Dave Grohl: "Had a guitar around the house all my life but never got around to really learning how to play it until I was about 10 years old. I was told to take lessons because everyone was sick of hearing 'Smoke On The Water.' Took lessons for about one year and stopped because it wasn't teaching me how to play music.
About the same time I was trying to figure out Beatles songs by myself. I was always really good at figuring out songs by ear. I always thought that it was in my blood, seeing as my mother was in singing groups as a teen and my father was an accomplished flautist. At 11, I started recording songs on a Fairfax County Public School issue cassette player with my best friend, Larry Hinkle.
My first electric guitar was a Silvertone (the cool kind from the '60s with the amp built into the case) that I got for Christmas at age 12. By spring it was dropped and broken. It was replaced by a Memphis Les Paul copy. Black. Soon discovered distortion and joined a neighborhood cover band. Played Who, Stones, etc.. Actually performed at a nursing home and played "Time Is On My Side." People danced.
On the summer of my 13th year. my family took its annual trip to Evanston, Il. to visit my cousins. Upon arrival, I was greeted at the front door by my cousin Tracey. But this wasn't the Tracey I had grown to love, this was punk Tracey. Complete with bondage pants, spiked hair, chains, the whole nine yards. It was the most fucking awesome thing I had ever seen. That few weeks in Evanston changed my life forever. I was totally amazed at the extensive underground of fanzines and labels and bands. Her record collection (worth a mint today, I'm sure) was incredible! Hundreds of singles from all over the world. I no longer thought that punk rockers existed only on CHIPS and Quincy. It was especially moving seeing my first show (Naked Raygun/R.O.T.A. at the Cubby Bear, summer 1982), having never been to a rock concert before in my life. To me, this was what a rock concert was really like until I saw my first "real" concert at age 19. Needless to say, it was quite a disappointment (the big concert, silly)."
William Goldsmith: "When asked in fifth grade if anyone wanted to play drums in the school band, William raised his hand. I didn't quite have the patience to focus on the sheet music they gave us, so I threw it away and decided to write my own parts in my head. I received many detentions for adding too many rolls.
When I was in seventh grade, my brother sat down with me and taught me that I was a real person and that I could think for myself, then proceeded to introduce me to many bands: Led Zeppelin, the Who, Elvis Costello, Talking Heads, Cream, Jethro Tull, etc.. When I got into eighth grade I got a drum kit and somehow already knew how to play it. I took it to the school band and said 'I'm not going to just play the snare anymore. I'm going to play the silly little songs with a drum kit by ear.' But really all I wanted to do was be Keith Moon, with the kick drum foot of John Bonham."
One incident reported on November 23, 1944 had Foo Fighters tailing an American plane over the Rhine for some 18 miles. Four days later, two pilots logged an encounter with a large, glowing, orange mass moving at approximately 250 mph. They followed it briefly before sudden, inexplicable radar malfunctions forced their return to base.
Nate Mendel: "I bought my first bass not because I knew how to play one or had any intention of becoming a musician, but because I really wanted to be in a band and a friend had told me that the bass was the easiest instrument to play. I never played in a band with that guy."
Dave Grohl: "In the summer of 1984 I met some guys at a Void show in D.C. who were in a band that needed a guitar player. I gladly offered my services and was given an audition. The band was called Freak Baby. I was accepted and my career as a punk rocker began. We played a few shows at a local high school and recorded a demo that fall with local studio wiz Barrett Jones. This was my first recording in a real deal 4 track studio. We convinced the local punk rock record store Smash to sell our cassettes and managed to gain a following of four or five local skinheads. Go figure. After kicking out our bass player a few months later, I had the chance to put down the guitar and rescue the drums from our struggling drummer, Dave. Turns out he was actually a rather fine bass player to begin with, making the decision even more logical (or palatable). ENTER MISSION IMPOSSIBLE.
Mission Impossible was a super-fast hardcore delight--a chance to try out all the tricks I hat learned from my growing record collection, on a real drumset even! I hadn't the slightest idea how to set the fucking thing up, but I sure loved beating the shit out of it. We actually wrote songs that had little breaks in them so we could jump just like the pictures we'd seen in Maximumrocknroll and Flipside. It was 1985 and I was living my hardcore dream."
