SOUNDGARDEN ARE DOING THE WHOLE REUNION THING ON THEIR OWN TERMS, AND IT’S CERTAINLY NOT NOSTALGIC...

From page 48 of Classic Rock Magazine April 2011



Cover of April 2011 issue.
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f a time traveller had landed in Chicago’s Grant Park on the evening of August 8, 2010, he’d probably think his time machine was improperly calibrated and had taken him to 1996 by mistake. How else to explain the thousands of alternative-music fans converging at the Lollapalooza festival to see Soundgarden? Seeing a field overflowing with a motley assortment of hipsters in horn-rimmed glasses and ironic t-shirts, long-haired rockers in combat boots and tattooed Suicide Girls certainly gives one the impression that the 90s never ended. However, this event isn’t the touring monolith that Lollapalooza was in the previous millennium – rather, it’s a three-day festival in a single city. Some of the differences between then and now are subtle, like the Wayfarer-style sunglasses in neon colours being worn by some attendees, eyewear that would have looked painfully passé in 1996 but which are now retro hip. And somewhere along the line, alt-rockers became foodies – how else to explain why vendors have abandoned the usual corn dogs and nachos for items including chilled watermelon gazpacho and punk rock shrimp.

When the first droning notes of Searching With My Good Eye Closed blast from the speakers, it truly feels like a journey back in time, to a past that seems like only yesterday. Over their two-hour set, Soundgarden perform plenty of hits ( Black Hole Sun , Spoonman ), fan favourites ( Rusty Cage , Jesus Christ Pose ) and surprises ( Gun , 4th Of July ), with most of the material coming from their Badmotorfinger and Superunknown albums.

Soundgarden may look slightly different than they did the last time they graced a festival stage – singer/guitarist Chris Cornell has grown his hair out to Badmotorfinger length, and guitarist Kim Thayil sports a dapper fedora instead of a backward baseball cap – but they sound every bit as huge, powerful and invigorating as they did at their peak – maybe even more so. Bassist Ben Shepherd and drummer Matt Cameron – perhaps the most potent hard rock rhythm section of the past 20 years – fill the skyscraper canyons of Chicago’s city skyline with thundering rhythms and deep, penetrating grooves. Cornell and Thayil’s guitars interlock to form majestically heavy riffs and psychedelic textures, while Cornell’s four-octave vocals float emphatically over the gloriously distorted wall of sound. Soundgarden’s characteristic combination of Sabbath-like riffs, hardcore punk energy, Zeppelin-esque folk flourishes and unique melodic finesse remains as fresh and vital as it was the first time around, defying the dated grunge tag within which the music industry once tried to confine the band.

Along with Nirvana, Alice in Chains and Pearl Jam, Soundgarden were one of the most commercially successful bands of Seattle’s grunge movement, which became a mainstream sensation in the early 90s. Formed in 1984, they preceded those bands, and helped establish their city’s thriving underground scene along with bands like The Melvins and Green River. Subsequently, Soundgarden became an important influence on groups that shared a similar affinity for grunge’s distinctive blend of metal, punk and 70s sounds.

In 1989, Soundgarden brought national attention to Seattle when A&M Records released Louder Than Love – the first grunge album on a major label – paving the way for the success of dozens of other Seattle bands. The group reached its commercial peak with its 1994 album, Superunknown , which boasted the hits Black Hole Sun , Spoonman and Fell On Black Days . The band’s fifth and final studio album, Down On The Upside , followed in 1996, and after completing a world tour in 1997, the group called it quits.

Considering the mysterious circumstances of Soundgarden’s breakup in 1997, their 2010 reunion was an unexpected event that seems to have taken even the band’s members by surprise. On January 1, 2010, Cornell tweeted: “The 12 year break is over and school is back in session. Sign up now. Knights of the Soundtable ride again!” The announcement was intended to communicate that their fan club was up and running again, with the goal of informing fans about the impending release of historic recordings from the group’s vault. Soon though, rumours that the band had reformed started to circulate, and some very attractive offers were presented to the band that made them realise that a reunion might actually work and make sense.

Soundgarden’s reunion is not the normal money-motivated cash grab, however. The group seems to have truly missed playing together, and they respect the band’s legacy. Instead of hitting the road with a big arena tour, they have played only three full-length shows – a secret gig at the Showbox Theater in Seattle, a Lollapalooza warm-up at Chicago’s Vic Theatre and their fullblown headlining spectacle in Grant Park. In September, the band released the Telephantasm collection, which is available in several singleand multi-disc packages that provide an excellent overview of the band’s finest moments. The entire single-disc version of Telephantasm , which includes the previously unreleased song Black Rain from the Badmotorfinger sessions, was bundled with Activision’s Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock , marking the first time a new music album was released as part of a video game. As of this writing, Soundgarden have announced no specific future plans. More shows are likely, but a tour and new studio recordings seem unlikely.

