Josh Homme
Joshua Michael Homme (born May 17, 1973) is an American rock musician, singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer best known as the founder, only permanent member, lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and primary songwriter of Queens of the Stone Age, which he formed in 1996 after serving as guitarist for the influential stoner rock band Kyuss.[1][2][3]
Homme's work with Queens of the Stone Age has yielded critically acclaimed albums such as Songs for the Deaf (2002), which peaked at number 17 on the Billboard 200 and featured hits like "No One Knows," blending heavy guitar riffs, experimental production, and desert rock influences rooted in his Palm Desert origins.[3] He has extended his influence through collaborations, including the supergroup Them Crooked Vultures with Dave Grohl and John Paul Jones, and side projects like Eagles of Death Metal, while producing records for acts such as Arctic Monkeys and Iggy Pop.[3]
Throughout his career, Homme has faced notable controversies, including a 2017 onstage incident where he kicked a photographer's camera, causing injury, and personal battles with addiction leading to rehabilitation; he has denied allegations of abuse raised during his 2019-2023 divorce and custody dispute with ex-wife Brody Dalle, with investigations finding no substantiation for claims against him.[4][5] More recently, health complications, including emergency surgeries and a 2024-2025 European tour scare, have tested his resilience, yet he persists in performing and creating music defined by raw intensity and innovation.[6]
Early life
Upbringing and formative influences
Joshua Michael Homme was born on May 17, 1973, in Joshua Tree, California.[7] He grew up in a family of Norwegian descent on his father's side, as the son of Irene and Michael Homme, the latter a general contractor whose work prompted frequent relocations across desert towns and even to Idaho.[7][8] Homme has an older brother, Jason, and his paternal grandfather, Clancy "Cap" Homme, was an early settler in the Palm Desert region whose farm Homme helped manage until age 25.[7] The family's eventual base in Palm Desert immersed him in the sparse, high-desert environment of Southern California's Coachella Valley, where isolation fostered self-reliance and improvisation for recreation.[7][9] This desert upbringing profoundly shaped Homme's worldview and creative approach, as he attended off-grid "generator parties"—impromptu gatherings powered by portable generators in remote locations that became incubators for the nascent Palm Desert music scene.[7] Such events, common among local youth, emphasized communal, DIY experimentation amid vast, unforgiving landscapes, laying groundwork for the raw, atmospheric ethos of desert rock.[7] A temporary family move to Sandpoint, Idaho, provided early exposure to live performance when Homme witnessed Carl Perkins at a festival, sparking interest in roots-oriented music.[9] Homme took up guitar at age 9, purchasing his first instrument—an Ovation Ultra GP—during the Idaho period, and received initial lessons focused on polka styles, which instilled an atypical rhythmic foundation diverging from standard rock pedagogy.[9] By 1985, at age 12, he joined his debut band, Autocracy, marking entry into local punk-infused circuits.[7] His core influences stemmed from punk rock rather than heavy metal, with pivotal records acquired at 13 including Misfits' Legacy of Brutality, The Cramps' ...Off the Bone, and Iggy and the Stooges' Raw Power; bands like Black Flag, Discharge, GBH, and The Exploited loomed large, as did a 15-year-old drive from Palm Desert to see Danzig perform.[2] Homme has repeatedly rejected metal associations, asserting, "I was never a metal guy," and crediting punk's urgency over metal's conventions for his stylistic independence.[2] These elements converged in the Palm Desert scene's generator-fueled jams, blending punk aggression with environmental vastness to forge Homme's emergent sound.[7]Musical career
Kyuss (1987–1995)
