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Chris Shiflett on Losing Taylor Hawkins and Processing Grief

Chris Shiflett has opened up about the death of Taylor Hawkins and processing the grief of losing his friend and Foo Fighters bandmate. Shiflett appeared on The Plug With Justin Jay where…

Chris Shiflett and Taylor Hawkins
Rich Fury, Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Chris Shiflett has opened up about the death of Taylor Hawkins and processing the grief of losing his friend and Foo Fighters bandmate.

Shiflett appeared on The Plug With Justin Jay where he said of coming to grips with Hawkins' death, "It's hard to talk about. Even still, it's hard to talk about, because it's still raw. There's just a lot of s--- like when anyone dies. You just go through all of these phases of grieving. what you think about is sort of evolving all the time."

Shiflett added, "It's made me reconsider everything I knew about Jim Morrison dying or Randy Rhoads dying. Any of those rock and roll tragedies, I understand people's fascination with it. Taylor was this big character and meant a lot to millions of people all over the world. On one hand, I get that fascination with it, but so much I've seen out there [on the internet] is so completely wrong. There's people out there saying s--- like, 'Dave [Grohl] killed Taylor by making him get the COVID vaccine.' It's like, 'Ah, f---! You're gonna turn it into that?! F---you!'...It makes you angry, because that s--- is disrespectful."

Shiflett is currently promoting a new solo track called "Born & Raised." When asked if while doing press people awkwardly avoid bringing up Hawkins," Shiflett said, "“It probably will be [more of a thing] when we ever get around to putting out another Foo Fighters record and go back into the promo boogie woogie. I remember that when I joined Foo Fighters, it was 1999 so it was a while after Kurt Cobain had died but I would watch interviewers twist themselves in knots trying to ask Dave about it but not ask. I would think it would turn into that kinda thing."

Later in the interview, the topic of the reality of death came up. Shiflett said, "I remember for a long time after my dad died, you're sad about it, but you almost, like, forget for a second...Even, like, waking up in the morning, and for a foggy second, you forget that he's dead. And then, 'Oh, fuck, that's right, he's dead.'...Being at our rehearsal studio ... it's like you just expect him to walk in the room. That's the part that's really bizarre. You just can't believe it. You know it's true, you know it's reality — I don't know when that sinks in for real."

The second Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert is tonight (September 27) at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles. It follows up the first show at London's Wembly Stadium that took place earlier this month. Shiflett said the biggest moment of the show came when Taylor's 16-year-old son Shane performed with the Foo Fighters.

"It was heavy," recalled Shiflett. "He's such a mini-Taylor. It was wild, and he just killed it. It was like an uplifting moment. That's probably the one that sticks out the most, but really just the whole month getting ready for it, there's so many little moments like that that just drive it home."

In memory of the first anniversary of the passing of Taylor Hawkins on March 25, we're looking back on the two tribute concerts organized by the Foo Fighters. The London and Los Angeles shows were incredible events full of light and love. They were reflections of Hawkins, himself. Foo fans the world over will forever miss and remember one incredible drummer and ambassador for rock music.

We send our thoughts to the family and friends of Taylor Hawkins on this anniversary and every day they miss the unique force he was.


The Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert at London's Wembley Stadium on Saturday, September 3 will likely go down as one of the most emotional and cathartic moments in rock in 2022.

The stacked bill featured some of the late Foo Fighters drummer's best friends, biggest influences and peers. Combined, those artists delivered an incredible six-hour show. It's one the thousands in attendance and those watching around the world won't soon forget. The Foo Fighters, themselves, delivered an incredible set where they were joined by a number of different drummers. Among them were Josh Freese, Travis Barker, Nandi Bushell, Rufus Taylor and Shane Hawkins, Taylor's 16-year-old son. If that weren't enough, Paul McCartney made a surprise appearance, too.

Preceding the Foos' set was an all-star lineup of performers that included Queen, Rush's Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson, Stewart Copeland, Brian Johnson, Lars Ulrich, Mark Ronson, Violet Grohl, The James Gang, The Pretenders, Them Crooked Vultures, Supergrass and more.

Photos from the beautiful celebration that was the Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert can be viewed below.

Dave Grohl

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Dave Grohl, Paul McCartney and Pat Smear

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Dave Grohl

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Dave Grohl and Josh Homme

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Kesha

KevinMazur_Kesha_Coattail_Riders20_Approved.jpgKevin Mazur/Paramount

Chrissie Hynde

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Dave Grohl and Brian Johnson

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Brian May

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Stewart Copeland

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Sam Ryder and Brian May

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Roger Taylor

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Liam Gallagher

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Joe Walsh

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John Paul Jones

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Geddy Lee

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Wolfgang Van Halen and Justin Hawkins

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Nandi Bushell

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Wolfgang Van Halen

Danny_Clinch_14761_Foo_Fighters_Taylor_Hawkins_Tribute_09032022_FKPJ2966.jpgDanny Clinch/Paramount

KevinMazur_VioletGrohl06

KevinMazur_VioletGrohl06.jpgKevin Mazur/Paramount

Wolfgang Van Halen and Dave Grohl

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Paul McCartney

Danny_Clinch_14761_Foo_Fighters_Taylor_Hawkins_Tribute_09032022_FKPJ0791-1.jpgDanny Clinch/Paramount

Lars Ulrich

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Justin Hawkins

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Final Bow from the Taylor Hawkins Tribute Concert in London

Final-Bow-Sean-Cox-1.jpgSean Cox/Paramount
Erica Banas is a news blogger who's been covering the rock/classic rock world since 2014. The coolest event she's ever covered in person was the 2021 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony. (Sir Paul McCartney inducting Foo Fighters? C'mon now!) She's also well-versed in etiquette and extraordinarily nice. #TransRightsAreHumanRights