Nov
16
2008
0

Ex-GUNS N’ ROSES Guitarist IZZY STRADLIN Is A Fan Of ‘Chinese Democracy’

 

Izzy Stradlin

Izzy Stradlin

According to The Pulse of Radio, former GUNS N’ ROSES guitarist Izzy Stradlin hasn’t heard all of the band’s new album, “Chinese Democracy”, but he likes what he has heard. Stradlin, who quit the group in 1991, told Punk.bz, “I have listened to some tracks off the record and I enjoyed them.” As for whether his former bandmate and sole remaining original GUNS member Axl Rose was responsible for the break-up of the classic lineup, Stradlin said, “Axl is a very complicated guy, but very talented.”

Stradlin, who has continued to perform and record as a solo artist since leaving GUNS, opened up about why he quit the band, explaining, “Our lifestyle was very self-destructive. I was seeing how my friends were dying, and after some time of that I decided that I’d had enough. I didn’t want to continue being a part of that. Now we’re all clean, and that’s great.”

The guitarist says he “never imagined” that GUNS N’ ROSES would reach the heights of success that it hit following the release of its 1987 debut album, “Appetite For Destruction”.

Stradlin added that he has remained friends with the other former members of GUNS N’ ROSES. Bassist Duff McKagan played on his most recent album and he also speaks with guitarist Slash, although a planned show together fell through. Stradlin also made a guest appearance at aGUNS N’ ROSES gig in New York City two years ago.

“Chinese Democracy” goes on sale November 23 exclusively through Best Buy.

 

source: blabbermouth.net

Nov
13
2008
0

GUNS N’ ROSES’ ‘Chinese Democracy’ Single Tops iTunes Charts

Chinese Democracy single

Chinese Democracy single

GUNS N’ ROSES‘ new single, “Chinese Democracy”, has topped the general iTunes Music Store chart in Greece, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Finland. In addition to being the No. 1 song and No. 1 rock song in the above countries, it’s the No. 1 rock song in the iTunes Music Stores in the U.S., Canada, France and the U.K.

GUNS N’ ROSES‘ new album, “Chinese Democracy”, will be released in the U.S. on November 23 exclusively through Best Buy. The 14-song set will be available on CD, vinyl, and as a download. 

One new song, “Shackler’s Revenge”, debuted on September 14 through the Rock Band 2 video game, while another, called “If The World”, can be heard in the new film “Body of Lies”.

“Chinese Democracy” is the first album of new material from GUNS N’ ROSES since 1991’s “Use Your Illusion I” and “Use Your Illusion II”.

source: blabbermouth.net

Nov
11
2008
0

RollingStone reviews Chinese Democracy

Chinese Democracy

Chinese Democracy

Let’s get right to it: The first Guns n’ Roses album of new, original songs since the first Bush administration is a great, audacious, unhinged and uncompromising hard-rock record. In other words, it sounds a lot like the Guns n’ Roses you know. At times, it’s the clenched-fist five that made 1987’s perfect storm, Appetite for Destruction; more often, it’s the one sprawled across the maxed-out CDs of 1991’s Use Your Illusion I and II, but here compressed into a convulsive single disc of supershred guitars, orchestral fanfares, hip-hop electronics, metallic tabernacle choirs and Axl Rose’s still-virile, rusted-siren singing.

 

 

If Rose ever had a moment’s doubt or repentance over what Chinese Democracy has cost him in time (13 years), money (14 studios are listed in the credits) and body count — including the exit of every other founding member of the band — he left no room for it in these 14 songs. “I bet you think I’m doin’ this all for my health,” Rose cracks through the saturation-bombing guitars in “I.R.S.,” one of several glancing references on the album to what he knows a lot of people think of him: that Rose, now 46, has spent the last third of his life running off the rails, in half-light. But when he snaps, “All things are possible/I am unstoppable,” in the thumper “Scraped,” that’s not loony hubris — just a good old rock & roll “fuck you,” the kind that made him and the old band hot and famous in the first place.

