The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Lauded rocker Chris Cornell killed himself by hanging

- By Mesfin Fekadu and Corey Williams

Chris Cornell, one of the most lauded and respected contempora­ry lead singers in rock music with his bands Soundgarde­n and Audioslave, hanged himself Wednesday in a Detroit hotel room, according to the city’s medical examiner. He was 52.

The Wayne County Medical Examiner’s Office said Thursday it completed the preliminar­y autopsy on Cornell, but that “a full au- topsy report has not yet been completed.” A police spokesman told two De- troit newspapers that the singer was found with a band around his neck.

Cornell’s death stunned his family and his die-hard fans, who Cornell just performed for hours earlier at a show in Detroit. Soundgarde­n’s current tour kicked off in late April and was planned to run through May 27. He was found dead at the MGM Grand Detroit hotel by a family friend who went to his room after Cornell’s wife asked him to check on the singer, police said.

Cornell was a leader of the grunge movement with Seattle-based Soundgarde­n — with whom he gained critical and commercial acclaim — but also found success outside the band with other projects, including Audioslave, Temple of the Dog as well as solo albums. He was widely respected in the music industry: He reached success in every band lineup he was part of it, his voice was memorable and powerful, and he was a skilled songwriter, even collaborat­ing on a number of film soundtrack­s, including the James Bond theme song for 2006’s “Casino Royale” and “The Keeper” from the film “Machine Gun Preacher,” which earned Cornell a Golden Globe nomination.

“To create the intimacy of an acoustic performanc­e there needed to be real stories. They need to be kind of real and they need to have a beginning, middle and an end,” Cornell said of songwritin­g in a 2015 interview with The Associated Press. “That’s always a challenge in three in a half or four minutes — to be able to do that, to be able to do it directly.”

Cornell, who grew up in Seattle, said he started using drugs at age 13 and was kicked out of school at 15.

“I went from being a daily drug user at 13 to having bad drug experience­s and quitting drugs by the time I was 14 and then not having any friends until the time I was 16,” he told Rolling Stone in 1994. “There was about two years where I was more or less agoraphobi­c and didn’t deal with anybody, didn’t talk to anybody, didn’t have any friends at all. All the friends that I had were still (messed) up with drugs and were people that I didn’t really have anything in common with.”

But at 16 he grew serious about music, learning to play the drums while also working as a busboy and dishwasher.

“That was the toughest time in my life,” he told Rolling Stone.

He eventually became a Grammy winner with Soundgarde­n, formed in 1984 and coming out of the rapidly growing Seattle music scene, which included Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains.

 ?? PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? Chris Cornell, 52, who gained fame as the lead singer of the bands Soundgarde­n and Audioslave, died Wednesday in a hotel room in Detroit.
PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO — INVISION — AP, FILE Chris Cornell, 52, who gained fame as the lead singer of the bands Soundgarde­n and Audioslave, died Wednesday in a hotel room in Detroit.

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