LOS ANGELES — The members of different rock band Jane’s Addiction filed dueling lawsuits Wednesday over singer Perry Farrell’s onstage scuffle with guitarist Dave Navarro at a Boston live performance final yr, prompting the cancellation of the remainder of their reunion tour and a deliberate album.
Navarro, drummer Stephen Perkins and bassist Eric Avery sued Farrell in Los Angeles Superior Courtroom looking for not less than $10 million, alleging that Farrell’s conduct on the tour had ranged from erratic to out-of-control, culminating within the assault, the place Perry punched Navarro each on stage and backstage.
“With a collection of swift blows, he single-handedly destroyed the identify, popularity, trademark, and viability of the Band and people who constructed it,” their lawsuit says.
Farrell and his spouse, Etty Lau Farrell, sued the three bandmates in the identical courtroom Wednesday, blaming them for the battle and the violence.
“Navarro, Avery and Perkins apparently determined,” the lawsuit says, “that Jane’s Dependancy’s a long time of success ought to be jettisoned in pursuit of a yearslong bullying marketing campaign towards Farrell involving harassing him onstage throughout performances, together with, amongst different ways, attempting to undermine him by enjoying their devices at a excessive quantity in order that he couldn’t hear himself sing.”
The Farrells stated that Navarro and Avery truly assaulted them.
Perry Farrell stated he was “blindsided” when the opposite members canceled the remaining 15 exhibits of the tour and broke up the band with out consulting him, costing all of them a substantial amount of cash.
And he stated his bandmates defamed him by publicly saying after the struggle that he had psychological well being issues.
Jane’s Dependancy was a vital a part of the Los Angeles music scene within the late Eighties with their mixture of parts of punk, goth and psychedelic sounds and tradition. They grew to become a nationwide phenomenon with hits together with “Jane Says” and “Been Caught Stealing,” and thru their founding of the Lollapalooza tour, whose first incarnations they headlined in 1991.
The group broke up quickly after however returned a number of occasions in numerous incarnations. The 2024 tour was the primary time the unique members had performed collectively since 2010.
Farrell missed all seven of the group’s rehearsals within the run-up to the tour, his bandmate’s lawsuit alleges, and his conduct throughout the early exhibits ranged from erratic to out-of-control.
“He struggled night time to nighttime amid public concern for his well-being and obvious intoxication,” their lawsuit says. “Perry forgot lyrics, misplaced his place in songs he had sung for the reason that Eighties, and mumbled rants as he drank from a wine bottle onstage.”
The lawsuit says Farrell was given many options to the amount drawback, none of which he adopted.
Then on Sept. 13 at Chief Financial institution Pavilion in Boston in entrance of about 4,000 followers, movies partially captured Farrell lunging at Navarro and bumping Navarro along with his shoulder earlier than taking a swing on the guitarist along with his proper arm. Navarro is seen holding his proper arm out to maintain Farrell away earlier than Farrell is dragged away.
However Farrell’s lawsuit says the “video proof is obvious that the primary altercation onstage throughout the Boston present was hardly one-sided.” It says Navarro was intentionally enjoying loud to drown out the singer, and “what adopted was an inappropriate violent escalation by Navarro and Avery that was disproportionate to Farrell’s minor physique examine of Navarro.”
Farrell alleges that when he was being restrained by a crew member, Avery punched him within the kidneys, and that each Avery and Navarro assaulted him and his spouse backstage.
Shortly after the struggle, Farrell in a press release apologized to his bandmates, particularly Navarro, for “inexcusable conduct.”
Each lawsuits allege assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional misery and breach of contract, amongst different claims.
“Now,” Navarro, Perkins and Avery’s lawsuit says, “the Band won’t ever have their revival Tour, to have a good time a brand new album and 40+ years of deep, complicated, chart-topping recordings. As an alternative, historical past will bear in mind the Band as struggling a swift and painful demise by the hands of Farrell’s unprovoked anger and full lack of self-control.”