
Guns N Roses
Your Booking Agent for Corporate & Private Events.
Contact Grabow Entertainment today, we have thousands of talents to choose
from for your next private or corporate party event.
At a time when pop was dominated by dance music and pop-metal,
Guns N' Roses brought raw, ugly rock & roll crashing back into the charts.
They were not nice boys; nice boys
don't play rock & roll. They were ugly, misogynist, and violent; they were also
funny, vulnerable, and occasionally sensitive, as their breakthrough hit, "Sweet
Child O' Mine," showed. While
Slash and
Izzy Stradlin ferociously spit out dueling guitar riffs worthy of
Aerosmith or
the Stones,
Axl Rose screeched out his tales of sex, drugs, and apathy in the big city.
Meanwhile, bassist
Duff McKagan and drummer Steven Adler were a limber rhythm section who kept
the music loose and powerful.
Guns N' Roses' music was basic and gritty, with a solid hard, bluesy base;
they were dark, sleazy, dirty, and honest -- everything that good hard rock and
heavy metal should be. There was something refreshing about a band who could
provoke everything from devotion to hatred, especially since both sides were
equally right. There hadn't been a hard rock band this raw or talented in years,
and they were given added weight by
Rose's primal rage, the sound of confused, frustrated white trash vying for
his piece of the pie. As the '80s became the '90s, there simply wasn't a more
interesting band around, but owing to intra-band friction and the emergence of
alternative rock,
Rose's supporting cast gradually disintegrated, as he spent years in
seclusion.
Guns N' Roses released their first EP in 1986, which led to a contract with
Geffen; the following year, the band released their debut album, Appetite for
Destruction. They started to build a following with their numerous live shows,
but the album didn't start selling until almost a year later, when MTV started
playing "Sweet Child O' Mine." Soon, both the album and single shot to number
one, and
Guns N' Roses became one of the biggest bands in the world. Their debut
single, "Welcome to the Jungle," was re-released and shot into the Top Ten, and
"Paradise City" followed in its footsteps. By the end of 1988, they released G
N' R Lies, which paired four new, acoustic-based songs (including the Top Five
hit "Patience") with their first EP. G N' R Lies' inflammatory closer, "One in a
Million," sparked intense controversy, as
Rose slipped into misogyny, bigotry, and pure violence; essentially, he
somehow managed to distill every form of prejudice and hatred into one
five-minute tune.
Guns N' Roses began work on the long-awaited follow-up to Appetite for
Destruction at the end of 1990. In October of that year, the band fired Adler,
claiming that his drug dependency caused him to play poorly; he was replaced by
Matt Sorum from
the Cult. During recording, the band added
Dizzy Reed on keyboards. By the time the sessions were finished, the new
album had become two new albums. After being delayed for nearly a year, the
albums Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II were released in September
1991. Messy but fascinating, the albums showcased a more ambitious band; while
there were still a fair number of full-throttle guitar rockers, there were stabs
at
Elton John-style balladry, acoustic blues, horn sections, female backup
singers, ten-minute art rock epics with several different sections, and a good
number of introspective, soul-searching lyrics. In short, they were now making
art; amazingly, they were successful at it. The albums sold very well initially,
but while they had seemed destined to set the pace for the decade to come, that
turned out not to be the case at all.
Nirvana's Nevermind hit number one in early 1992, suddenly making
Guns N' Roses -- with all of their pretensions, impressionistic videos,
models, and rock star excesses -- seem very uncool.
Rose handled the change by becoming a dictator, or at least a petty tyrant;
his in-concert temper tantrums became legendary, even going so far as to incite
a riot in Montreal.
Stradlin left by the end of 1991, and with his departure the band lost their
best songwriter; he was replaced by ex-Kills
for Thrills guitarist
Gilby Clarke. The band didn't fully grasp the shift in hard rock until 1993,
when they released an album of punk covers, The Spaghetti Incident?; it received
some good reviews, but the band failed to capture the reckless spirit of not
only the original versions, but their own Appetite for Destruction. By the
middle of 1994, there were rumors flying that the band was about to break up,
since
Rose wanted to pursue a new, more industrial direction and
Slash wanted to stick with their blues-inflected hard rock. The band
remained in limbo for several more years, and
Slash resurfaced in 1995 with the side project
Slash's Snakepit and an LP, It's Five O'Clock Somewhere.
