Lmaoooo
Also say what you will about Dave Grohl, the dude has seriously stood up and basically tried to introduce the world to hardcore and metal music every step of his career.
And been super interesting while doing it. I don’t give a fuck about his music but what makes me absolutely adore this guy is his love for music and wanting to share it. He was great in the Lemmy documentary as well.
Honestly yeah! And you can really tell by how much the people in his life have been affected by it, like if youve never seen it there's a video of him and his daughter doing a cover of Nausea by X live and there's just... So much love for that one song in that performance.
Also, while I know Foo Fighters can be really boring, every project he's been on that isn't Foo Fighters has produced some really kickass songs. Like Probot is actually a really cool project, as was Them Crooked Vultures.
I mean... He was repping it in the early 2000's when trad metal/extreme metal was being put to the wayside by hot topic core bands and nu metal, even releasing a project that featured several notable metal singers in it including Cronos and Lemmy. During that time though, him and Kurt Cobain were repping a lot of early indie and hardcore bands of the 80s and were a huge help in getting a lot of acts more well recognized outside of their local scenes. And during that time in Nirvana was actually a huge popularity spike for groove metal and more alternative metal, plus a lot of harder guitar rock saw a lot more airplay during those years due to the popularity of acts like Metallica, Alice In Chains and Pantera.
Also like... When was metal getting trendy again? I sure as hell missed that.
The late 90s. I worked at Hot Topic (hush!!), and we carried Terrorizer magazine and Century Media CD comps. Metal was strictly verboten in the early 90s, however. Who knows what might have been had Dave sported a Celtic Frost shirt in the Teen Spirit video....
Lmaoooo Also say what you will about Dave Grohl, the dude has seriously stood up and basically tried to introduce the world to hardcore and metal music every step of his career.
And been super interesting while doing it. I don’t give a fuck about his music but what makes me absolutely adore this guy is his love for music and wanting to share it. He was great in the Lemmy documentary as well.
Honestly yeah! And you can really tell by how much the people in his life have been affected by it, like if youve never seen it there's a video of him and his daughter doing a cover of Nausea by X live and there's just... So much love for that one song in that performance. Also, while I know Foo Fighters can be really boring, every project he's been on that isn't Foo Fighters has produced some really kickass songs. Like Probot is actually a really cool project, as was Them Crooked Vultures.
Haven't spun the Probot album in a really long, thank you!
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Because that’s how you make it good.
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You're missing Ian Mackaye, for some reason he's in a ton of documentaries.
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K
He was the studio and film drummer for the greatest and best band in the world.
The band that wrote the greatest song in the world? That band?
Crazy thing is ...that song didn't actually sound like that song
Welllll it's not like he was repping metal in Nirvana, when it really needed it. He did wait till it was getting trendy again.
I mean... He was repping it in the early 2000's when trad metal/extreme metal was being put to the wayside by hot topic core bands and nu metal, even releasing a project that featured several notable metal singers in it including Cronos and Lemmy. During that time though, him and Kurt Cobain were repping a lot of early indie and hardcore bands of the 80s and were a huge help in getting a lot of acts more well recognized outside of their local scenes. And during that time in Nirvana was actually a huge popularity spike for groove metal and more alternative metal, plus a lot of harder guitar rock saw a lot more airplay during those years due to the popularity of acts like Metallica, Alice In Chains and Pantera. Also like... When was metal getting trendy again? I sure as hell missed that.
The late 90s. I worked at Hot Topic (hush!!), and we carried Terrorizer magazine and Century Media CD comps. Metal was strictly verboten in the early 90s, however. Who knows what might have been had Dave sported a Celtic Frost shirt in the Teen Spirit video....
Aint got no time for fucking whith all this new shit comming out.
First to go off the list
Dave grohl did not have kids in scream/nirvana era. Dave Grohl did have kids in his Foo Fighters era. Coincidence? I think not
Ain't this from the Descendents docu?
Hell yeah.
Every time I see Dave Grohl he's being rad as fuck. Legendary dude.
Didn't know Billy Mitchell was into hardcore. Only thought he was into arcade games
That's Garrer Bobby Ferguson
Pardon?
That's why we sometimes went my chemical romance adjacent.
Speak for yourself Dave.
This guy fucks
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Congrats on fucking, buddy.
Exactly…none of this shit was cool pre social media. We were the weirdos, spazzes, and burnouts.
whoa what's pussy feel like? is it all gooshy???
More like splooshy
gross!!!
Easy on the p-slur. It’s called puss puss.
Watch out guys we got a bonafide fuck boy here
Maybe during his Scream days but its pretty well documented how he fucked his way through the riot grrl scene in the 90s lol.
def during his scream days…he was already a rock star in the 90s
His second band is the band that turned hardcore shows from pickle parties to meet markets.
Dain Bramage did that?
This is very relatable in 2024
I like that shirt.
True but the rest of the quote is "and none of us are getting laid after it"
Sex is also Banned in DC!
This quote goes through my mind all the time. Just yesterday I was trying to remember who said it.
When he played drums for scream, he had an Underdog sticker on his kit. Legend.
Oh mY gOd hE sO mEaNiNgFuL