Everman joined Nirvana in February 1989 as a second guitarist. He is listed as being second guitarist on Nirvana's
Bleach and appears on the cover, but did not actually play on any of the tracks. Nirvana founder
Kurt Cobain said the credit was a token of thanks to Everman for paying a fee of $606.17 to record the album. On the 2009 remastered edition of
Bleach, Everman is no longer credited but can still be seen on the front cover and he is given special thanks in the booklet. Everman toured with Nirvana the summer of 1989 in support of
Bleach. He can be heard playing guitar on
Trust No-One, an unofficial release of a live performance in
Boston. Cobain had broken his guitar the previous night and only provided vocals, leaving the guitar playing to Everman. Everman can also be seen in the bootleg video of Nirvana playing an "in store" performance at Rhino Records in Los Angeles on June 23, 1989. During his time with Nirvana, he could sometimes be seen using
Fender guitars, generally the
Fender Telecaster. Nirvana fired Everman after the tour ended A two-song Nirvana session featuring Everman on guitar is available, albeit in separate releases. A
Kiss cover called "Do You Love Me?" was released on the 1990
tribute album Hard to Believe: A Kiss Covers Compilation, and "Dive" was released on
2004's With the Lights Out. Both tracks were recorded at the
Evergreen State College's 24-track studio in June 1989. Everman next joined Soundgarden in Fall of 1989 as
Hiro Yamamoto's temporary successor on bass. In April of that year, he played on the band's cover of
the Beatles' "
Come Together", which appeared on an EP called
Loudest Love. Everman appeared in Soundgarden's
Louder Than Live home video. Everman left immediately after Soundgarden completed its promotional tour for
Louder Than Love in mid-1990 to play bass for the band
OLD (Old Lady Drivers), at which time Soundgarden found Yamamoto's ultimate successor, bassist
Ben Shepherd. Later, in 1993, he played guitar in
Mind Funk. ==Later life==