"We must adjust to changing times execute the office of President of the United States..." "I challenge a new generation of young Americans..." "My biggest fantasy when I was a kid was that I would go to see my favorite band play, and someone would come out and say," ""Sorry, the band can't play tonight, their drummer broke his fuckin' leg." ""Unless there's someone that knows all the songs..."" "Then, of course, I would jump up and be the greatest drummer in the world." "I fantasized about that." "With Nirvana, the process of making the music was so entirely simple and pure and real." "Kurt was a great lyricist, he had a beautiful voice, and he wrote really simple songs." "There were things I learned about songwriting from being in a band with Kurt that I don't think anyone else could have taught me." "That record, Nevermind, came out almost a year to the day after I had joined the band." "This song is called Smells Like Tieen Spirit." "Before Dave had joined the band, there was a message on my answering machine from Kurt, saying," ""Butch!" "We have the best drummer in the world!" "He's the greatest drummer in the world." ""I'm not kidding you." "He's awesome, dude!" And he hung up." "About a week later we were in LA and I walked into a rehearsal space with him." "And Dave walked up - skinny, long hair..." ""Hey, man, I'm Dave." "Nice to meet you." He was just full of energy." "I was like, "Let's play." "Play me some songs, you guys."" "And they played Tieen Spirit." "Dave did the and it just floored me." "Of course, everybody was telling the band that they thought we were great, but I don't think the three of us ever believed a word of anything anyone was telling us." "We never thought we were gonna sell a million records." "None of us had any idea that it was gonna completely change my life and their lives." "But I knew that they sounded really tight and pretty focused, and that they had written some amazingly powerful songs." "We knew something was happening because the atmosphere of the gigs just changed." "They went from being cool, hipster, underground people in a club to, like..." "jocks were coming to the show." "That was the first thing, like," ""Oh my God, there's jocks here," you know?" ""That's kind of strange." "They like our music?" ""You used to kick my fucking ass for listening to this music."" "I was a really big fan of Nirvana, like everybody else, and I happened to be reading an interview with Kurt where he had mentioned," "Nirvana was always meant to be a four-piece, a two-guitar band." "It was never meant to be a three-piece." "I thought, "Oh, well that's my in."" "Pat is from this legendary punk rock band called the Germs that we all grew up listening to." "There was no one more badass than the Germs." "Germs didn't give a fuck." "So Pat shows up in Seattle, and all of us were just like," ""Oh my God, hey, it's Pat Smear from the Germs." ""He's alive?"" "So now Nirvana is hitting the big halls, with guitarist Pat Smear helping to make the loud louder." "The day before the first rehearsal I saw my picture on MTiV News, saying," ""Nirvana has a new guitar player, Pat Smear."" "I was like, "My God, it's real!" "There it is!"" "I don't think Kurt wanted to be a huge fuckin' rock star." "And I don't think he could handle how complicated it had all become." "No one was very happy with the tour, or the band." "So Kurt decided he wants a break, even though we're on this tour you can't get out of, because you're a big band and you get sued." "We had, like, a week and a half off in between two legs of the tour." "I decided to fly home." "And Kurt went to Rome, where he was meeting Courtney Love, his wife." "Hi, I'm Tiabitha Soren, with MTiV News." "Nirvana front man Kurt Cobain was hospitalized in a coma in Rome, Italy on Friday morning..." "I turn on the TiV, and Kurt was being wheeled away in an ambulance in Rome." "I went to the hospital with him, and I didn't know what to do, because I thought," ""Do I say, this is Kurt Cobain, take care of him right away, VIP,"" "or do I say, "This is just some guy, don't call the press"?" "I finally went with, "This is Kurt Cobain, VIP." "Do something about it."" "Nirvana spokespeople reported encouraging signs, saying they've been told Kurt Cobain was responding to his name, opening his eyes, and squeezing his wife's hand." "When he came home, I remember talking to him on the phone, and saying, "Hey man, I don't want you to die, OK?"" "And he was very apologetic, "No, I'm sorry, it was a big mistake." ""I took these pills, I was drinking this champagne and I was in Rome..." ""It was, just a..." "just made a mistake."" "It was really sad." "I had a message from Kurt, but I wasn't home." "And so whatever help he needed from me, I couldn't help him." "And that was the last time I ever talked to him or saw him." "When I found out that he had killed himself..." "I was kind of numb." "I knew that it..." "He was gone, but I didn't know how to feel." "Kurt Cobain, a sweet and gifted man, dead at the age of 27." "Tio Courtney Love, one-year-old Frances Bean Cobain," "Dave Grohl, Kris Novoselic and Pat Smear, our deepest sympathies." "Everybody knew Kurt was in a bad way, but that's something you never expect to happen." "When someone is that down and out you still can't comprehend that they're actually gonna commit suicide." "It was terrible." "After Kurt died, I didn't wanna play music." "I didn't wanna play the drums." "When Kurt died, it wasn't just that my friend died." "It was my whole life kinda died around it and with him, you know?" "And I quit the music business." "At some point, I was finally motivated." ""I'm gonna get myself out of this funk I've been in for the last eight months."" "Or whatever it was, you know?" "I decided that I was gonna take my favorite songs that I'd written over the last four or five years that no one had heard... and I was going to record them at a 24-track studio down the street from my house." "And it was really exciting, because I was doing it totally by myself." "I didn't know why I was doing it." "I just wanted to do something, you know?" "So I booked a week at the studio, and at the end of the week, I had a cassette, and it sounded good." "And I started thinking, "I won't put my name on it." ""People will imagine it's just a band." ""They won't know it's the guy from Nirvana."" "In the middle of that session, I get a call at the studio that Tiom Petty wants me to come play drums for him on Saturday Night Live." "I just thought, "Oh my God, he's a hero of mine."" "And I had the opportunity to join the band if I wanted to join the band." "I really had to kind of choose." "Was I going to play drums with Tiom Petty, or was I gonna start over from scratch and be the lead singer and guitar player of a band, do something I'd never done before, that I was terrified doing?" "Believe me, it was not easy to tell Tiom Petty that I wasn't going to be his drummer." "It was not an easy decision to make." "I can still see my hand just putting the phone down, and thinking, "OK, let's see what happens."" "There was a band in Seattle called Sunny Day Real Estate." "And a good friend of mine told me that Sunny Day Real Estate were playing a show, and it was gonna be their last show because they were breaking up." "My band was falling apart about the same time that Dave found himself without a band." "We were broken up while we were doing the tour." "We decided we weren't gonna do it anymore, but had already booked this tour, so we were like," ""This will be the last thing we do."" "It was ironic because that was the first tour that we were playing shows where people were actually showing up." "We were like, "Oh, well!"" "I went to the show to see them play, knowing it was probably the last time anyone was