No one chooses to be an addict, but addicts can choose to use, and in the case of legendary singer Scott Weiland, he chose to imbibe a cocktail of drugs and alcohol that led to his untimely death.
At only 48-years young, Weiland — formerly the frontman of the Stone Temple Pilots — was found on his tour bus deceased, the apparent victim of cardiac arrest. The question in the ether since his death was, with his history of drug abuse, if substances contributed to his demise. The medical examiner for Weiland’s body confirmed many suspicions that a deadly mix of drugs did, in fact, take the talented singer from this Earth.
BREAKING: Medical examiner: Stone Temple Pilots singer Scott Weiland died due to toxic mix of drugs.
— The Associated Press (@AP) December 18, 2015
TMZ reports that it was a mixture of cocaine, ecstasy, and alcohol that led to his death. There were other drugs found on the tour bus, but they did not play a factor in the rock star’s tragic fall. The examiner also found “significant” cases of heart disease and asthma. We’ll update you as more information comes in.
Now check out…
Gain A Deeper Affection For Scott Weiland’s Music With These Deep Cuts
by John Hugar
The natural reaction to Scott Weiland’s tragic passing on Thursday night is a desire to jam to some of your favorite Stone Temple Pilots songs as a form of catharsis. I did so myself last night. But while throwing on a classic like “Interstate Love Song” or “Plush” is certainly an appropriate response, let’s not forget some of the lesser-known classics that Weiland gave us, both with STP and in his solo work (we’ll get to Velvet Revolver later). These are some of the deep cuts that show just how consistent a songwriter Scott Weiland was.
“Still Remains” – From Purple
This is a stone cold classic that found legs among STP fans despite the fact that it was never a single and never got the airplay that “Big Empty” and “Vasoline” got. One of STP’s more emotional songs, Weiland’s distressed delivery of “take a bath/I’ll drink the water that you leave” really sticks with the listener.
“Adhesive” – From Tiny Music… Songs from the Vatican Gift Shop
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUrk1lrGNp8
On STP’s third album, the band displayed their experimental side, and it worked wonders for them as they created what is often considered their masterpiece. “Adhesive” was a particularly ambitious track—a psychedelic ballad featuring some of Weiland’s darkest lyrics. The song is, perhaps, most remarkable for Dave Ferguson’s epic trumpet solo, which takes the song into an entirely new dimension. More than any other, this song refuted the notion that STP was merely a Pearl Jam clone.
“Barbarella” – From 12 Bar Blues (solo)
I’m cheating here because, technically, this track was released as a single. Sadly, though, “Barbarella” was DOA in terms of airplay, but as you can tell, it’s a bit avant-garde, so it’s absence from the airwaves is somewhat understandable. If Tiny Music showed that STP had an experimental streak, Weiland’s solo debut, 12 Bar Blues, went even further. It was one of the weirdest albums he ever recorded, but also one of the best.
“I Got You” – From 4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPFvpzlobHM
While “Sour Girl” is probably the most famous song from STP’s underrated fourth album, it’s not the only one to display the softer side of Weiland’s songwriting. A gentle, ’60s-ish tune, this song starts off fairly quietly before bursting into one of the band’s most memorable choruses. As Weiland sings, “I got you to paint the sorrow on my day/and I got you to paint the roses on my grave,” one wonders if Weiland’s singing about a co-dependent relationship with a woman, or if he’s referring to the hold his addiction had on him. Either way, it’s a beautiful and woefully underappreciated song.
“Atlanta” – From 4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8iFcLpz1E8
This album-closing ballad was another criminally underrated track from 4, which is easily the best STP album that no one ever talks about. Much like “I Got You,” the song appears to compare Weiland’s heroin addiction to a relationship with a woman; but whereas that song was only half-bleak, this song veers toward unrelenting darkness as Weiland sings, “She lives by the wall/and waits by the door.”
In light of his death, this might be a particularly tough one to listen to.
“Paralysis” – From Happy… In Galoshes (solo)
Weiland’s second solo album wasn’t quite as “out there” as the first, but he still went places he probably wouldn’t have gone to with STP. This was likely the standout track, a cut about a deteriorating relationship in which both partners meant well, yet still drove each other in the opposite direction. It was a nice song that probably could have been a hit had it come out a decade earlier, or been included on an STP album. Either way, it shows that Weiland kept writing great songs long after his ’90s prime.
“First Kiss on Mars” – From Stone Temple Pilots
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp9dR7BvuIs
STP’s self-titled comeback and Scott’s final work with the band lacked the hard-rock edge of STP’s early work, but that doesn’t stop it from being worth your time. This track, in particular, manages to simultaneously show off the more sensitive aspects of Weiland’s songwriting and his cleverness. Basically, it’s a country love song that makes numerous references to space travel. When Weiland sings about “super magic robots at the solar system,” it shouldn’t work, but somehow it does. Perhaps because he had the confidence to deliver any line, no matter how seemingly awkward it was.