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Foo Fighters release 11th studio album 'But Here We Are'

June 2, 2023

Dave Grohl and his Foo Fighters mark another highlight in their nearly 30-year history with their first album after the death of drummer Taylor Hawkins.

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In a photo by Scarlet McPage, Dave Grohl plays drums at a memorial concert for late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins in London. He is sweaty and smiling, with strands of his long dark hair in his face.
Image: Scarlet Page/Mbc/picture alliance

The 11th studio album by Foo Fighters gives insights into the soul of the band's founder, Dave Grohl. The band has recorded 10 songs about goodbyes, letting go and carrying on, grief and optimism. It seems to be a catharsis for Grohl, a spiritual cleansing following personal tragedies. The death of Foo Fighters' drummer Taylor Hawkins in March 2022 was hard enough to take. But then Grohl's mother, who had been one of his biggest supporters, died just a few months later, in August 2022.

The surviving band members could have decided that Hawkins' sudden death would be the end of Foo Fighters. Such was the extent of their pain of losing their bandmate and friend. But Grohl decided the band would first pay tribute to Hawkins with memorial concerts in London and Los Angeles, before confirming late last year that Foo Fighters would continue under that name, with Josh Freese joining as the new drummer.

In a photo by Dan Deslover, Taylor Hakins plays drums onstage on May 19, 2019, in Columbus, Ohio. He has a beard and his long blond hair flies around as he drums.
Taylor Hawkins' death at age 50 shocked his fans and his bandmatesImage: Dan Deslover/ZUMAPRESS/picture alliance

But here we are

The band went back to the studio and the resulting album, "But Here We Are,” has been released to rave reviews from critics and fans alike. The album opens with the song "Rescued,” which addressed the grief felt in the wake of Taylor Hawkins' death. "The Teacher,” with a guitar sound reminiscent of The Cure, is an ambitious, ten-minute, psychedelic rock epic that sees Grohl grappling with the death of his mother, who was a teacher. 

Sound-wise, the album is reminiscent of their previous albums. It's straightforward rock, rough-edged but with Dave Grohl's trademark warm guitar harmonies, which lends a pleasing tension to all the tracks.

In a photo by Rudi Keuntje, Dave Grohl (left, with long dark hair) and Kurt Cobain (smiling, with long blond hair and beard) sit on a couch during an interview in London on August 20, 1991.
Roommates, bandmates, musical soulmates and friends: Dave Grohl and Kurt CobainImage: Rudi Keuntje/Geisler-Fotopress/picture alliance

But Grohl hadn't always been a songwriter. He got his musical start as a drummer, first with the hardcore band Scream, then joined Nirvana, where he helped craft the sound that would make the band famous. Grohl also found a friend and musical soulmate in the band's singer, Kurt Cobain. He was deeply affected by Cobain's suicide in 1994 and the end of Nirvana. But he soon channeled his sadness into a new project.

Foo Fighters take off

Armed with outlines of songs he'd recorded on tapes or noted on scraps of paper for several years, Dave Grohl went into the studio in October 1994, and — aside from a guitar part on the song "X-Static” played by Greg Dulli of Afghan Whigs — recorded all the instrumentation and vocals himself. In his 2021 autobiography, "The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music,” Grohl said the recording sessions were a kind of therapy, comparing them to a defibrillator shocking his heart back into a normal rhythm. The result was the first Foo Fighters album, which was an instant chart hit, even making it to Number 3 in the UK.

In a photo by Gilbert Flores, Taylor Hawkins (left, long blond hair and beard) and Dave Grohl (long dark hair and beard) stand with crossed arms, smiling at each other, at the Grammy Awards in Hollywood, California on December 6, 2007.
More musical soulmates: Taylor Hawkins and Dave GrohlImage: Gilbert Flores/Avalon/picture alliance

Grohl didn't go it alone for long, soon gathering other musicians for his project, which continued its route to success with honest, earthy, hard-but-melodic rock. Taylor Hawkins joined in 1997, becoming Cobain's successor as Grohl's friend and musical soulmate. Each album has been a hit, spending considerable time on the charts, but the most successful so far has been their seventh studio album, "Wasting Light.” 

