New Cornell Article about Audioslave Split

MeddleDealMeddleDeal Posts: 2,547
edited February 2007 in Other Music
found this on ew.com:

http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20012333,00.html

Emancipation Proclamation
Chris Cornell explains how ''irresolvable personality conflicts'' made him decide it was time to say good-bye to Audioslave and pursue his solo projects full-time

By Shirley Halperin

Almost as surprising as Rage Against the Machine announcing that they will reunite for April's Coachella festival was last week's statement by Chris Cornell that he's leaving Audioslave (the band comprising Rage's guitarist, drummer, and bass player with Cornell on vocals). The former Soundgarden frontman, who is readying his second solo release, Carry On (out May 1), cited ''irresolvable personality conflicts as well as musical differences'' as the primary reason for his abrupt departure from the platinum-plus-selling band. In talking to EW.com, it seems Cornell has actually known for some time that he was ready to move on.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: So Chris, explain your decision to leave Audioslave.
CHRIS CORNELL: It comes down to this: We came from different bands that had pretty tumultuous existences. We agreed to do Audioslave under the premise that it was going to be harmonious and fun for everybody, and as soon as it wasn't that way anymore, I didn't want to do it. We started having problems from day one. There was, of course, this awkwardness where you have a 12-year relationship as a band and then an outsider comes in, particularly one that had a 15-year relationship with another band. For me, it was great creatively, but personally, it was like suddenly having stepparents. And as hard as we all worked at trying to respect different opinions and perspectives, when it came to the inner workings of the band, they had their way of doing things and I had mine. And they seemed to be at odds with one another, too.

The great thing about Audioslave was its downfall for me. Our songs came together like a band of 19-year-olds making music in a garage. We all wrote in one room, and it was really refreshing and exciting, which I think you hear on the record. But I'm not 19 and I've come to a place in my life where to be fully satisfied musically, I need to be able to do what I want.

Is democracy in a band impossible?
It depends on how you deal with it. If you can come to an agreement at some point, that's good. But what usually ends up happening is the person with the most passionate opinion ends up winning. If there was a situation where three people didn't want to do something and the fourth person was like, ''You guys don't understand!'' usually that person would get their way. But like any relationship, you don't lie down on the tracks for everything. You choose your battles. Soundgarden's democracy was pretty normal.

Do you miss the Soundgarden days?
I look back on those days with pride, and I miss the individuals, but there was a lot of band turmoil and a lot of sad things happened. The days of Soundgarden that I truly miss are when nobody really knew what was going to happen; we just knew we had a special scene going on in our city. The days when all the members of Soundgarden would be in the audience for all the other Seattle bands and [vice versa] and there was no end to the amazing creative output of all these different musicians. I miss the innocence of that scene, before everybody had stars in their eyes and people were coming from all over the world to start bands. Seattle became the new Hollywood, which was weird because we were so far away from that. I don't know if it's the weather or what, but I'm still shocked by the creativity that comes out of there. When I was working on ''You Know My Name'' [for Casino Royale] there was a poster on the studio wall for the Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players. They're a family from Seattle who go to garage sales, buy old vacation pictures, put them together as a slide show, and write music to it. That kind of naÏve creativity of ''let's entertain ourselves,'' that purity is still there.

What new bands are you feeling these days?
The Arcade Fire. I love the sound of their records. It's lo-fi in a way that reminds me of the indie scene when Soundgarden started, where it's really about the expression — the drums are just a distant hint at a rhythm and you're not really sure what instruments are coming and going — and the mosaic and not trying to make everything discernable. I really like Wolfmother a lot, too. I hear them as combination of heavy metal and the White Stripes, which is cool. They won the same Grammy award that ''Black Hole Sun'' got [in 1995] for Best Hard Rock Performance.

The music industry is changing, albums don't sell the way they used to. How do you adapt?
There are upsides to everything. All you have to do is embrace the way things are going. Clearly, there isn't a lack of enthusiasm toward rock music, but the demographic changed — it got to be younger, more Net-savvy MP3 downloaders. But there are positive aspects to that: Accessibility of your music will generate enthusiasm for your live performance, which narrows the field down to bands that deliver for real. Like, you have to be good at what you do. The other thing is it cuts out the fat of the record industry and weeds out people who are just coasting. It's no longer a situation where people can get big fat checks to sit on their ass doing nothing. These days, if you're not really into music, this isn't a business that you're going to want to be in. I think anything that benefits the listener, the person that pays for music, is good.

