The old rock ‘n’ roll cliché is to live fast and die young. But these
rockers flipped the script, died, and then went on to release album
after album, even after some of their bandmates passed away.
10. Aaron Lazar
Just when the Giraffes were about to break out from the underground in 2005, frontman
Aaron Lazar
had a
at age 27. And not just any old heart attack, but
sudden cardiac death.
A quick thinking girlfriend flagged down some paramedics who brought
Lazar back to life with a defibrillator. When discharged from the
hospital, Lazar found himself on the receiving end of an implantable
cardioverter-defibrillator permanently installed in his chest. Warned to
avoid over-stimulation, Lazar went right back on stage and kept on
rockin’. Only three months later, Lazar’s defibrillator kicked on in the
middle of a Giraffes set while Lazar kept playing. The Giraffes
self-titled effort followed that same year, but the traction seemed to
be lost for the band as a whole.
The Giraffes soldiered on for a couple more years and a couple more
albums until Lazar left the band in 2011. At the time of writing they’re
giving it another go — hopefully they’ll find the success that has
eluded them for the past decade.
9. Don Powell
Image Credit:
Per Bjarne Pedersen
Between the Beatles of the late ’60s and Queen in the early ’80s, it
can be argued that Slade was the most popular rock band in Great Britain
in the ’70s. With 12 Top Five UK singles in the early ’70s, Slade was
on top of the world (well, on top of Britain, having never scored a Top
10 hit in the United States) when their drummer Don Powell had a serious car accident that took the life of his girlfriend. Powell’s heart stopped beating twice immediately following the accident
and he suffered such severe head trauma that he was in a six day coma
with memory problems that linger to this day.
So, what do you do to mark the 40 year anniversary of the death of
your girlfriend and the accident that changed your life? You release an
autobiography outlining the events in graphic detail and call it
Look Wot I Dun – My Life in Slade.
8. Josh Homme
Josh Homme, the lead singer of Queens of the Stone Age, was an
underground hero when they broke through to the mainstream in 2002. Soon
after, trouble found him in the form of fighting as he was sentenced to
three years of probation and a stint in rehab for assaulting the lead
singer of the Dwarves in 2004. As opposed to the controversy seeking
Dwarves, the Queens of the Stone Age are a fairly straightforward,
talented rock band, having been nominated for multiple Grammy Awards.
When not fronting Queens of the Stone Age, Homme is known for his
time in the bands Kyruss, Eagles of Death Metal and Them Crooked
Vultures. More known for staying busy than getting into trouble, it was
shocking news to learn that Homme had died in 2010. As opposed to many
others on the list, Homme’s death stemmed from a
poorly executed knee surgery.
Medical malpractice isn’t exactly sex, drugs, and booze, and luckily Homme was revived on the operating table.
7. Dave Mustaine
As the original lead guitarist of Metallica, Dave Mustaine was kicked
out of the band in 1983 for drinking too much. Getting kicked out of
Metallica for drinking too much is quite the feat, but Mustaine went on
to a successful career
for 30 more years. During those years he drank, did a ton of drugs, became a hero of thrash metal, and
Wait, what?
The
complicated and ever evolving Mustaine,
who by some accounts has gone through rehab over a dozen times, revealed in his 2011 autobiography
Mustaine: A Heavy Metal Memoir
that he had indeed died and then returned to the land of the living.
Details of his brief interlude into the afterlife are vague, and
interestingly enough that wasn’t the tipping point that led Mustaine to a
conversion to Christianity. That came with a brush with losing the use
of his arm, without which he couldn’t play the music that helps give his
life meaning.
6. Slash
We could have been lazy and basically said the original lineup of
Guns N’ Roses — Steven Adler has cheated death a number of times with
his reward being stints on the reality show
Celebrity Rehab,
Izzy Stradlin put himself in a three day coma and Duff McKagan’s brush with pancreatitis was described as grave. But it was
who took his addictions up to the very edge. Slash was such a hardcore drug user that he
on the very same day. Since then Slash has stayed busy, forming Slash’s
Snakepit, selling tons of units with Velvet Revolver, and is now on
tour with his third solo effort. Want a more detailed description of
Slash’s years of addiction? Try his 2007 autobiography simply called
Slash
.
5. Phil Anselmo
Primarily known as the lead singer of the immensely
Phil Anselmo is yet another victim of substance abuse. We almost had to
use the word was, because in 1996 Anselmo overdosed after a show and
was
Tensions in the band continued to escalate afterwards and the group
blew apart at the start of the new millennium. Vinnie Paul and Dimebag
Darrell went on to form the band Damageplan and Anselmo focused on his
other band, Down, where bass player Rex Brown would later join him.
