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Foo Fighters Part Ways With Drummer Josh Freese
Foo Fighters Part Ways With Drummer Josh Freese

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Foo Fighters Part Ways With Drummer Josh Freese

Foo Fighters have parted ways with drummer Josh Freese, who has filled that role since 2023 in the wake of band member Taylor Hawkins' sudden death in March 2022. Freese revealed the surprising news in a social media post, which Foo Fighters themselves have yet to address in any form. A band spokesperson also declined comment. 'The Foo Fighters called me Monday night to let me know they've decided 'to go in a different direction with their drummer.' No reason was given,' Freese wrote. 'Regardless, I enjoyed the past two years with them, both on and off stage, and I support whatever they feel is best for the band. In my 40 years of drumming professionally, I've never been let go from a band, so while I'm not angry — just a bit shocked and disappointed. But as most of you know I've always worked freelance and bounced between bands, so I'm fine. Stay tuned for my 'Top 10 Possible Reasons Josh Got Booted From The Foo Fighters' list.' More from Spin: Pavement Reveal 'Pavements' Soundtrack, Visit 'Colbert' The Black Keys Detail New LP, 'No Rain, No Flowers' Peter Baumann's Old and New Dreams Freese, 52, is one of the most respected session drummers in rock and is a longtime friend of Dave Grohl and the Foos camp. Before a formal announcement that he was coming on board, he joined the Foos on drums during star-studded Hawkins tribute concerts in 2022 at London's Wembley Stadium and Los Angeles' Kia Forum. Freese has played drums in the Vandals since 1989 and has performed for long stretches with everyone from Devo, Guns N' Roses, Nine Inch Nails and the Replacements to Sting, Sublime With Rome, Weezer, A Perfect Circle, the Offspring, Danny Elfman and Paramore. He's currently back on the road with A Perfect Circle for the first time in 13 years. Meanwhile, the Foos earlier this week announced their first show of 2025 on Oct. 4 at the Singapore Grand Prix. The group canceled a number of concerts last year following the revelation that Grohl had fathered a child with a woman other than his wife. This is a developing story. To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.

See Pavement Perform ‘Harness Your Hopes' in First Late-Night TV Appearance in 15 Years
See Pavement Perform ‘Harness Your Hopes' in First Late-Night TV Appearance in 15 Years

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

See Pavement Perform ‘Harness Your Hopes' in First Late-Night TV Appearance in 15 Years

Pavement staged their first late-night TV performance in 15 years Thursday, playing their surprise viral hit 'Harness Your Hopes' on The Late Show. While the reunited cult alt-rock band don't have any gigs on the horizon this year, they have been on the road promoting the quasi-biopic/rockumentary Pavements, which is in select cities now ahead of its nationwide release on June 6. More from Rolling Stone Momma Hit the Slacker-Angst Sweet Spot All-in-One 'Pavements' Trailer Combines Museum, Musical, Movie, Mockumentary, More The Teaser for the Pavement Movie Has a Dramatic Version of 'Here' So You Know It's Serious The Colbert performance marked Pavement's first late-night TV appearance since the band played The Tonight Show back in 2010. 'Harness Your Hopes' — a non-album track from an EP released just months before the band's 1999 breakup — might seem like an unlikely choice for such a momentous occasion, but the song has, somehow, become Pavement's most popular song thanks to TikTok and Spotify, with the track earning the band their first-ever gold record just this week: On Thursday, Pavement's longtime label Matador Records announced the impending arrival of the soundtrack for Pavements, featuring 'dialogue snippets, scenes from the fake Oscar-bait biopic Range Life, and cast recordings from the Slanted! Enchanted! jukebox musical as well as live and rehearsal tapes from the band's 2021 reunion tour.' That soundtrack arrives digitally May 30. Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Why the story of Pavement required a documentary, a biopic, a musical and a museum — all in one movie
Why the story of Pavement required a documentary, a biopic, a musical and a museum — all in one movie

Los Angeles Times

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

Why the story of Pavement required a documentary, a biopic, a musical and a museum — all in one movie