Kyuss originated in Palm Desert, California, where Josh Homme co-founded the band in 1987 initially as Katzenjammer with vocalist John Garcia, bassist Chris Cockrell, and drummer Brant Bjork.[10] The group soon renamed itself Sons of Kyuss, drawing the name from a Dungeons & Dragons monster suggested by Bjork, and released a self-titled EP in April 1990 featuring raw, heavy riffs that foreshadowed their stoner rock sound.[11] Bassist Nick Oliveri briefly joined before departing, after which Scott Reeder replaced him in 1990, solidifying the core lineup with Homme on lead guitar and backing vocals.[12] In 1991, the band shortened its name to Kyuss and signed to Dali Records, releasing their debut full-length album Wretch on September 23, which included re-recorded tracks from the EP alongside new material emphasizing Homme's sludgy, down-tuned guitar work.[13] The follow-up, Blues for the Red Sun, arrived in June 1992, showcasing extended jams and desert-inspired themes that Homme helped craft through his riff-heavy compositions and production input. By 1994, after delays, they issued Welcome to Sky Valley (also known as the self-titled Kyuss) on June 28 via Atlantic Records, marking their major-label debut with Homme's evolving style of layered guitars and atmospheric builds.[12] Personnel shifts occurred late in the run: Bjork departed in 1994 due to creative differences, replaced by drummer Alfredo Hernández for the final album, ...And the Circus Left Town, released in 1995, which featured Homme's most refined contributions amid internal tensions.[14] Kyuss disbanded on October 1, 1995, shortly after the album's release, with Homme citing exhaustion from touring and band dynamics as factors, though he retained rights to the name alongside Reeder.[12] During their tenure, Homme's guitar playing—characterized by precise, heavy distortions and rhythmic innovation—helped define the band's influential palm desert scene sound, influencing subsequent heavy rock acts.[15]Queens of the Stone Age (1996–present)
Josh Homme founded Queens of the Stone Age in 1996 in Seattle, shortly after the breakup of Kyuss, initially under the name Gamma Ray before renaming it to avoid conflict with an existing band.[16] Homme, serving as the band's primary songwriter, guitarist, and vocalist, has been the only consistent member across its history, with a rotating lineup of collaborators contributing to its recordings and tours.[17] The band's early sound drew from stoner rock roots but evolved toward a broader rock palette emphasizing riff-driven songs and experimental production.[18] The debut self-titled album, Queens of the Stone Age, was released on September 22, 1998, featuring Homme alongside drummer Alfredo Hernández and bassist Nick Oliveri, among others.[19] Follow-up Rated R arrived in 2000, expanding the band's reach with tracks like "Feel Good Hit of the Summer." Breakthrough came with 2002's Songs for the Deaf, which included guest appearances from Dave Grohl on drums and Alain Johannes, achieving commercial success and critical acclaim for its cohesive song cycle structured around radio interludes.[20] Oliveri's departure in 2004 followed personal conflicts, including substance issues, leading Homme to helm Lullabies to Paralyze (2005) with a revamped lineup.[21] Subsequent releases like Era Vulgaris (2007) and ...Like Clockwork (2013) maintained the band's reputation for genre-blending rock, with the latter featuring high-profile guests such as Elton John and Alex Turner amid Homme's recovery from surgical complications.[20] Villains (2017), produced by Mark Ronson, shifted toward danceable rhythms while retaining Homme's signature guitar work, though the era included onstage incidents, such as Homme kicking a photographer in 2017, for which he later apologized citing personal struggles.[22] The band released In Times New Roman... on June 16, 2023, Homme's most introspective work reflecting themes of mortality following his 2022 cancer diagnosis and treatment.[23] Touring in support was interrupted in July 2024 by Homme's emergency surgery after a Paris Catacombs performance, leading to cancellations, but resumed with U.S. dates announced for 2025 and a live release Alive in the Catacombs in June 2025 documenting the underground show.[24][25] Current members include Troy Van Leeuwen on guitar, Michael Shuman on bass, Dean Fertita on keys, and Jon Theodore on drums.[21]The Desert Sessions (1997–present)