gonna see them play." "And I was watching them thinking, "That's a really good rhythm section."" "I gave them the cassette, thinking," ""Hey, check it out." "Maybe we could jam sometime."" "Dave was the first famous person I'd ever met." "He was just out of Nirvana, you know, like, that was a very big deal." "I remember the first time that Nate and William and I got together to jam." "It was over at William's parents' house." "I remember going up to William's parents' kitchen and sitting there after we played, and Dave just goes, "You guys wanna be in the band?"" "And I was like, "Hell yeah!"" "Playing in front of people was very difficult for me." "I did have a conversation with Dave and I said, "I don't think that I should do it."" "Dave said, "That's exactly why you're the guy that has to do it."" "I don't know what that meant but that convinced me, I guess." "After that rehearsal, Dave brings up that he wants a second guitar player, and thinks it should be Pat Smear, who William and I knew from him having played in Nirvana and the Germs." "Then Dave came over, and he gave me a cassette." "I listened to that whole tape, just front to end, and I thought it was all great." "I didn't have anything against Pat." "I didn't know him as a musician or as a person." "But he lived in Los Angeles, and I just thought that was fucking crazy." "The way I'd grown up, you were in a band with your friend from school that you saw every day." "You'd go home after school and get together at somebody's mom's house or basement and work it out." "You can't do that if the guy lives in Los Angeles." "Pat came up, we played, and he was perfect, so I got over that "Him living in LA" thing." "I might have talked to him about trying to move to Seattle." "All of us came from bands that ended prematurely." "We didn't really talk about our former bands." "For me, it was always kind of a touchy subject." "At this point in time, Kurt had only been dead for a year, and I didn't wanna talk about it." "So we all entered into this new band like it was helping us get through the loss of the bands we'd been in before." "I remember it really vividly," "Dave saying, like, "Let's have it be fun." ""Let's have things be out in the open." ""Let's talk about shit." "Just no drama."" "He was like, "I don't want it to be a stressful thing." ""We're not gonna tour into the ground." And..." "Which I was glad about." "The first tour that we did, was with a musician named Mike Watt." "He is a legendary punk rock bass player." "And he asked me if I would tour with him." "And I said, "Yeah, man." "How about this?" ""I'll be in your band if my band can open up on tour."" "And Eddie Vedder, from Pearl Jam, had done the same thing." "And we said, "Cool," ""Let's put together a tour where Eddie's other band," ""they were called Hovercraft, my band" " Foo Fighters," ""would open up for Watt, and we would all be his band."" "It was just this, like, revolving cast of musicians." "Each song would have a different line-up." "Instead of getting a bus for the first tour..." ""We'll get a van."" "I'd never done a bus tour, so to me it was totally obvious, "Yeah, we'll get a van." ""What, we get to buy a brand new one?" "Ha!" "Awesome!"" "We played six shows a week, and the places held maybe anywhere from 3OO to 6OO people, and Foo Fighters were making 5OO bucks a night or something like that." "As the tour was going on, the venues were getting bigger, and we started having that really nice but weird sort of pressure." "There was a lot of attention, because it was Dave's first tour after Nirvana." "The shows had all of these Nirvana fans that came." "They didn't know the songs because the record hadn't been out yet." "So there was a song called Marigold by Nirvana, that Dave had written and sang on." "It was the only thing they knew to yell out when we were playing." "So you'd just hear, "Marigold!"" "Marigold!" "Marigold!" "Marigold!" "Shut up!" "And we never played it." "How weird that must have been for Dave." "Arriving in record stores Tiuesday was one of the most buzzed-about new releases of the year, the self-titled debut album by Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl's new band, Foo Fighters, who wowed crowds on Mike Watt's recent club tour." "Personally, to me, it was a big deal when that record came out, because rather than go in and record something as a band, we used the stuff I had recorded on my own." "That cassette." "That's the first record." "Making their network television debut right here with us, we couldn't be happier, ladies and gentlemen, Foo Fighters." "Hi, Jena!" "And the winner is..." "Foo Fighters, Big Me." "I would like to think of this award as some sort of closure, it's..." "Stop throwing Mentos at us at our shows." "That's what I'm trying to say." "There were lots of interviews and, you know," "Dave not wanting to talk about Nirvana." "Every question in every interview was about Nirvana." "You can imagine what they were, like, "Is this song about Kurt?"" "Tiake any song from the record." ""Is that song about Kurt Cobain?"" "What's it like to be at a press conference and not be asked any questions?" "Fine with me, because I didn't wanna answer any of the questions that were asked." "There were some people that really resented me for starting this band." ""How dare you fucking start another band."" "They asked me, like, "Why did you decide to carry on" ""and make music that sounds like Nirvana?"" "I said, "Well, wait a minute." ""What do you mean, like loud rock guitars and melodies" ""and cymbals crashing and big-ass drums?" ""'Cause that's what I do." ""That's..." "I was in that band and this is, like..." "That's what I do." ""You want me to fuckin' make a reggae record?"" "The first couple years," "I really felt like I had to explain and defend what I was doing, because, first of all, "You're just a drummer." ""And, what, you're trying to sing?" ""And also, you were in Nirvana, so what the fuck is this shit?"" "So there's a..." "You just get to the point where you just think," ""Fuck you people."" "I wasn't sure what was gonna happen." ""Can Dave write more songs?" ""How is the writing process gonna work?" "Will we suck?"" "I had no idea." ""Does this band have a future?"" "I knew we were gonna be OK and be able to continue after I heard the song My Hero, 'cause it was great." "There were some songs that we just started writing and throwing into the set." "There were only a couple songs that we had that were really good openers." "I thought, "God, I need to write an opening song for us."" "In Europe and in England, when bands play the audience don't beat the shit out of each other like they do in America." "They do this bounce, right?" "Everybody bounces." "So I wanted to write a song that everyone would start bouncing to when we first came out and played." "So I had a melody and a riff idea, but I didn't know the tempo." "So I jumped up and down, and I found a tempo by, like, bouncing." "The tempo should be this..." "I wrote the song, brought it to sound check, said, "I have this new song." ""Let's learn it, so we can open with it tomorrow night or tonight."" "We sound checked, ran through it, the next night we opened with that song, the audience was going..." "It worked." "It's like, "Wow, cool." "Let's keep it."" "We played, like, 18,OOO shows in one year." "I'm exaggerating, but it felt like." "Then we just toured a lot!" "Pat was keeping track, Pat was always..." "Every other day he'd look at me and be like, "12 months. 13 months. 