Friday, April 10, 2015

An Illustrated Memoriam For Kurt Donald Cobain: February 20, 1967 - April 5, 1994

Christal Cooper

Article 2,227 Words


In Memoriam: Kurt Donald Cobain
February 20, 1967 – April 5, 1994

On Friday, April 8, 1994, electrician Gary Smith and his team of men went to the Kurt Cobain residence on 171 Lake Washington Boulevard to install a new security system. 



 At 8:49 a.m. Smith looked into the window of the greenhouse, located above the garage behind the residence, and noticed something.  
“I though it was a mannequin.  Then I noticed it had blood in the right ear.  I saw a shotgun lying across his chest, pointing up at his chin.”


It was determined by the Seattle Police Department that the male body was in fact that of Kurt Cobain, and that, on April 5, three days before, he committed suicide by injecting a fatal dose of black tar heroin and shooting a bullet via his mouth into his brain, killing him instantly.  It would have been only a matter of minutes that Cobain would have died from the black-tar heroin overdose if the gun had not been fired, thus Cobain committed an almost impossible feat –successfully committing suicide twice.   



       Kurt Cobain could be compared to the great Ernest Hemingway in numerous ways – both men were heavy drinkers, artists, writers, and victims of mental illness.  Both men also had suicide in their family history:  Cobain’s two uncles and great-grandfather committed suicide; and Hemingway’s father and two siblings, Ursula and Leichester, committed suicide. 


Both succumbed to the ritual tradition – except Hemingway was a more ripe age of 61, and Cobain was only 27 at the time of his double suicide, thus joining the legendry 27 Club with the likes of Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Jim Morrison. 







       On Sunday, April 10, a public candlelight vigil was held at Seattle Center’s Flag Pavilion attended by 7000 while, at the same time, 70 close friends and family gathered at the Unity Church of Truth for a private memorial. 




       One week later Kurt Cobain’s body was cremated with his ashes contained in an urn given to his widow Courtney Love.  She buried a portion of the ashes under the willow tree in the back of the 171 Lake Washington Boulevard residence in April of 1994; in May of that same year she traveled to Ithaca, New York to visit the Namgyal Buddhist monastery where she had some of the ashes blessed by monks and transformed into a memorial sculpture; the remaining ashes were left to his only child, Frances Bean Cobain, who, at the age of 6, in 1999, scattered the ashes in McLane Creek in Littlerock, Washington. 


       In this blog post we could talk about how many albums Nirvana has sold, how many books have been written about the tragic and mentally ill figure of Kurt Cobain, but it wouldn’t matter the statistics.  All that would matter is that Kurt Cobain mattered and still matters to so many people.  Here are some of their testimonials.

Charles Clifford Brooks III
Teacher, Poet, Radio Broadcaster, Publisher
Jasper, Georgia


       I was a freshman at Campbell University when I learned of Kurt Cobain’s suicide.  The grunge movement brought an enormous amount of peace to my own disenchantment with culture, and Kurt provided a lightning rod to call me home into the seat of my soul.  It was a surreal few weeks that tore at my ideas of surviving in a world seemingly so cruel to those able to articulate their deepest insecurities.



       I was in my living room one night, listening to Edvard Grieg’s “In the Hall of the Mountain King” that has the most grief-stricken piece about the death of Aase.


       So I took the story of the Mountain King and fused it with the death of Kurt.



       Greig’s “In the Hall of the Mountain King” contained the only sorrow I could find to mirror my own melody of loss.  This poem juxtaposed the two stories in a way to illustrate the agony I wrote, and still wear, concerning the loss of what I felt, and feel, is a brother.

Before Nirvana, Grieg

Before Nirvana, Grieg
crowned the Mountain King.
His corridors, adopted by grunge
and old trolls,
walked one to suicide.
Rock’s maudlin blonde
got shot-out pathetic
in the guesthouse.

Peer wouldn’t wear
the same, rotten crown,
his head against Solveig’s bosom.
Live at Reading pauses
To honor Aase’s suite death.
Legions light funeral pyres.

Violins mourn the quasi-prophet,
his family absent and everywhere.
The last tone,
a cello far from Norway,
ripples through Seattle
with desert sands
and Bedouin kisses.  



