AD: She has been described as a fag hag-
KC: Oh, she is. That was all she did for about five
or six years of her life-hang out in gay clubs. She learned everything about perfume and fashion from her friends.
AD: Now that you've got a baby, how are you going to
teach her about sexism and homophobia and things like that?
KC: I think that just growing up with Courtney and
I will be a good enough example that, hopefully, she won't be perjudiced. You have to admit that most of the reasons a person
grows up hating the isms is because their parents taught them. She might get confused, but I'm not worried about it at all.
AD: With the state the world is in, do you ever feel
scared for her?
KC: Well, I have apocalyptic dreams all the time. Two
years ago, I wouldn't even have considered having a child. I used to say that a person who would bring a child into this life
now is selfish. But I try to be optimistic, and things do look like they're getting a little bit better - just the way communication
has progressed in the past ten years. MTV, whether they're the evil corporate ogre or not, has played a part in raising consciousness.
It seems tacky enough almost, but rock and roll and
our generation are not going to put up with the same Reaganite bullshit we were subjected to when we were younger. I was helpless
when I was 12, when Reagan got elected, and there was nothing I could do about that. But now this generation is growing up,
and they're in their mid 20's, they're not putting up with it.
I know there's still Republicans all over the place,
but don't you feel that it's getting a little bit better? Not just because Clinton is in office now but-look at the first
thing he did. He tried to take away the ban on gays in the military, and I think that's a pretty positive thing. I don't expect
a lot of change, but I think in the last five years our generation's gotten a little more positive. I know that by reading
Sassy magazine, you know? As tacky and stupid as that seems, I can tell that the average 14-year-old kid is a lot more sensitive
- or trying to be - than they were ten years ago.
AD: Are you pro-Clinton?
KC: Oh, yeah. I voted for him. I would have rather
had Jerry Brown. I contributed my hundred dollars. But I'm definitely happy that Clinton's in.
AD: Would you play at the White House if they asked
you to?
KC: [Laughs] If we could have some kind of influence
on something, yeah. I know that Chelsea likes us a lot, so maybe Chelsea could say, "Dad, do this and do that! Nirvana says
so!" [Laughs] Sure, I'd play for the president. And Chelsea seems like a pretty neat person-Birkenstock-wearing kid. Amy Carter's
pretty cool too, from what I've heard. She's been seen at Butthole Surfers concerts!
AD: You guys aren't preachy about your opinions. It's
a sensible approach.
KC: Gee. That's pretty flattering, but out of all the
people I know, I'm about the least qualified to be talking politically. I hope I come across more personal than political.
About a year ago, when we realized the impact that we have, we thought it was a great opportunity to have some kind of influence
on people. I've been called a hypocrite and an idiot and unqualified, but I can't help it. It's just my nature. I have to
talk about things that piss me off, and if that's negative or that's preachy, then that's too bad. No one's gonna shut me
up. I'm still the same person I was. Actually, I used to be way more of a radical than I am now.
AD: In thought or in deed?
KC: Both, really. Mostly in deed; I can't really go
around vandalizing anymore. But I have - actually, I just did a while ago.
AD: What?
KC: I can't say! [Laughs] I can't even say! I have
people checking up on me all the time - especially because of the heroin rumors. That's been blown out of proportion so severely
that I'm constantly harassed at airports and immigration all the time. And the cops - I get pulled over whenever they recognize
me, and they search my car.
It all started with just one fucking article in Bam
magazine. This guy - I wasn't even high that night, and he just assumed I was and wrote a piece on how sunken in my cheeks
were and how pinholed my eyes were and that I wasn't able to cope with the success and everything that was going on with the
band. It was very embarrassing. It didn't bother me at first, but then once one article is written about a person that's negative,
it just spreads like wildfire, and everyone just assumes it's true.
AD: You're talking about Lynn Hirschberg's profile
of Courtney in Vanity Fair.
KC: I've never read an article that was more convincing
yet more ridiculous in my life. Everybody from our record label to our management to our closest friends believed that shit.
She [Hirschberg] did a really good job of taking a
piece of what Courtney had said and turning it into something completely different. I've seen that happen before--it's happened
with me alot of times--but this was such an extreme and done so well that I have to give her credit. She's a master at being
catty.