The Desert Sessions comprise a series of improvisational recording sessions founded and led by Josh Homme, beginning in August 1997 at Rancho de la Luna, a remote studio in Joshua Tree, California. Homme conceived the project as an antidote to the rigors of touring with Kyuss, inspired by unstructured Palm Desert generator parties from his youth, where musicians jammed spontaneously without commercial pressures.[26][27][28] Homme organized each session by inviting a rotating cast of collaborators—primarily from the stoner rock and alternative scenes, including early participants like Brant Bjork, Dave Catching, and members of Monster Magnet and Goatsnake—for three-day intensives focused on riff-based experimentation and lyrical absurdity. He contributed guitar, production, and occasional vocals, enforcing rules against preconceived songs to prioritize raw creativity and discomfort. The output yielded 10 volumes between 1997 and 2003, released in pairs on labels like Man's Ruin and Ipecac, featuring tracks that blended desert rock, punk, and psychedelia.[29][30][31] Notable later volumes included 7 & 8 (October 16, 2001), incorporating Ween and System of a Down's Shavo Odadjian, and 9 & 10 (September 23, 2003), with PJ Harvey on vocals and guitar for tracks like "Crawling King Snake." After a 16-year hiatus, Homme revived the Sessions in 2019, releasing Volumes 11 & 12 on October 25, featuring eight tracks with guests such as ZZ Top's Billy Gibbons, Warpaint's Stella Mozgawa, and Matt Berry; Homme again handled core instrumentation and production at his Pink Duck studio before finalizing at Rancho de la Luna.[32][33][34] The Sessions have influenced Homme's broader career, serving as a testing ground for collaborators who later joined Queens of the Stone Age, such as Joey Castillo and Alain Johannes, while maintaining an ethos of musical freedom over polished outcomes. No further volumes have been released as of 2025, though Homme has described the project as an ongoing tradition tied to his desert roots.[28][35]Eagles of Death Metal (1998–present)
Eagles of Death Metal formed in 1998 in Palm Desert, California, as a collaborative side project between Josh Homme and Jesse Hughes, a singer-guitarist and longtime friend from Homme's school days.[36][37] The band's name arose ironically from an attempt by a mutual acquaintance to introduce Homme to death metal music, though Eagles of Death Metal's sound emphasizes garage rock, punk, and rockabilly influences rather than heavy metal extremity.[38] Homme contributes drums under the stage name Boots Electric, with Hughes on vocals and guitar; additional musicians rotate for recordings and performances, reflecting Homme's limited availability due to his primary commitments with Queens of the Stone Age.[39][40] The band released its debut album, Peace, Love & Death Metal, on August 23, 2004, via Antacid Audio, featuring Homme's drumming and production input.[41] Follow-up records include Death by Sexy... (June 6, 2006), Heart On (October 28, 2008), and Zipper Down (September 18, 2015), all of which incorporate Homme's rhythmic contributions and occasional production; Zipper Down marked a return to collaborative songwriting between Homme and Hughes after a period of separate endeavors.[41][42] Homme's involvement has centered on studio work, with live appearances infrequent, such as guest spots at select shows including a 2015 reunion performance.[39] On November 13, 2015, terrorists attacked the Bataclan theatre in Paris during an Eagles of Death Metal concert, killing 89 people and wounding over 200 in the deadliest segment of coordinated Islamist assaults that claimed 130 lives citywide; band members, including Hughes, escaped amid gunfire, though Homme was absent from the tour.[43][44] The tragedy prompted international solidarity, including U2 inviting survivors and the band onstage at a December 2015 Paris show, and inspired the 2017 documentary Eagles of Death Metal: Nos Amis, directed by Colin Hanks, which chronicles the attack's aftermath.[45][46] Eagles of Death Metal has continued sporadically, with Homme participating in occasional live sets as recently as 2024, maintaining the project as an outlet for raw, energetic rock amid his broader career demands.[47]Them Crooked Vultures (2009–2010, 2022)
Them Crooked Vultures was a hard rock supergroup formed in Los Angeles in 2009, consisting of Josh Homme on lead vocals and guitar, Dave Grohl on drums, and John Paul Jones on bass and keyboards.[48] [49] The trio began informal jamming sessions earlier that year, drawing from their respective backgrounds in Queens of the Stone Age, Foo Fighters/Nirvana, and Led Zeppelin, before committing to a full project without prior plans for a permanent band.[49] The group's self-titled debut album was recorded primarily at Homme's Pink Duck Studios and released on November 17, 2009, through Interscope Records, peaking at number 12 on the Billboard 200 and receiving positive reviews for its heavy riffs and dynamic interplay.