Throughout its career in the 1990s, the band Pavement remained poised for a wider commercial success that it never quite found. As leaders of the lo-fi indie rock sound, the musicians remained something of a secret passed among fans, their air of willful inscrutability, ambivalence toward conventional success and general irreverence inspiring a dedicated faithful that has only grown over the years. The new film 'Pavements' is a fittingly unconventional one for this most unconventional of bands, combining documentary footage from a wildly successful 2022 reunion tour along with scenes from the production of an improbable jukebox stage musical, an exhaustive art gallery dedicated to the group's ephemera and a parody of a prestige Oscar-baiting biopic — all of it created especially for the movie. For director Alex Ross Perry, it boiled down to the admittedly unanswerable question of whether the band in its time could have been bigger than it was. Then he had a lightning bolt of inspiration. 'I wanted to make a movie from the perspective of Pavement [being] — as we say onscreen in the film — the world's most important and influential band, because that is literally true to 100,000 white Gen-X nerds,' says Perry on a recent Zoom call from his home in upstate New York. 'So what if the movie takes that not as a premise but as a fact?' asks Perry. 'And builds a fictional world where this music has inspired these other things people build as shrines to their favorite musicians — a museum, a Broadway show, a crappy biopic? Let's just do that and presume that is the cultural footprint of Pavement.' In an unexpected stroke of luck, during the years it took Perry to see his ambitious project through, a 1999 B-side called 'Harness Your Hopes' became the band's biggest hit ever, thanks to social media algorithms. Suddenly the success that had always eluded Pavement was happening at a level never seen before. The initial impulse behind the film came from Pavement's longtime record label. Chris Lombardi, founder of Matador Records, recalls first pitching Perry's idea to Stephen Malkmus, the band's notoriously laconic chief songwriter, singer, guitarist and nominal leader. 'The idea was to make it confusing and weird,' says Lombardi in a phone interview from Los Angeles, about explaining the concept to Malkmus. 'He was laughing about it and was like, 'If it sucks, the songs are pretty bulletproof.'' Perry, 40, is best known for seriocomic indie films such as 'Listen Up Philip' and 'Her Smell.' He also recently co-directed 'Rite Here Rite Now,' a concert film for the Swedish metal band Ghost that also blended fictionalized elements. The invented stage show, 'Slanted! Enchanted! A Pavement Musical,' included arrangements of the group's music by Keegan DeWitt and Dabney Morris and starred Michael Esper, Zoe Lister-Jones and Kathryn Gallagher. It was mounted for a few nights in New York City. The museum show in NYC's Tribeca, 'Pavements 1933-2022: A Pavement Museum,' mixed genuine memorabilia from the band's history with made-up awards, gold and platinum records the band did not actually earn, advertisements it was not really a part of and ephemera such as a toenail clipping supposedly from Gary Young, the group's original drummer. For the Hollywood biopic portion of the project, titled 'Range Life: A Pavement Story,' after one of the band's most ruefully wistful songs, Perry wrote nearly 50 pages of a traditional script covering 1995 and the making of the group's third album, 'Wowee Zowee,' a sprawling, three-sided record (the fourth was left blank) that confounded many at the time but is now widely lauded and beloved. 'If we're going to do a crappy, cliché, awards-chasing biopic, 'Wowee Zowee' is the moment,' says Perry. 'That is the meat — that's the best part of the biopic. That's when they slam the brakes on their own success. It's when they make an album that many now consider to be their masterpiece but was not seen as such at the time. 'It's the moment in every movie where something crazy happens at this big concert: It's Live Aid, it's Newport, it's whatever, we've all seen it,' Perry says, noting how the band was pelted with mud by the crowd at a stop on the 1995 Lollapalooza tour. 'So I only wrote the 'Wowee Zowee' part of 'Range Life.' I kept saying to people, 'Page 1 of my script would be Page 70 of 'Range Life.'' To play the band, Perry put together a cast of actors who might all credibly appear in a more conventional drama, including 'Stranger Things' breakout Joe Keery as Malkmus, Nat Wolff as guitarist and songwriter Scott Kannberg, Fred Hechinger ('Thelma') as percussionist Bob Nastanovich, Jason Schwartzman as Lombardi and Tim Heidecker as Matador co-owner Gerard Cosloy. Due to time and budget constraints, only about 15 or 20 pages of 'Range Life' were actually filmed, capturing such pivotal moments as an awkward band meeting in which label executives confront the group over the uncommercial approach of its latest album and another in which Malkmus blithely declines an offer to appear on an episode of 'Saturday Night Live' hosted by Quentin Tarantino. (Neither incident actually occurred.) 'Chris Lombardi said, 'You know, Malkmus said no to everything. I could almost see him having turned down something as big as 'SNL,'' Perry says. 'And I said, 'All right, well that's going in the movie.' Whether he turned down 'SNL' in 1995 or not, he's turning it down now.' Not that the band was ever above a little self-mythologizing in its day. Lombardi remembers how the label helped spread a rumor the band had turned down an offer to be on the TV show 'Beverly Hills, 90210' though it had never actually been asked to appear. 'We did a lot of TV,' says Nastanovich (the real one), the de facto internal historian of Pavement because he remembers the stories the best. 'Obviously the 'Leno' show we did was unusually poor, thankfully to the point of being so bad it was good. We clicked that button a handful of times. With the exception of 'Letterman' and 'Saturday Night Live,' we did a whole hell of a lot of TV. MTV, of course, was big at the time. We humiliated ourselves on all of those channels.' Weaving between the fiction and contradictions of the band's history led Perry to discover a more active, free-flowing process he has come to describe as 'four-dimensional filmmaking.' 'I'm not holding a script in my pocket and saying, 'Guys, we don't have these lines yet.'' Perry says. 