Cornell and Thayil sat down with Classic Rock to reminisce about their past, and share numerous good memories. As they spoke, it was difficult to

comprehend why the band ever broke up. No underlying animosity or ego conflict is perceivable, and their chemistry is unmistakably genuine. Describing the initial reunion, Cornell recently told MTV: “There were three minutes of ‘awkward first date,’ and then it was just stories of who threw up on what, when.” He explained that outside pressure – not internal conflict – actually led to the band’s breakup. With the recent decentralisation of the music industry, the members finally felt like they could take control of their own destiny on their own terms. While fans may have to wait a while to see the band live again, or even hear new material, Soundgarden’s current situation and positive attitude promise many good things to come.

How does it feel to be working together after 13 years apart? Chris Cornell: We were together for about 13 years as well. We were together and apart for pretty close to equal amounts of time, but it seems like the years apart went by a lot faster.

Kim Thayil: I don’t know if that’s a function of age and because there were fewer rites of passage. The past 13 years doesn’t seem that long, but the 13 years between 1984 and 1997 were really chock-full of events.

Cornell: Life was a lot more unpredictable between ’84 and ’97. Thayil: We didn’t own property or have money.

Cornell: As the band opened chapters with different record companies,

albums and tours – every time that would come around it was a new experience. By the 2000s when I was still touring a lot, I was going to the same places and playing the same stuff. Even when I made new albums it felt like something I had already done before in my previous band, so it wasn’t as unpredictable or as pioneering as the original 13 years were. That’s why guys who are 70-years-old piss off their wives when they say that the best years of their lives were when they were with their buddies in the army in a trench eating toothpaste. “That was better than being with you!” [laughs].

Even though Soundgarden are now considered classic rock, your music still seems just as fresh today. Cornell: That first dawned on me in 2000, after Soundgarden had been broken up for a few years. I was driving around Seattle, and I turned on the radio to a normal FM rock station. The song Pretty Noose came on, and I left the station on for a while to hear what they were playing. Suddenly, I realised that, even though it had been only a few years since we’d broke up, we had already fallen into this classic rock category, which is never going to go away.

It wasn’t going to change two years from then, and it hasn’t changed in the ten years since that moment. The same stations are still playing our music. That’s also the case with a lot of the other bands that were our peers. That couldn’t be planned. You can’t form a band and start recording music with the design that your music will last.

It seems like music has progressed very little over the past decade. Also, there’s not the huge generation gap that there was only a few years ago. Games like Guitar Hero are introducing kids to the music of their parents’ generation, and they love it.

Cornell: What I can’t understand is why the Seattle scene, which burst into national prominence in 1992, was the last really big rock scene to happen. Now it seems that everything is very fractured. A lot of the kids who would have grown up seeking out new rock bands and guitars are into hip-hop and whatever that quickly morphs into, which changes constantly. There are no specific scenes now. Music from 1992 doesn’t seem to be from an older or nostalgic musical period based on what we’re presented with today. There should be music out there right now that makes that music seem old and nostalgic, but there isn’t any.

The band was smart to call it quits back in 1997, before you had overstayed your welcome. You definitely left your fans wanting more, and people seem genuinely excited that the band has come back. Thayil: Or is it absence makes the heart go wander? [all laugh] But it does seem to be the former. We did leave maybe not at the peak of our game but certainly close to it.

Cornell: We were at a place where musically we could do pretty much anything we wanted. We hadn’t painted ourselves into a corner in terms of who we were stylistically or what kind of genre we were in. We could make any type of music we wanted to make, but then we stopped being a band. If we wanted to make new music now, whether it’s an album or just a song, if it disappointed one type of Soundgarden fan it would probably please another. But we’ve already kind of done that. One fan’s favourite record will be Badmotorfinger while another’s will be Superunknown or Down On The Upside . We did a lot of different things. The band consists of four songwriters, and we really didn’t like repeating ourselves.

Thayil: Five songwriters if you count Hiro [Yamamoto, bass player on Ultramega OK and Louder Than Love ].

