Dave Grohl’s repertoire seems endless, and his talent stretches across multiple instruments, making him one of the most versatile figures in modern rock. Yet even legends reach a boundary. At Foo Fighters gigs, fans expect the anthems—Everlong’s soaring highs, My Hero’s raw emotion, Best of You’s aching longing. And while live sets often include covers—Queen, David Bowie, Pink Floyd are among the acts Grohl and company have revisited repeatedly—those choices serve to keep the show dynamic and to shape the band’s evolving sound.
Think about how most bands start: by playing covers to learn the ropes, test chemistry, and discover their voice. It’s a simple, harmless approach: pick a familiar track, lock in with the rhythm section, and build from there.
For Grohl, there’s no better cover option than Nirvana. His bandmates likely know the history—Grohl spent years behind the drum kit as Nirvana helped redefine rock, an era forged from necessity and tragedy. Yet Grohl draws a strict boundary around those songs: they aren’t up for re‑singing.
“I wouldn’t feel comfortable singing a song that Kurt sang,” he said in a 2021 interview. “I feel perfectly at home playing those songs on the drums. And I love playing them with Krist and Pat and another vocalist.”
Some artists might have seized the chance to capitalize on fans’ enduring connection to Nirvana, blasting through beloved tracks that would guarantee a loud, immediate response. It’s tempting to chase easy nostalgia and effortless crowd energy. But Grohl has chosen a different path—one that respects his late friend’s legacy while navigating his own sense of loss.
He’s spoken frankly about the emotional tug of Nirvana’s memory: “I still have dreams that we’re in Nirvana, that we’re still a band,” he revealed. “I still dream there’s an empty arena waiting for us to play. But I don’t sit down at home and run through ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ by myself. It’s just a reminder that the person who is responsible for those beautiful songs is no longer with us. It’s bittersweet.”
For audiences, that bittersweetness is part of Nirvana’s enduring magic. Even a partial revival of Nirvana through Grohl’s drums would be historic, but Kurt Cobain’s imprint remains sacred—unreplicable and profoundly personal. That unique, almost prayer-like presence is what has kept Cobain’s legacy sacred, and perhaps that’s the only way it could—and should—remain.
Related topics