Soundgarden singer Chris Cornell, RIP

Chris Cornell, the singer of pioneering grunge/metal band Soundgarden, has died of apparent suicide. He was 52. Our thoughts are with his friends and family. When I saw Soundgarden play small clubs in the early 1990s, it was always an incredibly intense and, yes, loud experience. Cornell rocked. From the New York Times:

Mr. Cornell was born in 1964 in Seattle and helped form Soundgarden 20 years later. Sub Pop, then a fledgling record label, released the group's first single, "Hunted Down," in 1987, as well as two subsequent EPs. The group's debut album, "Ultramega OK," came a year later.


"Badmotorfinger," released in 1991, benefited from the swell of attention that was beginning to surround the Seattle scene, where Soundgarden, along with Nirvana and Pearl Jam, were playing a high-octane, high-angst brand of rock 'n' roll. Soundgarden's musical journeys tended toward the knotty and dark, plunging into off-kilter meters and punctuated by Mr. Cornell's voice, which could quickly shift from a soulful howl to a gritty growl.


Three of Soundgarden's studio albums have been certified platinum, including "Superunknown," from 1994, which featured "Black Hole Sun," "Fell on Black Days," "Spoonman" and "My Wave."