William Goldsmith: "My friend Peter Augustino started introducing me to more underground punk rock music. We started our first band, the Screaming Hormones. We could not play. When I got into high school, I met a guy named John Atkins who decided to collaborate with the Screaming Hormones. There was about 10 people in the band; we basically took everyone in the school who was even remotely interested in classic rock or punk rock and put them in the band. It was perhaps the worst band that ever existed. Then John Atkins and I broke off from the Screaming Hormones and decided to spend the next four years of our lives together learning how to write and shape songs. That was the most influential part of my career."
Naturally, pilots who made official reports regarding the Foo Fighters were subject to skepticism if not outright ridicule. An imposed silence ensued, only to be broken a month later by two flyers from the 415th Squadron who reported a December 22 pursuit by two Foo Fighters. Two nights later the same pilots were "attacked" by a glowing red object while flying over the Rhine.
Dave Grohl: "Mission Impossible played its last show in the summer of 1985. Over the course of that year, I'd had many great experiences: opening for the legendary Troublefunk at a high school prom, Ian Mackaye publicly declaring that he liked my band, finally being able to send demo tapes to all the pen pals I'd acquired over years of fanzine collecting, even releasing a split single with local heroes Lunchmeat (now Girls Against Boys).
Enter Reuben Radding, an extraordinary bassist in band called A.O.C. that had just broken up as well. His knowledge of hardcore was negligible, his taste being more in the Mission of Burma/Television vein. We set up our stuff in my living room and smoked a whole bunch of pot, wrote four songs, and Dain Bramage was born. With Reuben on guitar and vocals, Dave (ex-Mission Impossible) on bass, and me still at the drum set, we started writing song after song at an alarming pace. We started playing shows around town, whenever we could get them, usually to the hardcore kids' dismay. This band was where I really started to utilize my growing interest in songwriting: arrangement, dynamics, different tunings, etc.. We were extremely experimental, usually experimenting with classic rock clichÄs in a noisy, punk rock kind of way. Like every other band I'd been in, we eventually recorded a few demos with Barrett. After being discovered by C.O.C. drummer Reed Mullin, we were courted by L.A. independent label Fartblossom, much to our surprise. Flattered beyond belief, we went into a 24 track studio near Annapolis and recorded Dain Bramage's only LP, I Scream Not Coming Down. It was a fine demonstration of our blend of rock, art punk, and hardcore. I still like it."
Disturbed by the frequent and vivid nature of these reports, authorities attempted to dismiss them as St. Elmo's Fire, a naturally occurring by-product of mutual electrostatic induction caused by the very planes being "tailed" and "attacked." Theoretically, the immaterial nature of St. Elmo's Fire would account for its radar invisibility, while the charges present in these energy bodies could explain interference in the planes' radar functions.
William Goldsmith: "I then joined a band with Jeremy Enigk called Reason For Hate. I got into some trouble just after graduating from high school. My friend Greg Williamson was looking for a replacement drummer for a band he was in called Positive Greed. It seemed like a good idea at the time because they were going to take me on tour, and I needed to get out of town."
Dave Grohl: "A year or so later, I saw a flyer that read 'Scream looking for drummer, call Franz.' Now, Scream was legendary in D.C.. They had been a band since 1979 or '80 and I had seen them many a time. Their first two records were among my all-time favorites, so this little flyer was more than just that. Originally, I'd just wanted to call Franz, jam with them once or twice, then be able to tell my friends 'I got to play with Scream!!'. So I called Franz a few times and finally got an answer. I explained that I was a huge fan, told him which bands I'd played in, and that I'd love to give it a shot. When he asked how old I was, I lied and said I was 20 (I think I was 17). He never called back. I guess a few months went by and I called him again. This time I convinced him to give me an hour or two of his time and scheduled my audition. Seeing as how Scream records were among those I used to play drums to on my bed when I was first learning, I knew all their songs by heart. I even had an advance copy of their latest demo. So when Franz looked at me and asked, 'What do you want to play? Some Sabbath? Or some Zep?' I said, 'Nah. let's play...' and rattled off the names of all their songs. The next two hours were heaven for me, to be able to play Scream songs with the real deal.
After a few more practices, it was apparent they were serious about me joining. This was something that never entered my mind, the possibility of actually joining Scream. I had to really weigh the options: 1. Leave my two greatest friends in the dust and travel the world with one of my favorite bands ever. Or 2. Stick with Dain Bramage and hope it all works out.
