Genre: Grunge
© 1989-1990 Sub Pop
AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
This is one case where the legend really precedes the record itself. Cut for about 600 dollars in Jack Endino's studio over just a matter of days, this captures Nirvana
at a formative stage, still indebted to the murk that became known as
grunge, yet not quite finding their voice as songwriters. Which isn't to
say that they were devoid of original material, since even at this
stage Kurt Cobain
illustrated signs of his considerable songcraft, particularly on the
minor-key ballad "About a Girl" and the dense churn of "Blew." A few
songs come close to that level, but that's more a triumph of sound than
structure, as "Negative Creep" and "School" get by on attitude and
churn, while the cover of "Love Buzz" winds up being one of the
highlights because this gives a true menace to their sound, thanks to
its menacing melody. The rest of it sinks into the sludge, as the group
itself winds up succumbing to grinding sub-metallic riffing that has
little power, due to lack of riffs and lack of a good drummer. Bleach
is more than a historical curiosity since it does have its share of
great songs, but it isn't a lost classic -- it's a debut from a band
that shows potential but haven't yet achieved it.
tags: nirvana, bleach, 1989, flac,
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