[49] They supported the release with a world tour starting August 2009, performing over 30 shows across North America, Europe, and Australia through early 2010, including festival appearances at events like V Festival and Rock am Ring.[50] Activity ceased after the tour, with no second album materializing despite fan interest, as members returned to their primary commitments; the band effectively went inactive by 2010.[48] In September 2022, Them Crooked Vultures reunited for the first time in 12 years at tribute concerts honoring late Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins, performing at London's Wembley Stadium on September 3 and the Kia Forum in Los Angeles later that month.[51] [52] Sets included originals like "Dead End Friends" and a cover of Elton John's "Goodbye Yellow Brick Road," with Homme, Grohl, and Jones joined briefly by guest musicians, marking a one-off return without announcements of further plans. Homme later expressed openness to potential future activity in a 2024 interview but noted logistical challenges given members' ages and schedules, leaving the project's status dormant.[53]Other projects and collaborations
Homme produced Arctic Monkeys' third studio album, Humbug, released on August 21, 2009, and performed guitar on multiple tracks including "Dance Little Liar" and "Crying Lightning."[3][54] He also contributed guitar and additional production to the band's 2013 single "Knee Socks" from AM.[54] In 2016, Homme co-produced and played guitar, bass, and piano on Iggy Pop's album Post Pop Depression, which featured collaborations with bandmates from Queens of the Stone Age and was recorded in just three weeks.[3][54] Homme provided piano and backing vocals on Foo Fighters' track "Sunday Rain" from their ninth album Concrete and Gold, released September 15, 2017, and assisted in production for that song.[54] He co-produced Mark Lanegan Band's Bubblegum in 2004, contributing to its raw, blues-inflected sound.[54] Additional production credits include Mastodon's Crack the Skye (2009), where he offered guidance during mixing, and Royal Blood's self-titled debut (2014), co-producing tracks "Come on Over" and "Little Monster."[54] Earlier contributions encompass co-producing CKY's Volume 1 in 1999 and guitar performances on Masters of Reality's Deep in the Hole (2001) and Flak 'n' Flight (2003).[54] Homme also played bass on Mike Johnson's I Feel Alright (1998) and provided vocals for Wellwater Conspiracy's Brotherhood of Electric (1999).[54] These efforts highlight his role in shaping diverse rock and alternative projects through production and instrumentation.[3]Musical style and contributions
Guitar playing and production techniques
Josh Homme's guitar playing is characterized by extensive use of downtuned guitars, a practice he pioneered in Kyuss to achieve a unique sonic identity distinct from contemporaries.[55] He began detuning to B or C standard without prior influences like Black Sabbath, driven by experimentation in isolation, later standardizing C tuning for Queens of the Stone Age tracks such as "No One Knows."[56] [57] His style draws from early polka lessons taken from ages 9 to 11, which emphasized "oompah oompah" rhythms and full bar chords over barre chords, fostering an off-kilter approach with unusual major chord progressions and chromatic turns evident in riffs like those in "No One Knows" and "Go With the Flow."[56] [57] Self-taught and rejecting formal rules, Homme employs Lydian solos and atypical modes for melodic color, often using punchy chord voicings and hollow-body guitars recorded through vintage or inexpensive amps.[57] [58] In production, Homme favors live band recordings captured in single takes at studios like Sound City, utilizing analogue tape alongside Pro Tools HD without click tracks to preserve organic feel, as on Lullabies to Paralyze.[58] He maintains vast collections of gear—including over 45 guitars, 75 amps, and 250 pedals—for experimentation, such as miking amps in bathrooms or incorporating ambient noises like kitchen sounds, prioritizing front-end capture over post-editing.[58] Collaborating with engineers like Joe Barresi, his methods blend old-school analogue techniques with unconventional setups to yield dynamic, varied textures across songs.[58]Influences and thematic evolution