16 months."" "I was just like..." "I remember each time he would tell me I'd be like, "No fuckin' way!"" "We've been on tour for so long." "We've been a band for almost a year now, and I'd say about seven months out of that year has been spent on the road." "I wasn't some kid who was just like, "Yeah!" at that point." "It was just kind of like, you know..." "I'm older and I'm lazier..." "What?" "...and still I'm playing the same 2O songs 2 or 3OO nights a year." "This song's called For All The Cows." "This song is called For All The Cows." "It's called For All The Cows." "This one's called For All The Cows." "This song is called For All The Cows." "The second album that we made - The Colour And The Shape, we decided to work with this producer named Gil Norton." "And Gil, at the time, was famous for making the Pixies records." "This was my first real recording process." "Now there's a producer, someone who's not just pressing play but actually is saying, like," ""I think that should be a C. And you should also play it in time."" "We went into the studio with Gil and he worked us hard, real hard." "I was fucking terrible." "And William was having his own challenges." "Gil called Nate and I the "rhythmless section"." "So that was encouraging." "I could tell, when I had to do something a million times, that it was taking longer than I wanted, and it was my first realization " ""I'm not a fully-formed musician." "I've got to keep getting better."" "Constantly, there was this feeling that, whatever song we were working on, Dave had a drum... a drum part for it already, in his head or whatever." "When I've written a song, I have kind of a clear idea of where the basic root accents should lie." "That's a fancy way of saying," "I know what the drums should sound like in my head as I'm doing this thing." "That's not necessarily fair to say that as a songwriter, you know, who's collaborating with other musicians." "You're the drummer for a band where your singer is the greatest rock 'n' roll drummer in the world, looking over your shoulder waiting for you to do it as good as him." "That's just fucked-up pressure." "Regardless of how good you are, that's just fucked-up pressure." "And remember that William was a kid." "He was really young." "I think that William played the best that he could." "And sometimes it was great, and sometimes it wasn't." "What sucked about all that was, you know..." "I don't think the drum performances were the best." "They didn't..." "They weren't horrible." "If I listen to a song and I don't think it has the thing that it needs, it's not necessarily gonna get past me and get on an album." "We left Seattle, and went to Los Angeles to a different studio to finish this thing up." "And Dave comes in, he's like," ""Listen, we're gonna redo..."" ""My Poor Brain." Or whatever the song is." ""Drum track's not quite right." "Actually, I'm doing the drums on this one." ""We're just gonna redo it."" "William's up in Seattle at this point in time." "They'd call me down and say, "We need you to come play guitar on a song."" "And I'd go down and I'd be like, "Well, I already played this song."" ""Well, we did it over." "Oh, OK."" "You know, do it again." "I'd go home, then I'd get called again, "Come down and play."" "I'm like, "All right, cool." "Let's do it."" ""I already played this song!" It just kept happening." ""What the fuck is going on here?"" "And this happens three or four times, like, "Hey, we're gonna try this one again."" "It ended up like, "Wait a minute." "We're just doing this whole album over."" "I remember asking, "Does William know?"" "William's still up in Seattle, so he doesn't know what's going on and that this is happening." "And I'm stressing pretty hard because that's gonna be a big problem." "I was like, "What's going on?" ""Should I book a flight?" "I should be down there."" "Dave calls me, like, "Don't come down here." I was like, "Why?"" "He goes, "I'm redoing a couple of drum tracks." I was like..."Whoa." "OK."" "And I met with Nate." "I said, "What's going on?" "Dave's redoing a couple of the tracks?"" "He goes, "Is that what he told you?"" "I said, "Yeah." He goes, "He redid 'em all."" "The conversation that I eventually had with William was that I really wanted him to stay in the band, and I really wanted him to be the drummer... but..." "I was gonna play drums on the record." "I don't know whether it was management, the record company, Gil, all of the above, Dave, that wanted him to play drums and didn't want me to play drums, but him redoing the drum parts has never been explained to me." "It's a tough thing to talk about, because I know that William will never forgive me for playing drums on that record." "I know it." "And I wish things were different." "But I felt like this is what I had to do in order to make this album happen." "We talked and Dave said, "I still want you to tour the record."" "And I was just like, "Dude, I mean, I have to, you know..." ""As it is now, I have to rebuild my soul," ""or refind it, if you know what I mean." ""If I do that, it's like, 'see ya'." ""So... thanks but no thanks."" "It was a really weird time, and I was young." "What the fuck?" "I heard on the radio..." ""Foo Fighters drummer has left the band."" "I was like, "Whoa!" "Really?" ""I wonder if they have a drummer yet?"" "I remember vividly my brother saying, "You should be in this band."" "I was like, "Well, fuck, yeah, that'd be great, wouldn't it?" ""I would love to have been in the Who, Jane's Addiction and Led Zeppelin too."" "Around that time, Tiaylor Hawkins was playing drums with Alanis Morissette." "And she was blowing up." "I'd seen him play before, and there's no question the dude's a monster on the drums." "It's funny, 'cause back there's Tiaylor just fuckin' like..." "Just fuckin' killing it." "Like, "Oh my God!"" "We all loved Tiaylor, but he was in a band, the biggest band around at the time." "We were kind of in a pinch." "We had just recorded this record, and we had to go out and start doing shit." "So Dave calls him up, like, "Hey, man, do you know any good drummers?"" "I was like, "Yeah." "I'll be your fuckin' drummer!" "Let me try out."" "I remember saying to Tiaylor, "You realize we're not as big as Alanis Morissette?"" "I'm like, "I know, but I wanna be in a band." ""I wanna be part of something like that." So he said," ""Well, if you try out, and if we jam and..." "You have to be in the band."" "Dave called me like, "Remember Tiaylor?" I'm like, "Oh yeah."" "He's like, "Yeah, I think he'd be the drummer." And I reacted poorly to that." "I was hanging out with Dave and me and him were bouncing off the walls, and Nate was going, "Oh no, not another one of these fuckin' guys." ""I can't take two spazzes in one band."" "I didn't think our personalities were compatible." "He's just this, like, outgoing Southern California surfer dude." "Say somethin' funny." "I don't know anything funny." "I just came from a different world." "I was like, "That guy..." ""He is not a guy I'm gonna be in a band with." "No way."" "It's like, "He's really good."" ""OK."" " I hear you got a new drummer?" " Got a new drummer." " From the Alanis Morissette band?" " That's right." "His name's Tiaylor Hawkins, and..." "Is that his last name?" "I think it is." " He's really new!" " We just met him." "So now Tiaylor's in the band, and he comes in his first day of rehearsals, and Pat quits the band." "Right then and there." "Pat says, "Can I talk to you guys for a second?" We said, "Yeah, sure."" "We walk outside and he goes, "I gotta leave the band."" "I'm like, "What the fuck?" "Why?"" "I was just so sick of it." "I was just so sick of the whole thing." "I didn't wanna go out on another..." "you know, bazillion-show tour and..." "I just don't wanna do this anymore." "When you join a band the first week, and one of the members decides... ever since you've been there, he's gonna quit, you're like, "Obviously, it's me."" "I was shocked." "I was shocked." "I begged him to stay in the band." "And he said, "No, man." "I'm