Dave Grohl discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 16 |
Live albums | 6 |
Compilation albums | 8 |
Video albums | 11 |
EPs | 6 |
Singles | 64 |
Soundtrack albums | 4 |
Collaborations | 26 |
Dave Grohl is an American singer, songwriter, and musician whose discography consists of 16 studio albums, six live albums, eight compilation albums, six EPs, and four soundtracks, and also includes his other collaborations and work as a studio musician with 26 additional artists. A large portion of his releases have come as the drummer of Nirvana (1990–1994) and as the frontman of Foo Fighters (1995–present).
Grohl began playing music in the 1980s and was a member of Freak Baby, whose name was later changed to Mission Impossible after Grohl switched from guitarist to drummer. The band recorded demos under both names and released a split EP with Lünch Meat, originally issued as Thanks (1986), later retitled Getting Shit for Growing Up Different. [1] After some lineup changes, Mission Impossible became Dain Bramage and released I Scream Not Coming Down (1986) before breaking up when Grohl auditioned for Scream and became the band's drummer.
With Scream, Grohl released No More Censorship (1988), two live albums and the posthumous release, Fumble (1993), recorded shortly before the group's dissolution in 1990. Later that year, Grohl was put in contact with Kurt Cobain and Krist Novoselic who were in search of a new drummer for their band Nirvana. After a successful tryout, Grohl joined the band and recorded Nevermind (1991) with them the following year. The album became a breakthrough achievement and to date has sold over 30 million copies worldwide. [2] In Utero (1993), their third and final studio album, was released just months prior to the death of Cobain. Since then, a multitude of posthumous releases featuring Grohl have been issued, including MTV Unplugged in New York (1994), From the Muddy Banks of the Wishkah (1996), With the Lights Out (2004), and Live at Reading (2009).
Throughout his tenure with Scream and Nirvana, Grohl worked on crafting material of his own. Using the pseudonym Late!, Grohl released the album Pocketwatch (1992), on which he performed all instruments and vocals. This recording method was adopted three years later with Foo Fighters (1995), another album performed entirely by Grohl. After acquiring band members to help support the release, Foo Fighters quickly transformed into a group fronted by Grohl. The band has gone on to release a total of ten studio albums and three EPs to date, in addition to the live album Skin and Bones (2006) and their career spanning Greatest Hits (2009). As of 2015, Foo Fighters have sold over 12 million albums in the U.S. [3]
Grohl appeared as drummer of The Backbeat Band, who recorded music for the film Backbeat (1994). Although recorded in 1990, Harlingtox A.D. would mark Grohl's only appearance as a bassist, with the release of Harlingtox Angel Divine (1996). He appeared for the first time as David Grohl, credited for the music to the film Touch (1997), which also included the resurrection of his former moniker Late! on select tracks. In 2000, Grohl began work on the heavy metal side project Probot (2004), writing and performing the majority of the music himself.
While remaining active with Foo Fighters, Grohl has also contributed to an assortment of releases by other artists, ranging from solo acts such as Tony Iommi, David Bowie, Slash, and Michael Jackson to rock groups including Tenacious D, Queens of the Stone Age, Killing Joke, and Nine Inch Nails, among many others (see also: collaborations). Grohl contributed the track "Vile" to the soundtrack of the documentary film Rising Sun: The Legend of Skateboarder Christian Hosoi (2006). [4] In 2009, along with Josh Homme and John Paul Jones, he co-founded the supergroup Them Crooked Vultures for which he plays drums. The band released one self-titled studio album.
The following is a list of artists whose releases feature contributions from Dave Grohl.