Janlyn Diggs
Model and aspiring actress
Montgomery, Alabama


Kurt Cobain was an amazing musician.  I discovered the band Nirvana in early 2012 and I’ve been listening to them every sense.  He had so much raw talent as did the rest of the group.  



     Cobain’s music inspired me to play guitar, which I still do to this day.  I remember first hearing the band name; I searched interviews, songs, etc. and after watching those it was like I had fallen in love.  His personality is one like no other.  



     Listening to their music makes me feel as if I’ve been placed into the 90s in the heart of one of the biggest grunge movements in history.  Kurt Cobain has truly inspired me to be who I am today.

Christine Duray 
Artist 
Joliet, Illinois 



Okay, first of all, I love Nirvana, such a void in music until they came out. I first learned of Cobain's death and really didn't think much of it except sadness. Sometimes they say those who shine the brightest among us are the first to burn out.


My work is about expressions, I want to capture the thoughts, the moment that image was captured and turn them into my creation, I usually shoot for the eyes to do this but in the image of Kurt his eyes are closed. Still the emotion, the feeling was there. I knew it had to be captured in my own way. My work of Kurt Cobain is to honor his greatness and passion he had to stand on his own two feet.

Katie Longstaff
Stay-at-home-mom
Australia



Some people remember where they were when they heard Princess Diana died.  Others, Elvis.  But for me, I remember the moment I found out that Kurt Cobain had die. 



You see, I’d always felt myself as being a bit of a misfit.  Multiple changes of school meant I spent a large majority of my schooling years being regarded as “the new” girl – always under scrutiny, never fitting in.  At last, settling in a small country town, I tentatively struck up a friendship with other ‘misfits’ during the early stages of teenage angst.  While the other girls our age were listening to the repetitious drone of techno and dance music, we found a solace in the darker ballads of Kurt Cobain and Nirvana.



The Grunge phase in Australia was only in its early states.  Spiderbait, Hole, and many others were slowly gaining popularity with many teens.  “Smells like teen spirit” became a favorite with the cheerleaders and I can recall many hours spent in the basement with friends, frantically trying to come up with a routine for the athletics carnival the next day.


For me, it wasn’t about the rebellious stigma attached with listening to “heavier” music as it was seen back then – there was something in the lyrics that just seemed to echo in my soul, almost as if he understood the agony of growing up weird.  He was the person celebrity who made it ok to express the darker side of being a teenager.



The day Kurt died is etched clearly in my mind.  My bus always arrived at school a little earlier than my friends, so it was tradition to wait for the others before going inside.  I knew the moment my two friends got off their bus that something had happened.  One was openly crying and the other’s eyes were blotchy and red.  They told me in a quite voice:  “Kurt Cobain committed suicide this morning.”



Pain, betrayal, hurt and confusion were instant friends.  To actually take his own life nearly felt like treachery – how could he abandon us like that?  So suddenly?  With no real explanation?



We wore black for months.  On his birthday, after a few stolen drinks we’d smuggled into a friend’s birthday, we pulled out the Ouija board to get our answers.  But other than a hangover and messy, drunk, emotional teenagers, we achieved nothing. 



I still have my own theories and I don’t want to believe that he abandoned us like that, but I guess I’ll get my answers one day.

Tarun Sharma
Artist
India






       When I was 9 years old (or) maybe 8 I was crazy about rock music and then I started finding some rock music on YouTube and I found Nirvana.

Tracie Schaeffer
Artist
Montgomery, Alabama



I have to be honest; I don't remember where I was when I found out Kurt Cobain died. I do remember my 10th grade science lab partner (1991) gave me a dubbed copy of a Nirvana ep at school. At the time I was heavy into hair metal and I listened to that tape and I never listened to another hair band again. 



I also remember keeping the issue of the People magazine about Kurt's death in my car for at least six months and I'd read it at least once a week.

Fay Smith
Writer
Aberdeen, Washington



       I didn’t actually discover Kurt until after he died.  I listened to talk radio at that time.  One night in July 1994 I watched the Saturday Night Live with Nirvana.  As soon as they started singing “Heart-Shaped Box” I knew I was obsessed.
       I came to Aberdeen, Washington, Kurt’s hometown, for the first time in June 1995, and returned many times when I was living in Denver and Montana.


