-- in the summer of 1995, few would have guessed that the group would wind up as the one band to survive the '90s alt-rock explosion unscathed. Other bands burned brighter but they flamed out, breaking up after scoring a hit or two, but the Foos steadily racked up success after success, filling up stadiums around the world while staying on top of the charts all the way into the second decade of the new millennium. Once the band's lineup coalesced around the time of its third album in 1999,
' sound also gelled into a recognizable signature built upon the heavy, melodic, loud-quiet-loud template of the Pixies and
, the modern rock anchored by a love of classic guitar rock. It was commercial without pandering, creatively restless without being alienating, a sound with wide appeal delivered by a band that was happy to tour and record the way bands did back in the '70s. When Wasting Light became their first number one album in America upon its release in the spring of 2011, it was confirmation that
were survivors who had earned a large, devoted audience primarily through hard work.
All of this industriousness stems from
Dave Grohl, who had been playing guitar and writing songs long before he began drumming. Throughout his early teens he performed in a variety of hardcore punk bands and in the late '80s he joined the Washington, D.C.-area hardcore band
Scream as their drummer. During
Scream's final days,
Grohl began recording his own material in the basement studio of his friend
Barrett Jones. Some of
Grohl's songs appeared on
Scream's final album,
Fumble. Following the band's 1990 summer tour,
Grohl joined
Nirvana and moved cross-country to Seattle.
After
Nirvana recorded
Nevermind,
Grohl went back to the D.C. area and recorded a handful of tracks that would appear on Pocketwatch, a cassette released by Simple Machines. For most of 1992, he was busy with
Nirvana, but when the band was off the road, he recorded solo material with
Jones, who had also moved to Seattle. The pair kept recording throughout early 1993, when
Grohl returned to
Nirvana to record
In Utero.
Grohl had toyed with the idea of releasing another independent cassette in the summer of 1993, but the plans never reached fruition. Following
Kurt Cobain's suicide in 1994, the drummer kept quiet for several months. In the fall of 1994,
Grohl and
Jones decamped to a professional studio and recorded the songs that comprised
Foo Fighters' debut album in a week. Boiling down his backlog of songs to about 15 tracks,
Grohl played all of the instruments on the album. He made 100 copies of the tape, passing it out to friends and associates. In no time,
Grohl's solo project became the object of a fierce record company bidding war.
Instead of embarking on a full-fledged solo career,
Grohl decided to form a band. Through his wife he met
Nate Mendel, the bassist for
Sunny Day Real Estate. Shortly before the pair met,
Jeremy Enigk, the leader of
Sunny Day Real Estate, had converted to Christianity and quit the band, effectively ending the group's career. Not only did
Mendel join
Grohl's band, but so did Sunny Day's drummer,
William Goldsmith. Former
Germs and
Nirvana guitarist
Pat Smear rounded out the lineup. The band, named
Foo Fighters after a World War II secret force that allegedly researched UFOs, signed a contract with Capitol Records. The band's self-titled debut, consisting solely of
Dave Grohl's solo recordings, was released on July 4, 1995. It became an instant success in America, as "This Is a Call" garnered heavy alternative and album rock airplay. By early 1996, the album was certified platinum in the U.S.
Throughout 1996,
Foo Fighters supported the album with an extensive tour, enjoying a crossover hit with "Big Me" that spring. Late in the year, the group began recording its second album with producer
Gil Norton. During the sessions,
William Goldsmith left the band due to creative tensions, leaving
Grohl to drum on the majority of the album. Before the record's release,
Goldsmith was replaced by
Taylor Hawkins, who had previously drummed with
Alanis Morissette.
The Colour and the Shape,
Foo Fighters' second album and the first they recorded as a band, was issued in May of 1997.
Smear left the group in the wake of the album's completion and was replaced by guitarist
Franz Stahl, whose stay proved short-lived; 1999's
There Is Nothing Left to Lose was recorded as a three-piece, with ex-
No Use for a Name guitarist
Chris Shiflett signing on soon after.
One by One, the group's most polished production, appeared in late 2002, followed by 2005's
In Your Honor, which narrowly missed the top of
Billboard's album chart. After releasing a live album titled
Skin and Bones in 2006, the band returned to Norton's studio and started constructing a dozen fractured, eclectic rock songs to be released in 2007 under the name
Echoes, Silence, Patience, and Grace. Two years later, the group released its first compilation, Greatest Hits, as
Grohl launched his new supergroup
Them Crooked Vultures, which also featured
Josh Homme of
Queens of the Stone Age and
Led Zeppelin's
John Paul Jones.
Foo Fighters reconvened for 2011's Wasting Light, a Butch Vig production that doubled as the official return of
Pat Smear, who hadn't played on any of the band's albums since 1997. Wasting Light wound up as a smash success for the Foos, debuting at number one on the
Billboard charts, going gold in the U.S. and garnering the band another four Grammy Awards. In the wake of Wasting Light, several other Foo projects emerged -- a limited-edition compilation of covers called Medium Rare released for Record Store Day 2011; a documentary of the band called
Back and Forth -- and the group toured the album into 2012.
In 2012, the
Foo Fighters announced they were taking a hiatus and
Dave Grohl immediately returned to the confines of
Queens of the Stone Age, drumming on their 2013 album ...Like Clockwork, and he also threw himself into directing a documentary about the legendary Los Angeles recording studio Sound City. The film appeared early in 2013 to positive reviews and it was accompanied by a soundtrack called Sound City: Reel to Real, which featured
Grohl-directed jams with a variety of Sound City veterans, plus Paul McCartney. Not long after its release, the
Foo Fighters announced their hiatus had ended and they were working on a new album.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi