BEIJING, April 9 (Xinhuanet) -- Groups of
funs sent flowers Wednesday to the park facing Lake Washington in
memory of the U.S. Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain.
"I miss your beautiful face and voice," one
dedication reads. "Thank you for inspiring me," says another.
Fifteen years ago, at a house adjacent to the park,
Kurt Cobain's dead body was discovered by an electrician.
The Nirvana frontman, 27, had committed suicide,
police later ruled, killing himself with a shotgun while high on heroin and
pills.
Cobain's death ended a battle with hard drugs and
added Cobain to a long list of legendary musicians, such as Jimi Hendrix and
Janis Joplin, whose careers were cut short by their addictions.
His ashes were reportedly scattered in a Washington
state river and a New York Buddhist temple.
Nirvana band mates Krist Novoselic and Dave Grohl
eventually formed other bands. Cobain's widow, Courtney Love, stayed in the
limelight with an acting career and legal problems surrounding her own drug
problems. Frances Bean, the couple's daughter, has largely lived outside the
public eye.
"At point I thought, 15 years on, no one would really
know who Kurt Cobain was outside of a group of diehard fans," said Jeff
Burlingame, a Cobain biographer who grew up with the musician in Aberdeen,
Washington, and knew him when he was a teenager who, without a place to sleep,
crashed on mutual friends' couches.
But Nirvana's music endured, and Cobain even found
fans in his hometown of Aberdeen, which he had derided as a small-minded town.
"The old-timers who were there when Kurt was around
really took offense to some of the things he said about the area, so they had no
real reason to honor him," said Burlingame, who co-founded the Kurt Cobain
Memorial Committee.
A famous son is a famous son, though. Now, visitors
arriving in Aberdeen are greeted with a sign that reads "Come As You Are," after
a famous Nirvana song.
A concert will be held Friday in Seattle to honor
Cobain.
(Agencies)