just not into it anymore."" "It was right when we were about to go out and start our tour, like, "Here's these new songs."" "Pat quits, and so he's kinda got us in a bad..." "in a bad spot." "I asked him to stay until we could get someone to replace him." "So we made a deal that I would tour for six weeks, till the new guy was ready." "But it stretched out to, I think, six months maybe." "So Pat has quit the band, but he's still playing with us." "That gives us some time to integrate Franz Stahl, who became the second guitar player in the band." "I'd known Dave for years." "We grew up in the same city." "He was in my first band, this punk rock band called Scream." "When I left Scream to join Nirvana, the one relationship that felt the most strained was my relationship with Franz." "I think that he resented me for leaving." "It took a while, and then we reconciled and we became friends again." "That moment where Pat said, "I don't wanna be in the band anymore,"" "I immediately thought, "I'm gonna call Franz."" "I was on tour in Japan and I get the phone call from Dave and... he wants to know if I'd like to join the Foo Fighters." "There wasn't any sort of musical audition." "I just thought," ""Franz, you wanna be in the Foo Fighters?" He said, "Yes."" "And then the next day I was on the roof of Radio City Music Hall." "Please give a warm welcome to Foo Fighters!" "We were playing at the MTiV Awards, on top of the marquee, as kind of a warm-up act." "And so I played the first song, and then I quit." "And then Franz came up and he joined." "It happened just so fast." "And I was still jet-lagged from Japan." "Hello!" "The last song we played was my last song with the band." "I would like to introduce you to Franz Stahl, who will be taking over." "Thank you!" "Rock on, guys!" "Foo Fighters!" "It was all very new to me, because I was used to slumming it." "Sleeping on people's floors, just getting by, you know?" "And this was a whole new level." "When I joined the Foo Fighters, it was like, you know, you made it." "You hit it, and you were getting recognized for it." "It was awesome." "Once Franz joined the band, we did what we always did, we went on the road." "We played as many places and as many shows as we could, and it was starting to grow." "Like, you could see there were 2,OOO people, 3,OOO people, 4,OOO people at gigs." "We were no longer playing the afternoon slot at the festival, we were playing the evening slot." "And there was a song on the radio, Everlong, and all of a sudden there were videos on MTiV, and it was happening to us, that thing that happens to new bands when they start to get popular." "We got Franz." "I indoctrinated myself." "That's right." "Franz joined the band on-air..." "That was a great big surprise." "It was awesome." "It's the best year we've had as a band, and Franz is, you know..." "he's the dude." "I loved the first two records." "And there wasn't a song that I didn't enjoy, you know?" "And I certainly was looking forward to writing, and... you know, leaving my mark." "Franz is a great guy." "And a sweet guy." "And I was actually..." "got really close with him." "It seemed like it would be perfect." "We were rehearsing and writing at the time, and coming up with song ideas..." "and Tiaylor and Nate and I seemed to have this thing where we were on the same page, and we were jamming and coming up with something together." "And Franz just didn't seem to find his place in all of that." "In Scream, I wrote all the music, the majority of it." "My brother would write the lyrics." "So I was always, I was very hands-on, you know?" "But it was Dave's band." "And he writes all the music." "I was kinda leery of pushing my ideas, you know, so I wasn't trying to be as vocal about it." "For some reason, the four of us together wasn't right." "It never congealed into feeling like a band." "It's just chemistry." "We had a talk with Dave about it and he didn't wanna hear it, but he knew what the situation was." "My relationship with Franz was much different than everybody else's." "I'd known the guy since I was 18." "And we had cut our teeth together." "It was tough, man." "I mean, honestly, like..." "It was just, you know, a great old friend of mine that, unfortunately, I was asking to leave the band." "That's not to say he's not a fucking great musician, because, of course, everybody knows he is, but when we worked together as four people... it just didn't gel, you know?" "We got on some kind of conference call and told him we were gonna get a different guitar player." "There was a lot of sadness and drama." "It was ugly." "Basically, I got a phone call." "I got a fucking phone call." "And it just all ends right there." "I don't even know how to react, you know?" "There's just no nice way of saying, "You're out of the band."" "I'm not exactly sure what happened." "You know, I was in the band... and, for whatever reason, I was out of the band." "But, I mean, it was the best two years of my life, you know?" "Most bands go through the same shit that we had been through up until that point." "Before anybody's ever heard of them." "Unfortunately, we went through all of those embarrassing growing pains in public." "By 1998, I would sit down to do an interview, and people'd say," ""OK, so fuckin'..." "Who's in the band right now?" ""Has anybody else left in the last month and a half?"" "But there was always Nate." "I was staying at my mother's house, and I got a call from Nate." "I said, "What's up, man?" He goes, "I gotta leave the band."" "And I just thought, "Oh, Jesus fucking Christ."" "I said, "OK."" "At this point... my response to a member leaving was like, "All right, why?"" "Sunny Day Real Estate had gotten back together." "I had a lot of really formative experiences with them, so I had this like... high-school crush, kind of irrational... attraction to that project." "And I was tortured, and I called up Dave." "And I was fuckin' pissed." "I think I told him, "OK, you know what?" "Call everyone and tell 'em you quit." ""I'm gonna go fuckin' get drunk."" "As soon as I got off the phone, I knew it was the wrong thing to do, that I was gonna be happier in Foo Fighters." "It was a better thing for me to do." "I called a couple friends..." ""I quit the band and I feel weird about it."" ""Yeah, 'cause that was a dumb idea."" "Me and my buddy Jimmy took my rental car out to Ribsters, we got fuckin' shitfaced, rallied my rental car, fuckin' threw rocks at it all night, busted out windows, drove over people's lawns, and I wound up stumbling home" "and woke up at seven in the morning in the bedroom that I grew up in as a kid, with my mom saying, "David, Nate's on the phone!"" "I called him the next morning at 6 am." "I was wigged out and I think it caught him off guard." ""I don't really wanna quit the band." "I don't know what I was thinking."" "He's like, "Good."" "I was like, "Yeah." "This is better." "Sorry about that."" "I was still wasted, too." "I was just lying in bed, like," ""I love you, man." "I'm glad you don't wanna quit."" "So we decided that we're gonna make this next record as a three-piece." "We had just made this super hyper-produced record, which we slaved over and lost two band members." "I thought, "I'm gonna buy a house in Virginia, build a studio in the basement," ""and we're gonna make this record without any fuckin' record company" ""and no pressure, and no one telling us what to do."" "It was different, just having the three of us there, we were starting to form a good identity for the band." "That's when Dave was first starting to become more comfortable as a lyric writer." "A song like Ain't It The Life, without realizing what I was doing," "I was kind of making this wish list of all the things in life I wish I had." "We weren't really on a