       In 2005, during one of my trips, I applied for a job at the hospital here (the one where Kurt was born) and was hired.  My house is within walking distance of the house where Kurt spent his first few years.



       Soon after that I met Leland Cobain, Kurt’s granddad.  He was wonderful and he loved to talk about Kurt.  Sitting in the living room where Kurt lived (and) seeing the back yard he used to mow made him very real to me.



       He ceased being Kurt Cobain the world-renowned star and became Kurt, the teenager who pretended the lawn mower wouldn’t start, who made a dollhouse for his grandmother.  He was like a long lost friend.



       Sometimes I think I see him, disappearing around a corner, or just out of sight at the bridge.  He is real to me even though I didn’t discover him until too late.
        
Kenny Squires
Musician and magazine writer
St. Louis, Missouri



      
       I used to sit in front of my cheap stereo and listen to In Utero, following along with the lyrics in the liner notes.  Lyrically, the songs all have at least one distinct image (“…meat-eating orchids…”) or play on words (“…contradictionary files…”).  I’d never heard lyrics like that before.   


The anger and pain in Kurt Cobain’s voice resonated my own dealing with most of the people around me.  That’s the main thing he did for me – he helped me to realize that I wasn’t alone.   Between that, the great songs, and the beautiful noise he made, it’s almost impossible to imagine what my life would have been like without him.



Photograph Description And Copyright Information

Photo 1
People Magazine issue April 25, 1994 with Kurt Cobain on the cover.
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 2
171 Lake Washington Boulevard in Seattle, Washington
CCBYSA 2.0

Photo 3
Kurt Cobain’s body with a Seattle Police Detective kneeling over it.
Released by the Seattle Police Department
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 4
Ted Moore cigar box with Cobain’s heroine “tool kit” that he used to inject himself with before shooting the fatal bullet.
Released by the Seattle Police Department
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 5
Kurt Cobain’s foot next to the bullets.
Released by the Seattle Police Department
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 6
Hemingway at a fishing camp in 1954. His hand and arms are burned from a recent bushfire; his hair was burned in the recent plane crashes.
Public Domain

Photo 7
Jimi Hendrix performing for the Dutch televiswio show Hoepla in 1967
CCBBYSA 3.0

Photo 8
Janis Joplin
Publicity Photo 1970
Public Domain

Photo 9
Jim Morrison
Publicity Photo 1968
Public Domain

Photo 10
Kurt Cobain’s public memorial service at the Seattle Center Flag Pavilion on April 10, 1994
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 11
Unity Church of Truth in Seattle Washington
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 12
Spin Magazine cover with Kurt Cobain, Courtney Love, and baby Francis Bean Cobain
December 1992
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright law

Photo 13
Charles Clifford Brooks III
Copyright granted by Charles Clifford Brooks III

Photo 14
Photo-shopped image of Janlyn Diggs, baby doll head, and Kurt Cobain
Photo-shopped by Christal Rice Cooper
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs

Photo 15
Edvard Grieg in 1888
Portrait published in The Leisure Hour (1889)
Public Domain

Photo 16
Edvard Grieg’s two phrase theme, written in the key of B minor.
Public Domain

Photo 17
Modeled by Janlyn Diggs
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs.

Photo 18
Modeled by Janlyn Diggs
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs

Photo 19
Janlyn Diggs holding two rocks – one of Kurt Cobain’s image and the other of Kurt Cobain’s signature.
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs.

Photo 20
Christine Duray
Copyright granted by Christine Duray

Photo 21
Pencil drawing of Kurt Cobain
Attributed to Christine Duray
Copyright granted by Christine Duray

Photo 22
Katie Longstaff
Copyright granted by Katie Longstaff

Photo 23
Painting of Kurt Cobain
Attributed to Connie Stevens (connieastevens@hotmail.com) who did the painting as a gift for her daughter Katie Longstaff

Photo 24
Kurt Cobain (front) and Krist Novoselic (left) live at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards
CCBYSA2.0

Photo 25
Announcement from the band encouraging people to participate in the making of the music video for "Smell Like Teen Spirit"
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 26
Photo-shopped image of baby dolls, Kurt Cobain, Janlyn Diggs holding skull
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs

Photo 27
Janlyn Diggs holding Kurt Cobain’s suicide note.
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs

Photo 28
Janlyn Diggs with quote by Kurt Cobain on cardboard box.
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs

Photo 29
Janlyn holding anti-suicide sign
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs.

