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Screaming Trees singer, Seattle icon Mark Lanegan dies at 57

FILE - Mark Lanegan performs at the Sonic Temple Art and Music Festival in Columbus, Ohio on May 18, 2019. Singer Mark Lanegan, whose band Screaming Trees was an essential part of the Seattle grunge scene in the early 1990s, has died. Lanegan's twitter account says he died at age 57 Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022 at his home in Ireland. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File) (Amy Harris, 2019 Invision)

Mark Lanegan, the singer whose raspy baritone and darkly poetic songwriting made Screaming Trees an essential part of the early Seattle grunge scene and brought him an acclaimed solo career, died Tuesday at age 57.

ā€œOur beloved friend Mark Lanegan passed away this morning at his home in Killarney, Ireland,ā€ said a post on Laneganā€™s Twitter account, which called him ā€œa beloved singer, songwriter, author and musician.ā€ Management company SKH confirmed the death for the New York Times.

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No cause was given. In a memoir released last year, Lanegan said a severe case of COVID-19 left him hospitalized in a coma.

Lanegan never saw major commercial success, but through seven full-length albums with Screaming Trees, 10 solo records, and collaborations with Queens of the Stone Age and many others, he won a devoted fan base that included critics and his fellow musicians of several generations.

ā€œMark Lanegan will always be etched in my heart ā€” as he surely touched so many with his genuine self, no matter the cost, true to the end,ā€ John Cale of the Velvet Underground said on Twitter.

Iggy Pop tweeted, ā€œMark Lanegan, RIP, deepest respect for you. Your fan, Iggy Pop.ā€

Lanegan formed the Screaming Trees in 1984 in his hometown of Ellensburg, Washington. A drummer at first, he said he was so inept he had to become a lead singer.

With their mix of moody pop and a hard rock that leaned into psychedelia, Screaming Trees were among the candidates that many thought would break big from the Seattle grunge scene of the late 1980s and early ā€™90s though they would never see the widespread popularity of Nirvana and Soundgarden.

Their major label debut for Epic Records, 1990ā€²s ā€œUncle Anesthesia,ā€ was co-produced by Soundgardenā€™s Chris Cornell.

The single ā€œBed of Rosesā€ would get them played on MTV and modern-rock radio.

The Treesā€™ commercial peak came with 1992ā€²s ā€œSweet Oblivionā€ and the single ā€œNearly Lost You,ā€ which remains Laneganā€™s biggest hit and best known song, thanks in part to its appearance on the soundtrack of the Cameron Crowe film ā€œSingles.ā€

The group would technically remain a unit until 2000, but Lanegan increasingly focused on his solo career during the 1990s, creating music that was quieter, more bluesy, and more broody, earning him the nickname ā€œDark Mark.ā€

His voice made him a sought-after collaborator with his fellow Seattle musicians. He sang on projects with Alice in Chainsā€™ Layne Staley and Pearl Jamā€™s Mike McCready. He recorded a series of Leadbelly covers with Kurt Cobain. It would never be released, but Cobain would use their arrangement of ā€œWhere Did You Sleep Last Nightā€ in a memorable performance on ā€œMTV Unplugged.ā€

Lanegan would lend his voice to five albums for Queens of the Stone Age, starting with their 2000 breakthrough ā€œRated R.ā€

He made three albums as a duo with Belle and Sebastianā€™s Isobel Campbell and formed another duo, The Gutter Twins, with The Afghan Whigsā€™ Greg Dulli.

He and wife Shelley Brien moved to Killarney in County Kerry, Ireland in 2020. He contracted COVID-19 soon after. He would write about that, his long struggle with drugs and alcohol, and his decade of sobriety in the memoir, ā€œDevil in a Coma.ā€

ā€œMark Lanegan was a lovely man,ā€ tweeted New Order and Joy Division bassist Peter Hook, with a photo of Lanegan joining him on stage. ā€œHe led a wild life that some of us could only dream of. He leaves us with fantastic words and music! Thank god that through all of that he will live forever.ā€

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton on Twitter: https://twitter.com/andyjamesdalton.


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