Year | Artist | Release | Additional information |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | King Buzzo | King Buzzo | Guitar, bass, and drums on select tracks, lead vocals on "Skeeter". |
1995 | Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers | SNL25: The Musical Performances Volume 1 | Drums on "Honey Bee", recorded November 19, 1994 for Saturday Night Live . |
Mike Watt | Ball-Hog or Tugboat? | Guitar on "Big Train", drums on "Big Train" and "Against the 70's", which both feature Eddie Vedder. | |
The Stinky Puffs | A Little Tiny Smelly Bit of The Stinky Puffs | Drums on the live versions of "Buddies Aren't Butts", "Menendez' Killed Their Parents", "I'll Love You Anyway" and "I Am Gross/No You're Not!", which also feature Krist Novoselic. | |
1997 | Puff Daddy | Been Around the World | Drums on "It's All About the Benjamins (Rock Remix I)" and "It's All About the Benjamins (Rock Remix II)", which both feature The Notorious B.I.G., Lil' Kim, Tommy Stinson and Rob Zombie. |
1998 | Earthlings? | Earthlings? | Guitar and backing vocals on "The Dreaded Lovelies", which also features Victoria Williams. Guitar on "Yugga Yugga", a bonus track on the 2012 vinyl reissue. |
2000 | Reeves Gabrels | Ulysses (Della Notte) | Drums and backing vocals on "Jewel", which also features Frank Black and David Bowie. |
MxPx | The Ever Passing Moment | Count-off vocal introduction on "The Next Big Thing". | |
Earthlings? | Human Beans | Drums on "Rock Dove", which also features Mark Lanegan and Barrett Martin. | |
Tony Iommi | Iommi | Lead vocals and drums on "Goodbye Lament", which also features Brian May. | |
2001 | Tenacious D | Tenacious D | Drums on all tracks, additional guitar on "Wonderboy", "Explosivo", "Dio", "The Road", "Rock Your Socks", "Double Team" and "City Hall". |
2002 | David Bowie | Heathen | Guitar on "I've Been Waiting for You". |
Queens of the Stone Age | Songs for the Deaf | Drums and percussion on all tracks | |
2003 | Cat Power | You Are Free | Bass on "Speak for Me", drums on "Speak for Me", "He-War" and "Shaking Paper". |
Killing Joke | Killing Joke | Drums on all tracks. | |
The Bangles | Doll Revolution | Backing vocals on select tracks. | |
2005 | Garbage | Bleed Like Me | Drums on "Bad Boyfriend". |
Nine Inch Nails | With Teeth | Percussion on "All the Love in the World", drums on "You Know What You Are?", "The Collector", "Every Day Is Exactly the Same", "Getting Smaller", "Sunspots" and "The Line Begins to Blur". | |
2006 | Pete Yorn | Nightcrawler | Drums on "For Us". |
Tenacious D | The Pick of Destiny | Drums on all tracks, demon vocals on "Beelzeboss (The Final Showdown)". | |
Juliette and the Licks | Four on the Floor | Drums and percussion on all tracks. | |
2008 | Jackson United | Harmony and Dissidence | Drums on "Undertow", "Black Regrets", "Lifeboat", "Trigger Happy", "White Flag Burning", "Stitching" and "Like a Bomb". |
Lemmy Kilmister | We Wish You a Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year | Drums on "Run Rudolph Run", which also features Billy Gibbons. | |
2009 | The Prodigy | Invaders Must Die | Drums on "Run with the Wolves", additional drums on "Stand Up". |
2010 | Slash | Slash | Drums on "Watch This", which also features Duff McKagan. |
Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders | Red Light Fever | Guitar and backing vocals on select tracks. | |
Mondo Generator | Dog Food | Drums on "Dog Food", which also features Happy-Tom. | |
2012 | Tenacious D | Rize of the Fenix | Drums on all tracks except "They Fucked Our Asses" or "They F----d Our A---s" |
2013 | Ghost | If You Have Ghost | Rhythm guitar on "If You Have Ghosts", drums on "I'm a Marionette" and "Waiting for the Night", production |
RDGLDGRN | RDGLDGRN EP | Drums | |
Zac Brown Band | The Grohl Sessions, Vol. 1 | Drums on "Let It Rain" and "Day for the Dead", producer | |
2014 | Kristeen Young | The Knife Shift | Drums on all tracks except "Then I Screamed", guitar on 5 tracks |
2015 | Blast | For Those Who've Graced the Fire | Drums |
Dan Mangan + Blacksmith | Club Meds | Backing vocals and slide guitar on "Vessel" | |
2016 | Nine Inch Nails | Not the Actual Events | Drums on "The Idea of You" |
Rush | 2112 (40th Anniversary) | "Overture" | |
2021 | Halsey | If I Can't Have Love, I Want Power | Drums on "Honey" |
2022 | Liam Gallagher | C'mon You Know | Drums on "Everything's Electric" |
2024 | St. Vincent | All Born Screaming | Drums on "Broken Man" and "Flea" |
The following is a list of singles that include Dave Grohl as an official band member.