'What we have is a public-facing film set where we had 3,000 people come through the museum in the four days it was open. Thousands of people came through a film set not knowing it's a film set. And they're being filmed and what's happening is exactly the dramatic structure I've conceived.' Malkmus himself played along at the museum, responding on camera to some of the most preposterously fake pieces in the exhibition such as an Absolut vodka ad ('Absolut Pavement') as if they were real, providing Perry with footage he wouldn't see until later. (Multiple cinematographers roamed at the event.) 'I didn't know how amused he would be by it,' Perry says of Malkmus' visit to the museum. 'The answer was extremely, which was delightful to see because I think he got the humor in that, because the humor was only derived from the way he's presented himself for 30 years, the way he's written lyrics, the distanced 'I'm playing the game, but I'm letting you know that I don't want to play the game.' That sort of dichotomy within him — the museum was created in that spirit.' Eventually, the band attended a staged premiere of the movie-within-the-movie. With all the trappings of an actual film premiere — red carpet photos and a postshow Q&A in front of an actual audience — 'Range Life' consisted of about 60 minutes of footage, assembled specifically for the event by the film's editor, Robert Greene, a frequent Perry collaborator and himself a director of doc-fiction hybrids such as 2016's 'Kate Plays Christine.' The event took place at a movie theater in Brooklyn. Everyone agrees the band was freaked out by what it saw. 'When you write something to not be good and to play every cliché note on the piano and you film it poorly where it's just the most traditional coverage — surprise, surprise, it's really tough to watch,' says Perry. As Lombardi recalls of the band's dismayed response, 'I told my girlfriend, 'I think I just killed Pavement.'' 'You certainly don't want to be misrepresented in a negative way,' says Nastanovich. 'And so that was my biggest concern walking out of there.' Lombardi adds, 'It's hard to see yourself up there depicted by other actors. And to see it onscreen, somebody talking about something about your life that didn't actually happen, is really kind of a mindf—. What is going on here? Is this funny? Or is this making me feel sick? I think it was a real process to bring it all around.' Perry completely understands why the band members were confounded by the work-in-progress that they saw. 'Imagine you're so cool that you've actually never watched a Hollywood biopic,' he says. 'Now imagine that you're seeing all of those clichés play out for the first time in your life and they're all about you. It would be extremely confusing. Nobody understood the tone because they'd never seen it before. 'Suddenly they were, 'This can't be the movie,' says Perry. 'And we were like, 'It's not. It's empirically not the movie.'' Yet even in the small snippets of 'Range Life' that appear in the final 'Pavements' film, Keery's performance as Malkmus is unexpectedly affecting. Behind-the-scenes footage of him diligently prepping for the part becomes something of a satire of Method acting intensity and the actor's loss of self. While working with a vocal coach, he uproariously obtains a supposed photo of the inside of Malkmus' mouth. Keery is currently on tour with his own band, Djo, and was unavailable for comment. But Perry acknowledges the challenge the project presented to him and the other actors. 'What he said yes to — and what he did when he showed up every day — is so risky,' says Perry. 'It's such a huge risk on the part of any actor to step in front of a camera, use your own name, make fun of yourself a little bit. Make fun of your profession, make fun of your peers, definitely make fun of your publicists and also capture all of that and not seem like an a—hole. 'This has never been done before,' he continues. 'If you're the first person to do something, you might be the first pancake and you just kind of have to throw it away. And that's entirely on the table here. There was no indication that what we were doing was going to work.' Perry appreciates the band for entrusting him with its story and capturing what has turned into a whole new chapter in the band's history. 'There's no other band where you have that 30 years of legacy and meaning and value but 0.0% of the protectiveness of that legacy that every other band has, that would stymie any attempt to do anything interesting,' says Perry. 'Any other band with that much value behind them would just want to make something that is a piece of marketing so they can make money to be that band.' The film premiered last fall at the Venice Film Festival before playing the New York Film Festival, where all five members of the band appeared onstage after the screening. 'Essentially two things happened that night,' says Perry. 'We took this band from humble beginnings — underground clubs, college radio — and we put them onstage at Lincoln Center, which is a phenomenal career arc,' says Perry. 'Three days earlier it had been Elton John presenting his Disney+ documentary. So that is not the company Pavement have ever been in. 'The other thing that happened is that I was proven right, which I really like,' he adds. 'I had been saying for four years: Trust me, this is going to be very cool. This is going to be unique. No one's ever done this before. I'm not saying it's going to be perfect. I'm not saying it's going to be without conflict or bumps along the way. I am promising if people see this movie for what it is, they will say, 'This is an absolutely one-of-a-kind achievement that truly captures who this band was, is and will always be.' And we pulled that off.' The unorthodox methods of 'Pavements' uniquely capture the elusive spirit of the band in ways a more traditional approach would not, even as it maintains a sense of mystique. 'They embody a spirit of a time of fanzines and putting out your own records and playing small shows and doing it because you wanted to do it,' says Lombardi of the band. 'And not looking to capitalize in a capital-C kind of way. Trying to just make great songs for your friends, play with people you like to play with, hang out at places that were fun to hang out at and do your own thing.' Of Perry's film, Lombardi seems impressed. 'It's a hard thing to tell,' he says of the band's vibe. 'They did understand where those guys are coming from and that's just not really an easy thing to convey. They did it and I'm really happy where we landed.' 'If it confuses people, then I'm pretty easy to contact,' says Nastanovich. 'I can tell them what's real and not real.'

