The Rock ’n’ Roll Casualty Who Became a War Hero

Misfit

Lawful neutral
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/02/magazine/evermans-war.html?pagewanted=1&_r=5&hp&

I asked if he ever talked about it. Jason shook his head no. Did they find out anyway? “Always.”

The first time was at Fort Benning in 1994, in the middle of the hell of basic training. The ex-cop recruits in boot camp with him said that prisoners had more freedom than they did. There were guys who faked suicide attempts to get out of basic. But Everman never had any doubts. “I was 100 percent,” he told me. “If I wasn’t, there was no way I’d get through it.”

He had three drill sergeants, two of whom were sadists. Thank God it was the easygoing one who saw it. He was reading a magazine, when he slowly looked up and stared at Everman. Then the sergeant walked over, pointing to a page in the magazine. “Is this you?” It was a photo of the biggest band in the world, Nirvana. Kurt Cobain had just killed himself, and this was a story about his suicide. Next to Cobain was the band’s onetime second guitarist. A guy with long, strawberry blond curls. “Is this you?”

Everman exhaled. “Yes, Drill Sergeant.”

And that was only half of it. Jason Everman has the unique distinction of being the guy who was kicked out of Nirvana and Soundgarden, two rock bands that would sell roughly 100 million records combined. At 26, he wasn’t just Pete Best, the guy the Beatles left behind. He was Pete Best twice.
 

Larry Gude

Strung Out
Interesting story. However, I think it far worse to have been Pete Best than to be kicked out of those two bands. 2 minutes of watching either one of them live and I'd rather go to boot camp. Rock in roll is a whole lot tougher than we tend to think it is.

They don't fake suicide to get out of it.
 
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