Taylor Hawkins (50) – Foo Fighters – was born in Ft. Worth Texas on Feb. 17, 1972. Four years later his family moved to Laguna Beach, California, where Hawkins grew up. He was the youngest of three, with an older brother and sister, Jason and Heather and started playing drums at the age of 10. He graduated from Laguna Beach High School in 1990, where he had been friends with future Yes-reincarnation lead vocalist Jon Davison.
Hawkins played in the Orange County–based psychedelic rock band Sylvia before he became the drummer for British/Canadian rock woman Sass Jordan. After drumming for Sass Jordan, Hawkins joined Alanis Morissette’s touring band Sexual Chocolate for nearly two years (June 1995-March 1997). During that time, he toured the world with the Canadian singer as she supported her breakthrough album, Jagged Little Pill. Hawkins also appearing in the Jagged Little Pill, Live home video and music videos for “You Oughta Know,” “You Learn” and “All I Really Want.”
Here is the true story on how he joined Foo Fighters:
In 1997, you replaced William Goldsmith as Foo Fighters’ drummer. Is it true you offered to join when Dave Grohl called to ask you to recommend someone?
“Well, it didn’t actually go like that. I was a huge fan of the first Foo Fighters record. I’d met Dave a couple of times on the road and we’d become sort of friends. I was driving with my girlfriend at the time, and we were listening to [Los Angeles radio station] KROQ. I heard William had departed and they were looking for a new drummer. I scrambled to get Dave’s number and called him. I said, ‘I heard you guys are looking for a drummer,’ and he said, ‘Well, do you know any?’. I thought Alanis wanted to go in a more laid-back direction, and it seemed like the right time to jump. Alanis didn’t need me! I basically said to Dave, ‘I’ll play drums for you,’ and we jammed a couple of times. I remember I was at home watching [1995 erotic drama] Showgirls with my girlfriend, and Dave called to ask if I wanted to join.”
On his Stage Fright Taylor said:
“It’s really with Foo Fighters shows. I do shows with my other bands, but I just feel a certain way when there’s 100,000 people waiting for you to go onstage. I put a big burden on myself to play perfectly – whatever that means – and keep in perfect time. We’re not one of those bands who are hooked up to a computer or play to backing tracks. We have no safety net, and what happens is what happens. If it’s a trainwreck, it’s a fucking trainwreck. We live and die by the great sword of rock’n’roll. You’re getting something real: you’re getting blood, you’re getting guts, you’re getting a human exchange, and we’re actually really feeding off the audience and the excitement.”
Hawkins first appeared with the Foo Fighters in the music video for the 1997 single “Monkey Wrench“, although the song was recorded before he joined the band. In addition to his drumming with the Foo Fighters, Hawkins provided vocals, guitar, and piano to various recordings. Hawkins played on 9 studio albums with Foo Fighters and toured incessantly.
Yet, he still found time for numerous side projects and collaborations.
In 2000, Hawkins was contacted by Guns N’ Roses to replace Josh Freese on drums. Hawkins seriously considered the offer before Queen drummer and friend Roger Taylor convinced him to remain in Foo Fighters. In 2006, Hawkins released a self-titled LP with his side project, Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders. Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders subsequently released two more studio albums: Red Light Fever in 2010, and Get the Money in 2019. He occasionally played with a Police cover band alternately called the Cops and Fallout. At Live Earth in 2007, Hawkins was part of SOS Allstars with Roger Taylor of Queen and Chad Smith of Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Hawkins recorded the drum tracks for the Coheed and Cambria album Good Apollo, I’m Burning Star IV, Volume Two: No World for Tomorrow as the band’s regular drummer, Chris Pennie, could not record because of contractual reasons. Hawkins also toured with Coheed and Cambria shortly during the months of the album release. Hawkins can also be heard drumming on Eric Avery‘s (formerly of Jane’s Addiction) first solo effort, Help Wanted and on Kerry Ellis‘s album, Wicked in Rock. Hawkins and Grohl split drumming duties on Harmony & Dissidence, the third album by Foo Fighters bandmate Chris Shiflett‘s own side project, Jackson United.
