1984–1997 and 2010–2017: Soundgarden Soundgarden was formed in 1984 by Cornell, Thayil, and Yamamoto, with Cornell originally on drums and vocals. In 1985, they enlisted Scott Sundquist to take over as drummer so that Cornell could concentrate on vocals. Soundgarden's first recordings were three songs that appeared on a compilation for
C/Z Records called
Deep Six. In 1986, Sundquist, who by that point had a wife and a child, decided to leave the band and spend time with his family. The band subsequently signed with
A&M Records, becoming the first
grunge band to sign to a major label. He was replaced by former
Nirvana guitarist
Jason Everman. Everman was fired following the band's tour in support of
Louder Than Love. In 1990, they were joined by a new bassist,
Ben Shepherd. Along with Nirvana,
Alice in Chains, and
Pearl Jam, Soundgarden quickly became one of the most successful bands from Seattle's emerging grunge scene in the early 1990s. With Shepherd, the new line-up recorded
Badmotorfinger in 1991. The album brought the band to a new level of commercial success and exposure amid the sudden popularity and attention given to the Seattle music scene.
Badmotorfinger included the singles "
Jesus Christ Pose", "
Outshined" and "
Rusty Cage". The three singles gained considerable airtime on alternative rock radio stations, while the videos for "Outshined" and "Rusty Cage" gained considerable airtime on MTV. The song "Jesus Christ Pose" and its music video was the subject of widespread controversy in 1991, and the video was removed from MTV's playlist. "Rusty Cage" was later covered by
Johnny Cash on his 1996 album,
Unchained. "
Room a Thousand Years Wide" was released (along with the B-side "HIV Baby") as a 7" single through Sub Pop's
Single of the Month club a full year before the release of
Badmotorfinger, and later re-recorded for the album. With
Badmotorfinger, Soundgarden found their first mainstream success: it was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance in 1992 Soundgarden's fourth studio album, 1994's
Superunknown, proved to be the band's breakthrough album. Upon its release in March 1994,
Superunknown debuted at number one on the
Billboard 200. The album launched several successful singles, including "
Spoonman" and "
Black Hole Sun", and brought the band international recognition.
Superunknown achieved quintuple platinum status in the United States, triple platinum status in Canada, and gold status in the United Kingdom, Sweden, and the Netherlands.
Rolling Stone gave
Superunknown four out of five stars. Reviewer J.D. Considine said
Superunknown "demonstrates far greater range than many bands manage in an entire career". Considine criticized "Black Hole Sun" and "Half", stating that the former is "not a very good song", while the latter "is the virtual definition of a B-side."
Jon Pareles of
The New York Times said that "
Superunknown actually tries to broaden its audience by breaking
heavy-metal genre barriers that Soundgarden used to accept." He added that "Soundgarden want[s] something different from standard heavy metal." David Browne of
Entertainment Weekly gave the album an A, saying "Soundgarden is pumped and primed on
Superunknown, and they deliver the goods." He praised it as a "hard-rock milestone—a boiling vat of volcanic power, record-making smarts, and '90s anomie and anxiety that sets a new standard for anything called metal." The album was nominated for the
Grammy Award for Best Rock Album in 1995. Two singles from
Superunknown, "Black Hole Sun" and "Spoonman", won Grammy Awards,
Superunknown was ranked number 336 on
Rolling Stone magazine's list of the
500 greatest albums of all time, and "Black Hole Sun" was ranked number 25 on
VH1's list of the 100 greatest songs of the '90s. The band's fifth album was 1996's self-produced
Down on the Upside. The album spawned several singles, including "
Pretty Noose", "
Burden in My Hand" and "
Blow Up the Outside World".