Rose remained out of the spotlight, becoming a virtual recluse and doing
nothing but tinkering in the studio; he also recruited various musicians --
including
Dave Navarro,
Tommy Stinson, and ex-Nine
Inch Nails guitarist
Robin Finck -- for informal jam sessions. Remaining members were infuriated
by
Rose's inclusion of childhood friend Paul Huge in the new sessions when both
Stradlin and
Clarke were excluded from rejoining the band. And a remake of
the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil" was essentially the straw that
broke the camel's back, as
Rose cut out some of the other member's contributions and pasted Huge over
the song without consulting anyone else. By 1996,
Slash was officially out of
Guns N' Roses, leaving
Rose the lone remaining survivor from the group's heyday; rumors continued
to swirl, and still no new material was forthcoming, though
Rose did re-record Appetite for Destruction with a new lineup for rehearsal
purposes. The first new original
Guns N' Roses song in eight years, the industrial metal sludge of "Oh My God" finally
appeared on the soundtrack to the 1999
Arnold Schwarzenegger film End of Days. Soon after, Geffen issued the
two-disc Live Era: '87-'93.
2000 brought the addition of guitarists
Robin Finck (of
Nine Inch Nails) and
Buckethead. 2001 was greeted with
Guns N' Roses' first live dates in nearly seven years, as the band (who
consisted of
Rose plus guitarists
Finck,
Buckethead, bassist
Stinson, former
Primus drummer Brian "Brain" Mantia, childhood friend and guitarist Paul
Huge, and longtime
Guns N' Roses keyboardist
Dizzy Reed) played a show on New Years Eve 2000 in Las Vegas, playing as
well at the mammoth Rock in Rio festival the following month. On New Years Eve
2001, the band played almost the exact same set as the year before.
An appearance at MTV's 2002 Video Music Awards helped garner interest in the
new lineup, but a rusty performance from
Rose and an interview where he said his new album wasn't coming out anytime
soon didn't do much to further their cause. That summer, the band started on
their first tour in almost eight years, and they managed to fulfill all of their
commitments in Europe and Asia. Sadly, they caused a violent and destructive
riot in Vancouver when
Rose failed to show up for the first date of their North American tour.
While he was up to his old shenanigans with the retooled lineup, former
Stone Temple Pilots vocalist
Scott Weiland,
Slash,
Sorum, and
McKagan formed the successful
Velvet Revolver in spring 2002.
And so years passed and still no new
Guns N' Roses album, to the point where it became a joke to many. The album was long
billed as Chinese Democracy, and occasionally session recordings would
leak and make their way onto Internet file-sharing networks. A fascinating
article written by Jeff Leeds for The New York Times, published March 2005,
revealed how tangled and costly the making of the album had become. According to
the article, titled "The Most Expensive Album Never Released,"
Rose began work on the album in 1994 and racked up production costs of at
least 13 million dollars. Producers involved with the album at one time or
another include Mike Clink,
Youth,
Sean Beavan, and even Roy Thomas Baker. (Curiously,
Moby claimed to have been offered the job as well.)
Marco Beltrami and
Paul Buckmaster were allegedly brought in for orchestral arrangements, and
there was a revolving door of guitarists. In 2006, the album seemed closer to
release, as
Rose began surfacing in public and even took his band on the road for some
shows. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine & Greg Prato, All Music Guide
Contact Grabow for more information or to book
Guns N' Roses for your next corporate or private event.
Serving meeting planners since 1983
4219 Creekmeadow Drive
Dallas, TX 75287-6806
972.250.1162
888.290.1162
972.250.1165 FAX
www.grabow.biz
grabow@grabow.biz
Grabow Entertainment has a proven history since 1983 in the
corporate and private entertainment industry, and acts as an entertainment contractor and producer of private and corporate events. We do not claim or represent ourselves as the exclusive agent or management of all the artists included on our roster. We concentrate our efforts on serious inquiries of talent buyers. We are unable to answer fan club information requests, fan email, public relations contacts or questions , or personal requests for contact information for artists or speakers.
|