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Foo Fighters BioWhile he was drumming with Nirvana,
Dave
Grohl was recording original songs at home that never received public
release. Those tapes would become the foundation of Foo
Fighters, the band
he formed in 1995, after the death of Kurt Cobain. Like Nirvana,
Foo
Fighters melded loud, heavy guitars with pretty melodies and mixed punk
sensibilities with a sharp sense of pop songwriting. |
Foo Fighters Bio |
Foo Fighters Pictures |
After Nirvana recorded Nevermind, Grohl went back to the D.C. area and recorded a handful of tracks that would appear on Pocketwatch, a cassette released by Simple Machines. For most of 1992 he was busy with Nirvana, but when the band stayed off of the road, he recorded solo material with Jones, who had moved to Seattle. The pair kept recording throughout early 1993, when Grohl returned to Nirvana to record In Utero. Grohl had toyed with the idea of releasing another independent cassette in the summer of 1993, but the plans never reached fruition. Following Kurt Cobain's suicide in 1994, the drummer kept quiet for several months. In the fall of 1994, booking time in a professional studio, Grohl and Jones recorded the album that became Foo Fighters' debut album in a week. Boiling down his backlog of songs to about 15 tracks, Grohl played all of the instruments on the album. He made 100 copies of the tape, passing it out to friends and associates. In no time, Dave Grohl's solo project became the object of a fierce record company bidding war. |
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