Late Grunge legend Chris Cornell is to be immortalised in a rock opera.

Mike McCready has paid tribute to his late Temple of the Dog bandmate

Mike McCready has paid tribute to his late Temple of the Dog bandmate

The Soundgarden frontman's Temple of the Dog bandmate, Pearl Jam's Mike McCready, is hoping to turn the project he's working on about the legendary Seattle music scene - the epicentre of Grunge with the likes of Mudhoney, Nirvana, Screaming Trees, and Soundgarden - into a stage show.

And he's confirmed that it will pay tribute to Cornell - who tragically died by suicide in 2017 aged 52 - among other legends from the scene.

He told Guitar World: “I look at him as one of the greatest singers and songwriters of all time, aside from being a friend.

“I love Chris and I’m working on a little project about the Seattle scene and a musical kind of rock opera thing. It’s just from my experience in the Seattle music scene, and he’s part of it.”

On the lengthy process, McCready added: “I’m working on a script and I’ve got about 18 songs that I’m working on, and I’m singing on it. It’s been a long journey.”

Last month, the musician shared a clip of him performing the tribute song ‘Crying Moon’ in memory of his late friend.

He captioned the clip: “This is a song I wrote as a goodbye to my friend Chris Cornell. Crying Moon is part of my process in dealing with his death. Chris opened up my world to new heights when he let me play on Temple Of The Dog. When he agreed to sing on Mad Season as part of the Sonic Evolution show with the Seattle Symphony, I literally jumped for joy! The Temple Of The Dog reunion at that show inspired us to tour, which was amazing. Playing War Pigs live with Chris was a dream. I love and miss him...”

Elsewhere, the 57-year-old guitarist revealed Pearl Jam's follow-up to 2020’s 'Gigaton' is nearing completion.

He said: “I think there’s a few tweaks here and there that have to happen, and we’re probably not going to have anything out this year.”

He hailed producer Andrew Watt for pushing them outside their comfort zone.

The 'Alive' rocker said: “Watt got us into a room and just pushed us as hard as we could be pushed, you know, it’s hard for a quote-unquote outsider to come into our world because we’ve done things a certain way. We’re open to new things, but we are also in our own world. We’ve done things for 30 years. So we know the dynamics of our band very well. But sometimes we need to get pushed and questioned, and Andrew did a great job of that.”