Mark Lanegan, grunge icon and Screaming Trees singer, dead at 57

Mark Lanegan, the lead singer of 90s rock band Screaming Bushes, has died at 57.

The grunge icon, who was additionally a member of Queens of the Stone Age, handed away at his house in Killarney, Eire, Tuesday morning, in keeping with a publish revealed on his official Twitter account.

“Our beloved good friend Mark Lanegan handed away this morning,” the tweet learn. “A beloved singer, songwriter, creator and musician he was 57 and is survived by his spouse Shelley. No different data is obtainable right now. We ask Please respect the household privateness.”

The singer’s surprising dying comes simply months after he spoke candidly about his months-long battle with COVID-19, which led to hallucinations and a medically induced coma.

Lanegan (far left) is seen with his Screaming Trees bandmates back in 1989.
Lanegan (far left) is seen along with his Screaming Bushes bandmates in 1989.
Getty Photographs

Lanegan, alongside along with his shut good friend Kurt Cobain, was thought of one of many key figures of the grunge music style, which originated in Seattle in the course of the late Nineteen Eighties.

The rocker was born outdoors Seattle in 1964. He shaped Screaming Bushes as a youngster alongside guitarist Gary Lee Conner, bassist Van Conner and drummer Mark Pickerel.

The band launched their first LP in 1986, earlier than signing a serious label contract with Epic Data in 1990.

Screaming Bushes’ greatest album, “Candy Oblivion,” was launched in 1992, promoting a whole lot of hundreds of copies and cementing their fame as one of many world’s greatest grunge bands. A number of of their songs appeared in “Singles” — Cameron Crowe’s hit movie starring Matt Dillon and Bridget Fonda about Gen X’ers dwelling in Seattle.

Lanegan is seen on stage in 2001. In addition to his work with Screaming Trees and Queens of the Stone Age, he also released 12 best-selling solo albums.
Lanegan onstage in 2001. Along with his work with Screaming Bushes and Queens of the Stone Age, he additionally launched 12 solo albums.
Getty Photographs

The rockers launched seven albums collectively earlier than they cut up in 2000.

From 2000 till 2014, Lanegan was a backing singer and keyboardist in Queens of the Stone Age.

He additionally launched 12 solo albums between 1990 and 2020. His final document, “Straight Songs of Sorrow,” was launched simply earlier than he contracted COVID-19.

In his memoir, “Satan In A Coma,” which was revealed final 12 months, Lanegan reminisced about his harrowing March 2021 battle with the coronavirus, writing: “Each tried breath was a battle, irrespective of how exhausting I attempted to take a pure one. Although I refused to go to hospital my spouse lastly referred to as an ambulance behind my again and I used to be wheeled out of my yard on a gurney.”

Lanegan is seen on stage in 2015. He published his memoir "Devil In A Coma" last year.
Lanegan onstage in 2015. He revealed his memoir “Satan In A Coma” final 12 months.
Corbis by way of Getty Photographs

He continued: “I finally ended up in intensive care, unable to attract oxygen, and was identified with some unique new pressure of the coronavirus for which there was no treatment, after all. I used to be put right into a medically induced coma, none of which I remembered.”

Lanegan stated he suffered “weird desires, unusual visions, shadowy darkness, untrustworthy recollections, and recurring hallucinations, all hallmarks of near-death experiences” following his COVID battle.

The singer additionally overtly battled alcoholism and drug habit within the Nineteen Nineties and 2000s. He had two stints in rehab — as soon as in 1996, and once more in 2007. Nevertheless, Lanegan managed to beat his substance abuse and, on the time of his dying, had been sober for over a decade.

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