BILLY CORGAN on KURT COBAIN's death: "I cried because I lost my greatest opponent" | Revolver

BILLY CORGAN on KURT COBAIN's death: "I cried because I lost my greatest opponent"

Smashing Pumpkins bandleader had competitive relationship with late grunge icon
Billy Corgan Kurt Cobain split 1600x900

Smashing Pumpkins bandleader Billy Corgan has opened up about the sense of competition he had toward late Nirvana mastermind Kurt Cobain. In a new conversation with Zane Lowe on Apple Music 1, the grunge vet revealed that when Cobain tragically died in 1994, he cried "because I lost my greatest opponent."

Corgan prefaced this comment by gushing over Cobain's talent as a songwriter, and underscoring how much respect he had for the grunge pioneer as a musician. But he also characterized his relationship with Cobain in sport-like terms, and essentially said that when he died, Corgan lost his main competitor in the battle for alt-rock supremacy.

"When Kurt died, I cried because I lost my greatest opponent," Corgan told Lowe. "I want to beat the best. I don't want to win the championship because it's just me and a bunch of gabronis, to use a wrestling term. It's like, Michael Jordan, arguably the greatest sports competitor I'll ever see in my lifetime? I mean, you want to talk about an alpha. That guy wanted to win the valet tip. You know what I mean?

"I want the Pumpkins standing on the top of the heap of our generation," Corgan said earlier in the interview. "If that means I got to write 800 songs to do it, I'll do it. I ain't shy about that.

"I will go down always as saying, Kurt was the most talented guy of our generation. Kurt had so much talent. It's like frightening. It was like a John Lennon level of talent, where you're like, how can you have all this talent? Or Prince, right? But Kurt's not here, sadly. So I looked around, I was like, 'All right, well, I could beat the rest of them for sure.'"

See the full interview with Lowe below, and then watch Corgan pick the 11 greatest metal bands ever.