Cornell: At any given time, everyone in the band was writing. And when they were writing they weren’t thinking about the styles and tastes of the other band members. We were always an eclectic band. We always left things open for whatever we wanted to create. There was no concept of being subservient to the fans. The closest we’ve come to any consensus from our fans is when they will go online and try to figure out what is the highest note that I’ve reached

and when did I reach it. Most fans agree that it was in 1990.

il: People seem to have missed us, although there was some Thay cynicism about us coming back, which is to be expected. I’ve always been cynical when a band reunites, but it’s kind of weird to see someone else pick up on that. Most people who do that focus on the lifestyle or pop culture element of a band whose day is done. People who actually know music and bands also know how

rock culture develops and how bands influence each other. A lot

of new bands have come up, and so many of them tip their hats to us personally and directly. That’s a big source of pride. We’re probably more remembered by the legacy we’ve left. The bands in indie, metal, punk and underground music – even proggish pop bands – we’ve influenced will probably be influencing other bands for a long time. It’s really strange to find out the level of influence you’ve had, especially in all the different ways it’s manifested itself. There are bands and movements that have blossomed from specific songs we recorded. 4th of July is one example. Cornell: Loud Love is another. Many people have told me that that specific song was a big influence. That was an interesting moment for us. A lot of people don’t know that Ultramega OK outsold Louder Than Love , which came out after Ultramega OK and was on a major label.

Thayil: And Ultramega OK spawned Smashing Pumpkins and Nirvana. Guys in both of those bands have said that to us, and they’ve said that in interviews. That album showed them that a band could have metal elements, but you didn’t need to be a unch of dumb-asses. b ➻ Cornell: When Louder Than Love came out, Loud Love and Get On The Snake actually got onto commercial rock radio. They weren’t in regular rotation, but they did get played. I remember when we were going to play a show in Los Angeles and KNAC played the song. It was the most unusual moment, because it made perfect sense to hear it on the radio, even though it sounded huge and was unlike anything else they played before and after. I got a feeling of excitement. It felt vital and exuberant. When those songs got a little bit of airplay, it showed people what was possible, and that helped open the door to all of these bands that followed. It was this whole idea of new rock that would still work within the commercial rock formula, even if it was side by side with Tom Petty or Bon Jovi.

I remember reading about Soundgarden for the first time back in 1989, and the writer made a big deal about how slow your songs were. This was back when bands like Metallica, Megadeth and Slayer were getting attention for being faster than everything else. People had forgotten that slower music often sounds heavier because the notes have room to breathe and grow.

Thayil: There’s no room for psychedelic in fast. There’s no room for drone. There’s no room for tension that builds.

Cornell: There’s no feedback in fast either.

Soundgarden played their share of fast songs as well, like Face Pollution and Ty Cobb.

Thayil: Sure, but it wasn’t the band’s signature. We played fast in different ways. It’s one thing to come up with a radical idea, like those galloping speed-metal picking techniques. But then everyone did that, and if you didn’t play that way it was considered something other than metal. It was very conformist. The same thing happened with punk rock. People would say things like: “If you’re playing a guitar solo it isn’t punk rock!” Fuck all of you guys.

Cornell: Right before we started Soundgarden, I was in a band that was started by a couple of Jamaican guys and this guy from Seattle. We played reggae but we also played ska, and we did both things very well. I remember how much that upset fans of one style or the other. They told us we couldn’t do both. At the time I wasn’t a big fan of either style, and I thought the distinction was really silly. I also was frustrated in the punk genre. Punk had no room to breathe until the early 80s... Thayil: ...when Black Flag slowed down and Hüsker Dü came along. It breathed for a little while before it was closed off again.

Cornell: And people complained that it was too commercial or too metal. Some post-punk bands broke the punk mould right away. I don’t like it when the most important thing is what you don’t do as opposed to what you do. “You can’t do this! You can’t do that, otherwise you’re not this!” Then there are rules and you can only do less.

Thayil: You’re always setting boundaries. You have to ask, “If we do that, is that us?” But it’s better to do that from within a band than to have that determined by some outside subculture. We benefited from the fake polarity between punk and metal. People may go: “Why are Soundgarden at Lollapalooza?

They’re a metal band.” But punk and metal come from the same end of the spectrum. They’re both suburban white guys playing distorted guitars. We benefited because we attracted fans that thought we were a metal band as well as fans who thought we were a punk band. There were also people who hated us because they didn’t think we were metal enough or punk enough.

Cornell: Some people thought we were too 70s. When Soundgarden started, the 70s were bad in any context. There was no such thing as good 70s anything.

Thayil: We took a lot of chances and risks, and ultimately it worked out. There were people who liked us for having elements of metal and punk, and people who felt that we didn’t abide by their standards for those subcultures, which was fine with us. We weren’t going to go to their parties anyways.