major deadline, our friend Adam Kasper was down there engineering and co-producing." "I did all of those vocals sitting on a couch." "It was just a laid-back record, and you hear it." "And the Grammy goes to..." "And the Grammy goes to..." "Learn Tio Fly, Foo Fighters." "There Is Nothing Left Tio Lose, Foo Fighters." "We won three Grammys for that record." "I remember standing there at the podium making the speech, looking out at all those people in tuxedos and diamonds and shit, thinking, "I bet you this is the only record made in a basement" ""that's gonna win a Grammy this year."" "And I was so fuckin' proud." "Tiake care, thank you very much, everybody." "Roll camera." "OK, and roll sound." "Roll playback!" "We take our music really seriously, but music videos?" "They're commercials." "They're candy commercials." "So why not make fun of the process?" "But once we got into it, I started having fun with it." "And it became a trademark for this band." "We try not to take ourselves too seriously." "In videos a lot of times, you could easily get caught up in that," ""We're playing on a mountaintop."" "The wind's blowing in your hair, and then an eagle flies down and lands on your shoulder." "Or some, you know, like..." "I just think that's sort of an outlet of our humor." "I mean, I've seen Dave do stuff on videos, where he's bein' such a fuckin' goofball." "I'm not as good at it." "You know, I did try to make us a trio." "Dude, Police!" "They're a trio!" "Musically, we needed more." "More guitar." "Part of the sound of the Foo Fighters is a lot of guitars." "It's just part of the sound." "We argue about it every time we mix a record, 'cause I always want the drums louder, and Dave's like," ""It's the Foo Fighters." "The guitars are really loud."" "None of us had the right guy that was a friend, or a friend of a friend..." "It wasn't handy." "So we had to have open auditions for a guitar player." "Pin a note at the Guitar Center, like, "Guitar player wanted for Foo Fighters."" "We wound up in this rehearsal space, and I just remember this line of guitar players." "And I was terrified." "It sounded great." "I mean, I dig it." "Nice meeting you for the first time." "Hopefully see you again soon." "There's the guy that came in and hugged everybody." "It was like, "Hi." "Hi." It was like..." "There was one kid that came in, he was so nervous." "He came in, and was like, "What's up?" "Will you sign something for me?"" "He just immediately wanted us to sign some shit." "We were like, "Yeah, dude, cool it." "It's cool, you know?" "Just relax." ""Let's hang, you know?" "Let's talk."" "And we hung out and talked a little bit." "And then he went to open up his guitar case, and it was locked." "He had a brand new guitar, a brand new case, and he fucking locked his guitar in it." "And didn't have a key." "We literally did, like, a week or two of tryouts." "There was one point where it was getting a little dire, we were like, "Fuck!"" "A good friend of mine called me and said," ""Hey, I heard Guns N' Roses are auditioning guitar players," ""and I think I could get you an audition."" "And I was like, "Well, I don't wanna audition for Guns N' Roses."" "But I said, "But I heard the Foo Fighters guitar player quit." ""Tiry to get me an audition with Foo Fighters."" "Everyone, shake hands with Chris." "Chris!" "When Chris came in to audition, we somehow came to the realization that we met when we were kids at a punk rock show in Santa Barbara." "Years and years before any of this, when Dave had been the drummer in Scream, and I was playing bass in a band called Rat Pack." "We actually opened up for them." "The fact that he was a part of that underground punk rock thing was really important to me." "So we bonded pretty instantly, because I thought," ""He's gonna get it." "He's gonna understand, and he won't take this shit for granted."" "Very good, that's very good, man." "He could sing, and he was a shredder, and he was a good guy, and he'd been in bands, and he didn't smell, and he was awesome." "So the next day, just all day, I just sat there by the phone." "And at like, around five or six, the phone rang and it was Dave and Tiaylor." "And they said," ""All right, you know, you got the gig." "We start rehearsing tomorrow." ""Say goodbye to your friends, you're not gonna see anybody for the next year."" "It was like, Chris joined the band and we had our itinerary ready to go." ""Ready?" "We're gonna leave for ten years." "Let's go."" "The Foos found their new best buddy in Chris Shiflett, a former member of punk bands No Use For A Name and 22 Jacks." "I remember wanting to help Chris feel comfortable." "We went out to dinner a couple of times." "Tirying not to have a situation where he comes in and it's like, "OK, go!"" "When I joined Nirvana, I was the fifth drummer of Nirvana." "With Chris, it was maybe the same way, you know?" "He was the third guitar player of the Foo Fighters." "In the early days of being in the band I didn't wanna step on anybody's toes." "I didn't even know what..." "I didn't know what my place was." "And I was just genuinely, like, this was everything that I ever wanted - the dream coming true." "Every time Foo Fighters would put out a record," "I would get really excited and miss it so bad." "I found out after being in the band for a couple months that they had almost replaced me with Pat." "Pat almost came back, who they had a lot of history with, and there was a relationship there." "Dave didn't know that I knew that, and probably most of them didn't." "There was at least a couple times where I called Dave and said, "I want back."" "Then when it looked like it might actually happen, I got scared." "After being in the band for a couple months, I had this feeling," ""This could all end, and I'm gonna enjoy this while it lasts." ""Because it probably will end sooner than I want it to."" "That third record, we went on the road with the Red Hot Chili Peppers." "For, like, four months we toured America with them." "We had never played arenas before." "We hadn't done that arena rock thing." "That's when we started coming up with jams onstage and working out, like, a show." "Not a "show," not dancers and shit in the show, but really like kinda work out a good set." "So that it's impressive." "Tiaylor really drove that home." "It was great." "That changed the band, probably, forever and made us concentrate more on really playing together." "We had a stage setup that we had built for the arena." "It was basically modeled after the Queen Live Killers record cover, it was very seventies." "Hi." "This is our dressing room, where we get dressed before we play." "And we had these little uniforms set." "And we brought a wardrobe case" "Everything was red and black, or white." "That was our color theme for the tour." "It was the first time we thought in terms of something like," ""Let's look a certain way on stage."" "I had the black shirt with white tie and black pants." "Nate had the red shirt with black tie and..." "We looked like Kraftwerk or something like that." "We were..." "It was silly, really." "But we put on this show, and we fuckin' killed it." "OK, we'll see you guys in a town near you, I hope very soon." "Tiake care and..." "I love you." "It just stands to reason no matter how great a thing that your life or your job is, after a while, you need a break." "That was fun until after two months of doing it." "It feels like Groundhog Day, all those arenas look the same." "You start bringing the bottle of whisky to the stage with you." "It started with, "Let's do a shot before we play." We'd call it "band prayer"." "Then that turned into like, "Let's do ten shots before we play."" "And we all started gettin' fuckin' hammered before we went onstage." "And we got really shitty