Down on the Upside was notably less heavy than the group's preceding albums and marked a further departure from the band's grunge roots. Soundgarden explained at the time that it wanted to experiment with other sounds. David Browne of
Entertainment Weekly said, "Few bands since Led Zeppelin have so crisply mixed instruments both acoustic and electric." However, tensions within the group arose during the sessions, with Thayil and Cornell reportedly clashing over Cornell's desire to shift away from the heavy guitar riffing that had become the band's trademark. Despite favorable reviews, the album couldn't match the sales of
Superunknown. 2010 On January 1, 2010, Cornell alluded to a Soundgarden reunion via his Twitter account, writing: "The 12-year break is over and school is back in session. Sign up now. Knights of the Soundtable ride again!" The message linked to a website that featured a picture of the group performing live and a place for fans to enter their e-mail address to get updates on the reunion. Entering that information unlocked an archival video for the song "Get on the Snake" from Soundgarden's second studio album, 1989's
Louder Than Love. In March 2010, Soundgarden announced that they would be headlining
Lollapalooza 2010. Soundgarden made the announcement through their website and email list. On April 16, 2010, Soundgarden held a secret show at the
Showbox Theater on First Avenue in downtown Seattle, publicized via the band's mailing list. The show was billed as
Nudedragons, an
anagram for Soundgarden. Asked in August 2010 if Soundgarden would record new material, Cornell replied, "it would be exciting to record one song, to hear how Soundgarden-ish that might be this much time later. But for me, it's been more of a trip relearning the songs and playing them together. Some of the songs we're approaching we've never played live." Soundgarden made their first television appearance since their reunion on the second episode of
Conan O'Brien's
TBS show,
Conan, on November 9, 2010, and toured North America in summer 2011. In summer 2012, Soundgarden released a new single and video, "Live to Rise", for
The Avengers movie soundtrack. Soundgarden had continued to tour worldwide, and guitarist Kim Thayil mentioned in several interviews that the band was to begin work on material for their seventh album. Following Cornell's death, the surviving members of Soundgarden discussed the possibility of moving on with a replacement for him, but Thayil confirmed in an October 2018 interview with
Seattle Times that the band had once again dissolved. Speaking to
Music Radar magazine in a July 2019 interview, Thayil also said that the surviving members of Soundgarden are trying to finish and release the album they were working on with Cornell. However, the master files of Cornell's vocal recordings are currently being withheld, and they can't complete the album without it.
1998–2000 and 2006–2017: Solo career In 1998, Cornell began working on material for a solo album upon which he collaborated with
Alain Johannes and
Natasha Shneider of the band
Eleven. The album, titled
Euphoria Morning, was released on September 21, 1999. In his first ever solo tour to support
Euphoria Morning, Cornell spent seven months on the road from September 13, 1999, to March 7, 2000. He played 61 shows, two of which coincided with the debut of the album on September 21 and 22, 1999 at the
Henry Fonda Theater in Hollywood California. Attendance was high, considering that Cornell performed the initial shows before fans were even familiar with the music. The touring band included several contributing musicians on the album: Alain Johannes, Natasha Shneider, Rick Markmann, and Greg Upchurch.
Euphoria Morning proved commercially unsuccessful, selling 393,000 copies in the U.S.; however, the album's single "
Can't Change Me" was nominated for
Best Male Rock Vocal Performance at the
2000 Grammy Awards. Cornell recorded a French version of the song that was released as a bonus track on
Euphoria Mornings deluxe version and on the Japanese and European editions. The album also includes "Wave Goodbye", Cornell's tribute to his late friend
Jeff Buckley. It has been noted that
Euphoria Morning is influenced by Buckley's songwriting and distinctive vocal style. During this period, an unreleased song called "Heart of Honey" was recorded in collaboration with Alain Johannes and Natasha Shneider. According to Johannes, "Heart of Honey" was recorded for the film
Titan A.E. but not used. The song was leaked on the Internet. While doing solo tours between 2011 and 2016, Cornell would often pay tribute to the late Natasha Shneider and perform ''"When I'm Down"
, (from the album Euphoria Morning'' that Shneider produced) accompanied by a vinyl recording of the original piano track that Shneider performed for the song. Though not officially released on CD, an hour-long acoustic concert Cornell performed on September 7, 2006, at O-Baren in