Cornell: I remember when we did these shows where the audience unanimously hated us and we played very well. Both of the times that happened, I remember being extremely happy when we were leaving: I knew that we did a great show, and I knew that everyone hated it. One was a show that we did in Vancouver, and Mike Bordin from Faith No More was there. ➻ Thayil: Oh! That was when someone threw a glass at you. Cornell: They threw an ashtray that almost hit me in the head. Mike was there with Anna Statman, who had signed Faith No More to Slash Records, and they were beside themselves. They thought they had seen the best show they had ever seen from any band, but the rest of the audience hated our guts. The only person whose opinion I cared about was blown away by it, but that was juxtaposed by playing in a room full of people who really hated it. I felt like we were really on to something. Thayil: Like we knew something that they didn’t. Cornell: Then we did another show at North Seattle Community College, which had a budget for entertainment. We had a friend who booked bands there and could pay us. The poster said: ‘Two-Band Dance.’ Thayil: It was with a local group called The Beat Pagodas. When we played everyone sat there upset, waiting for us to get done so The Beat Pagodas could come on.

Cornell: When we started playing, I somehow kneed myself in the face and blood was gushing out of my nose. There were all these college students who came there with their dates to dance, and here was Soundgarden with this singer who was bleeding profusely. Everyone got off of the dance floor and was standing with their backs against the wall. I threw my mic stand like a spear, and when it hit the floor it slid all the way across the empty dance floor. As it approached the people who were standing against the wall they just separated and let it hit the wall. They had no emotion. Everyone just sat there until we were done. Thayil: Then our six-foot-three friend Milton Garrison, from the postpunk band Vexed, went out on the dance floor and started doing his weird, funny dances to us.

Cornell: That went beyond not being liked. People were having such a horrific time, and they didn’t understand us at all. It was like this massive cultural divide. Because of that weird alienation, that was one of my favourite shows of all time.

Thayil: Pissing people off is supposed to be one of the prime elements of rock. Sometimes that means saying ‘fuck you’ to the people that you care about. Cornell: That’s one of those moments where a band can explode into consciousness. Everyone celebrates that fuck you-ness and the alienation that it creates when they wear your band’s T-shirt. But then it becomes an immediate trap door when you put out your second album. How do you say

‘fuck you’ to the 10 million people who bought your record?

But you have to do that. If your life starts based on ‘fuck you’, where does it go when ‘fuck you’ doesn’t mean anything?

That’s when you need to have legs, and a deep enough record collection so that you can become something that replaces the ‘fuck you’.

What plans are there for the immediate future beyond the shows you’ve done, and the Telephantasm collection? Thayil: There are always ideas and thoughts. Nothing has been set ahead. It’s more a matter of if we feel like doing something when the time comes.

Cornell: Up until now this is it. We decided at some point that we should play at Lollapalooza...

Thayil: ...and put together Telephantasm . That’s been the focus for the present moment. We haven’t been thinking beyond that. I can say with assuredness that there will be other records that venerate the band’s legacy, along with some merchandise. Matt is working on live recordings from our last tour. We also want to re-release records that have been out of print. Screaming Life is technically out of print, although Sub Pop recently released a twentieth-anniversary edition of it. Technically, Ultramega OK is out of print, although SST can make you a copy of a CD if you order it through their website, and it’s still available in a few stores. There are issues with the availability of Louder Than Love . Then there are all these B-sides that we want to compile as a companion to the A-Sides collection. We definitely plan on releasing collections and packages of unreleased and uncompiled Soundgarden material. I can assure that you’ll see more of that over the next couple of years.

At this stage do you see Soundgarden being around for another 13 years?

Thayil: I definitely cannot see doing another 13 years, because I couldn’t see doing the first 13 years. When you’re in your late teens or early twenties, you don’t plan that far ahead. I imagine there are some people who do in hopes of getting the gold watch when they retire, but I’m not that person, and I don’t think any of the other guys are either. Cornell: I remember when the entire band was in a room together doing an interview around the time Louder Than Love was about to be released. Someone asked us what we saw ourselves doing ten years from now. Ten years sounded like a really long time, but that was actually 20 years ago now. My answer was that I didn’t want to know what I’d be doing ten years from now, or even to plan for it. I remember having a band meeting and someone came up with the idea of us coming up with a two-year plan. I thought that was creepy.

Thayil: If you’re drafting a business model you might want to sketch that out...

Cornell: ...but when you’re in a band, you can’t map everything out. Everything we did was something unpredictable that came up at the last minute. It wasn’t even possible to make a two-year plan because of all the unpredictable events that crushed that. I can always say pretty confidently that I want to be doing something with music, but who knows if some other passion will get a hold of me in the next ten years? That’s always possible.

Telephantasm is available now on Interscope. Their first live collection, titled Live On I-5 and taken from their 1996 West Coast tour, is due out on March 22. As yet there are no plans for any further live performances.

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