Homme's musical influences originated in the punk rock scene, with key early inspirations including Black Flag, Discharge, GBH, and the Exploited, which informed his aggressive, DIY ethos despite Kyuss's later classification as desert or stoner rock.[2] He has emphasized a broad palette, citing artists across genres such as Harry Nilsson, Lightnin' Slim, Roky Erickson, New Order, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Björk, Radiohead, JD McPherson, and Dion & the Belmonts.[59] Homme has rejected strong ties to traditional heavy metal, stating he had limited exposure to bands like Black Sabbath during Kyuss's formation, countering assumptions about the group's riff-heavy sound.[60] This eclectic foundation carried into Queens of the Stone Age, where Homme expanded beyond Kyuss's sludge-oriented psychedelia by incorporating melodic structures and genre-blending elements, self-financing the 1998 debut album to maintain creative control post-Kyuss disbandment in 1995.[61] Later projects like Eagles of Death Metal and Them Crooked Vultures further diversified his sound, drawing on garage rock and supergroup dynamics with influences from blues and post-punk.[2] Thematically, Homme's lyrics evolved from the surreal, abstract imagery of Queens of the Stone Age's early work—evident in tracks like those on the 1998 self-titled album—to increasingly personal and confessional explorations in subsequent releases.[2] By the 2013 album ...Like Clockwork, themes shifted toward vulnerability, recovery from near-death experiences, and interpersonal fractures, reflecting Homme's documented struggles with addiction and health crises, including a 2010 emergency surgery complication that left him clinically dead for minutes.[62] Recent albums like In Times New Roman... (2023) emphasize acceptance amid chaos, with lyrics addressing self-destructive patterns and resilience, as Homme has described an "addiction to risking it all" in interviews.[63][2] This progression mirrors causal shifts from youthful experimentation in the Palm Desert scene to mature reckonings with mortality and relationships, prioritizing raw introspection over earlier cryptic detachment.Other endeavors
Philanthropy and charity initiatives
Josh Homme co-founded the Sweet Stuff Foundation in 2013 with his family to provide financial assistance to career musicians, recording engineers, and their families facing illness or disability, ensuring that approximately 98 cents of every donated dollar directly supports aid recipients.[64][65] The nonprofit, which remains family-operated, focuses on the music industry's unsung professionals who often lack adequate support during crises.[66] In response to the November 2015 Paris attacks, which affected the Eagles of Death Metal concert attended by Homme, the foundation directed all incoming donations through December 31, 2015, to the victims' families, supplementing its core mission with targeted crisis relief.[67][68] Additionally, Homme's band Eagles of Death Metal pledged 100% of publishing income from fan-submitted cover versions sold via their website to the foundation for the same cause.[69] Homme has organized multiple benefit concerts for the foundation, including the March 20, 2024, "Josh Homme & Friends" event at The Belasco in Los Angeles, featuring performers such as Dave Grohl, Beck, Chad Smith, and St. Vincent, which raised $250,000 with 100% of proceeds allocated to the nonprofit.[70][71] In December 2023, he collaborated with members of Paramore and Jimmy Eat World to promote the foundation's launch initiatives.[72] Beyond the foundation, Homme headlined an "all-star" Music Saves Lives benefit concert on November 28, 2023, with proceeds donated to Suicide Awareness Voices of Education (SAVE), a nonprofit focused on suicide prevention.[73] These efforts reflect Homme's targeted support for music community welfare and broader humanitarian responses tied to his professional experiences.Film, media, and production work
Homme has appeared in acting roles primarily as himself in cameo capacities. In Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000), he featured alongside Queens of the Stone Age bandmates in a promotional segment tied to the film's rock soundtrack.[74] He reprised a similar self-referential appearance in the comedy Hot Rod (2007), performing during a stunt sequence.[74] His most substantial on-screen role came in End of Watch (2012), where he portrayed a suspect in a police procedural context.[74] Beyond acting, Homme has contributed to film soundtracks and scores. He co-composed tracks for The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys (2002), including the instrumental "Atomic Trinity," alongside Nick Oliveri and Brad Wilk.