Irish Central

Tracing Kurt Cobain's Irish roots

- Rhona Tarrant

Kurt Cobain, frontman of Nirvana, tragi‐ cally took his own life, aged 27, on April 5, 1994. Nine months prior to his death, Cobain said he “had a sense that [he] was from Ireland."

There are many people and places that wish to claim Kurt Cobain as their own. First, there’s his hometown of Aberdeen in Washington, whose sign on the en‐ trance to the town reads, “Welcome to Aberdeen, Come As You Are."

Then there’s Olympia, the capital of Washington state, where he wrote many of the tracks that featured on Never‐ mind, Nirvana’s breakthrou­gh second al‐ bum.

Nearby Seattle, where he lived for two years, has been long associated with the musician.

But one place that Cobain laid claim to wasn’t in Washington State. In fact, nine months before he died he said that he “had a sense that [he] was from Ireland."

Kurt Cobain's Irish roots

Little was known about Cobain’s her‐ itage until July 1993, when Guitar Wor‐ ld’s Jon Savage interviewe­d the musician on his world tour. When the question of identity arose, the musician said that he had recently found out that his surname was Irish.

“My parents have never bothered to find that stuff out,” he said, “I found out by looking through phone books throughout America for names that were similar to mine. I couldn't find any Cobain at all, so I started calling Coburns. I found this one lady in San Francisco who had been researchin­g our family history for years.”

He later discovered that ‘ Coburn’ had originally been ‘ Cobain’, but the family name changed when they emigrated from Co Cork. The Cork connection was “a weird coincidenc­e” he said, “because when we toured Ireland, we played in Cork and the entire day I walked around in a daze. I'd never felt more spiritual in my life.”

Cobain was referring to their 1991 tour with Sonic Youth when Nirvana played support in Cork and Dublin. The gig took place weeks before the release of "Smells Like Teen Spirit" which catapul‐ ted the band to internatio­nal attention. He said the experience had left him feeling “more spiritual” than ever before, “It was the weirdest feeling and I have a friend who was with me who could tes‐ tify to this. I was almost in tears the whole day. Since that tour, which was about two years ago, I've had a sense that I was from Ireland.”

Kurt Cobain's Co Tyrone connection­s

Although the subject of his Irish heritage was largely forgotten for over a decade, it was brought to light in 2010 when Tyrone woman Fionnula O’Reilly discov‐ ered that she was related to the musici‐ an.

While tracing her family tree, she dis‐ covered that her ancestors Samuel and Letitia, whose surname was originally spelled Cobane, left Tyrone and settled as shoemakers in the state of Washing‐ ton. Kurt Cobain was a fifth-generation descendant of the emigrants.

It’s not known whether Cobain continued to search for his ancestors after the in‐ terview with Jon Savage. The grunge icon's body was discovered in his Seattle home on April 8, 1994, three days after taking his own life and the day he was originally scheduled to be performing at the Point Theatre in Dublin.

Here Kurt Cobain discusses his identity: *Originally published in 2014, updated in2024.

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