Singer Chris Cornell hanged himself, medical examiner says
He was not on the list.
Chris Cornell, lead singer of Soundgarden and Audioslave,
hanged himself, the Wayne County (Michigan) Medical Examiner's Office announced
Thursday in a statement.
The cause of death has been determined as suicide by
hanging, the statement said, adding that a "full autopsy report has not
yet been completed."
Cornell, 52,died Wednesday night after performing in
Detroit.
A family friend called 911 around midnight Thursday after he
went to check on Cornell and found the musician "unresponsive" on the
bathroom floor at the MGM Grand hotel, Detroit police spokesman Michael Woody
said. Emergency medical personnel arrived, and Cornell was pronounced dead at
the scene, he said.
Cornell was in Detroit performing with Soundgarden on a US
tour that kicked off last month. His passing was "sudden and
unexpected," his representative, Brian Bumbery, said in a statement to
CNN.
"His wife Vicky and family were shocked to learn of his
sudden and unexpected passing, and they will be working closely with the
medical examiner to determine the cause," the statement read. "They
would like to thank his fans for their continuous love and loyalty and ask that
their privacy be respected at this time."
The Grammy-winning rocker had performed Wednesday night at
the Fox Theatre in Detroit. He ended his performance with a cover of Led
Zeppelin's "In My Time of Dying."
"Full set with an encore. Nothing odd. Outstanding
performance," Bill Lowe of Port Clinton, Ohio, said, describing the show
in a text message to CNN.
Cornell began his career in the Seattle rock scene. In 1984,
he formed the band Soundgarden, which was influential in the grunge-rock
movement of the early 1990s.
Cornell becomes another in a line of lead singers from major
grunge bands to die abruptly and in most cases, of unnatural causes. Nirvana's
Kurt Cobain was founddead in his Seattle home in 1994; his death was ruled a
suicide. Alice in Chains' original singer, Layne Staley, died from a drug
overdose in 2002. Scott Weiland of Stone Temple Pilots died of an accidental
overdose in 2015.
In interviews, Cornell discussed his past struggles with
alcohol and the impact of his friends' deaths from substance abuse.
"I've lost a lot of young, brilliant friends, people
that I thought were very inspired," he told Rolling Stone in 2015.
"They're all young and these guys all had limitless potential in their
lives in front of them."
Soundgarden predated both grunge pioneers Nirvana and Pearl
Jam, but it wasn't an overnight success.
The group hit its commercial peak with its breakout album,
"Superunknown," in 1994, which was nominated for a Grammy Award for
best rock album. A hit song from that album, "Black Hole Sun," won
the Grammy that year for best hard rock performance and the song
"Spoonman" won for best metal performance.
The group disbanded in 1997 and released a greatest hits
compilation the same year.
The breakup wasn't anything unusual, Cornell told CNN in
2012. "It was just time for a break," he said.
In 2001, Cornell joined with three former members of Rage
Against the Machine to form Audioslave. Their most successful single,
"Like a Stone," released in 2003.
The group's defining moment was a 2005 concert in Cuba,
which at the time was billed as the country's first outdoor rock concert by an
American band.
As the charismatic frontman, Cornell was known for his raw
and soulful voice.
He also sang the theme song to the James Bond movie
"Casino Royale" and released five solo albums
Remembering the rock star
Soundgarden returned to the stage in 2010 for festival
performances and had recently started touring again. The band tweeted Wednesday
night a quote from Cornell: "What I look forward to the most...is the
camaraderie. It's what we missed when we weren't a band."
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