‘Pavements': A Sly Ode to the Last Band You'd Give the Biopic Treatment
‘Pavements': A Sly Ode to the Last Band You'd Give the Biopic Treatment

New York Times

time02-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Times

‘Pavements': A Sly Ode to the Last Band You'd Give the Biopic Treatment

Everybody thinks they know their favorite musicians or bands inside and out: what the lyrics mean, when their style changed, which fabled event made or broke their careers. Filmmakers have always been willing participants in the process, from concert movies to intimate documentaries to glossy biopics. We crave the results, because the myth-weaving is collaborative. And sometimes it involves bending reality a bit to get a better story. Nominally, the subject of the eccentric new documentary 'Pavements' (in theaters) is, well, Pavement — but in truth, it's about the whole ecosystem that creates the legend. The 1990s indie-rock band reached moderate fame in its prime, broke up in 1999, and reunited for tours in 2010 and 2022, which is where 'Pavements' begins. The band has a lot of lasting fans, mostly people old enough to have gone to shows or listened on their local college station during Pavement's original run. There are also a lot of people who've never heard of it. That makes the band an unlikely subject for a documentary, which is kind of the joke — and which lends 'Pavements' its bigger theme, too. Directed by Alex Ross Perry and edited by the documentarian Robert Greene, it's a hard film to describe. Part spoof and part serious, its vibe is very much in keeping with its subjects. There's the documentary part, about the band's formation and various albums, with archival footage and interviews, a format familiar to anyone who watches documentaries these days. But there are at least three other things going on inside this movie, shot by the cinematographer Robert Kolodny in a variety of visual styles designed to recall genres we've seen before. We watch the creation and rehearsal process for 'Slanted! Enchanted!,' a Pavement jukebox musical that culminated in two workshop performances in New York in 2022 (one of which I attended). We see the opening of a museum-style show with memorabilia. And woven into this is footage that purports to be a behind-the-scenes look at the making of 'Range Life,' a Hollywood-style biopic about the band. The main focus is Joe Keery (from 'Stranger Things'), who is cast as the Pavement lead singer Stephen Malkmus and spends much of his time engaging in increasingly goofy attempts to 'get inside' the head of the almost comically laid-back Malkmus. This footage is obviously poking fun at musician biopics like 'Bohemian Rhapsody' and 'Elvis' — at one point, Keery complains to a vocal coach that he can't seem to get rid of Malkmus's vocal fry, and the 'screenwriters' are constantly inventing heightened moments. 'Range Life' does not exist, though there are scenes 'from' it in the film, sometimes shown in split-screen with actual archival footage of the moment being depicted. And while 'Slanted! Enchanted!' did get a stage production, it hasn't reached Broadway yet. The museum show did happen — though some of what's in it is fabricated, including a few fake ads for Apple and Absolut Vodka that the band very much did not shoot — but everyone in attendance seems a little dazed and confused about it, including the band. Mush all these pieces together with archival video of interviews with the musicians (in which, at times, they just make stuff up), and lace it with occasional glimpses of the crew of 'Pavements' making the film, and the effect is delightfully destabilizing. At some point we lose track of whether anything in here is real at all, or whether maybe it all is. That's sort of the point. The art created around an artist — a musical, an exhibition or most definitely a film — memorializes and mythologizes, and the story takes on a life of its own. The low-key and never very mainstream Pavement seems like the last band that would get this treatment, and that's the joke. But it also makes the band the perfect subject for what 'Pavements' is slyly doing, and quite brilliantly, too.

