Hole's Live Through This
By (Author) Anwen Crawford
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic USA
1st February 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Musicians, singers, bands and groups
Composers and songwriters
782.42166092
Paperback
144
Width 121mm, Height 165mm
141g
Courtney Love has never been less than notorious. Her intelligence, ambition and appetite for confrontation have made her a target in a music industry still dominated by men. As Kurt Cobain's wife she was derided as an opportunistic groupie; as his widow she is pitied, and scorned, as the madwoman in rock's attic. Yet Hole's second album, Live Through This, awoke a feminist consciousness in a generation of young listeners. Live Through This arrived in 1994, at a tumultuous point in the history of American music. Three years earlier Nirvana's Nevermind had broken open the punk underground, and the first issue of a zine called Riot Grrrl had been published. Hole were of this context and yet outside of it: too famous for the strict punk ethics of riotgrrrl, too explicitly feminist to be the world's biggest rock band. Live Through This is an album about girlhood and motherhood; desire and disgust; self-destruction and survival. There have been few rock albums before or since so intimately concerned with female experience. It is an album that changed lives so why is Courtney Loves achievement as a songwriter and musician still not taken seriously, two decades on
While many may not admit to it immediately, it's probably a safe bet that your average rock fan from the 90s keeps Hole's Live Through This in their collection. And why not The immensely successful 33 1/3 series from Bloomsbury examines the album track-by-track through the eyes of writer Anwen Crawford (The Monthly), giving both a historical frame of mind to the album, as well as deconstructing the themes behind seven tracks If you haven't had a chance to experience this album, give it a listen, then give this book a read, and then give the album a second shot it will definitely give you an appreciation for what Hole was trying to make and the impact they had on grunge. -- Gavin Sheehan * SLUG Magazine *
Crawford's book in the 33 1/3 series about Hole's Live Through This is passionate, thoughtful, empathetic and well-argued, an explanation of what the album meant to smart suburban teenagers trying to figure out where they fit into the world. -- Tim Byron * The Vine *
This book made me care about an artist I had long ago written off. Yes, Courtney Love has pretty much retired from making meaningful music, but for Anwen Crawford, an Australian journalist and critic, that only makes Holes 1994 album Live Through This all the more compelling. As she chronicles the decisions that produced the bands grunge-era breakthroughwhich was released just days after Kurt Cobains suicideCrawford writes movingly about the effect these songs had on herself and on other women around the world In that regard, the albums anger and ferocious self-determination havent diminished in two decades. -- Stephen M. Deusner * Pitchfork *
Anwen Crawford is an Australian writer. She is the music critic for The Monthly magazine, and her essays have appeared in publications including Frieze, Overland and Loops: Writing Music.