AD: What about the drug use?
KC: Courtney was honest about the heroin excursion
we went on for a few months. Then Courtney found herself pregnant, realized she was pregnant and had a drug problem, and got
off drugs. It's as simple as that. But it made it look like eight months after the fact, Courtney was still nine months pregnant
and still doing drugs and everyone was really concerned. Like there was some awful den of iniquity going on in our apartment.
I looked really skinny. Well, I am a skinny person, and I gain ten pounds every time I'm photographed, so peopel assume I'm
this chunky, normal weight person.
I'm just so tired of talking about this. We have to
live with the resuslts of this one article every fucking day. It's something we have to deal with all the time.
AD: How did you feel when you read it?
KC: I was totally pissed off. My first thoughts were
to have her fucking snuffed out. I wanted to personally beat the shit out of her, and I've never wanted to do that to anybody,
especially a woman. But I just had so much anger in me. It was done so well. We were just helpless to combat something like
that. We've had to do fluff pieces to try to fight this thing. It's embarrassing to have to do that: to pose with your family
on the cover of a magazine, to hope that some people at least question the validity of [Vanity Fair].
AD: You're talking about posing for the December Spin
cover?
KC: Yeah, and we've done a couple of other things.
It pissed me off to the point of...not even wanting to hate that much. We could have filed a lawsuit with Conde Nast, but
they have so many millions of dollars, they could have filibustered for ten years, and we wouldn't have come up with anything
except losing most of our money.
AD: What's the funniest thing you've ever seen written
about you?
KC: Practically all of it. [Laughs] Most of the time
I come across as just this redneck little rocker kid who basically can't put a sentence together, you know? I come across
a lot of times as just a stupid rock-and-roll kid.
AD: Courtney comes across in the press as the Nancy
Reagan of this relationship.
KC: It's just sick. God! I don't want to say something
like "Well, if anything, I wear the pants in the house." It's completely divided. We have influence on each other. It's totally
50-50. Courtney insists on this: She has a tab when she borrows money from me that she has to pay back. She's only up to $6,000.
We're millionarires, and she goes to Jet Rag [a Los Angeles vintage-clothing shop] and buys clothes-$5 dresses. big deal!
I'll gladly buy her some $5 dresses. We don't require much at all.
Our personal expenses over the last year-we made a
million dollars, of which $380,000 went to taxes, $300,000 went to a house, the rest went to doctors and lawyers, and our
personal expernses were like $80,000. That's including car rentals, food, everything. That's not very much; that's definitely
not what Axl spends a year. She insisted on a prenuptial agreement; no one knows that. So there's definitely not manipulation
going on in this relationship at all.
It really sickens me to think that everyone assumes
this. It makes me feel even stupider. I'm not the most secure person in the world, and I don't need to know that everytime
I go outside and someone recognizes me, they think of me as this defenseless little rocker idiot that's being manipulated
by his wife. It's a little bit more complex than that.
Courtney's had misconceptions about herself all her
life. I talk to people who knew Courtney five years ago, and she was way more of a volatile, fucked-up person than she is
now. She was insane at times. People would see her at parties just begging for attention. I never could have predicted a successful
marriage with this person a few years ago. It just couldn't have happened.
AD: How does all this affect the other members of Nirvana?
KC: Definitely not as severe as everyone thinks or
what has been written. There was article in the [British music magazine] NME that was nothing but an "expose" on Courtney
fucking up Nirvana and making us come close to breaking up. It's pretty frightening to find that an article like that can
be written by a friend of yours. It makes it hard to trust anybody. Chris and Dave liked Courtney before I even liked Courtney.
During that time, I knew that I liked her a lot, but I wouldn't admit it. She and Dave were really good friends - I shouldn't
say this, but they almost wanted to get together for a time. When we were on tour in Europe, some of our shows collided with
Hole shows, and Courtney would hang out on the bus with us, and Chris and Courtney were really good friends. And it hasn't
changed at all. There hasn't been any bad blood except after the Vanity Fair piece.