by the end." "I think that's probably why so many musicians wind up getting so fucked up, just 'cause you need something to keep it fun." "Tiaylor had been struggling with... with drugs, I think." "He and I had talked about it a few times." "I didn't really know how to deal with the way you were supposed to be." "I thought that to be a rock 'n' roller you have to be the fuckin' Keith Richards." "You have to be the dark, partying, fuckin'..." "the real deal." "That's the only way it's real rock 'n' roll." "Rock 'n' roll!" "I would tell him, I'd say, "You know, dude, I love you like a brother." ""I'm not a cop." "I'm not your dad, whatever." ""But I'm worried about you, you know?"" "We were in London, and we all went out to a bar across the street from the hotel." "We were having a good time, and I came back to my room early." "And in the morning I got a call that he was on his way to the hospital." "We got word that Tiaylor's in a coma at the hospital, and OD'd on, you know, whatever it was." "I think it was heroin that he did." "And our sound man at the time, he was like, "Oh yeah, Tiaylor fucked up." ""He's gonna die, like, he's fuckin' dead."" "It was so weird, like, he hadn't died, but he had overdosed." "And..." "I just felt so totally helpless, you know?" "What sort of things do you demand on tour?" "Instruments." "So I sat with him... for those couple weeks." "Until he woke up." "And when he woke up," "I said to him, "Dude, it's gonna be OK."" "And he looked at me and he said, "Fuck off!"" "And I thought, "Oh, good, everything's gonna be OK."" "Dave's my best friend." "And even more than a best friend, he's like a brother." "He really is." "And, yeah, he was..." "as I would be with him, if something happened to Dave where he was on the brink of death," "I would be losing my mind." "And he was losing his mind." "So we get back from London after my fuckin' OD, and then two months after that, we start trying to make this record." "But we weren't ready." "And nobody's really into it." "Everyone's playing half-assed." "I'd do something and Dave would listen and say," ""This has gotta change." "This is not working with the vocals." "That's too busy."" "I was disagreeing." "I had a shitty attitude 'cause I was pissed." "It was bizarre." "It was my first record with the band." "And I was just showing up to the studio every day and was sort of confused, like, "It's weird, I'm never playing on this." ""I show up at noon every day and I kinda sit here" ""and I eat food and drink coffee and then I go home." ""What is this?"" "There's starting to..." "There's a little bit of infighting and whispers of, "Blah-blah's pissed at blah-blah about wah-dah."" "And the vibes just were not happening." "Dave's like, "I feel like you guys are taking the band for granted." ""It's just, show up, make a record, and go on and do our thing." ""There's no..." "You don't have to show up with a passion for it."" "And he had a point." "I would walk in, listen to what we have, and think," ""I don't really know if I want anyone to hear this."" "The making of that record was a fuckin'..." "It sucked." "We finished it, and... we gave it to our manager, John Silva, and he was like, "Well, we could put this out," ""but I don't know if we're gonna be able to sell any of them."" "Lmmediately following that," "Dave had done a record with Queens of the Stone Age as their drummer, and went out and toured on that record." "And was like, "I'm gonna go do this." ""We'll figure out what we're gonna do about this record that didn't work later."" "Dave's not happy with the record and he wants to shelve it." "And he's also gonna go on tour with Queens of the Stone Age." "And so it was kind of like, "Whoa." "He's doing what?" ""You know, what are we doing again?" "What did you say?"" "I just started to think that we should stop." ""I don't have to be here," ""and I really fuckin' love doing this other thing, so..." ""fuck it."" "He went off with Queens, and that went on for a little while." "Then we got together to rehearse, to go play Coachella." "We were signed on to do this show, where Dave was playing with Queens the day before, and then we were playing." "There was so much tension." "Nobody was talking, and we were just rehearsing to get through these songs." "God bless him, Chris at one point in time in the rehearsal just goes," ""I don't know if I'm the only one," ""but you could cut the air in here with a fuckin' knife." ""What the fuck's goin' on?" Then it was just on." "We had this big fight, one of the biggest arguments we've ever had." "It was mostly between Tiaylor and Dave." "They had it out, like this serious discussion." "Stuff that had been pent up." "When I went to play drums with Queens of the Stone Age, Tiaylor resented me for that." "What bands are you listening to now?" "The new Queens of the Stone Age CD is amazing, everybody knows that." "He was really upset that I didn't come see him play drums and how exciting it was for him to be back onstage playing with another band." "I just went through this awful trauma, and I was supposed to be happy that Dave's having such a good time." "But I wasn't, you know?" ""I'm not fucking happy for you to go play with another band." ""Why should I be happy for that?"" "So Dave was trying to write the set list for the show, and we had an argument about it, just," ""You're a fuckin' asshole." "If you don't like it, you can leave!"" "And the next day, I said, "I will be leaving." "As soon as we finish this." ""As soon as we play Coachella and finish this record," ""do whatever commitments we have, I'm out of here."" ""Look, let's go and do this show," ""and if we never wanna do it again, then let's not."" ""The Foo Fighters are over." "And I'm OK with that."" ""OK." "That's it." "Oh well."" "I played two nights at that Coachella." "One with the Foo Fighters, and one with Queens of the Stone Age." "And Tiaylor sat and watched Queens of the Stone Age that night, at Coachella." "At that point, I was OK with it." "I didn't care anymore." "I was like, "Well, this is probably our last show, so, you know," ""maybe Dave will just end up being Queens of the Stone Age drummer for now" ""or whatever, and that'll be what it is."" "And then we played the next day and we played great." "Dave was like, a new front man in front of 1O, OOO, 2O, OOO people, however big that fuckin' thing is." "It was really good." "After that, me and Dave went for a walk." "And he said, "Let's go back to Virginia, record a couple songs."" "We made a plan to meet and just jam, see what happens." "I said, "I have this new song." "It's called Tiimes Like These."" "Tiimes Like These was basically written about the band disappearing for those two or three months." "And me feeling like I wasn't entirely myself." "I just thought, "OK." "I'm not done being in the band." ""I don't know if they are, but I'm not."" "It wasn't too long before Dave was excited to get back to work on the record." "We just started picking all the songs and going, "Let's re-record that." "We have a week."" "And we re-recorded the album in seven days in my basement." "It was all finished really quickly, and it had the passion, it had the feel and sound that was like..." "a record we could be proud of." "I remember that being like, the turning point." "Like, "OK, this isn't ending."" "We had already spent three months and a million dollars on something that we threw away." "The difference between All My Life and All My Life was that this one cost a million dollars and sounded like crap." "This one, we did in my basement in half an hour and became the biggest fuckin' song the band ever had." "It was a big record, you know?" "Millions of people bought it." "All My Life we just have to play when we play gigs." "Tio this day, that's by far