How much did Rage reforming spur your decision?
Not much, really. After the third Audioslave record was done, I started an album on my own and made a decision to spend time away from the band. And it was anybody's guess what that time apart would create. But suddenly, my life was in order and I was enjoying every aspect of making music, especially being able to work at home with my family, without the constant give and take. Musically, I felt like I could go in any direction I wanted, and that brought me to the conclusion that it wasn't something that I wanted to do anymore.

Did you talk to any of the guys before or after making the announcement?
They found out with everybody else, and I haven't heard from them at all since.

You've often said that a Rage performance was one of the best live shows you'd ever seen...
Seeing Rage live was the reason that Audioslave existed! It's why I wanted to get in a room with those guys because they were some of the best performances I'd ever seen. And a part of me thinks they should still be a band.

Would you go see them play Coachella this April?
Of course!

Would you get on stage with them?
Now that's a good idea...

Posted Feb 20, 2007
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Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • no heartbreak with them breaking up.
    "If she don't love me no more, i know her sister will" Jimi Hendrix
  • MeddleDealMeddleDeal Posts: 2,547
    i know some people like them or hate this band, but I like this band, it sucks that they broke up. I'm posting this article for the fans of this band :)
    ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~
    ~*STONEY PONY all the WAY!*~
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    "For the world, not for the war"-Neil Finn
  • At least Cornell's still wanting to make music...
    "Darth Vader would say 'Impressive'."

    -Eddie Vedder

    6/24/06 Cincinatti, Ohio
    6/14/08 Manchester, Tennessee
  • Cornell WAS Audioslave. He is great songwriter IMO.
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  • VEDHEAD27VEDHEAD27 Posts: 3,091
    Thank you for posting this Nadi. :)
    I had read parts of it before but not the whole thing.
    Thanks!

    Damn straigh he should have some serious pride about his SG days. :D
    His breakdown of why Audioslave broke up makes perfect sense to me too. Totally understandable.

    This on the other hand, IS NOT....
    MeddleDeal wrote:
    found this on ew.com:

    Did you talk to any of the guys before or after making the announcement?
    They found out with everybody else, and I haven't heard from them at all since.

    What in the FUCK!? I can't understand why he wouldn't just have the common courtesy & respect to tell them beforehand. Regardless of how things were towards the end...it's just the right thing to do! This is simply unjustifyable imo.
    Seriously rubs me the wrong way....
    something Cornell has never done before. :(
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    ...YOU invented it!" ~ E√

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  • i have a theory if anyone cares to listen.

    Long term factors:

    Morello v cornell in studio. u can hear it in songs, morello tended to put in unecessarily long solos or solos for the sake of it. If i were chris i'd be fucked off. also, the ratm guys cldnt play the old sg shit on the ooe tour properly, which prob pissed chris off, likewise when cc did a zack impression on old ratm stuff. so the old 'musical differences' Plus i reckon cc prob made the others feel insecure as musicians and songwriters...

    Tom and Chris had separate interests outside audioslave all along but they prob looked a damn sight more attractive after:

    Short term factors:

    Cornell is a family man, his wife and kids were receiving death threats from a crazy ass stalker. would you want to tour and leave them? fuck no. so the family toured with the band on ooe tour, or the last bit in Europe im not sure. then Chris refuses to tour revalations. Considering he did a mini tour for the bond track, the others may have missed his logic here. So big fight erupts and all the other issues get out.

    Then: Ratm announce coachella, morello talks to the press about the world needing political music basically having a dig at cornell, plus no one knows if they told him before they told the press (i suspect not because of fight)

    so, CC tells the press he s leaving audioslave and fully explains himself to pacify the fans, like a pro, not telling the others prob to give them a taste of their own medicine (if not hes being arsy and i cant defend him) personally, i wanted this to happen for a while. If it were mostly any other singer bar cc i would nt have been arsed to be an audioslave fan.

    make sense? i shdnt smoke this late...mind a tickin.
  • DELETEDDELETED Posts: 421
    ..
  • VEDHEAD27 wrote:
    What in the FUCK!? I can't understand why he wouldn't just have the common courtesy & respect to tell them beforehand. Regardless of how things were towards the end...it's just the right thing to do! This is simply unjustifyable imo.
    Seriously rubs me the wrong way....
    something Cornell has never done before. :(

    thanks for posting this, i totally agree with you. wonder what tim, tom and brad thought about him doing that? hopefully they put on a kick ass show at coachella and zack decides its time to get the band back together.
  • aNiMaLaNiMaL Posts: 7,117
    Great article! Thanks for posting it.
  • AndySlashAndySlash Posts: 3,247
    MeddleDeal wrote:
    Did you talk to any of the guys before or after making the announcement?
    They found out with everybody else.