[75] For the German drama In the Fade (2017), directed by Fatih Akin, Homme created the original score, incorporating brooding guitar riffs that complement the film's themes of loss and vengeance; the soundtrack also featured guest artists like Lykke Li and Courtney Barnett.[76][77] Homme has engaged in documentary production and narration related to rock music history. He co-directed American Valhalla (2017) with Andreas Neumann, chronicling his collaborative album Post Pop Depression with Iggy Pop, including behind-the-scenes footage of recording sessions in California and Iceland.[78] The film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and emphasizes the improvisational creative process between the two musicians.[79] Additionally, Homme narrated Lo Sound Desert (2015), a documentary exploring the Palm Desert rock scene's origins, featuring interviews with former Kyuss members and other local acts.[80]Personal life
Family and relationships
Josh Homme married Australian musician Brody Dalle, lead singer of the Distillers, on December 17, 2005, in Palm Springs, California.[81] The couple met in 2001 during Homme's tour with Queens of the Stone Age and QOTSA's collaboration with the Distillers.[82] Homme and Dalle have three children: daughter Camille Harley Joan, born January 17, 2006; son Orrin Ryder, born in 2011; and son Wolf Dillon Reece, born in 2014.[82][81] Homme has publicly credited his children with providing emotional support during personal difficulties, stating in 2023 that they accompanied him on tour and helped him navigate challenges.[83] The marriage ended in divorce finalized in 2019, following Dalle's filing for legal separation in November 2019.[84] In March 2022, a Los Angeles court granted Homme sole legal custody of the three children, a status that persisted through at least 2023 amid ongoing co-parenting arrangements.[4] No prior or subsequent marriages or significant relationships for Homme are documented in public records.[85]Health challenges
In June 2023, Homme disclosed that he had been diagnosed with cancer approximately one year earlier, around mid-2022, undergoing surgery as part of his treatment.[86] By late 2023, he announced receiving the "all clear" following successful intervention, though specifics of the cancer type and procedures remained undisclosed to maintain privacy.[87] [88] These challenges compounded with further complications in 2024, as Homme battled escalating pain and ineffective medication in the lead-up to Queens of the Stone Age's July 8 performance in the Paris Catacombs.[89] Despite his condition, he completed the show before undergoing emergency surgery in the United States approximately 20 hours later, an intervention tied to ongoing health deterioration that left him bedridden for seven months.[86] [88] This crisis prompted the cancellation of the band's remaining 2024 tour dates, including European legs, to prioritize recovery.[90] [91] Homme has described the period as physically grueling, noting in interviews that the severity made performing untenable beyond the Catacombs session, though he emphasized perseverance through prior ailments like knee surgery and infections without similar halts.[92] The exact nature of the 2024 surgery was not publicly detailed, aligning with Homme's pattern of limiting disclosures to protect personal boundaries amid public scrutiny.[93] By mid-2025, he reported recovery progress, allowing focus on future projects.[94]Views, hobbies, and public persona
Homme has described himself as a "fallen libertarian," expressing frustration with the erosion of civil liberties in the United States, where he believes "almost every civil liberty has been taken away" and individuals overly rely on police for personal matters.[95] He identifies as fiscally conservative, arguing that "the government knows what to do with your money better than you do" is false, and views government operations as inefficient, stating "if the government were a business it would be completely bankrupt."[95] Socially liberal in outlook, Homme owns several firearms, including a Winchester repeater rifle and a Beretta 9mm, instilled with respect for them from his desert upbringing, though he notes reluctance to use them defensively.[95] He conceptualizes God non-traditionally as "everything you don’t understand," prioritizing family as the core meaning of life over transient pursuits like piracy.