Hawkins played on the track “Cyborg”, from Queen guitarist Brian May‘s 1998 solo album, Another World; he also played drums at VH1‘s Rock Honors 2006 while Queen performed “We Will Rock You“. He sang backing vocals on the Queen + Paul Rodgers single, “C-lebrity“.[33]
Hawkins was commissioned to complete an unfinished recording of a song by Beach Boys‘ drummer Dennis Wilson titled “Holy Man” by writing and singing new lyrics. The recording, which also featured contributions from Brian May and Roger Taylor of Queen, was issued as a single for Record Store Day in 2019.
While the Foo Fighters were on break in 2013, Hawkins formed a rock cover band called Chevy Metal.
Then Hawkins appeared on Slash‘s solo album Slash, released in 2010, providing backing vocals on the track “Crucify the Dead”, featuring Ozzy Osbourne.
Also in 2013, he made his acting debut in the role of Iggy Pop in the rock film CBGB. Hawkins recorded the drums on Vasco Rossi‘s last song, “L’uomo più semplice”. This song was released on January 21, 2013, in Italy.
In March 2014, Hawkins announced his new side project called the Birds of Satan. It features Hawkins’s drum technician and bandmate from Chevy Metal, Wiley Hodgden on bass guitar and vocals as well as guitarist Mick Murphy also of Chevy Metal. The band’s self-titled debut album was released in April 2014, with a release party at ‘Rock n Roll Pizza’ featuring the Foo Fighters guesting on some of the cover tracks.
In an interview with Radio X, Hawkins revealed that his initial idea with his solo projects was to duet with female singers. Hawkins invited other stars to sing in the Taylor Hawkins and the Coattail Riders album Get the Money, such as LeAnn Rimes, who sang on one of his songs titled “C U In Hell”. Loudwire named the album one of the 50 best rock efforts of 2019. The album features a ridiculous list of guest appearances: his boss Dave and bandmate Pat Smear are on there, alongside Jane’s Addiction’s Perry Farrell, The Eagles’ Joe Walsh, The Pretenders’ Chrissie Hynde, Level 42 bassist Mark King, former Sex Pistols guitarist Steve Jones, and Roger Taylor, the man who gave Taylor the idea to hit stuff for a living in the first place. “It really is ridiculous, isn’t it?” he laughs. Other musicians who appeared on his projects included Brian May, Heart’s Nancy Wilson and many more.
In October 2021, Elton John released The Lockdown Sessions, which featured Hawkins playing drums on the song “E-Ticket”. Also in 2021, Hawkins and Jane’s Addiction members Dave Navarro and Chris Chaney formed a supergroup called NHC. Described by Hawkins as being “somewhere between Rush and the Faces“. The band made its live debut in September 2021 at Eddie Vedder‘s Ohana festival, with Taylor’s Foo Fighters bandmate Pat Smear on additional guitar. The band recorded an album in 2021, which released in 2022.
Along with the other members of Foo Fighters, Hawkins starred as himself in the comedy horror film Studio 666, released on February 25, 2022. He posthumously appears on select tracks on Ozzy Osbourne‘s 2022 album Patient Number 9 and Iggy Pop‘s 2023 album Every Loser.
Hawkins told Rolling Stone that the toll of performing live was starting to wear on him.
“I’m still a spaz; but I’m trying really hard to figure out how to continue to keep the intensity of a young man in a 50-year-old’s body, which is very difficult,” Hawkins said in 2021. “I’m not whining, I’m really not … I’m just saying it’s f—ing hard work.”
Perhaps too much work, perhaps an enlarged heart or perhaps an overdose, sadly Taylor Hawkins passed away in Bogota, Columbia on March 25, 2022.
Tributes:
- dozens of musicians and artists paid tribute to his life across the globe.
- Hawkins was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2021 as a member of Foo Fighters. He was voted “Best Rock Drummer” in 2005 by the British drumming on magazine Rhythm. After his death, the Foo Fighters and his family announced two tribute shows, which took place in September 2022.