Following the suicide of bandmate Kurt Cobain, Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl found himself contemplating quitting music entirely. He was invited to drum for several bands, including Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Danzig, but even after joining a few live performances, Grohl felt strongly he should work on his own project instead. He saw the opportunity as something of “cathartic therapy.”
Grohl booked six days at the Robert Lang Studios in Seattle and brought along producer Barrett Jones to work with him. Previously, in 1992, Grohl had recorded a series of demos called Pocketwatch, which he had done very little with. He intended to create something similar with his week at Robert Lang, recording new music, playing every instrument, and releasing it under a name that would make listeners believe it was a full band, not just a solo project.
Over a period of one week in October 1994, Grohl and Jones produced the new record, typically getting through four songs per day. Grohl quadrupled up his vocals on certain tracks due to his insecurity as a singer and accomplished every song in roughly 45 minutes.
In an effort to preserve his anonymity with the project, Grohl released the album under the “band” name, the Foo Fighters.
The record was released to acclaim from critics, with publications praising Grohl’s voice and finding the similarities to Cobain and Nirvana. Billboardsaid it was filled with “inspired songwriting and passionate performances” and Entertainment Weeklysaid, “[Grohl’s] songs pack the riffy wallop of unpolished Nirvana demos, and his voice has Kurt Cobain’s lunging, over-the-top passion.”
Grohl intended to use the pseudonym “Foo Fighters” to work on solo projects post-Nirvana; however, when labels began to show interest after his recorded the “self-titled” debut, he recruited bassist Nate Mendel, drummer William Goldsmith, and guitarist Pat Smear to make up an actual band. Grohl himself became the lead vocalist and guitarist as opposed to his role as drummer in Nirvana. Grohl ended up licensing the record to Columbia, and the band made their first public performance in February 1995, five months before the album’s full release.
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This story was originally published by Parade on Jul 4, 2026, where it first appeared in the Entertainment section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
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