I called Franz and told him no. I explained my situation and apologized. I think he understood and invited me to their next show a few weeks later. It was one of the greatest Scream shows I'd ever seen. I changed my mind."
Nate Mendel: "I first started playing with my friend Jason Cobb. He was an excellent guitar player, from the "sit in your room, smoke pot and learn Led Zeppelin songs note for note all day" school of guitar. Our first band was an argument. Sitting around one day with our friends Glen Essary and Glen Attebury, Jason decided to demonstrate the inane simplicity of punk rock by composing a typical punk rock song on the spot. He lost the argument and that song became Product of Rape's first song."
Yet reports of Foo Fighters persisted, climaxing in May 1945 with the sighting of five orange balls traveling in a triangular formation near the eastern edge of the Pfazerwald. With the conclusion of the war, however, decreased air activity in this region logically led to fewer sightings of Foo Fighters. Eventually, they would be forgotten until their reemergence in 1950, heralding the modern age of UFO sightings.
Dave Grohl: "It was spring of '87 and here I was in one of D.C.'s most respected bands. Scream was no longer making records for Dischord, but another D.C. label had signed us. Ras Records was a reggae label about to try (unsuccessfully) to expand into the rock market. So we were thrown into a fancy 24 track studio with a reggae producer to make No More Censorship, Scream's fourth LP.
We set out on what would be our first American tour in the fall of 1987. I was 18 years old, doing exactly what I wanted to do. With a $7 a day per diem, I traveled to places I'd never dreamed of visiting. And all because of music. The feeling of driving across the country in a van with five other guys, stopping in every city to play, sleeping on peoples' floors, watching the sun come up over the desert as I drove, it was all too much. This was definitely where I belonged.
My first trip to Europe was amazing. In February of 1988, we flew into Amsterdam and spent the next two months playing in the Netherlands, France, Germany, Italy, Scandinavia, England and Spain. Most shows were in squats (buildings taken over by punks at war with the system, fighting the police for their right to a place to live) and youth centers, very few in bars or nightclubs. It was awesome. Most shows were actually pretty crowded since Scream was one of the few American hardcore bands to visit Europe before.
We did another short U.S. tour, returned to Europe in the fall for three months, recorded a live record (Live At Van Hall In Amsterdam), and continued writing new songs. This was also the year I attended my first big stadium concert, Monsters of Rock featuring Metallica, Van Halen, Dokken, Scorpions, etc., etc.. Needless to say, I found the whole thing extremely comical and couldn't for the life of me understand the appeal of something so contrived and phony. Good thing I would never have to do that."
Foo Fighters. Self-titled Debut Album.
Nate Mendel: "Diddly Squat was my first actual band. We played hardcore and put out one 7" record. I bought a van and we did a few tours, breaking up after the last one in 1988. Diddly Squat drummer Eric Akre and I then conspired with friends in a Washington D.C. band called Christ on a Crutch (which included Product of Rape singer Glen Essary) to reform that band in Seattle. In the six month interim between Diddly Squat and Christ on a Crutch, I moved to Seattle and played in a straight edge band called Brotherhood. This band had pretty great songs but was weighted down with burden of being a straight edge band. It was really fun, though. Christ on a Crutch got together and played for a few years, doing tours and putting out a bunch of singles and an LP. We played at an anarchy festival once. This band died in 1993."
Dave Grohl: "In between Scream tours, I was hanging out with Barrett more and more, helping him out with his solo project in the studio. Since he had his own 8 track in the basement, we would jam on his songs and record them pretty quickly. I sometimes played bass or guitar on some songs. That summer I realized that if I were to write a song, record the drums first, then come back over it with a few guitars, bass, and vocals, I could make it sound like a band. So I came up with a few riffs on the spot and recorded three songs in under 15 minutes. Mind you, these were no epic masterpieces, just a test to see if I could do this sort of thing on my own. It was the beginning of a beautiful relationship.
I then started writing more and more stuff, some used in Scream's final tape (later released as Fumble), some hidden away for later use. We did our final tour of Europe in the spring of 1990. It was a real ballbuster, 23 shows in 24 days, so draining that one member quit 3/4 of the way through, only to be promptly replaced so that we could finish the tour. We recorded another live record (Live In Germany) and headed home.