Something else Rose broadcasts over and over onChinese Democracy: Restraint is for suckers. There is plenty of familiar guitar firepower — the stabbing-dagger lick that opens the first track, “Chinese Democracy,” the sand-devil fuzz in “Riad N’ the Bedouins” and the looping squeals over the grand anguish of “Street of Dreams.” But what Slash and Izzy Stradlin used to do with two guitars now takes a wall of ‘em. On some tracks, Rose has up to five guys — Robin Finck, Buckethead, Paul Tobias, Ron “Bumblefoot” Thal and Richard Fortus — riffing and soloing in broad, saw-toothed blurs. And that’s no drag. I still think the wild, superstuffed “Oh My God” — the early Chinese Democracy track wasted on the 1999 End of Dayssoundtrack — beats everything on Guns n’ Roses’ 1993 covers album, The Spaghetti Incident?

Most of these songs also go through multiple U-turns in personality, as if Rose kept trying new approaches to a hook or a bridge and then decided, “What the hell, they’re all cool.” “Better” starts with what sounds like hip-hop voicemail — severely pinched guitar, drum machine and a near-falsetto Rose (”No one ever told me when/I was alone/They just thought I’d know better”) — before blowing up into vintage Sunset Strip wallop. “If the World” has Buckethead plucking acoustic Spanish guitar over a blaxploitation-film groove, while Rose shows that he still holds a long-breath vowel — part torture victim, part screaming jet — like no other rock singer.

And there is so much going on in “There Was a Time” — strings and Mellotron, a full-strength choir and Rose’s overdubbed sour-growl harmonies, wah-wah guitar and a false ending (more choir) — that it’s easy to believe Rose spent most of the past decade on that arrangement alone. But it is never a mess, more like a loud mass of bad memories and hard lessons. In the first lines, Rose goes back to a beginning much like his own — “Broken glass and cigarettes/ Writin’ on the wall/It was a bargain for the summer/An’ I thought I had it all” — then piles on the wreckage along with the orchestra and guitars. By the end, it’s one big melt of missing and kiss-off (”If I could go back in time . . . But I don’t want to know it now”). If this is the Guns n’ Roses that Rose kept hearing in his head all this time, it is obvious why two guitars, bass and drums were never going to be enough.

It is plain, too, that he thinks this Guns n’ Roses is aband, as much as the one that recorded “Welcome to the Jungle,” “Sweet Child O’ Mine,” “Used to Love Her” and “Civil War.” The voluminous credits that come withChinese Democracy certainly give detailed credit where it is due. My favorite: “Initial arrangement suggestions: Youth on ‘Madagascar.” Rose takes the big one — “Lyrics N’ Melodies by Axl Rose” — but shares full-song bylines with other players on all but one track. Bassist Tommy Stinson plays on nearly every song, and keyboardist Dizzy Reed, the only survivor from theIllusion lineup, does the Elton John-style piano honors on “Street of Dreams.”

But Rose still sings a lot about the power of sheer, solitary will even when he throws himself into a bigger fight, like “Chinese Democracy.” In “Madagascar,” which Rose has played live for several years now, he samples both Dr. Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech and dialogue from Cool Hand Luke. And at the end of the album, on the bluntly titled “Prostitute,” Rose veers from an almost conversational tenor, over a ticking-bomb shuffle, to five-guitar barrage, orchestral lightning and righteous howl: “Ask yourself/Why I would choose/To prostitute myself/To live with fortune and shame.” To him, the long march to Chinese Democracy was not about paranoia and control. It was about saying “I won’t” when everyone else insisted, “You must.” You may debate whether any rock record is worth that extreme self-indulgence. Actually, the most rock & roll thing about Chinese Democracy is he doesn’t care if you do.

Oct
30
2008
0

RollingStone Magazine: James Hetfield gives Axl props

 

James Hetfield

James Hetfield

The current issue of Rolling Stone Magazine, Issue 1065 has a Q&A with James Hetfield of Metallica. Here’s the important question:

 

Have you listened to the leaked tracks from “Chinese Democracy”?