With Scream
With Nirvana
With The Backbeat Band
With Foo Fighters
With Foo Fighters (continued)
With Queens of the Stone Age
As Probot
With Them Crooked Vultures
With BBC Music (various artists)
Solo
With Live Lounge Allstars
With Liam Gallagher
The following releases were produced or co-produced by Dave Grohl.
Year | Release | Artist(s) |
---|---|---|
1992 | King Buzzo [I] | King Buzzo |
1995 | Foo Fighters [II] | Foo Fighters |
1997 | Touch OST | David Grohl/Late! Louise Post John Doe |
1999 | Into the Pink | Verbena |
2006 | Chariots on Fire EP | Rye Coalition |
Curses | ||
2013 | If You Have Ghost | Ghost |
The Grohl Sessions, Vol. 1 | Zac Brown Band | |
David Eric Grohl is an American musician. He founded the rock band Foo Fighters, of which he is the lead singer, guitarist, and principal songwriter. From 1990 to 1994, he was the drummer of the grunge band Nirvana.
Nirvana was an American rock band formed in Aberdeen, Washington, in 1987. Founded by lead singer and guitarist Kurt Cobain and bassist Krist Novoselic, the band went through a succession of drummers, most notably Chad Channing, before recruiting Dave Grohl in 1990. Nirvana's success popularized alternative rock, and they were often referenced as the figurehead band of Generation X. Despite a short mainstream career spanning only three years, their music maintains a popular following and continues to influence modern rock culture.
Krist Anthony Novoselic is an American musician and activist. Novoselic co-founded and played bass for the rock band Nirvana.
Incesticide is a compilation album by the American rock band Nirvana. It consists of their 1990 non-album single "Sliver", B-sides, demos, outtakes, cover versions, and radio broadcast recordings, and as such is not the official follow-up to the band's breakthrough album, Nevermind. The album was released on December 14, 1992, in Europe, and December 15, 1992, in the United States. It eventually reached number 39 on the Billboard 200.
Foo Fighters is the debut studio album by American rock band Foo Fighters, released on July 4, 1995, through Roswell and Capitol Records. Former Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl wrote the entire album. He recorded it himself in six days with the assistance of producer Barrett Jones at Robert Lang Studios in Seattle, Washington, in 1994. Grohl said that he recorded the album just for fun, describing it as a cathartic experience to recover from the suicide of Nirvana bandmate Kurt Cobain. The album is considered to have started the post-grunge genre.
Georg Albert Ruthenberg, better known by his stage name Pat Smear, is an American musician. He was the lead guitarist and co-founder of Los Angeles–based punk band The Germs and a rhythm guitarist for grunge band Nirvana. After Nirvana disbanded following the suicide of frontman Kurt Cobain, drummer Dave Grohl went on to form Foo Fighters, with Smear joining on guitar. Smear left the band in 1997 before rejoining as a touring guitarist in 2005 and being promoted back to a full-time member in 2010.
In Utero is the third and final studio album by the American rock band Nirvana, released on September 21, 1993, by DGC Records. After breaking into the mainstream with their second album, Nevermind (1991), Nirvana hired Steve Albini to record In Utero, seeking a more complex, abrasive sound that was reminiscent of their work prior to Nevermind. Although the singer and primary songwriter Kurt Cobain claimed that the album was "very impersonal", many of its songs contain heavy allusions to his personal life and struggles, expressing feelings of angst that were common on the band's previous album.
Foo Fighters is an American rock band formed in Seattle in 1994. Founded as a one-man project by former Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl, the lineup now consists of Grohl, Nate Mendel (bass), Chris Shiflett and Pat Smear (guitars), Rami Jaffee (keyboards), and Josh Freese (drums). Drummers William Goldsmith and Taylor Hawkins, along with guitarist Franz Stahl, are former members of the band.