Upon returning, an eviction notice was discovered, unopened, in (Scream vocalist) Pete Stahl and (bassist) Skeeter's mailbox. It was for the next day. The only logical thing to do: Get back on the road. So we booked what would be our last tour, rather hastily, and hit the road in the summer of '90. Plagued with cancellations and low attendance, it was apparent that something had to give. That something would be our bassist Skeeter. Upon waking up in Franz's sister's house in L.A. halfway through the tour and discovering that Skeeter was gone, we realized some heavy decisions had to be made. Suckers for punishment that we were, we decided to stay in L.A. and search for a new bassist."
Band Personnel (alphabetically):
William Goldsmith (drums)
Dave Grohl (guitar, vocals)
Nate Mendel (bass)
Pat Smear (guitar)
Dave Grohl: "After I explained our predicament to him, Buzz Osborne from the Melvins told me that this band called Nirvana was looking for a drummer. He said they'd seen Scream in S.F. and really liked my drumming. After waiting a few days, I gathered up enough courage to call this guy Chris. I introduced myself and he remembered seeing me play. I explained my situation and he told me that they had already recruited Mudhoney drummer Dan Peters and that they were practicing with him for an upcoming UK tour. I wished him luck and told him that if they were ever in L.A. (which was looking more and more like my permanent home) to give me a call.
Chris called back that night and asked if there was any way I could fly up to Seattle.
Another heartbreaking decision: Was I to leave my best friends in the world, the ones who had taught me everything I knew about touring, playing, writing, living, etc. to move to Seattle and join a band full of people I had never even met? It was the toughest decision I ever had to make. Honestly, 100%. I got the hell out of L.A. and there was no looking back.
With only my drum set in a huge box and a bag of clothes, I was greeted at the Seattle airport by the biggest guy I had ever seen and the scrawniest guy I had ever seen. After a brief run through of the songs on Bleach a few days later, it was clear that this was my new position."
* Greg Dulli plays guitar on "X-Static" and is therefore the only other musician to play with Dave on this recording.
Dave Grohl: "On my trips back to Va., I started recording more and more at Barrett's studio. I had probably finished six or seven songs and was writing a lot of stuff in my spare time in Olympia. After recording Nevermind, I went home for a few days and recorded at a different local D.C. studio. This tape was heard by a friend named Jenny Toomey who had a label called Simple Machines. She had heard other recordings and asked if I was interested in doing a cassette release. I was a little hesitant, always having been very shy about people listening to me sing, but I eventually said yes. This was to become my alter ego, "Late." The cassette was entitled Pocketwatch and was (and still is) duplicated from a second generation copy that I had given Jenny months before and included early versions of "Winnebago" and "Marigold" (later Nirvana B-side).
The explosion of my real band kept me pretty busy for a while, but I always managed to bring along a guitar so that I could write songs to record upon returning home. By this time, Barrett had moved to Seattle and become my roommate. The 8 track studio was in the basement, at our disposal anytime we came up with an idea.
This is where I really started to focus on my songs. After touring America and Europe for Nevermind, we had some time to relax. It was my time to get to work downstairs. "Alone & Easy Target," "Floaty" and maybe 10-15 others were recorded there. Then it was back on the road with the N-band."
Production Credit:
Barrett Jones & Foo Fighters
William Goldsmith: "Played in the Igloo Sect then formed a band called Chewbacca Kaboom with Dan Hoerner and Nate Mendel. Chewbacca Kaboom was the fourth band I was in at one time. I eventually quit the other bands, continuing to play with Chewbacca Kaboom, which became Sunny Day Real Estate after several other corny names."
Nate Mendel: "Around 1992, Dan Hoerner, William Goldsmith and I formed band called a lot of things and then finally Sunny Day Real Estate. While I was in Europe on Christ On A Crutch's final tour, Jeremy Enigk joined the band. We had an easier time getting shows with him in the band."
Dave Grohl: "The summer of 1992 was a blast. With little action on the Nirvana front, I could pay more attention to my music. The studio was moved to a different location, as were we, and recording became a full time deal. Between sporadic Nirvana trips and visits to D.C., most of my time was spent writing and experimenting with harmonies and arrangements. Songs like "Good Grief" and "Exhausted" were written around this time.
"Weenie Beenie" and "Podunk" were thrown together in early 1993, as were lots of other songs I sure hope no one ever hears. "For All The Cows" was done around the same time, and my growing love of recording cover songs led me to record "Ozone" from Ace Frehley's solo record and the Angry Samoans' "Gas Chamber."