Stockholm, is widely available for
download under the title
Chris Cornell: Unplugged in Sweden. A promotional CD for his solo album,
Carry On, was released in March 2007, titled
The Roads We Choose – A Retrospective. The 17-song CD included songs from Soundgarden, Temple of the Dog, Audioslave and Cornell's solo work. On June 5, 2007, Cornell released his second solo album,
Carry On, produced by
Steve Lillywhite. It debuted at number 17 on the American
Billboard charts. Among the artists who accompanied him on his second solo release was friend
Gary Lucas, who contributed
acoustic guitar to some of the tracks. Cornell stated that he was always writing, and that there were some songs that he was not able to put onto an Audioslave album. While recording his second solo album, Cornell was involved in a motorcycle accident. He was apparently "
rear-ended by a truck in
Studio City, Los Angeles while riding his motorcycle" and "catapulted 20 feet into the air." He was able to walk away from the accident but had severe cuts and bruises. He returned to the studio later that day. In 2007, Cornell appeared as a supporting act to
Aerosmith on at least two legs of their 2007 world tour—
Dublin, London, and
Hyde Park—and to
Linkin Park in Australia and New Zealand. These shows formed part of his own ongoing world tour, which began in April 2007 and continued into 2008 and 2009. Cornell described his touring band—comprising guitarists Yogi Lonich and Peter Thorn, bassist Corey McCormick and drummer
Jason Sutter—as "musicians that could get the whole picture", playing music by Soundgarden and Audioslave, as well as his solo material. In 2008, Cornell was featured on the main stage of Linkin Park's
Projekt Revolution tour. While touring with the band, he teamed up with lead vocalist
Chester Bennington to perform
Temple of the Dog's "Hunger Strike", and with Street Drum Corps for a number of Soundgarden tracks. Cornell also joined Linkin Park on stage to sing the second verse of their Grammy-winning song "
Crawling". Timbaland has referred to the recording sessions as "The best work I've done in my career" and predicted that Cornell would be the "first rock star in the club". Cornell described
Scream as "a highlight of my career". The album was largely panned by critics, but was the highest-charting album of Cornell's solo career, reaching No. 10 on the
Billboard 200. On April 2, 2009, Cornell took over Atlanta Rock station, Project 961,
WKLS. For 24 hours, the station became "Chris-FM" and included a two-hour special of Cornell DJing and playing favorite songs from his career. On September 11, 2009, Cornell performed
John Lennon's "
Imagine" on ''
The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien''. In January 2011, Cornell announced his solo acoustic "Songbook" tour, continuing a series of acclaimed solo acoustic shows in Los Angeles during 2009 and 2010. The first leg of the sold-out tour began on April 1, 2011, and continued through the U.S. and Canada until May 6, resuming in October and visiting New Zealand, Australia, South America and the U.S. again before ending on December 17. The tour received universally positive reviews. In November 2011, Cornell released
Songbook, an acoustic live album featuring songs recorded during Cornell's "Songbook" tour in North America. His first live album as a solo artist,
Songbook included stripped-down performances of songs from his entire career as a solo artist as well as with Soundgarden, Audioslave, and Temple of the Dog, plus covers of
Led Zeppelin's "
Thank You" and
John Lennon's "
Imagine". The album received largely positive reviews, with
AllMusic calling it Cornell's "best solo offering to date". Cornell continued his "Songbook" tour in Europe and the U.S. during 2012 and 2013 to further acclaim. On January 21, 2013, Cornell performed a 10-minute acoustic set at the Commander-in-Chief's Ball, which recognized Medal of Honor recipients and Wounded Warriors. He also performed later in the evening with Soundgarden at
Barack Obama's
Inaugural Ball, doing a three-song set at the event. The last solo release prior to his death was the charity single "
The Promise", written for the
movie of the same name about the
Armenian genocide. Prior to his death, Cornell committed all proceeds from the song to support refugees and vulnerable children. On February 26, 2018, Cornell's first posthumous song was released. He composed the music and added lyrics to
Johnny Cash's poems "You Never Knew My Mind" and "I Never Knew Your Mind". The song, titled "You Never Knew My Mind", is featured on the album
Johnny Cash: Forever Words, a collection of songs created from Cash's unused poetry, lyrics and letters, as interpreted by several artists. In 2019, Cornell won a posthumous
Grammy Award for the Best Rock Performance at the
61st Grammy Awards for his single "When Bad Does Good".
