![]() ![]() However, despite their legendary prowess as an explosive live act and the fact that several key concerts were professionally recorded for posterity (resulting in the odd live b-side popping up on their singles), Nirvana never got around to releasing an official live record prior to their untimely demise in 1994. Kurt Cobain and co tackled bootleggers profiting from their hard to find/unreleased material at the height of their fame with Nirvana's official odds 'n' sods collection Incesticide in 1992 – which, ironically enough, subsequently inspired the long-running Outcesticide bootleg series. IF YOU grew up loving Nirvana during their 1990s heyday, chances are you whiled away many a Saturday afternoon trawling independent record shops for exorbitantly priced bootleg CDs – I'm thinking of you, Hector's House – featuring illicitly recorded live shows and/or rare tracks.
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