Around the summer of 1993, I had been talking to a fellow in Detroit about possibly releasing some of my stuff on his small label. I wanted to remain anonymous, but ultimately have something to send to friends and stuff. Nirvana's upcoming tour put that stuff on the back burner, but I was genuinely looking forward to pursuing it once the band had some time off."
William Goldsmith: "While Nate was in Europe touring with another band, Dan and I formed a band called Thief Steal Me a Peach with Jeremy Enigk playing guitar and singing and Dan playing bass. Nate's return failed to dislodge Jeremy from the band, but it did return Dan to the guitar. This group was also called Sunny Day Real Estate."
Label:
Roswell/Capitol (note the order)
Dave Grohl: "After Kurt's death, I was about as confused as I've ever been. To continue almost seemed in vain. I was always going to be 'that guy from Kurt Cobain's band' and I knew that. I wasn't even sure if I had the desire to make music anymore. I received a postcard from fellow Seattle band 7 Year Bitch, who had also lost a member. It said, 'We know what you're going through. The desire to play music is gone for now, but it will return. Don't worry." That fucking letter saved my life, because as much as I missed Kurt, and as much as I felt so lost, I knew that there was only one thing that I was truly cut out to do and that was music. I know that sounds so incredibly corny, but I honestly felt that. I decided to do what I had always wanted to do since the first time I'd recorded a song all by myself. I was going to book a week in a 24 track studio, choose the best stuff I'd ever written out of the 30-40 songs that had piled up, and really concentrate on them in a real studio.
So I booked time at the studio down the street and got my shit together.
The first four hours was spent getting sounds. This was a cinch for Barrett, whom I'd asked to produce since he was the one person in the world I felt comfortable singing in front of. By five o'clock we were ready to record. Over the past six years, Barrett and I had perfected our own method of recording. Start with drums, listen to playback while humming tune in head to make sure arrangement is correct, put down two or three guitar tracks--Mind you, all amplifiers and everything are ready to go before recording begins--Do bass track and move on to next songs, saving vocals for last.
This time, though, it became sort of a game. I wanted to see how little time it could take me to track 15 songs, complete with overdubs and everything. I did the basic tracks in two and a half days, meaning I was literally running from instrument to instrument, using mostly first takes on everything. All vocals and rough mixes were finished on schedule: one week.
Then the question of what to do with it.
I made my first mistake: my trip to the duplication lab downtown for 100 copies. My next mistake was my blind generosity. That fucking tape spread like the Ebola virus, leaving me with an answering machine tape full of record company jive."
I jammed around with a few people before meeting Nate Mendel. His girlfriend was a good friend of my wife, and they joined us for a Thanksgiving party at my house. It was the night we discovered my house was haunted, but that's a different story altogether.
Not long after meeting Nate, I gave a tape to Pat Smear. I knew that the band would need two guitars, but didn't think that Pat would want to commit to anything (or that he would even like the music). To my surprise, not only did he like the tape, he expressed interest in joining up. I just wanted to find the perfect drummer."
Pat Smear: "After you've been in the coolest band ever, what do you do? I sat on the couch with the remote control in my hand for a year. I didn't know if I ever wanted to be in a band again. I was just working on solo stuff. Dave and I had kept in touch and I had heard about his tape, but I didn't know what to expect. When I heard the tape, I flipped. Dave gave it to me at a club and I went home. After I listened to it, I went back to the club. But I didn't want to ask to join the band. I waited for him to ask me."
William Goldsmith: "Sunny Day Real Estate began to fail in mid-1994 with the conversion of Jeremy to Christianity, a condition unfamiliar with artistic tolerance."
Nate Mendel: "Jeremy quit in 1994 and the band broke up. This is about the time that Dave started handing out his tape and thinking about putting together a band. And then we had to write these embarrassing little things."
Dave Grohl: "Enter William Goldsmith. Will was in Nate's band, Sunny Day Real Estate. The band had become extremely popular in Seattle and had an album out on Sub Pop. Though I had never seen or heard them, I knew a little about them. I saw them play their last few shows in Seattle and was blown away by Nate and Will. So you can imagine my first reaction when I heard the band was calling it quits. I gave the two of them tapes through my wife's friend and prayed they'd enjoy them."