I haven’t.  I’m sure Lars has heard it - he’s a big-time Axl follower [laughs].  He’s followed him around and annoyed him, trying to capture some of the rock-star-ness. We played a festival with them in Germany in 2006 - not on the exact same day - and we went down and watched them.  The guy’s a good frontman.  There’s a lot of extra stuff that goes along with that, but he is talented.

Thanks to: GypsySoul @ heretodaygonetohell.com

Oct
24
2008
0

Slash interviewed on WBCN. Comments on Chinese Democracy

 

Slash

Slash

Former Guns N’ Roses guitarrist Slash was interviewed yes on WBCN, by Toucher and Rich of the Boston radio station WBCN 104.1 FM. 

 

During the interview, the DJ played Chinese Democracy, and first time listener Slash commented “That sounds cool,” ”It’s good to hear [Axl Rose's] voice, you know?!”.

Check out the interview @ www.wbcn.com

source: www.wbcn.com

Oct
21
2008
0

L.A. man pleads innocent in Guns N’ Roses piracy

Axl Rose

Axl Rose

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A man accused of placing songs on the Internet from an unreleased album by the rock band Guns N’ Roses pleaded innocent on Monday in federal court.

Kevin Cogill, 27, is charged with violating federal copyright law.

Cogill pleaded innocent to the charge on Monday and no date has been set for the trial, said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

The FBI says that Cogill posted nine tracks from Guns N’ Roses’ upcoming album “Chinese Democracy” on a Web site called antiquiet.com (http://www.antiquiet.com).

Cogill was arrested in August at his Los Angeles home and released on bail the same day. He faces three years in federal prison if convicted, and five years if the court finds he posted the songs for commercial gain.

Guns N’ Roses said in a statement at the time of the arrest that while it did not condone Coghill’s actions, “our interest is in the original source” of the material. Mrozek declined to comment on whether there would be any additional arrests.

One of the biggest bands to emerge from the American metal scene in the late 1980s, Guns N’ Roses has not released an album of new material in more than 17 years. “Chinese Democracy” will reportedly come out later next month, but the project has been delayed multiple times over the years as singer Axl Rose shed all his original bandmates.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Dean Goodman)

source: Reuters

Oct
07
2008
0

Rolling Stone Readers’ Rock List: Sports Anthems

 

Guns N' Roses

Guns N

Over at RollingStone.com we found some interesting news…

 

“With the baseball playoffs in full swing, last week we asked the readers to tell us their sports anthems. After sorting through information like the Vancouver Canucks’ goal song and what Dio song the Phillies’ Pat Burrell comes to the plate to, we can reveal that Guns N’ Roses’ “Welcome to the Jungle” is your favorite stadium rocker, beating out a pair of tunes by AC/DC, Metallica and the White Stripes song that has become the unofficial theme song for soccer hooligans. Check out the list below:

1. Guns N’ Roses — “Welcome to the Jungle”
2. AC/DC — “Thunderstruck”
3. Metallica — “Enter Sandman”
4. AC/DC — “Hell’s Bells”
5. White Stripes — “Seven Nation Army”
6. Ozzy Osbourne — “Crazy Train”
7. U2 — “Vertigo”
8. Ramones — “Blitzkrieg Bop”
9. Todd Rundgren — “Bang The Drum All Day”
10. House of Pain — “Jump Around””

Oct
06
2008
0

Jesse Hughes of Eagles of Death Metal Interview: talks about touring with the Hives, opening for Guns N Roses, new EODM album

 

Jesse Hughes

Jesse Hughes

Eagles of Death Metal are a cool straight-up rock band out of Indio, CA. Their lead singer Jesse Hughes is originally from South Carolina but he rocks like pure Americana (what the hell did I mean by that?) Anyways, Josh Homme (lead singer of Queens Of The Stone Age) plays drums for EODM except on some tours. Foo Fighters lead singer, Dave Grohl, is a big fan of the band and so is Jack Black. In fact, both appeared in EODM’s video for “I Want You So Hard (Boy’s Bad News). Eagles of Death Metal opened for Guns N Roses a few years ago and got kicked off the tour because Axl Rose decided that he didn’t like them anymore. Jesse sat down with Blip TV to talk about that, touring with The Hives and EODM’s new album. Check it out.