For a few days, even Chris was convinced that Courtney
had said those things. Courtney had said, "Why don't you kick Chris out of the band?" She said that, but it was a total joke.
That's the biggest problem with articles-context. The word sarcastic needs to be in parentheses 90% of the time in an interview
with us. Dave and Chris are dealing with this fine, and they're defending us as much as they can, but we can't expect them
to go on a defense crusade, because it doesn't affect them like it affects us.
AD: Have there been times in the last year when you've
just wanted to quit?
KC: Oh, yeah. The other night. I called up Chris late
at night; I was really drunk, and I said, "I don't want to be in this band anymore, I'll call you tomorrow." I was dead serious.
For a couple of hours. [Laughs]
AD: How is it dealing with a big label?
KC: We haven't had any complications. In our contract
we have 100% artistic control. What that means in fine print, I don't know. All the evil corporateness that I've heard about
since I've been into underground rock probably is true with other bands, but we have a good lawyer and a great contract. And
we sell a lot of records for them, so we have the upper hand.
AD: Courtney's band got a good contract too?
KC: It's actually better than ours. This is the first
decade major labels have even dealt with a contract like this. They're so used to having bands that don't even know what they
want to do that they have to be in control. There are a lot of bands that don't have any artistic direction at all, so they
need to dress up in spandex.
AD: So you can turn on mainstream radio and hear some
music you like these days.
KC: That's part of the reason I'm a little bit more
optimistic this year-Clinton and because the Screaming Trees are on heavy rotation right now. It's commercial, but it's good
music. I don't like Pearl Jam's music at all, but at least they have good attitudes; they're not another Van Halen, who totally
refuse to address anything. The only sad thing about it is that the innocence of underground musc has been lumped in with
the corporate idea of what underground is. There are no boundaries. Pearl Jam's a good example. I don't mean to harp on them;
I'm tired of talking shit about them, but they're a real commercial rock band.
AD: What do you do when you're not playing music?
KC: Well, I'm reading Perfume for the second time.
It's about a perfume apprentice in the 1700s. And I really like Camille Paglia a lot; it's really entertaining, even though
I don't necessarily agree with what she says. I still paint once in a while-I painted the cover of Incesticide.
And I make dolls. I like the style of things from the
1700s and 1800s from Yugoslavia and that area. I copy them from doll-collector magazines. They're clay. I bake them, and then
I make them look really old and put old clothes on them. They look like I actually came across a real antique, because I don't
know where to find the dolls that are in those magazines. I could go to a doll-collectors show, but they're so expensive.
I don't want to indulge in things like that-"Now that I'm a rock star, I buy antiques," you know? [Laughs] Some of those things
are, like, $50,000.
I can't find anything I want. I go shopping, and I
buy food, and that's about it. Now that I have all this money, I just can't spend it on anything. Everything that I appreciate
is old but not necessarily an antique, so I can get it really cheap.
AD: So you're not falling into the trap of spending
money on things just because you can?
KC: Sometimes I wish I could. I've noticed there are
specialty shops for the rich and famous that have basically the same things you can find at Kmart, but they have a ridiculous
price tag, and people buy it just because they don't have anything else to do with their money. There are a lot of things
like that on Rodeo Drive. We went into Gucci just to see what a Gucci bag cost. [Laughs] Just this leather bag, and because
it had a Gucci name on it, like, $10,000! AD: Do you like L.A.?
KC: I hate L.A. I love the weather, but I can't stand
being there. I absolutely hate it. A lot of it has to do with having the responsibility of driving around with the baby. People
are so rude there. I'm not that bad a driver, and I get in a wreck almost every day.
We were there for the riots. That decision was the
most asinine thing I'd ever seen. If they were going to riot, I just wish they could have rioted in the middle of Beverly
Hills. Got all the Gucci bags. [Laughs]
AD: Now's your chance to say anything you'd like to
say.
KC: I always clam up when that question is asked. Maybe
I'll just fumble and stutter and end up saying, "Don't believe everything you read." I always knew to question things. All
my life, I never believed most things I read in history books and a lot of things I learned in school. But now I've found
I don't have the right to make a judgement on someone based on something I've read. I don't have the right to judge anything.
That's the lesson I've learned.