Queens of the Stone Age Classic Lineup Reunites

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Former Queens Of The Stone member Nick Oliveri recently spoke about his 2004 split from the band. He went on to admit that it “took some time to heal over some things.”

Nick Oliveri details the reason for the split

The musician who played bass with the desert rock kings from 1998 until 2004, made the confession while chatting to Eonmusic about “Totally”, the latest release from his band Stoner.

Oliveri and Queens Of The Stone Age founder Josh Homme have a long musical relationship dating back to the early 1990s when they were members of KYUSS. Speaking about reconnecting with Homme for a guest appearance on Queens Of The Stone Age’s “…Like Clockwork” release in 2013, Nick said; “You know, we’ve know each other for so long, it’s just weird to be at each other’s throats.”

He then went on to elaborate on his personal relationship with Homme, the bassist continued: “You can’t force somebody to play music with you. It ran its course just playing music together. We’re still friends; it’s just that we don’t make music together right now.”

Oliveri, had played a major role in the creation of Queens Of The Stone Age’s breakthrough releases “Rated R” (2000) and “Songs For The Deaf” (2002),went on to say that the band’s intense productivity contributed to his eventual split with them. “We did so much in a five-year period, in a concentrated period, so much work, that we kind of burned out on each other,” he revealed.

Nick was pragmatic about how things have turned out in the ensuing years, saying: “It is what it is, and he kind of wanted the band to go in a different direction anyway, so he’s taken it there, and that’s where he wants it to go, and it’s great for him.”

Touching on his personal feelings, he said: “Unfortunately it’s one of those things where, it used to bother me a lot, but it doesn’t anymore. It took some time to heal over some things, and for him too.”

When asked when he and Homme last saw each other, Oliveri said that it had been after the passing of former bandmate Mark Lanegan, who died in February 2022. “I just saw him at Mark Lanegan’s funeral, and we were in good spirits remembering Mark,” he said. “It was a good memorial for him. We had all the crew there — the whole band was there that was from that era, at that funeral, except [Mark]; he was the only one not there.”