Foo Fighters’ Taylor Hawkins tribute concert is nominated for an Emmy

a black and white photograph of Taylor Hawkins performing live on-stage with Foo Fighters

The Foo Fighters tribute concert honouring the band’s late drummer Taylor Hawkins has been nominated for an Emmy.

It is one of the five nominees in the “Outstanding Sound Mixing For A Variety Series Or Special” category. Directed by Joel Gallen and produced by Emer Patten for EP-PIC Films & Creative, the concert was captured live on September 3, 2022 at Wembley Stadium in London.

The show is up against U2’s Bono & The Edge: A Sort Of Homecoming With Dave Letterman, Elton John Live: Farewell From Dodger Stadium, The 65th Annual Grammy Awards and Saturday Night Live.

Hawkins, who drummed with Foo Fighters from 1997, died in March 2022, aged 50.

Dave Grohl and Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters perform during day one of Lollapalooza Chile 2022. Credit: Marcelo Hernandez/Getty
Dave Grohl and Taylor Hawkins of Foo Fighters perform during day one of Lollapalooza Chile 2022. Credit: Marcelo Hernandez/Getty

The sold-out show hosted 90,000 people inside the stadium and the livestream was watched by millions around the globe. The six hour tribute concert featured performances from the Foo Fighters themselves along with Hawkins’ friends, contemporaries and his then-16-year-old son, Shane.

Liam Gallagher kicked off the night’s musical offerings, performing two classic Oasis songs with members of Foo Fighters, while Red Hot Chili Peppers‘ Chad Smith shared a touching video story.

Later, Grohl’s teenage daughter, Violet, took to the stage to perform Jeff Buckley covers, accompanied by her father, Queens Of The Stone Age and Them Crooked Vultures’ Alain Johannes and Jane’s Addiction‘s Chris Chaney.

The night saw Them Crooked Vultures reunite for the first time in 12 years, while
Supergrass performed three songs for their “huge fan” Hawkins.

Metallica‘s Lars Ulrich and AC/DC‘s Brian Johnson joined forces on a pair of AC/DC covers, while Mark Ronson and Violet Grohl covered ‘Valerie’.

Queen’s Brian May and Roger Taylor then joined Foo Fighters for a five-song set, while The Eagles‘ Joe Walsh led a reunited James Gang in their first live performance in 16 years. Calling them the “one band that I always associated Taylor Hawkins with”, Grohl joined the surviving members of Rush–  Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson – on stage to perform a handful of the band’s biggest hits.

The final set of the night saw Paul McCartneyTravis BarkerNandi Bushell, Rufus Taylor (son of Roger Taylor), Josh Freese and Devo join Foo Fighters on stage for ‘Times Like These’, ‘All My Life’, ‘The Pretender’, ‘Monkey Wrench’, ‘Learn To Fly’, ‘These Days’, ‘Best Of You’, ‘Aurora’, ‘My Hero’ and ‘Everlong’.

In other Foo Fighters news, the band made a not-so-surprise appearance at Glastonbury, where they confirmed long-running rumours that they were behind mystery band The Churnups.

That performance earned the band a four-star review from NME‘s Thomas Smith, who wrote: “Nine songs is what they have time for, the quickest, breeziest Foo Fighters gig of this scale in donkeys. It’s a rare sight: serious urgency underpins every song, particularly opener ‘All My Life’ and ‘No Son of Mine’.

“Even ‘Learn To Fly’ and ‘The Pretender’, the latter of which does get broken down and built back up, marching onwards along with pep and energy.”

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