Alex Ross Perry Says Christopher Nolan's ‘Miraculous' ‘Dunkirk' Was Main Inspiration for ‘Pavements,' Calls Out ‘Unforgivable' Scripts
Alex Ross Perry Says Christopher Nolan's ‘Miraculous' ‘Dunkirk' Was Main Inspiration for ‘Pavements,' Calls Out ‘Unforgivable' Scripts

Yahoo

time08-02-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Alex Ross Perry Says Christopher Nolan's ‘Miraculous' ‘Dunkirk' Was Main Inspiration for ‘Pavements,' Calls Out ‘Unforgivable' Scripts

Alex Ross Perry revealed an unexpected inspiration for 'Pavements,' his experimental musical biopic concert film about the American indie band Pavement: Christopher Nolan's Oscar-winning epic 'Dunkirk.' Speaking at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where he is screening both 'Pavements' and 'Videohaven,' the indie director called Nolan's effort 'one of the most structurally incredible, miraculous scripts ever written.' 'This is a hundred-million-dollar World War II film that, to me, had to be my influence in making this documentary,' he continued. 'It has three storylines: one that takes place over a week, one that takes place over a day, and one that takes place over an hour, and 80% of the way through the movie all of them converge at the same point at the same time. I had never seen anything like this done in a script before. It works when you read it and it works when you watch it. ' More from Variety Miike Takashi Talks Japanese Horror, Extreme Violence, Audience Reactions: Movie Theaters Offered Sick Bags to Audience Members Mouly Surya on Indonesian Period Thriller About Dutch Colonization 'This City Is a Battlefield' Closing Rotterdam: 'It's a Shared History' Netflix Nearing $5 Million Deal for 'Perfect Neighbor,' Sundance Documentary About Florida's Stand Your Ground Law (EXCLUSIVE) Perry explained that 'Pavements' came from a sense of 'restlessness' both as a filmmaker and a cinephile. 'I watch a movie every day and am very bored by a lot of them. I just had to think of something different.' 'I didn't invent the essay film, I just wanted to make one,' he added. 'That's not an instinct most narrative filmmakers would ever have. It's like learning another language. I couldn't learn another language, every attempt I ever made in school failed, but I can learn another filmmaking language and that's my version of teaching myself something I would like to be fluent in.' The result, a hybrid film that mixes scripted scenes, archival footage, and a musical stage play, is something the filmmaker says 'has never been done before. 'I say this humbly, but not that humbly because this was hard as hell to make: You've never seen something like ['Pavements'] because it is not legally clearable except through the loopholes we jumped through. You've never seen that ever until I made this movie and I learned the reason for that and it's that it is legally almost impossible and takes time.' Elsewhere in the conversation, which happened alongside British filmmaker and IFFR Tiger Jury member Peter Strickland ('The Duke of Burgundy'), Perry spoke at length about the importance of a good script. 'I can't believe that I've become one of these people as a writer but when I see movies that don't work for me I just have to say the problem with the movie is the script doesn't work,' observed the director. 'I'm not a very articulate viewer or reviewer of movies but the only thing I can ever articulate is why a script doesn't work or why a script is exciting to me. Everything in the middle I have no thoughts on.' Despite refraining from pointing out exactly which film he was referring to, the filmmaker cited an example of a 'very popular' film that 'came out recently' with an 'unforgivable' script. 'In the two hours that you watch the film, if you've ever seen another movie, there is not a single moment where you are not one hour ahead of the characters,' he pointed out. 'Every second I spent watching this movie was torture because I am not the world's most prolific viewer but I have seen a movie before. This is something that, to me, is unforgivable and makes a movie unwatchable.' Being so aware of a script's needs is both a blessing and a curse to Perry, who mentioned he has become harder on himself 'than I ever thought I would be.' 'Even watching a minute of 'Queen of Earth' I can just see that we filmed a third draft whereas now I wouldn't even send out something I hadn't worked on for a long, long time and felt it had been perfected.' 'Previously I was making movies that the joy of them was that they were spontaneous. I wrote it and six months later we were shooting it and that used to be really fun. Now that would horrify me,' concluded the director. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Grammy Predictions, From Beyoncé to Kendrick Lamar: Who Will Win? Who Should Win? What's Coming to Netflix in February 2025

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