William Goldsmith: "I was hanging out, depressed, in D.C. after Sunny Day Real Estate's final tour when Dave came up to me and said, 'Hey, how's it going?'"
Pat Smear: "Dave had been talking about Sunny Day Real Estate, though I had never heard them. Then one night I just walked into a club and heard over the PA: 'Let's hear it for Sunny Day Real Estate!' They'd just finished their set. I met William and Nate and they said, 'See you in a couple of days at rehearsal."'
Dave Grohl: "I didn't want this to be some ridiculous solo project. I sure as fuck didn't consider Pat, Nate and William my backing band. I realized this was a bizarre foundation for a band, but that's exactly what my goal was: To have another band. We got together and it was soon apparent that this was to be that next band. I wanted everyone to have the freedom to do whatever they wanted to do within the songs, each member as important as the next."
Thank you.
Flash back to 1995-96: A platinum-plus debut LP, "Best New Artist"
awards--not to mention high marks across the board--in the Rolling Stone
and SPIN readers polls, a year and a half of sold out shows from the U.S.
to Southeast Asia, the 1996 MTV Video Award for "Best Group Video"... You'd
think these guys would take some time off to rest on their laurels, to
smell the flowers, to bask in the praise and accolades...
You'd think, but you're not a member of the Foo Fighters. August
1996 marked the end of the band's grueling touring regimen supporting the
Foo Fighters album--and a week's vacation for Grohl before composing the
music for the Paul Schrader feature film Touch (on which he once again
performed virtually every note save for a few guest spots, which included
John Doe of X and Veruca Salt's Louise Post). By early October, certified
workaholic Grohl's fellow Foos had sufficiently recovered from road fatigue
to begin pre-production on the new album at the 24-track studio of Barrett
Jones, with whom Grohl had co-produced the first Foos LP.
But there was the matter of those pesky lyrics. Or as Grohl puts
it, "I had nothing. Absolutely nothing."
"I had three or four weeks to write lyrics for 13 songs," he recalls.
"It's strange, now, the way it's all fallen into place. It seems like it
was intended to be this thematic, conceptual thing. It wasn't, but when
I look at it now... I was joking that the cover should be just a picture
of a therapist's couch. It's just weird. The way it's worked out is just
really weird. And it's liberating. The lyrics are like my therapist's notepad.
Completely bizarre. I can really say if people start asking about the last
six months of my life, I can honestly say, 'Go read the lyrics.' I'm not
even saying 'Go try to figure it out from the lyrics,' just read them.
It's right there."
That said, anyone who should ask those personal questions now
knows what the answers will (or won't) be in advance. As for the music,
however, The Colour & The Shape is everything the first full length,
full band recording by the Foo Fighters should be. Where the first Foos
record was essentially the David Grohl project (For those terminally out
of the loop: Grohl sang and played everything on the first album, with
the exception of a guest guitar turn by Afghan Whig Greg Dulli on 'X-Static'),
with guitarist Pat Smear, bassist Nate Mendel and (now former) drummer
William Goldsmith joining later, The Colour & The Shape is a truly
collective effort. And Grohl has nothing but the highest praise for his
fellow voices on The Colour & The Shape.
"Nate's an amazing bass player. He's so good at finding a sub-melody.
I come up with a riff and I want to find a perfect vocal melody, something
that's unpredictable, clever, and not so similar to anything else. I'll
think I've found that perfect melody and I'll be singing along, thinking
'This is so great, it goes so well with the chord progression,' and then
Nate starts doing this bass thing that just blows the vocal melody away.
He's just got such a great sense of melody.
"The cool thing about Pat is I'll come up with a song and show
it to him and he refuses to play the same chords that I play. If I'm down
low on the neck, he's way up there. We'll never meet. Sometimes I'll try
to get him to play something more similar to what I'm doing: 'Pat, that
sounds a little weird, maybe you should come down to where I am' and he'll
just say 'No, that's OK. I like this.' It's great. The dynamic of the band
has just, sort of, expanded. You can tell on the record."
That group dynamic shows and shines throughout: On the subtle
and subdued beauty of opener "Doll," the infectious and sublime harmonies
of first single "Monkey Wrench," "Everlong" and "New Way Home," the balance
of gentle melody and cathartic rage on "My Poor Brain" and "Enough Space,"
the epic centerpiece "February Stars," and so on, and so on ad infinitum.
