Jason Evangelho reviewed Total F*cking Godhead by Corbin Reiff
A promising start and a disappointing end
3 stars
Chris Cornell's unexpected death is, in a beautiful but understandably tragic way, partially responsible for my wife and me connecting and finding love. We bonded over the sadness of his passing and celebrated his ridiculously talented legacy of music. So I dove into this book with what's admittedly some bias, some enthusiasm, and some emotional connections to the material.
My wife read the Croatian version of this book last year, so I knew going in that author Corbin Reiff had been severely roadblocked by various legal issues surrounding Chris's death and estate. In fact, Reiff admits as much in the introduction and isn't shy about expressing his disappointment over seeing so many promising interview opportunities -- some months in the making -- vanish practically overnight.
Despite this changing the scope of the biography, it opens with so much promise. Reiff paints a brief but powerful picture of Chris "liberating" a …
Chris Cornell's unexpected death is, in a beautiful but understandably tragic way, partially responsible for my wife and me connecting and finding love. We bonded over the sadness of his passing and celebrated his ridiculously talented legacy of music. So I dove into this book with what's admittedly some bias, some enthusiasm, and some emotional connections to the material.
My wife read the Croatian version of this book last year, so I knew going in that author Corbin Reiff had been severely roadblocked by various legal issues surrounding Chris's death and estate. In fact, Reiff admits as much in the introduction and isn't shy about expressing his disappointment over seeing so many promising interview opportunities -- some months in the making -- vanish practically overnight.
Despite this changing the scope of the biography, it opens with so much promise. Reiff paints a brief but powerful picture of Chris "liberating" a collection of Beatles records from a neighbor's wet attic, and spending months isolated in his bedroom, just listening to the band with fascination and reverence.
Similarly, the Soundgarden origin story is meticulously documented. As someone who lived through and was obsessed with the grunge era, so many of these facts and insights were new to me and I enjoyed the hell out of these early chapters.
Then the monotony sets in. Certainly a symptom of the "interview blockade" that Reiff had to deal with, but it still results in a bit of a slog.
The bulk of the book devolves into less an exploration of Chris Cornell, and instead becomes an unnecessarily detailed chronicle of all the various tour stops and album release cycles. It's dizzying trying to keep track of his solo tours, Audioslave tours, Soundgarden tours, Temple of the Dog shows, more solo tours, album production, various promotional events...
You get the idea. It starts to read like a novelization of 30 years' worth of Wikipedia entries. Don't misunderstand; it is interesting, but it's also disappointing how the magic of the opening chapters is lost to a timeline of Cornell's musical and live output.
To his credit, Reiff does shed light on Chris Cornell's approach to and philosophy behind songwriting, and I relished all of that.
If you're a diehard fan of Chris or Soundgarden, I do recommend reading this. But just know going in that it resembles more of a nicely packaged history of Chris Cornell's music output and collaborations, than a true biography.