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Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins dies at 50The band's social media confirmed the death, but did not provide a cause or location
International New York Times
Last Updated IST
Taylor Hawkins, the hard-hitting, charismatic drummer for Foo Fighters, has died at 50. Credit: AFP Photo
Taylor Hawkins, the hard-hitting, charismatic drummer for Foo Fighters, has died at 50. Credit: AFP Photo

Taylor Hawkins, the hard-hitting, charismatic drummer for Foo Fighters, has died at 50.

A statement posted to the band’s social media and sent by its representative confirmed the death, but did not provide a cause or location. The band was scheduled to play a show Friday night in Bogotá, Colombia, at the Festival Estéreo Picnic.

Recognisable for his flailing limbs, surfer’s good looks and wide, childlike grin, Hawkins became a member of the band led by Dave Grohl for its third album, “There Is Nothing Left to Lose,” released in 1999, and has played on the group’s subsequent seven albums.

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Foo Fighters’ most recent LP, “Medicine at Midnight,” arrived last year as the group was celebrating its 25th anniversary, and in an interview with The New York Times, Hawkins was direct about his hopes for its future. “I want to be the biggest band in the world,” he said.

Hawkins started to play drums at age 10, and said that a 1982 Queen show made him realise music was his passion. “After that concert, I don’t think I slept for three days,” he said in a 2021 interview with the metal magazine Kerrang. “It changed everything, and I was never the same because of it. It was the beginning of my obsession with rock ’n’ roll, and I knew that I wanted to be in a huge rock band after seeing Queen.”

After playing in a local California band called Sylvia and backing Canadian rock vocalist Sass Jordan, Hawkins’ first mainstream break came in 1995, when he joined Alanis Morissette’s band as she toured behind her blockbuster album “Jagged Little Pill.” (He appeared in the video for its breakout hit “You Oughta Know,” flipping his blond mane behind the drum kit.)

Grohl, then still primarily known for his role as the drummer for Nirvana, recalled meeting Hawkins backstage at a radio station concert in the 1990s and feeling an immediate kinship. “I was like, ‘Wow, you’re either my twin or my spirit animal or my best friend,’” Grohl said in an interview last year. “When it was time to look for a drummer, I kind of wished that he would do it, but I didn’t imagine he would leave Alanis Morissette, because at the time she was the biggest artist in the world.”

But when Grohl called him later looking for a drummer, Hawkins said, “I’m your guy,” Grohl recalled.

“I think it had more to do with our personal relationship than anything musical,” he added. “To be honest, it still does. Our musical relationship — the foundation of that is our friendship, and that’s why when we jump up onstage and play, we’re so connected because we’re like best friends.”

Grohl, Foo Fighters’ lead singer and one of its songwriters and guitarists, had played drums on the band’s first album in 1995, and he took over again for its second album, “The Colour and the Shape,” when a replacement failed to stick. In joining the band, Hawkins was charged with taking over for one of contemporary rock’s most distinct, powerful and beloved drummers.

Recorded in a Virginia basement without the input of a record label, “There Is Nothing Left to Lose,” went on to win the Grammy for best rock album — the first of the band’s 12 career awards there.

At this year’s Grammys, where Foo Fighters were scheduled to perform on April 3, “Medicine at Midnight” was nominated for three awards, including best rock performance (for the song “Making a Fire”), best rock song (“Waiting on a War”) and best rock album.

Foo Fighters were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2021, recognised for their “rock authenticity with infectious hooks, in-your-face guitar riffs, monster drums, and boundless energy.” At the ceremony, Hawkins told Grohl, “Thank you for letting me be in your band.”

In addition to his drumming, Hawkins went on to contribute as a songwriter to Foo Fighters albums, even singing lead vocals on occasion. Beginning in 2006, he released three albums with his side project, Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders. Last year, he teamed up with guitarist Dave Navarro and bassist Chris Chaney to form a band called NHC; the group’s debut EP, “Intakes & Outtakes,” was released in February.

On recent Foo Fighters tours, Hawkins would swap places with Grohl to sing a cover of Queen’s “Somebody to Love,” paying homage to the band that set him on his path.

Although he was referred to as “a sideman with a frontman’s fair,” Hawkins admitted over the years to feeling some insecurity about filling Grohl’s seat behind the drum kit. “A lot of my insecurities — which led to a lot of my drug use — had to do with me not feeling like I was good enough to be in this band, to play drums with Dave,” he told Spin in 2002.

In 2001, he overdosed in London and was in a coma for two weeks. “Everyone has their own path and I took it too far,” he told Kerrang, adding that he once believed the “myth of live hard and fast, die young.”

Hawkins added, “I’m not here to preach about not doing drugs, because I loved doing drugs, but I just got out of control for a while and it almost got me.”

In a 2018 conversation with Beats 1, he said, “There’s no happy ending with hard drugs,” but declined to explain how he stayed sober: “I don’t really discuss how I live my life in that regard. I have my system that works for me.”

Hawkins married his wife, Alison, in 2005. She survives him, as do their three children, Oliver, Annabelle and Everleigh.

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(Published 26 March 2022, 09:57 IST)