| Daily Variety |
| November 15, 1993 |
| . |
| REVIEW The Lemonheads; Hole |
| (The Palace, Hollywood; 1,250 capacity; $ 17.50 top) |
| by Troy J. Augusto |
| . |
| Promoted By Goldenvoice. |
| Bands: (Lemonheads) Evan Dando, Nic Dalton, David Ryan; |
| (Hole) Courtney Love, Eric Erlanson, Patty Schemel, Kristen Pfaff. |
| Reviewed Nov. 7, 1993. |
[snip]
The Lemonheads have hit on a promising combination of classic pop song structure, accessible themes and just the right amount of unintentional sex appeal. Sounds like the fabled next big thing has arrived.
Not so with second-billed Hole, a caustic power-punk-pop quartet led by the insufferable Courtney Love, a singer who seems all too interested in showing disdain for fame long before most people have heard her band.
Love is the wife of Kurt Cobain, singer and guitarist for DGC labelmates Nirvana, and has been subject to public and critical scrutiny both because of her husband's widely popular band and as the result of an interview last year in Vanity Fair, where she seems to acknowledge drug use while pregnant with their daughter.
At the Palace, her obvious drunken state was bragged about as she railed against music critics, bored friends in the crowd and life as the "wife of a rock star."
While some
songs showed a smart pop flair, the band's old-school punk noise, combined
with Love's vitriolic barbs and consistent whining make for a Hole better
left unexplored.