Before fans hear Soundgarden's
first studio album in 15 years, they'll get to hear frontman Chris Cornell
at his quietest. He is currently in the midst of his first solo acoustic
tour, and he loves the contrast.
"It couldn't be further from what I would do
in Soundgarden," Cornell tells Spinner. "The bottom line is
that's what's interesting to me about it and that's what's exciting
about it."
Part of that excitement goes back to his first acoustic
show back in Sweden in the late '80s [in
fact it was 2006 - webmaster], - a gig so successful Cornell
says he will release it at some point - and the idea of having to prove
himself in a new format. "I can do this onstage with a band and
amps and volume and aggression. I got that, no problem," he says.
"But if I can't just walk in a room, pick up and instrument and
entertain people, then how much of a musician am I really?"
After fronting one of the most successful and enduring
rock bands of the '90s, Cornell has heard all of the naysayers who want
him to concentrate on one thing musically. "One of the first comments
I hear whenever I go and do something different is, 'Oh, that's what
you want to do all the time. That's all you wanna do,'" he says.
"That always sounds a little silly to me. The music, to me, is
so diverse and there's no way in one lifetime I'll ever be able to scratch
the surface of what's possible to do."
In the end, this freedom is exactly the way Cornell
wants things to be: "It's seeing my dream career come to fruition."
Reprinted from Spinner - originally available
as an online feature here