Photo 30
Tarun Sharma
Copyright granted by Tarun Sharma

Photo 31
Painting of Kurt Cobain by Tarun Sharma
Copyright granted by Tarun Sharma

Photo 32
Tracie Schaeffer
Copyright granted by Tracie Schaeffer

Photo 33 and 34
Kurt Cobain’s Heart
Artwork by Tracie Schaeffer
Copyright granted by Tracie Schaeffer

Photo 35
Fay Smith
Copyright granted by Fay Smith

Photo 36
Sign erected in 2005 in Cobain's hometown of Aberdeen, Washington in tribute to him. It was paid for by the Kurt Cobain Memorial Committee and is a reference to the Nirvana song "Come as You Are"

Photo 37
Grays Harbor Hospital where Kurt Cobain was born located in Aberdeen, Washington
Attributed to Joe Mabel
CCBYSA3.0

Photo 38
Kurt Cobain in the 2nd grade.  This photo was printed on the brochure for Kurt Cobain’s funeral.
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Law

Photo 39
Janlyn Diggs reading Kurt Cobain’s journals.
Copyright granted by Christal Rice Cooper and Janlyn Diggs.

Photo 40
Kenny Squires
Copyright granted by Kenny Squires 

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Poet Terri Kirby Erickson: "What Easter Means To Me!"

Guest Blogger Terri Kirby Erickson
What Easter Means To Me


"I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world."  John 16:33




When I was a little girl, Easter meant dyeing hard-boiled eggs with our mother—hiding, hunting for, and eating them—and wearing an especially frilly dress (in my brother's case, a mini-suit, complete with bow tie) to Sunday school and church.  But most of all, we couldn't wait for that giant rabbit to visit our house on Druid Hills Drive, leaving behind those enormous cellophane-wrapped Easter baskets filled with chocolate eggs and bunnies, jelly beans, and other treats for my little brother and me to find and devour.




One Easter morning when I was about four years old, I decided to go in search for that illusive bunny, who never seemed to stick around long enough for a grateful hug. 




Because it was so early, I figured he had to be on our street somewhere, still delivering baskets to our neighbors and friends.  So I opened the front door and ran outside in my "footie" pajamas, and wandered up and down the street searching for a large, colorful, basket-toting rabbit.  Needless to say, I couldn't find him, and my parents were none too pleased when they discovered I had been outside all by myself in the half-light of dawn, looking for him.

Little did I know that the Easter bunny wasn't a human-sized, brightly-tinted hare, but my own mother and father, two people whose love to this very day, sustains me.  I never had to leave home at all to find what had been right there with us, my brother and me, all along.



As an adult, I have often encountered people who are continuously searching for something they can't find because they are concentrating on the things of this world—more money, bigger houses and cars, more stimulating partners and friends—and on the dark side, drugs, alcohol, and anything else that takes their minds off themselves and their earthly challenges, and offers them oblivion.  Nothing, however, seems to satisfy them for long. 

I believe there is a sort of "God space" in our hearts and minds that can only be filled by Him—that no matter what we try to toss into that space that isn't God, it will remain empty.  Many of us yearn for something we cannot name, and in my belief system, that "something" is a relationship with God the father and His son, Jesus Christ, who love us whether or not we love them in return, but never enter a "room" with a locked door—the kind of door we close when we reject any idea that God exists.




Personally, I am not a dogmatic Christian, and my idea of "hell" is what it would be like to try and negotiate this big, hard world by myself without the love, tenderness. and strength of God.  Sometimes the only prayer I can manage is, "Father, please help me," but He always comes through, even when my prayers are brief and ineloquent.  When I think of those who don't believe in God and consequently never pray, I picture them as people who refuse to plug in their toasters, but nonetheless, keep trying to make toast. 