    That's a fucking dick move if there ever was one.
  • as much as i fucking love and worship chris cornell, that really is shitty, that he didn't tell the band he was permanently leaving before he told the rest of the world :(


    i for one am gutted. i'll never see audioslave live.

    i also love RATM. i will be over the moon if they get back full time with zack.

    i hope zach makes it happen, cos in my opinion tim, tom and brad are too good to not have a full time band to play in. :)
    2006 - Astoria, Dublin, Leeds
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  • as much as i fucking love and worship chris cornell, that really is shitty, that he didn't tell the band he was permanently leaving before he told the rest of the world

    I'm guessing he probably wasn't on speaking terms with the band, particularly since they didn't bother to tell him they were resurrecting RATM, which hardly shows loyalty to Audioslave.
  • MeddleDealMeddleDeal Posts: 2,547
    I know, that is what shocked me about this as well, he didn't let anyone in the band know BEFORE he announced it to the whole world. What Chris did was the same thing that Frank Black did when he broke up the Pixies back in 1993. :(

    I do respect Chris as a great songwriter and musician, but this move really makes him look bad.
    ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~ø~
    ~*STONEY PONY all the WAY!*~
    ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~~*~*~
    "For the world, not for the war"-Neil Finn
  • MeddleDeal wrote:
    I know, that is what shocked me about this as well, he didn't let anyone in the band know BEFORE he announced it to the whole world. What Chris did was the same thing that Frank Black did when he broke up the Pixies back in 1993. :(

    I do respect Chris as a great songwriter and musician, but this move really makes him look bad.

    So it was ok for them to reform their old band without telling him first?! how would that make you feel?
  • CC really blindsided them. Its to bad they broke up though. I seem to be one of

    the few on the board that liked them



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  • AndySlashAndySlash Posts: 3,247
    So it was ok for them to reform their old band without telling him first?!?

    Is that really what happened? If so, that's a dick move, too.

    For saying he (they) are not 19 anymore, he (they) sure know how to act like it.
  • DOSWDOSW Posts: 2,014
    So it was ok for them to reform their old band without telling him first?! how would that make you feel?

    Performing a single reunion show with your old band is completely different from leaving your current band without telling anyone. I like Cornell as much as anyone on here, but not telling the other band members that you're leaving is indefensible.
    It's a town full of losers and I'm pulling out of here to win
  • AndySlash wrote:
    Is that really what happened? If so, that's a dick move, too.

    For saying he (they) are not 19 anymore, he (they) sure know how to act like it.

    Yeah they didn't tell him. But I think the breakdown in their relationship as band members had happened quite a while back, like after the finished Revelations. At the end of the day, none of us know exactly what has gone down, so to start picking on any of them for being childish is a bit presumptuous. It doesn't seem like a really nasty split, more like a clash of opinions - and whilst they may be capable of being friends again, they just don't see eye to eye as band mates.
  • DOSW wrote:
    Performing a single reunion show with your old band is completely different from leaving your current band without telling anyone. I like Cornell as much as anyone on here, but not telling the other band members that you're leaving is indefensible.

    Oh come on, how naive are you?! If RATM don't announce a full reunion after Coachella I'll be extremely surprised. And why wouldn't they tell him if they were still on speaking terms at that point? Because they had already had a falling out I suspect. Why do people take these things as face value all the time, like their couldn't be another explanation?
  • Oh come on, how naive are you?! If RATM don't announce a full reunion after Coachella I'll be extremely surprised. And why wouldn't they tell him if they were still on speaking terms at that point? Because they had already had a falling out I suspect. Why do people take these things as face value all the time, like their couldn't be another explanation?

    exactly. backing that all the way. tom was only ever out for himself. they ll prob announce it at the show. good chris left, they cldnt handle his talent,songwriting or otherwise,. go back to the one trick pony guys, you know it makes sense.

    and i liked rage's music once upon a time but they cldnt hold a candle to sg.

    :)
  • I don't think there was ever much a group dynamic in Audioslave anyway.
    I share a cigarette with negativity.
  • yosi1yosi1 Posts: 3,272
    If only Tom had mellowed out, and they got a drummer who could play/groove, they could have been a pretty good band.

    Edit: Maybe I just like Chris Cornell doing rock and roll :D
    you couldn't swing if you were hangin' from a palm tree in a hurricane.
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