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  1. Former Hole drummer shares what life was like with Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love in her memoir, Hit So Hard.

  2. 21 de may. de 2020 · Duration: 1 hour 43 minutes. Availability: Worldwide. Details the life and near death story of Patty Schemel, drummer of the seminal '90s alternative rock band Hole, and charts her early life, friendship with Kurt Cobain, rise to fame and eventual spiral into an addiction that left her homeless on the streets of Los Angeles before she turned ...

  3. Patricia Theresa Schemel (b. 24 April 1967), sister of Larry Schemel, played the drums on the albums Live Through This and Celebrity Skin by Hole (2).She was replaced by Samantha Maloney for the Celebrity Skin tour. She performed on Courtney Love's solo album, America's Sweetheart, for which she received some partial songwriting credits. In addition, she recorded with Juliette Lewis's punk ...

  4. 6 de sept. de 2018 · Hole drummer Patty Schemel’s brutally honest memoir, Hit So Hard, looks at the dark side of rock ‘n’ roll stardom, drug addiction and depression, but moves toward the light – sobriety and sanity. Drummer Patty Schemel opens her memoir, Hit So Hard, joking about growing up with sober parents who held AA meetings in their humble home ...

  5. 16 de ene. de 2018 · A lot of people wish they could’ve been a fly on the wall during the 90s grunge scene. Patty Schemel lived it. As the drummer for Hole, Schemel spent years on the road with Courtney Love and Kurt Cobain, and documented both their musical and their personal experiences together. “I got a video camera for Christmas, and I just took it on the road with me,” Schemel explains.

  6. 2 de feb. de 2018 · Patty Schemel, the great drummer for the rock group Hole, battled with addiction for over 30 years. Now, after 12 years of sobriety, her memoir Hit So Hard i...

  7. 30 de ene. de 2018 · From the time Patty Schemel was born, her parents were in Alcoholics Anonymous, hosting meetings in their home forty-five miles north of Seattle.Schemel likens the experience to being brought up religious. In the opening of her recent memoir, Hit So Hard —a follow-up of sorts to the 2011 documentary of the same name —she writes, “our guidelines for living were based on the Twelve Steps.”