Biography F
Foo Fighters
While he was drumming with Nirvana, Dave Grohl was recording original songs at home that never received public release. Those tapes would become the foundation of Foo Fighters, the band he formed in 1995, after the death of Kurt Cobain. Like Nirvana, Foo Fighters melded loud, heavy guitars with pretty melodies and mixed punk sensibilities with a sharp sense of pop songwriting. next
Fergie
Like
Martika, Jennifer
Love Hewitt, and Rahsaan
Patterson, Stacy "Fergie" Ferguson got her first major break as a
youngster on the television
program Kids Incorporated. Born in 1975, she did voice work for The Charlie
Brown and Snoopy Show, as well as commercials, prior to becoming a Kids
Incorporated regular from 1984 through 1989. next
Foreigner
While quite a few arena rock acts of the '70s found the
transformation into the '80s quite difficult, several acts continued to flourish
and enjoyed some of their biggest commercial success: Journey,
Styx, REO
Speedwagon, and especially Foreigner. Foreigner's leader from the beginning has
been British guitarist Mick
Jones, who first broke into the music biz as a "hired gun" of
sorts, appearing on recordings by George
Harrison and Peter
Frampton, and as part of a later-day version of hard rockers Spooky
Tooth. By the mid-'70s, Jones
had relocated to New York City, where he was a brief member of the Leslie West
Band and served as an A&R man for a record company. But it wasn't long
before Jones
felt the urge to be part of another rock outfit as he sought to put together a
band that would be able to combine elements of rock, progressive, R&B, and
pop into a single, cohesive style. next