[95] Regarding the music industry, Homme has lamented the challenges for emerging acts, calling it "very difficult to be a young band" in an era where touring in vans and playing frequent shows is harder than before, and expressing empathy for those pursuing it as a vocation without guarantees of financial or popular success.[96] He advocates for artistic evolution, asserting bands "have to be willing to lose your fans sometimes" to avoid stagnation, as loyal supporters anticipate change and each album should surpass the last, even into a hypothetical fifteenth record.[97] Homme favors live recording over polished studio builds, prefers concise formats like EPs with "four good pop songs" over bloated albums, and critiques record labels as "lame" rather than inherently malevolent, while rejecting rigid release cycles in a chaotic market.[98] Homme's hobbies include sewing, a skill acquired in home economics class at age 13, which he practices on tour buses to customize clothing with patches or studs inspired by family influences.[99] He enjoys people-watching as a source of observational insight for his songwriting and self-identifies being a "smartass" as a familial trait and pastime.[98] Other interests encompass a preference for pirates over ninjas due to their association with "booty" and flamboyance, alongside valuing unstructured time with his children to remain "grounded."[98][99] Homme cultivates a public persona marked by irreverent sarcasm, philosophical depth, and unfiltered candor in interviews, often blending humor with critiques of complacency in art and society.[98] He has admitted to deriving amusement from "making people uncomfortable," positioning half the audience as unwitting participants in his jests, while emphasizing authenticity over broad appeal, as evidenced by his disdain for unearned praise and insistence that persistent detractors—about 15% of any audience—signal inherent flaws in the work.[100][97] This intensity coexists with reflective warmth post-personal trials, viewing music as a "beautiful river" for exploration rather than a race, and advocating presence through analog pursuits amid digital distractions.[99]Controversies and legal matters
Professional incidents
On December 9, 2017, during Queens of the Stone Age's performance at KROQ's Almost Acoustic Christmas concert at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, Homme kicked Shutterstock photographer Chelsea Lauren in the head while she was positioned in the photo pit.[101] Lauren, who was capturing low-angle shots, reported sustaining a contusion requiring emergency medical treatment and stitches for a subsequent head injury unrelated to the kick but occurring amid the chaos.[102] Video footage captured Homme raising his boot deliberately toward Lauren's head during the song "A Song for the Dead," after which he continued kicking over stage monitors and lighting equipment.[103] Minutes later, with stage lights dimmed, Homme appeared to slice his own forehead with a blade, resulting in visible bleeding that he referenced onstage by mocking the audience's reaction.[104] Homme issued a public apology the following day via Instagram, attributing the actions to being "lost in performance" and expressing regret without initially acknowledging the specific kick to Lauren, later clarifying it as an unintended consequence of stage disruption.[102] The incident drew widespread criticism for apparent aggression toward a working professional, amid reports of erratic tour behavior including artist disses and self-harm displays.[105] Earlier, on July 13, 2004, Homme was arrested for assault following a physical altercation with Dwarves vocalist Blag Dahlia at the Dragonfly Club in Los Angeles, stemming from Dahlia's onstage mockery of Homme during a Dwarves performance.[106] The confrontation escalated post-show, leading to charges against Homme for battery, though details on resolution remain limited in public records.[106] In February 2014, during Queens of the Stone Age shows, Homme physically removed multiple audience members who had rushed the stage, including throwing one off while playing piano during "The Vampyre of Time and Memory" in Sydney and another during a joint bill with Action Bronson in New York.[107] Homme justified the actions as maintaining performance boundaries, consistent with prior instances of verbal confrontations toward intrusive fans.[108] At the 2008 Norwegian Wood Festival in Oslo, Homme halted a performance to berate fans for throwing objects, including cups and a shoe, leading to accusations of homophobic language in his retorts, such as directing slurs toward presumed audience members.[5] Homme later addressed the claims in interviews, denying intent and framing the outburst as frustration over stage safety disruptions.[5] These episodes reflect a pattern of onstage volatility, often tied to crowd interference or equipment issues, though critics have highlighted disproportionate responses.[106]Family disputes and abuse allegations