One song on that album especially stands out: "White Limo” is a crazy, hard, punk-slash-rock'n'roll track, a bow to Lemmy Kilmister's Motörhead. And Lemmy himself gets in on the action too: In the video, he sits smoking and drinking whiskey at the wheel of a stretch limousine, with Foo Fighters in the back as a typical rock band with guitars, beer, champagne and joints. Fun fact: Lemmy never even had a driver's license.

A throne for Dave Grohl

In June 2015, Foo Fighters played a stadium gig while on tour in Gothenburg, Sweden. During the second number, a headbanging Dave Grohl pranced from one side of the stage to the other. Suddenly, he got his foot tangled in a cable, tripped and fell from the stage, in front of 50,000 fans, breaking his leg. After getting a temporary cast and taking a generous swig of whiskey, Grohl was carried on a stretcher back onstage, where he sat on a chair and finished the concert with the rest of the band.

In a photo by Nick Wass, Dave Grohl sings while sitting in his custom-made throne onstage in Washington, DC on July 4, 2015. He has long dark hair and a beard, and is dressed all in black. His right leg is in a purple plaster cast, and its propped up. He holds a blue guitar on his lap. The bottom of the throne is decorated with an array of guitar necks and headstocks.
Dave Grohl's stage throne recalls the Iron Throne from 'Game of Thrones'Image: Nick Wass/Invision/AP/picture alliance

Not wanting to have to cancel the band's North American tour while his leg healed, the Foo Fighters frontman designed a kind of elevated throne where he could sit and perform at shows until he was able to stand and walk properly again.

The miracle of Cesena

That tour featured one very special appearance: In late July 2015, 1,000 musicians gathered on a field near the Italian town of Cesena and together played the Foo Fighters song "Learn to Fly.” The organizer of the "Rockin' 1,000” project then asked Foo Fighters to play in Cesena.  The video went viral, and Dave Grohl, still recovering from his fall in Sweden, was moved by it, and promised the band would appear in Cesena — which they did, in November 2015, with Grohl's throne among their road gear. 

On loan to Axl Rose

The throne gained its own fame, and when Dave Grohl no longer needed it, it went its own way. In April 2016, it was rolled on to the stage of an area in Las Vegas, where Axl Rose, the singer of Guns N' Roses, took his seat upon it. Rose had broken his foot ahead of his band's tour and didn't want the relatively minor injury to keep him from performing.

In 2018, Foo Fighters returned to Gothenburg. The band started playing and Grohl ran around in his usual manner — only to again fall from the stage. But the shock was short-lived for the audience: The band was pranking them, having hired a stunt double to recreate Grohl's accident. The real frontman leapt back onto the stage and rocked the stadium.

In a photo by Charles Sykes, Dave Grohl holds up a guitar while playing it on stage at the MTV Music Video Awards in New York on September 12, 2021. He is on the far left of the photo, dressed all in black with long dark hair and a beard. In front of him below the stage, the audience reaches out their arms to him.
Dave Grohl is known for being a high-energy performer onstageImage: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP/picture alliance

But Grohl did, in fact, suffer another fall a year later. At a gig in Las Vegas, he had the audience pass him a can of beer, part of which he spilled on an amp, chugging the rest and then climbing back on to the stage — from which he promptly fell again. Luckily, that stage was lower, so Grohl was unhurt and continued the concert as planned.

You can't keep a good man down

Ever positive, Dave Grohl deals with personal setbacks the same way he deals with tumbling from the stage: taking it all in stride, getting back up and making the best of things. He's known for his sense of humor and joyfulness, his unequivocal love of music and for his friends and family. 

The world-famous rock star is not above engaging in a drum battle with Animal from The Muppets or taking part in James Corden's "Carpool Karaoke” shenanigans. He encourages his three daughters' musical talents and has proudly invited them onstage to play with him.

When the COVID-19 pandemic brought the world to a halt in spring 2020, and concerts everywhere were cancelled, Grohl used his downtime to write "The Storyteller: Tales of Life and Music.” In the memoir, he wears his heart on his sleeve, writing candidly about good times and bad, about love, sadness and optimism — the topics he covers in his music. On the Foo Fighters' latest, "But Here We Are,” Grohl's unique way of telling stories is once again on full display.

This article was originally written in German.

Silke Wünsch
Silke Wünsch Reporter and editor at DW's culture desk