my favorite song to play live." "Every night, good or bad show, it doesn't matter, when you get to that part of the set, it always goes bananas." "If you're having a bad show, that's the turning point every night." "Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the Foo Fighters!" "Ladies and gentlemen, Foo Fighters." "Please welcome back to the program, Foo Fighters." "Foo Fighters!" "Ladies and gentlemen, Foo Fighters!" "We barely got through making a record, and then started kinda going up the ranks as a live band." "We didn't have huge success right up front." "It's been little milestones of things we've been asked to do and been able to do." "It was a fun time." "We were doing these great tours, and the shows were getting bigger, and we were on a good roll." "We'd get asked to play on the MTiV Awards, and we'd show up, and we'd be the only fuckin' rock band there." "So it'd be like us and fuckin' boy bands, girl bands, rappers, solo artists." "After a while we got suspicious, like," ""Wait a minute, do they know who we are or do they just need a rock band?"" "Thank you." "After One By One," "I went home and started demoing all this really delicate acoustic music." "I thought, "Let's make an album" ""where you have one CD that's all the really heavy rock shit," ""then you have another CD" ""that's really beautiful acoustic-based, lower dynamic stuff."" "And we'll tour for six or seven months on the rock record, then go out on this theatre tour doing the acoustic shows." "Since the acoustic record had additional instrumentation," "I thought, "We need a bigger band."" "I always had in the back of my mind that someday I'll get to come and play along with them." "And in 2OO6, Dave called me and said," ""Come out and do this acoustic tour with me."" "I didn't actually know Pat, but I was aware that there'd been a couple times through the years when Dave had almost brought him back." "And so, to me, Pat was just a guy that wanted my job." "So when I found out about that, I was just like, "You gotta be fuckin' kidding me."" "Pat is a Foo Fighter, whether he's in the band or not." "He and I have gone through a lot together." "Pat should be in the band." "I definitely thought it must be awkward for Chris." "So I felt awkward only in that..." ""I hope this isn't awkward for you."" "The first rehearsal, Pat showed up, and we actually instantly hit it off, you know?" "I sorta got to be friends with him over the course of doing those shows." "Clive Davis came to see us play at one of the acoustic gigs, and I said, "I think it'd be so cool if we were that band" ""where we did the rock show and we had all the people that love the rock show," ""and we did the acoustic show and had all the people that love the acoustic show," ""and they wouldn't necessarily have to go to both."" "And Clive was like, "Yes, but you can do both together."" "In a total Yoda moment." "I was like, "Oh my God, you're right!"" "And that was the next album, Echoes, Silence, Patience,  Grace." "Those songs were basically just that." "So that tour and that album before totally shaped the one that happened after." "We were at a point in our career where we thought things couldn't get any bigger." "We've headlined these festivals, played these arenas." "We're perfectly happy with the way things are." "And then John Silva said, "You guys wanna play Wembley Stadium?"" "And I said, "Fuck." "OK, but wait, how big is that place?"" "When you do something like that you put it on sale six months ahead of time because that's a lot of tickets - 85,OOO people." "You need six months to get rid of all those tickets." "And we sold it out." "I couldn't believe it." "So we put another one on sale, and it sold out in, like, a few days." "When it sold out like it did, I think everybody in the band was just like," ""What the fuck?" "How did that happen?"" "It was this huge responsibility, this great thing like," ""All right." "It's our turn now, like, we have to make it great."" "It was six months until we had to play the show." "Every night before I went to sleep for six months, I'd think," ""My God, I have to play fuckin' Wembley Stadium."" "Then I'd wake up in the morning, like, "We're playing Wembley!"" "Wembley is so big, and it's like this sort of monster bowl you're playing." "It's just sort of the weight and the responsibility I put on myself for a show like that, it's intense." "I remember before the first show, I was so nervous, and I somehow got hot sauce in my eye backstage, right before we went on," "I was just, "Why now?" "Why did this have to happen now?"" "You don't just go, "Yay, they asked us to do this thing" ""and we're gonna go and do our best and see what happens."" "You wanna make sure it becomes the most memorable show you've done." "And know that you killed it." "It was nerve-wracking, because it's Wembley Stadium." "And if you've ever been there, it's so fucking huge." "It's like an illusion." "How the fuck did this band get this fuckin' big?" "Can you tell me that?" "When you have 2O, OOO people and there's nosebleeds that are so far away, you wanna be able to bring everybody in." "I want the people up there to feel like they're right there." "You'd imagine that after playing something like Wembley Stadium and playing to 85,OOO people, "God, what do we do now?"" "Yeah, it's good." "It's the same way with records, in a way." "This is our seventh record." "What could we possibly do that's different than the last thing we had done?" "And I thought, "Well..." "I wanna do the next one in the garage."" "It's about making records the way we used to fucking make records." "But let's do it with Butch Vig so it's fucking huge." "Butch Vig is probably most well known for doing Nevermind, the Nirvana record." "But he's done a ton of stuff through the years." "He did the last Green Day record and he was in Garbage, and he's been a working producer for a long time." "Dave said, "I wanna make the record in my garage."" "And then he said, "What do you think about making the record on tape?"" "I wanna get away from what people think we should do." "I learned how to make records on tape." "And there's something about that process that I love, but you can't fix things like when you're working purely in a digital format." "That's the first thing I said to the band." ""If we're gonna do this on tape, you guys have to play really well." ""Because nothing's gonna be fixed."" "I think most people have an idea of how records are made." "They're made on computers." "You can do whatever with computers, but we all grew up making records on tape." "It's got a certain sound." "It's got a certain set of limitations." "You can't go in and just go like, "Well, that's close enough."" "Wow, this is great!" "Rock n' roll is imperfection and flaws and four or five or six or eight people playing together." "It's not gonna line up." "It's gonna be a little fucked up." "It should be." "Human beings aren't perfect." "You wanna say hello?" "Hi!" "What was really different was the environment, doing it at Dave's house." "Which is the most comfortable environment you can imagine." "It's like..." "It's just fun to be there anyways." "I think the atmosphere of where you're recording has to come out on the record." "I don't see how it couldn't." "Look at this crew." "Look at the Hawkins!" "What, are you kidding me?" "The engineers and everybody at one point were like," ""OK, we're gonna need this and this and this." ""$7OO, OOO worth of outboard gear."" "And Dave's like, "No, no, no." "We're making a record in a garage!"" "I love that we're about to make an album at home." "I think the album's gonna sound like that." "I know it will." "If we need to have three different drum sounds, wouldn't it be cool to have them crossfade into each other, like as