Chances are you’re either a huge fan of Nirvana, know their songs, or at the very least — know the name. Their name, music, and incredible designs are literally everywhere you look. In fact, even ...
Nirvana are being sued for copyright infringement for using an image on their merchandise that was designed by a British artist named C.W. Scott-Giles. The image was Scott-Giles' translation of Dante ...
It's not every day somebody sues Nirvana, but that's exactly what happened on April 28. That's the day when, as Blabbermouth points out, Jocelyn Susan Bundy sued Nirvana LLC, Silva Artist Management ...
Thirty years ago this month Nirvana released Unplugged In New York, the live acoustic album recorded as part of MTV’s Unplugged series. It’s a brilliant record, so good in fact, that for many it sits ...
UPDATE (10/22): A copyright infringement lawsuit over Nirvana’s use of a C.W. Scott-Giles illustration from a 1949 English translation of Dante’s Inferno on merchandise has been dismissed. Per court ...
While much of the legal focus in recent months has been on Nevermind cover baby Spencer Elden's lawsuit trying to get his image removed from future pressings of the album, Nirvana have also been ...
Who would’ve thought two little x’s for eyes, a squiggly smiley face to finish them off and an all-caps rendering of a band name would unite and inadvertently become the biggest fashion statement of ...
This is the best comment on that post: Hey justin, do you actually listen to nirvana or is Kurt cobain's life just a fashion statement to you? Anyway, now Justin Bieber's stylist has give an interview ...
C.W. Scott-Giles drawing of "Upper Hell" for a 1949 English translation of Dante's Divine Comedy (Source: federal court filings). LOS ANGELES (CN) — A Ninth Circuit panel on Monday upheld the ...
After several years, and a few unexpected twists, Nirvana and Marc Jacobs have settled a copyright dispute over the band’s smiley face logo, which also raised questions about the origins of the famous ...