In The Royal We, Faith No More keyboardist Roddy Bottum opens a window into a vanished world — the ecstatic, chaotic, and deeply human San Francisco of the early 1980s. Mixing fable, poetic recollection, and unflinching honesty, Bottum’s memoir, set for release on November 4, relives the rites of passage that shaped one of alternative rock’s most singular voices.
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Bottum describes his youth as one of quiet isolation — a young gay man searching for a mirror in which to see himself. That search led him north to San Francisco, a city that became both sanctuary and crucible. What he found there was a blossoming queer art scene fueled by punk, performance, and the sharp smell of risk. It was there that he met the musicians who would form Faith No More, the experimental rock band that later redefined genre boundaries and toured the world.
But Bottum’s story is not a rock cliché of ascension and fame. The Royal We confronts the inseparable counterparts of creation: addiction, loss, and the fraught beauty of survival. Heroin, he admits, shadowed much of his creative journey. The book’s pages capture this descent not through confession but transformation — each episode laced with surreal imagery and emotional clarity.
“The Royal We is a personal and heartbreaking collection,” Bottum told Rolling Stone. “It celebrates my coming out and the creation of Faith No More in the wild, pre-Internet San Francisco of the 1980s — the time of bike messengers, pacifist punks, hippies, heroin, wheatgrass, music, witchcraft, and kids who reached and aspired to unimaginable heights.”
That city — electric, dirty, magical — thrums beneath every sentence. Bottum reverently resurrects a moment before gentrification and digital homogeneity, when artists and outcasts lived on the edge of both ecstasy and despair. As the AIDS crisis unfolded, that euphoria warped into mourning, but Bottum’s tone remains one of love: for the friends lost, the songs written, and the city that made him.
Half memoir, half hallucination, The Royal We is less about celebrity than about community — a deeply queer document of belonging, disintegration, and resilience. It reminds readers that art often grows best in chaos, and that memory, even when painful, can be an act of creation in itself.
Useful links
Publisher information on The Royal We (release November 4, 2025)
Rolling Stone – Faith No More’s Roddy Bottum on “The Royal We”
Faith No More official site: https://www.fnm.com
You may also like
-
A house temple for the night: Bonne Nuit brings EG & Floorfillers to UMI’s Studio
This Friday, French agency Bonne Nuit lands in Brussels to take over the intimate Studio
-
Mons en Lumières turns the city into a luminous queer‑friendly wonderland
From 22 to 25 January 2026, Mons en Lumières is back to flood the historic
-
Renee Nicole Good: Community Mourns the Loss of a Queer Mother, Poet, and Advocate for Compassion
Renee Nicole Good, a 37‑year‑old queer writer and mother of three, was killed on Wednesday
-
Brandi Carlile, A Voice That Breaks You Open and Puts You Back Together
Rarely had a voice touched me, transformed me, filled me with both joy and sorrow
-
Thirty Years of Belgian Pride: What Now?
Thirty years of Belgian Pride means thirty years of streets reclaimed, visible bodies, and slogans