the other drum sound's starting to come up and the other one's going back?" "Wouldn't it be cool if we had a bucket of KFC right now?" "So in recording, it usually begins with Tiaylor and I." "The drums first, with the guitar, and at first it's really to see if Tiaylor and I lock in with each other." "Did I miss my cue?" "Yes, you did." "I go through a process, sort of a self-loathing, "I suck" process when I'm recording drums." "I tend to think I'm the worst drummer in the world." "Fuck." "Sorry." "I messed up the pattern a little bit." "OK." "When I go back and listen to the recording," "I'm like, "I'm all over the place." It's not great." "Why?" "Why, God, why?" "Sorry, I broke a drumstick!" "Then it slowly evolves and comes together after a couple hours, and I have a drum track I'm really proud of." "The drums are finished." "I'm still not sure about These Days." "I could sit there and agonize all day over one little snare hit or fuckin'..." "the way a groove feels." " And you will." " And I will." "They'll play it on the radio and you'll go, "Damn!" "That fuckin' snare hit!"" "Maybe we should have just ProTiooled the fuck out of this record." "At least you know it's perfect." "When you're recording analogue like this, knowing it can't be fixed brings a factor to the way the band thinks about how they're gonna play." "For instance, Nate, before he would do his bass part, would go out in the tent and work out his part, so when he came in to play, he knew everything he was gonna do." "I think it sounds great." "It sounds awesome." "Yeah, it sounds awesome." "Is the bass or anything doing..." "Is the bass or anything doing a note coming out of..." "Is there anything like that?" "Is that gonna, do you want one?" " You know what I mean?" " I'd maybe not do that." "Don't do that." "That was very non-confrontational." ""Maybe don't do that."" "I would maybe not ever do that in the song." "I'm the guy that plays the rhythm straight up the middle." "And then you have Chris, and Chris has a really sharp and clean sense of melodic playing." "Then over here, there's Pat." "And it's like..." "when Pat puts on a guitar it just goes..." "All of those things..." "If they're balanced it sounds like the Foo Fighters." "Did we finally get too grungy?" "It's never too grungy!" "I wonder if it's just, you're losing, like, the notes." "We've had this expanded band now for the last couple albums." "As a musician, it's a dream to be able to play with as many people and do as many different things as you can." "So where should we start?" "What do you wanna start with?" "We gotta get Bob fuckin' rockin' and rollin'." "What am I doing here?" "I just learned the song, I got it in my head." "What do you want me to do?" "When you meet someone that really helped you become the musician that you are," "I really think it's important to acknowledge that." "Bob's voice is so signature, and to have him come to my fuckin' house and do it on my fuckin' record blows me away." "All right, cool." "You wanna do the bridge?" "What do you wanna do, Bob?" "Come on in." "I didn't write the middle section of the song, because I wanted to write it with Bob, while Bob was there." "But I didn't have the words, so I sort of explained it, and we tried it once just with phonetic crap." "Is that gonna make sense?" "I think so." "OK, let me write something really quick." "OK, five-minute lyrics." "OK, give me a five-minute lyric break." "Clock's runnin'." "Dad?" "Yeah?" "Remember you said you'll swim?" "I know, I have to write these words really quick, so I can go sing it." "OK." "OK." "One, two, you know what to do..." "That sounds so good!" "That is so fucking cool, you guys!" "You can hear, it's really good." "Some of the songs still had question marks, you know, the biggest song being I Should Have Known." "That song became sort of the X factor in the album." "Yep, that's cool." "Fuckin' A, right?" "I kinda feel like I Should Have Known is a song that's about Dave's past, and I think there are definitely references in there about Nirvana and Kurt." "Fuckin' A, man." "That's really good." "When I first started writing that song, it was about someone else that I was involved with, and at the end of the day, I said to myself," ""I should have known that this was gonna happen."" "But when I sing that song, it's hard not to think about all of the times in my life that's happened." "Hey, Krist!" "Hello!" "We had Krist Novoselic come in and play bass on I Should Have Known." "That was a very special moment, 'cause I had not been in the same room with Dave and Krist since we finished Nevermind." "It does that back and forth twice, then it does the turnaround chords." "Yeah, it goes, D sharp, G, D sharp, G, F, C, then it goes back in D sharp, G, D sharp..." "It's like a six chord." "So it goes..." "How was the tone?" "I think it fuckin' sounds gnarly." "There, it's done." "Seriously." "That's all you get, motherfucker." "I was not surprised that Dave asked Krist to play on the record." "I was surprised it hadn't happened any other time in the last 16 years." "You never realize how important the bass sound is to the sound of a band until you put it in another band and go, "Oh, there it is."" "I think what Krist played on the song was the absolute perfect thing for him to do on a Foo Fighters record." "I think that might be the ending." "We've found it." "Yeah, sample my phone." "The ice cream truck." "It usually takes us a while to name an album." "But I decided to call the record Wasting Light, because I honestly feel like" "I don't wanna let one minute of this go without really feeling it." "The best way to prepare to playing to 85,OOO people is to play at these small club gigs." "Because that's kind of a true test." "You go to see an arena rock band." "They're pretty good, but would they be any good at the Roxy?" "Hold the fuckin'..." "Then bask in the glory for a minute." "Having Scream be the first band on the bill, my heroes from my childhood, the band that I dropped out of high school to join, to see them sharing the stage with my band Foo Fighters was a really big deal to me." "Yeah, good night, y'all." "Thank you." "You guys wanna hear the new record?" "The Foo Fighters sound like the Foo Fighters because it's me, and Tiaylor, and Nate, and Chris, and Pat." "If it were anyone else, it would sound different." "You never wanna lose anybody, and you never wanna see someone disappear out of your life, but we wouldn't be here if it were different with William." "We wouldn't be here if it were different with Franz." "I feel bad about the bad things, I feel good about the good things, but I wouldn't change a thing." "We've worked hard, and we've made a great band." "I'm incapable of doing almost anything else at this point in time, so this is what I do." "I'm an adult that plays in a rock band." "How about that?" "I've had people say in interviews," ""So, Tiaylor, what is it like to be a rock star?"" "And I'm like, "Fuck you." "I'm not a rock star." "I'm a musician."" "It's a functional family, you know what I mean?" "I go to work coming up here, and I just fucking laugh all day and play great music." "There will probably always, to some extent, be that feeling," ""This could all end tomorrow." "Who the fuck knows, you know?"" "We're all pretty lucky that we get to do this and we have to enjoy it while it's here and make the most of it." "It's a crazy feeling when something goes from a spark of imagination to something you can hold in your hands." "That first cassette... made in five fuckin' days or whatever, and here we are." "It's just like, "Whoa." "How the fuck did this happen?"" "Honestly, had I taken this whole career thing seriously," "I would've named it something else, 'cause it's the worst fuckin' band name in the world!"