"Old Age" is a song by the American rock band, Nirvana. For years, it was known only as a Hole song, first appearing as a B-side on their 1993 single for the song "Beautiful Son," and again on their 1997 compilation album, My Body, The Hand Grenade. Then, in 1998, a tape of the song being performed by Nirvana was leaked to the Stranger, a Seattle, Washington weekly newspaper. The tape was recorded in March 1991, as part of a demo for record producer Butch Vig (who produced the band's second album, Nevermind, later that year), and seemed to contradict the song's official standing as a Courtney Love composition. In a Stranger article written by Kathleen Wilson following the leak of the tape, Nirvana bassist Krist Novoselic confirmed that "Old Age" was indeed "a Nirvana song."
At least one other version of the song is known to exist: a solo acoustic home demo which first surfaced on the internet in 1999. Its authenticity was challenged at first, but in 2004, an MP3 of the demo was sent by the website Live Nirvana to "a panel of band associates" - including former Hole guitarist Eric Erlandson - which confirmed that it is, indeed, a Cobain recording. Erlandson believes it was recorded as a demo for Love, who then reworked the song's lyrics in time for the Fall of 1992, when it was first recorded by Hole.