Dave Grohl
Musician

Dave Grohl's 12 favorite albums

David Grohl is an American musician best known as the founder, lead singer, guitarist, and primary songwriter of the rock band Foo Fighters. He was also the drummer for the grunge band Nirvana from 1990 to 1994. Before joining Nirvana, Dave Grohl was the drummer for the punk rock band Scream. He later formed Foo Fighters as a solo project after Nirvana disbanded following the death of their lead singer, Kurt Cobain. Grohl has also played drums for the rock supergroup Them Crooked Vultures and has collaborated with Queens of the Stone Age. He has directed music videos for Foo Fighters and has made several documentaries, including "Sound City", "Sonic Highways", and "What Drives Us". He has been recognized as one of the most influential rock musicians of the past two decades and has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice, once with Nirvana and once with Foo Fighters.

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Dave Grohl's favorite albums

  • AC/DC - Back In Black
    AC/DCBack In Black

    Now if you want to be a drummer, you’re going to want to get the AC/DC album Back In Black. That is rock ‘n’ roll drumming 101.

  • The Beatles - Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
    The BeatlesSgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band

    One reason is that album still connects the way it did the day it came out

  • Kyuss - Blues for the Red Sun
    KyussBlues for the Red Sun

    Oh my God! This album changed my life. I was 24 and something about the grooves and the guitar sounds and the drums and the bass made this new noise that kinda sounded familiar, like you’d heard it in the early Seventies, but you’d never heard it that good. They reinvented this genre of music, Seventies hard rock.

  • Frank Black - Frank Black
    Frank BlackFrank Black

    I listened to this far too much. I thought for a moment that he would be this huge pop star and finally get his due. There are some great songs on this, but his music is just quirky enough that it will never translate to a huge audience. A long time had passed since Surfer Rosa and this was probably his most cohesive pop album yet. There’s Bowie in there, all sorts of influences and sometimes it was more raw and fucked-up than ever. As a lyricist, he was truly great. So witty and weird.

  • Mark Lanegan - The Winding Sheet
    Mark LaneganThe Winding Sheet

    Oh man, it’s the most beautiful record. It’s a Sunday morning, acoustic, soulful blues record. The guy has so much soul and the most beautiful voice. You imagine this is what your heart would sound like if it could sing, it’s so fuckin’ beautiful. This album came out just after I moved to Seattle, so to me it represents that whole time. Mark sang for the Screaming Trees, so he had his flipside, but there was also a lot of appreciation in Seattle at that time for the purity and truth of real music.

  • Pixies - Surfer Rosa
    PixiesSurfer Rosa

    It was so necessary at that time for someone to incorporate elements of quirky, weird punk into sweet pop. It influenced a whole generation of bands, which then influenced a whole generation, so this album is probably one of the most influential albums of the last 15 years. It probably made Steve Albini most famous for his production too. Nirvana always made sure everyone knew we were just ripping off the Pixies.

  • Melvins - Gluey Porch Treatments
    MelvinsGluey Porch Treatments

    The Melvins started off as this fast, hardcore punk rock band, but then turned into this sludgy Black Sabbath metal militia that they knew everyone would hate. They started playing as slow as they could because everyone screamed for them to play faster – just to piss everyone off. They were the kings of that whole bratty nature of punk. It’s kind of a basement production job, but it sounds heavier than any fuckin’ Dio or Slayer record I ever heard.

  • Public Enemy - Yo! Bum Rush the Show
    Public EnemyYo! Bum Rush the Show

    A total revolution in hip-hop. And the duality of Flavor Flav and Chuck D is just amazing, man. It’s necessary, almost, that someone as heavy and right on as Chuck D should have some sort of relief. The sounds on this record, and their lyrics about their 98 Oldsmobile’s… they just seemed like this gang with their own scene. I went to see a Public Enemy show in Malcolm X Park one time and somebody heard a gunshot and everybody ran. DC was the murder capital back then. It got pretty spooky.

  • Bad Brains - Rock for Light
    Bad BrainsRock for Light

    This might be my all-time favourite record. It was the first time I’d heard a hardcore band that had that supreme musicianship, but kept it kind of simple – four black guys from Washington DC who laid every other hardcore punk rock band to waste. They were amazing. They were Rastafarians, so they’d throw in a little bit of reggae just to mellow out the punks or something. And they were the most amazing live band in the world. They’re just great. Really, really, really, really great.

  • Led Zeppelin - Coda
    Led ZeppelinCoda

    Led Zeppelin completely moulded the way I play the drums. No one can deny that band anything. All their albums are great. I prefer Houses Of The Holy and In Through The Out Door to their first two, but Coda was the best, ‘cos ‘Bonzo’s Montreux’ was on it – John Bonham’s one drum symphony. I stayed up many a night working on that one. I’ll play it for you right now if you want!

  • The B-52’s – The B-52’s
    The B-52’sThe B-52’s

    I remember seeing the B-52’s on Saturday Night Live, and this introduced me to the world of weird music. I was young, my parents were asleep. Songs like ’52 Girls’, ‘Rock Lobster’, of course… they definitely opened up a whole new world to me.

  • The Beatles – The Beatles (White album)
    The BeatlesThe Beatles (White album)

    What year did this come out? I think I was a glimpse of hope in my parents’ eyes but this has some of my favourite Beatles songs on it: ‘Blackbird’, ‘Revolution #9’, ‘Revolution’, ‘Helter Skelter’. It’s funny to imagine those four cute little Beatles years later on LSD. Where did they go wrong, writing something like ‘Helter Skelter’ and influencing Charles Manson? I’d call this timeless.

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