The Colour & The Shape expands from the singular voice of 1995's Foo
Fighters into a work equal parts realized potential and promise for the
future.
"We didn't want to make this record a lo-fi basement project,"
Grohl says. "I'm sort of tired of these bands who write really amazing
pop songs and record them on an 8-track for the sake of recording their
album on an 8-track; people who think that's the punk rock purist thing
to do. That would be the wrong thing for this band. For these songs. There's
stuff on this album where I'm singing falsetto, stuff where there's four
or five guitar parts going on at once. I just thought 'I'd rather have
this sound like a Queen record than, say, a... Rapeman record.' But we
didn't make it that big a production. It's not like Guns 'N' Roses' 'November
Rain' or anything. But for us, it's a stretch. I've never done anything
like this before."
Props are therefore due Gil Norton, who did a stellar, if stern,
job of guiding the Foo Fighters through their first band/producer relationship
on The Colour & The Shape. "I wanted Gil because of the work he'd done
with The Pixies," Grohl recalls. "His knack for making a really fucked-up
sound sound really... divine. He can sort of polish a really messy guitar
sound so that it's still a messy guitar sound, but it's really clear and
distinct. The clarity on all those records is really great. You can hear
everything. It's so good. I'd never met with producers before so I had
no idea what to expect. So we met up in New York and I brought along some
rehearsal tapes. We sat down and started listening to them and within two
seconds he started making suggestions. He got through the verse and the
chorus of one song and he said, 'Oh, you know what you should do? You should
take that guitar line and the chorus and bridge it...' It was exactly what
I imagined a producer should do."
"Plus Gil's a fucking whip-cracker," Grohl continues. "He made
us do things 20 to 50 times. There's only one first take on the entire
album. I thought he was going to have a heart attack when that happened.
Still, he was like 'That sounded great. Want to try it again?' It could
see the beads of sweat forming on his forehead. It's almost like an obsessive-compulsive
thing. He has to do things ten times because that next take might sound
a little better."
Six weeks spent living and recording at Washington's remote Bear
Creek studios were followed by a record two-week break to assess the work
in progress (It was also during this period that Grohl found time to record
"Walking After You" at Washington DC's WGNS studio, the only demo-style
track to make it on to the record; "It was the moment. I'll never be able
to capture that again"). Reconvening at Grandmaster in Los Angeles, the
band recorded the bulk of material that would become the finished album
at a breakneck pace. By the final stretch of recording, the band was bouncing
between recording and mixing in the space of the same day. "I had resigned
to the idea that I was just going to be in the studio for the rest of my
life," says Grohl. "By this time, it was the middle of February. Four months
of being in the studio. And the one day that I had off while we were in
L.A., I went to another studio to go fuck around. I just couldn't be out
of the studio. After the record was finally done, it took me two weeks
to get used to the idea, the feeling of not being in the studio."
Following the completion of the L.A. sessions, drummer William
Goldsmith made final his decision to leave the Foo Fighters (Rumors that
Goldsmith was ousted or left due to Grohl's alleged recording over his
tracks have proven unfounded, as Goldsmith has left on completely amicable
terms). "The idea that I just scrapped his tracks and did them over is
just wrong," Grohl explains. "We re-did entire songs. The L.A. recordings
are different versions. Completely different. We basically re-did a lot
of the record. William just felt that he didn't want to go back out on
the road again for such a long time. I don't know if he'd ever gotten used
to the idea of being in a band that would play a festival in front of 60,000
people or a headlining show for 4000. Let alone doing things like that
for a year and a half. I think William felt like he'd be more comfortable
living a more stable, grounded life."
With the record completed and new drummer Taylor Hawkins in place,
it's back to work for the Foo Fighters. A "Monkey Wrench" video directed
by Grohl (does this guy sleep?) has been completed, and the band has hit
the road for, well, probably longer than a year and a half this time.
Go To Top
"The album really tells the whole story," says Foo
Fighters lead vocalist and guitarist David Grohl on the making of his band's
brand new The Colour & The Shape. "It begins with 'Doll,' which is
a song about entering into something that you weren't prepared for and
being scared of that. Then you go through 11 songs that have to do with
guilt, love, the pain of losing someone... It runs the course, the whole
thing, until you get to the end, to 'New Way Home,' which is meant to be
the resolution."