2001–2007: Audioslave Audioslave was formed after
Zack de la Rocha left
Rage Against the Machine and the remaining members were searching for another vocalist. Producer and friend
Rick Rubin suggested that they contact Cornell. Rubin played the Soundgarden song "Slaves & Bulldozers" for the remaining Rage Against the Machine band members to showcase his ability. Cornell was in the writing process of a second solo album, but decided to shelve that and pursue the opportunity to work with
Tom Morello,
Tim Commerford and
Brad Wilk when they approached him. Morello described Cornell: "He stepped to the microphone and sang the song and I couldn't believe it. It didn't just sound good. It didn't sound great. It sounded transcendent. And when there is an irreplaceable chemistry from the first moment, you can't deny it." The quartet wrote 21 songs during 19 days of rehearsal and began working in the studio in late May 2001. Their debut album,
Audioslave, released in November 2002, spawned hits such as "
Cochise", "
Like a Stone" and "
Show Me How to Live", and has reached triple platinum status in the United States. The band was nearly derailed before the album's release; Cornell was going through alcohol problems and a slot on the
Ozzfest tour was canceled. In a
San Diego CityBeat article, Cornell explained that he went through "a horrible personal crisis" during the making of the first record, staying in rehab for two months and separating from his wife. The problems were ironed out and Cornell remained
sober. The band toured through 2003, before resting in 2004 to record their second album. Audioslave's second album,
Out of Exile, was released in May 2005 and debuted at number one on the U.S. charts. The album has since gone on to achieve platinum status. The album features the singles "
Out of Exile", "
Be Yourself", "
Your Time Has Come" and "
Doesn't Remind Me". Cornell admitted to writing his most personal songs ever on this album, influenced by the positive changes in his life since 2002. He also described the album as more varied than the debut and relying less on heavy guitar riffs. but by the band's second album,
Out of Exile, noted that they had established a separate identity. The album was received more favorably than Audioslave's debut; critics noted Cornell's stronger vocals, likely the result of quitting smoking and drinking,
AllMusic praised the album as "lean, hard, strong, and memorable". On May 6, 2005, Audioslave played a free show in
Havana,
Cuba. Audioslave became the first American rock group to perform a concert in Cuba, playing in front of an audience of 70,000 people. The band traveled to Havana on May 4 to interact with Cuban musicians. Cornell commented: "Hopefully, this concert will help to open the musical borders between our two countries." The 26-song set concert was the longest the band had ever played. In early 2006 the band returned, recording their third album as they had written most of the material during the tour. The band released the album, titled
Revelations, in September 2006.
Revelations was influenced by 1960s and 1970s
funk and
R&B music. The first two singles were "
Original Fire" and "
Revelations". Two of the songs from the third album, "Shape of Things to Come" and "Wide Awake" were also prominently featured in
Michael Mann's 2006 film,
Miami Vice, prior to the release of the album. Despite the exposure to other forms of media and the positive critical buzz for their third album, Audioslave did not tour behind the release. They went into hiatus to allow Cornell to complete "You Know My Name", the theme song for the 2006 James Bond film,
Casino Royale, and Morello to pursue his own solo work under the moniker of
the Nightwatchman. All of Audioslave's lyrics were written by Cornell, whilst all four members were credited with writing the music. Their songwriting process was described by Wilk as "more collaborative" and "satisfying" than Rage Against the Machine's, which was "a battle creatively". Cornell, for his part, saw Soundgarden's songwriting method as inferior to Audioslave's. Cornell's lyrics were mostly apolitical; Audioslave's Morello referred to them as "haunted,
existential poetry". They were characterized by his cryptic approach, often dealing with themes of existentialism, love,
hedonism,
spirituality and Christianity. and attended rehab after recording the debut album, Morello stated that
Revelations was "the first record [Cornell] didn't smoke, drink, or take drugs through the recording." However, Morello said: News about Cornell's departure emerged in July 2006, when insiders stated that after the third album he would leave to pursue for a solo career. The singer immediately denied the rumors, stating: "We hear rumors that Audioslave is breaking up all the time... I always just ignore [them]." As the other three members were busy with the Rage Against the Machine reunion with de la Rocha coming back, and Morello and Cornell had each released solo albums in 2007, Audioslave officially disbanded. On January 17, 2017, it was announced that Audioslave would reunite for their first show in twelve years at
Prophets of Rage's Anti-Inaugural Ball, protesting President
Donald Trump's inauguration as
President of the United States. The event took place on January 20, 2017. Asked in February 2017 if there would be more Audioslave reunion shows in the future, frontman Cornell replied, ==Other musical projects==