In January 2019, Brody Dalle, Homme's wife since 2005 and mother of their three children, filed for divorce, citing his alleged alcohol and drug abuse as grounds.[85] The ensuing custody battle involved mutual restraining orders and abuse allegations from both parties.[85] In September 2021, Dalle filed for domestic violence restraining orders on behalf of their two sons, then aged 10 and 5, alleging Homme engaged in physical and verbal abuse, including blows to the head, excessive alcohol and marijuana consumption around the children, and threats.[109][110] Temporary orders were granted based on the children's written statements describing fear of their father and specific incidents of aggression.[109] Homme denied the claims, asserting they were fabricated amid the contentious divorce.[85] During a January 2022 domestic violence hearing in Los Angeles, Dalle testified that Homme head-butted her in the face on an unspecified prior occasion, causing a broken nose and requiring medical attention; she described feeling "terrified" and cited additional verbal abuse escalating from late 2018.[111][112] Homme countered with allegations that Dalle had accused him of fantasizing about her murder, which he rejected as baseless.[85] In December 2021, Dalle was sentenced to community service for contempt of court related to violations during the custody proceedings, including denying the children access to Homme.[113] By March 2023, a California court granted Homme and the three children a three-year restraining order against Dalle, citing her repeated breaches of custody orders that endangered the minors, such as unauthorized travel; Homme described the ruling as protecting the family from further harm.[114][85] No criminal convictions for abuse have been reported against Homme, and court outcomes in the custody dispute favored his position, though the allegations reflect a pattern of reciprocal claims in high-conflict family litigation often influenced by parental incentives.[85][115]Works
Discography
Homme began his recording career as the guitarist and co-founder of the stoner rock band Kyuss, contributing to four studio albums released from 1991 to 1995.[116]| Year | Title | Label |
|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Wretch | Dali/Chameleon |
| 1992 | Blues for the Red Sun | Dali |
| 1994 | Welcome to Sky Valley | Atlantic |
| 1995 | ...And the Circus Leaves Town | Atlantic |
| Year | Title | Label |
|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Queens of the Stone Age | Loosegroove/Interscope |
| 2000 | Rated R | Interscope |
| 2002 | Songs for the Deaf | Interscope |
| 2005 | Lullabies to Paralyze | Interscope |
| 2007 | Era Vulgaris | Interscope |
| 2013 | ...Like Clockwork | Matador |
| 2017 | Villains | Matador |
| 2023 | In Times New Roman... | Matador |
| Year | Title | Label |
|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Volumes 1 & 2 | Man's Ruin |
| 1999 | Volumes 3 & 4 | Low Desert Punk |
| 2001 | Volumes 5 & 6 | Interscope |
| 2003 | Volumes 7 & 8 | Interscope |
| 2003 | Volumes 11 & 12 | Interscope |
| 2019 | Volumes 13 & 14 | Matador |
| Year | Title | Label |
|---|---|---|
| 2004 | Peace Love Death Metal | Antacid Audio |
| 2008 | Heart On | Downtown |
| 2015 | Zipper Down | Downtown |
Filmography
Homme's filmography includes acting appearances, primarily cameos and portrayals of himself, as well as directing and composing contributions to documentaries and features.[74] His roles often intersect with his musical career, featuring in rock-related documentaries and films incorporating his compositions.[123]| Year | Title | Role/Contribution |
|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 | Actor (small role)[74] |
| 2007 | Hot Rod | Actor (himself/cameo)[74] |
| 2011 | Cure for Pain: The Mark Sandman Story | Appearance/interviewee[124] |
| 2012 | End of Watch | Actor (small role)[74] |
| 2017 | American Valhalla | Director, actor (himself)[78][125] |
| 2017 | In the Fade | Actor (cameo)[124] |
| 2017 | Eagles of Death Metal: Nos Amis | Appearance (performer/producer)[126] |
| 2025 | Queens of the Stone Age: Alive in the Catacombs | Appearance (lead performer, concert film)[127] |