source: theaudioperv.com

 


 

Oct
06
2008
0

BLIND MELON: Excerpts From ‘A Devil On One Shoulder’ Book Available

 

Shannon Hoon

Shannon Hoon

Two excerpts from the book “A Devil on One Shoulder and an Angel on the Other: The Story of Shannon Hoon and Blind Melon” have been posted online, both of them dealing with GUNS N’ ROSES frontman Axl Rose and BLIND MELON’s tour with GN’R in 1993:

* The chapter “Axl and Shannon” can be found at this location.
* Click here for an excerpt from the chapter “Crammed in a Van Tour”(which includes touring with GUNS N’ ROSES in 1993)

“A Devil on One Shoulder” author Greg Prato was interviewed recently for the “Blind Melon Forum Radio Show”. In addition to the taking part in the chat, he picked out his favorite BLIND MELON songs, and read parts of the book. Download the Prato portion of the show as an MP3 audio file at this location.

One of the most tragic stories of the 1990s rock world was that of singerShannon Hoon and his band, BLIND MELON. Despite scoring one of the decade’s most enduring singles and videos, “No Rain”, and a quadruple-platinum hit with their 1992 self-titled debut album (in addition to touring alongside rock’s biggest names), Hoon could not overcome a dangerous drug addiction. Only two records into a promising career, Hoon was dead from an overdose at the age of 28. “A Devil on One Shoulder and an Angel on the Other” is the first book to tell the group’s story — culled from over 50 exclusive interviews, and featuring many never-before-seen photos.

“A Devil on One Shoulder” was written by journalist Greg Prato, whose work as appeared in a variety of sites and magazines, including All Music GuideBillboard.comRollingStone.com, and Classic Rock magazine, among others. A longtime fan of the band, Greg has been working on this book — with the help of the surviving members of the band — for the past few years. In the process, Greg conducted interviews with such renowned rock names as Duff McKagan (VELVET REVOLVERGUNS N’ ROSES), Gilby Clarke (GUNS N’ ROSES), Mike Clink (GUNS N’ ROSESproducer), Kim Thayil (SOUNDGARDEN), Jerry Cantrell (ALICE IN CHAINS), Mike Inez (ALICE IN CHAINS), and Craig Ross (LENNY KRAVITZ), plus family and friends — including Shannon’s mother, Nel Hoon.

While it will obviously appeal to fans of Shannon and BLIND MELON, this 344-page paperback book (whose title comes from a phrase that guitarist Rogers Stevens once said to describe Shannon) will also be of interest to fans of GUNS N’ ROSES, as Shannon’s friendship with Axl Rose is chronicled throughout the years, as well as memories of whenMELON opened shows for GN’R in 1993 (at their out-of-control peak). Elsewhere, you’ll find additional stories on SOUNDGARDENALICE IN CHAINSNEIL YOUNGLENNY KRAVITZPAGE & PLANT, and THE ROLLING STONES — all of which are bands that BLIND MELON toured with. And of course, new light is shed directly on this great yet often underrated band, as you get the inside scoop behind the three classicHoon-era albums (the aforementioned “Blind Melon”, 1995’s “Soup”, and 1996’s posthumous release, “Nico”), the story behind “No Rain”, the colorful yet tragic life of Shannon, and the group’s recent rebirth, with new singer Travis Warren (and new album, 2008’s “For My Friends”).

The book is available through www.lulu.com for $19.99 (U.S.), and there are samples to read at the site (including a full chapter, titled “Axl and Shannon”). BLIND MELON and Shannon Hoon’s unforgettable story certainly deserves to be told, and “A Devil on One Shoulder and an Angel on the Other” covers all the bases. “I am honored that Greg has painstakingly accounted for what the hell happened during those crazy times. He has summed up all the chaos, jubilation, and paranoia that isBLIND MELON,” stated Brad SmithBLIND MELON bassist.

For more information, go to this location (to access the sample chapter, click on the book’s title at the top of the page).

source: blabbermouth.net

Written by Lourenzo in: Axl Rose, GN'R Mentions | Tags: , ,
Sep
30
2008
0

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