. Of course, no diamond-certified, canonical treasure hitting the two-decade mark can be left well enough alone in 2011- especially one that changed the lives of a lot people now approaching middle age, with the discretionary income to prove it. Despite its tremendous influence on the mainstream rock that followed, it's hard to think of another album that sounds much like Nirvana's Nevermind, a record with so much more pop and punk punch than any music it inspired. ![]()
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