Anselmo is currently promoting Down’s latest album
IV Part II
and is also known for the defunct Superjoint Ritual, a solo effort, and
for being in a slew of other obscure metal bands. Of course there is a
book, this time coming from Rex Brown, who documents the rise and fall
of Pantera in the pages of 2013’s
Official Truth 101 Proof.
4. Dave Gahan
Going from one end of the musical spectrum to the other,
Dave Gahan
has been the lead singer and driving force behind the pop band Depeche
Mode for nearly 35 years. Depeche Mode is one of the most popular bands
in western Europe, putting 50 singles and a dozen albums on the UK
charts alone. In 1996 Gahan overdosed on heroin and cocaine and for two
minutes was dead. His recollection of his death? He saw only darkness
and “it scared the (crap) out of me.”
With the usual stories of addiction rounding out
Gahan’s biography,
including one where paramedics nicknamed him “the Cat” because they had
gone to his house so many times they gave him the gratuitous nine lives
moniker, Gahan also tried multiple times to clean up, putting out solo
efforts and staying prolific with Depeche Mode, never going more than
four years without a release. Today Gahan’s health problems are those of
the run-of-the-mill 50 year old: torn muscles and gastroenteritis.
3. Ozzy Osbourne
When you think of obscene amounts of drug abuse across a lifetime,
the first two names that probably pop into your head are Ozzy Osbourne
and Keith Richards. Guess what? Ozzy Osbourne did die in 2003 due to… an
ATV accident? The story is that Ozzy was horsing around on an ATV when
it flipped up and landed on him, breaking eight of his ribs amongst other injuries.
Ozzy recovered to do yet another stint at Ozzfest. Staying busy touring
to promote new solo efforts and even re-uniting with Black Sabbath to
release
13
, it seems like Ozzy is never far from the spotlight.
Ozzy posted online during 2013 that he had lapsed back into drug and alcohol habits.
Now that Ozzy is 65, maybe he should settle on moderation as opposed to quitting. Besides his reality TV show
The Osbournes
, Ozzy wrote an autobiography in 2009 titled
I Am Ozzy
and the ghost writer said there was so much material left out that there was probably going to be an
I Am Ozzy 2.
And don’t forget Ozzy’s documentary
God Bless Ozzy.
2. Nikki Sixx
Bassist and songwriter Nikki Sixx of
was once more well known for ingesting copious amounts of drugs than
his work with the Crüe. As outlined in his 2007 autobiography
The Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rock Star
, Sixx
died in the clutches of addiction in 1987,
only to be
revived by two adrenaline shots.
Instead of hiding from this fact, Sixx wrote the Grammy-nominated
“Kickstart My Heart” a year later.
Not only does it seem like “Kickstart” is more popular today than when
it was written, but Sixx is on a two year farewell tour with Motley
Crüe, started his own successful band Sixx AM, has his own clothing
line, has his own radio show, and still writes and produces material for
other artists.
What’s even more amazing is that Denis Leary once said “you could
lock Motley Crüe in a room with two tons of (drugs) and they’d come out
half an hour later, goin’ ‘Rock on Man.’” Sure enough, all four original
members are circling the globe as you read this.
1. Al Jourgensen
When promoting his excellent book
Ministry: The Lost Gospels According to Al Jourgensen
,
Jourgensen admitted that he, in fact, died three times across the span
of his lifetime. Seemingly each time he came back to life he hated
George Bush and Ministry bandmate Paul Barker more, and became more
prolific at releasing material. Despite a high water mark in the early
’90s Ministry never went away, spewing industrial music to a loyal
fanbase. All Jourgensen’s deaths were substance abuse related, and even
though his friend and bandmate Mike Scaccia died in 2012, Jourgensen
plans on touring in support of 2013’s
From Beer to Eternity
release.
When discussing rock biographies, it’s hard to top
The Lost Gospels
when
it comes to amazing stories, whether it’s Jourgensen’s unlikely
friendship with fellow junkie and author William S. Burroughs, where
Jourgensen happened to be the night River Phoenix died, or even his
encounter with aliens as a child.
He uses brutal candor when talking about the quality of some of his
releases, the 13 proper Ministry albums, the half-dozen live albums, the
remixes, the side projects, the compilations, producer credits, and the
time he dated Aimee Mann from ‘Til Tuesday. Oh, and he seems to have a
healthy disdain for music writers. It’s a safe bet that he would hate
this article.
0 comments:
Post a Comment