Probot was a heavy metal side project of former Nirvana drummer and Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl. Described by Grohl as "a death metal Supernatural", the album mixes instrumentals recorded by Grohl himself with various metal singers whom the musician admired. The album was released in February 2004 by Southern Lord Records. It featured one single entitled "Centuries of Sin"/"The Emerald Law".
"Drain You" is a song by American rock band Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist, Kurt Cobain. It is the eighth track on their second album, Nevermind, released in September 1991. The song was released as a promotional single in late 1991, and also appeared as a b-side on UK retail editions of the first single from that album, "Smells Like Teen Spirit".
Pocketwatch is a cassette album by Dave Grohl, under the pseudonym Late!, released in 1992, on the now-defunct indie label Simple Machines as part of their Tool Cassette Series.
"On a Plain" is a song by American rock band Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist, Kurt Cobain. It is the 11th track on their second album, Nevermind, released in September 1991.
"Endless, Nameless" is a song by the American rock band Nirvana, written by vocalist and guitarist Kurt Cobain, bassist Krist Novoselic, and drummer Dave Grohl. It is the 13th and final song on the band's second studio album, Nevermind, released in September 1991.
Nevermind, It's an Interview is the only officially released interview CD of American grunge band Nirvana. It was only a promotional release and was never commercially available. Released in limited-edition form worldwide in 1992 by Geffen Records, written, produced and engineered at WFNX Boston by Kurt St. Thomas and Troy Smith, (authors of Nirvana: The Chosen Rejects,. The original interview sessions were recorded by St. Thomas the night of Nirvana's first appearance on NBC's Saturday Night Live in 1992. It contains over an hour of audio interview with live and studio recordings. The reason for its production was for radio stations world-wide to have a Nirvana interview to play because at that time the band was so popular that it was not possible for them to visit all the radio stations that were playing their music. Copies of the CD are rare and have become collectors items. However, for a limited time, the entire CD was included at the end of the iTunes version of With the Lights Out, Nirvana's posthumous box set. It is listed as:
"Marigold" is a song written and composed by American rock musician Dave Grohl, that was first released on Pocketwatch, an album Grohl issued under the pseudonym Late! in 1992.
Backbeat is the original soundtrack of the 1994 film Backbeat starring Stephen Dorff, Sheryl Lee, Gary Bakewell and Ian Hart. The music was produced by Don Was. A score based album with Don Was' original music was also released. Recording sessions for the album started on March 26, 1993 at Ocean Way Recording, in Los Angeles, California. Many of the songs on the album were first takes. Don Was stated in an interview with Variety, that "the makeshift band recorded 15 songs in three days with virtually no overdubs and no more than two takes. “The self-imposed deadline was one of the devices that I used to keep it raw and spontaneous, so we wouldn’t scrutinize too much,” Was said. “Because at that stage the Beatles were a wild teenage band that compensated for their lack of finesse with a tremendous amount of energy". The promotional video for "Please Mr. Postman" was filmed in Germany, in March, 1994, for the UK promo single, which was released on May 3, 1994.
"Alone + Easy Target" is a US radio-only single released by Foo Fighters from their self-titled debut album. It was released only as a promotional single.
Wasting Light is the seventh studio album by American rock band Foo Fighters, released on April 12, 2011, through Roswell and RCA Records. Wanting to capture the essence of their earlier work and avoid the artificiality of digital recording, Foo Fighters recorded the album in the garage of frontman Dave Grohl in Encino, California, using only analog equipment. The sessions were produced by the band alongside Butch Vig, with whom Grohl had worked on Nirvana's Nevermind. Since the old equipment did not allow for many mistakes to be corrected in post-production, the band spent three weeks rehearsing the songs, and Vig had to relearn outdated editing techniques. The band sought a heavier and rawer sound in contrast to the experimentation of their previous albums. Most of the lyrics were written as Grohl reflected upon his life and possible future. Guest musicians include Bob Mould, Krist Novoselic, Jessy Greene, Rami Jaffee and Fee Waybill. Pat Smear played as an official member of the band for the first time since The Colour and the Shape (1997).
Roswell Records is an American record label founded by Dave Grohl in 1995 for his band Foo Fighters. It is currently an imprint of RCA Records and is based in New York City.