Hawkins died at the age of 50 in Bogotá, Colombia, on March 25 while the band was embarking on a tour of South America. That did take a year of working up the guts to do.” While Grohl declined to comment to Rolling Stone, a Foo Fighters representative disputed the “characterizations” made by Hawkins’s friends and denied he ever raised issues with Grohl or the band’s management prior to his passing. “The fact that he finally spoke to Dave and really told him that he couldn’t do this and that he wouldn’t do it anymore, that was freeing for him,” an anonymous colleague and friend of Hawkins added. He said, ‘I can’t continue on this schedule, and so we’ve got to figure out something.’” “After that, he had a real important heart-to-heart with Dave and the management. “That was one of the straws that broke the camel’s back,” Smith said. “So I guess they did come to some understanding, but it just seems like the touring schedule got even crazier after that.” Chad Smith, the drummer for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, recalled a similar chat he had with Hawkins, which occurred after the drummer collapsed on a plane in Chicago last December. “He had a heart-to-heart with Dave and, yeah, he told me that he ‘couldn’t fucking do it anymore’ - those were his words,” Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron explained.
Among the dozens of close friends interviewed for the piece, several alleged that Hawkins had struggled for several years, both mentally and physically, with the band’s unrelenting tour schedule, which culminated in a recent conversation with Dave Grohl. Nearly two months after the tragic death of Taylor Hawkins, Rolling Stone has published a lengthy story that gives further perspective into his final days as a Foo Fighter. I apologize to his family and musical friends for any pain this may have caused.” Rolling Stone has yet to comment on being denounced by two of rock’s most renowned drummers. “Instead, the story they wrote was sensationalized and misleading, and had I known I never would have agreed to participate. “I was asked by Rolling Stone to share some memories of our time together, which I thought was going to be the loving tribute he deserved,” he explained. “My quotes were taken out of context and shaped into a narrative I had never intended.” He added, “I am truly sorry to have taken part in this interview and I apologize that my participation may have caused harm to those for whom I have only the deepest respect and admiration.” Chad Smith, who amplified several of Cameron’s recollections of the “heart-to-heart” Hawkins allegedly shared with Grohl, went further. “I assumed it would be a celebration of his life and work,” Matt Cameron wrote. Update, May 18 at 10:18 a.m.: Two close friends of Taylor Hawkins have issued statements on social media to express regret over their participation in the Rolling Stone article, claiming that the magazine misrepresented its editorial intentions.