I have had friends who are Buddhist, Jewish, Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, atheist, and agnostic—and I love and respect them all and their right to believe or to disbelieve in anything.  In my view, there are many paths to enlightenment and I would never presume to judge the rightness or wrongness of anyone's faith or lack thereof, nor would I criticize their journey.  And I understand, also, that to many, the idea of God is a lot like the Easter bunny—something folks made up to amuse and comfort children as well as "naive" adults whom they picture clinging to religion like a crutch, all too often beating others over the head with it.




Well, beating people over the head with my views is not my way, nor do I believe it is Christ's way.  I am no saint by any means, but what I try to do—imperfectly, of course—is to reflect God's love to others in my daily life, in my poetry, and in my relationships with the people around me.  I am not a Christian writer, but a writer who happens to be a Christian.  And I'm not an evangelist, either, nor do I yammer on about my faith or religion in general, with people who don't want to hear it. 




But no matter what I write about, it is through the prism of my belief in a loving God.  And no matter who I'm with, I'm doing my best to mirror God's love to that person, in whatever way is needed.  Of course, I fall short again and again because I'm all too human.  It is amazing to me that God loves me and loves all of us, anyway, just like my parents and others love me, no matter what idiotic, ineffectual, wacky, or counterproductive thing I might attempt to do today.




So for me, Easter has become over the years, a time to reflect on how blessed I feel to be in relationship with the God of my understanding, and how wonderful it is to be "connected" to the power of His love and to know that He is always with me and with all people in the world who love Him, too—and even with those who don't, for whom Easter can still symbolize a time of rebirth and renewal. 


But I have to admit, as far as I'm concerned, Easter and chocolate go together like Antony and Cleopatra—well, not as disastrously, I hope!  I love chocolate even more today than I did when I was four, which means good luck finding a pair of "footie" pajamas to fit me now...  And while you won't see me roaming the streets searching for the Easter bunny, or wearing a frilly dress and patent leather shoes in Sunday school, I will be at home with my family, quietly celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ, our Lord, and wishing every person of all faiths or none, a joy and chocolate-filled day!





Terri Kirby Erickson is the author of four collections of poetry, including In the Palms of Angels (Press 53, 2011), winner of multiple awards including a Nautilus Book Award, and her latest collection, A Lake of Light and Clouds (Press 53, 2014). Her work has appeared in the 2013 Poet's Market, Garrison Keillor's The Writer's Almanac, Ted Kooser's American Life in Poetry, Asheville Poetry Review, Verse Daily, The Christian Science Monitor, JAMA, and numerous others, and her poetry has won many awards and honors, including the Joy Harjo Poetry Prize and the Poetry for their Freedom Award.  She lives in a small town in North Carolina with her husband, Leonard, in a gray ranch house surrounded by songbirds, squirrels, and the occasional rabbit.  For more information about her work, please visit www.terrikirbyerickson.com





Photograph Description And Copyright Information 

Photo 1
Woman and Jesus painting image.
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright Information

Photo 2
1907 postcard depicting the Easter Bunny
Public Domain

Photo 3
Terri Kirby Erickson at age 4
Copyright granted by Terri Kirby Erickson

Photo 4

Photo 5
Terri Kirby Erickson's parents
Copyright granted by Terri Kirby Erickson

Photo 6

Photo 7
Painting of Jesus holding a lantern knocking at the door
Attributed to William Holman Hunt (04-02-1827 - 09-07-1910)

Photo 8
Praying Hands
Attributed to Albrecht Durer
Public Domain

Photo 9
The Co-exist sign
Fair Use Under the United States Copyright law

Photo 10
Jesus washing the disciplines' feet
Attributed to Jacopo Comin Tintoretto (10-1516 to 05-1594)
Public Domain

Photo 11
Woman writing
Attributed to Henri Lebasque 09/25/1865 to 08/09/1937
Public Domain

Photo 12
Terri Kirby Erickson sitting on her front porch
Copyright granted by Terri Kirby Erickson.

Photo 13
Terri Kirby Erickson
Copyright granted by Terri Kirby Erickson

Photo 14
Jacket cover of In the Palms of Angels 

Photo 15
Jacket cover of A Lake of Light and Clouds