Brad Arnold, the founder and lead singer of 3 Doors Down, the hard-rock band known for its early 2000s hit songs like “Kryptonite” and “Here Without You,” died on Saturday. He was 47.
His death was announced in a statement by Universal Music Enterprises, which said that Arnold had died in his sleep after having been diagnosed with cancer. In May, Arnold announced in a short video that he had Stage 4 clear cell renal cell carcinoma. The cancer had metastasized to his lungs, he said.
A representative for Arnold declined to comment beyond the statement released on Saturday.
As a founding member of 3 Doors Down — he was the band’s original drummer and the lead vocalist — Arnold “helped redefine mainstream rock music, blending post-grunge accessibility with emotionally direct songwriting and lyrical themes that resonated with everyday listeners,” the statement said.
The band broke out with the song “Kryptonite” from its debut album, “The Better Life” (2000). The song, cut with an aggressive drumbeat, pays homage to the bonds of deep, forgiving friendship. Peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, “Kryptonite” earned a Grammy nomination for best rock song and cemented the band’s place among the rock bands of the day.
Arnold wrote it during algebra class when he was 15. “I hated math and would just sit there and write every day,” Arnold told Songwriting magazine in 2022. “I would write lyrics all the time in that class. I barely passed.”
It took him another 20 minutes to set the lyrics (“I really don’t mind what happens now and then / As long as you’ll be my friend at the end”) to music with his bandmates, who initially included his friends Todd Harrell on bass and Matt Roberts on lead guitar.
“It’s weird how that works sometimes,” Arnold told The New Hampshire Union Leader in 2018. “Sometimes you can work on a song for days, and it’ll wind up being an OK song.” But the best songs, he said, “just kind of come out.”
The song’s popularity has endured across generations. When Arnold performed the tune at a concert in 2019, he found himself astonished to see a crowd of younger people jamming out to it. “I was like, ‘Yo, that’s so awesome,” he told American Songwriter in 2021. “I said, ‘That song is older than every single song person here.’”
Brad Arnold was born on Sept. 27, 1978, in Escatawpa, Miss.
He formed 3 Doors Down in 1996 with Harrell and Roberts. The guitarist Chris Henderson joined the band in 1998. Roberts died from a prescription drug overdose in 2016 at 38.
After the band released its second album, “Away From the Sun,” in 2002, the single, “When I’m Gone,” earned the group a Grammy nomination for best rock song and for best rock performance by a duo or group with vocal. Its third album, “Seventeen Days” (2005), debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard charts, selling more than 230,000 copies. The band released at least three more studio albums.
Arnold struggled with alcoholism, telling The Union Leader that “almost every problem” in his life could be traced back to alcohol. Recalling a tour in Japan, he said: “It wasn’t like I was just blacked-out drunk or did anything stupid, I just couldn’t even remember what I was doing.” He added, “I was like, ‘I have to stop this.’”
In January 2025, he marked nine years of sobriety with a post on Instagram.
Arnold was also an outspoken supporter of President Trump. 3 Doors Down performed at the president’s first inauguration in 2017 alongside other rock and country stars like Toby Keith.
Arnold told TMZ that he was proud to perform at the ceremony. “We love America,” he said. “It’s a great honor to be here.”
Performing at the presidential inauguration after a polarizing election did not seem to worry the band.
“The people that were mad about us for playing the inauguration didn’t like us anyway,” Henderson told The Detroit Metro Times in 2018. “And it didn’t do anything to our fan base but strengthen it.”
“The only pushback,” he added, “came from people on the internet that didn’t like us to begin with, and didn’t like Trump, and are never going to like Trump.”
Reviewing the performance for The New York Times, the critic Jon Caramanica wrote that the band’s songs “remain sturdy” and that Arnold’s voice “was strong, though denuded of its sleazy edges.”
A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.
Derrick Bryson Taylor is a Times reporter covering breaking news in culture and the arts.
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