It’s now been 30 years since the most extreme week of Courtney Love’s life. She became a professional rockstar and a professional widow in the space of seven days.
On April 5, 1994, her husband, Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain, 27, died at their Seattle home in one of rock’n’roll’s most shocking suicides. Then on April 12, Love’s band, Hole, released an album that would go multi-platinum, with the prescient title Live Through This.
The first album after signing a million-dollar record deal, it saw Love’s career soar at the worst time in her life. Four months after Cobain’s death she was touring the world with Hole, working through her grief on stage.
It’s reductive to narrow down Love’s achievements to a rock’n’roll survival story, but her strength and resilience outweighs even her ambition.
For most, Love first appeared on their radar during her relationship with grunge icon Cobain. They met in 1990 and were married by 1992 and it was the first major taste of the attention she’d been seeking all her life.
Born Courtney Michelle Harrison in