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#901 Re: Guns N' Roses » gunsnroses.com (Merch store now open, SALE!) » 742 weeks ago
Hey Russ, was BBF chatting on the new website earlier? You probably missed it sleeping/recovering in time for VH.
I saw it mentioned on another site so I was curious if there was anything interesting in the conversation.
#902 Re: Guns N' Roses » Feb. 19th, 2012 - House of Blues, Chicago, IL » 742 weeks ago
Yeah Monkey I was thinking about the inconcistency of the application of the request. First I don't think Axl requests it or even knows that it happens (until he reads about it in forums).
I do believe it's someone in the Guns camp (probably one of the Lebeis') that gives the directive. Maybe it depends on Axl's mood, if he has been upset by things (maybe a new Slash lawsuit or whatver the fuck), they decide that for that night if he's not in a good mental state they will put the word out that there are to be no Slash t-shirts. They simply don't want to risk something setting him off.
Well that's one possible explanation for why it doesn't alway happen?? Just a thought.
Also Ali remember the guy that went backstage in around 2006 I think it was. In his review on mygnr he said there was a girl giving anyone with a Slash shirt etc a CD shirt to put over the top before they want backstage. I doubt the security company would be putting their hand in their pocket to buy new shirts for those guys. It's gotta have come from internal GNR somewhere. I will try and dig up the link to his review where he said it.
#903 Re: Guns N' Roses » Feb. 19th, 2012 - House of Blues, Chicago, IL » 742 weeks ago
Russ did the no Slash shirts thing rear it's head again at HOB?
#904 Re: Guns N' Roses » Niven says Stage Fright Causes Axl's Lateness » 742 weeks ago
Here's the final part of the interview. There is some cool pics on each of the individual links to the story (parts 1, 2 & 3). A couple of polaroids of Alan's that I had never seen before.
http://www.metalsludge.tv/home/index.ph … &Itemid=52
"Live and Let Die": Former Guns N' Roses Manager Tells All - Part 3
By Gerry GittelsonPHOENIX -- With Guns N’ Roses set to be inducted into the Rock N Roll Hall of Fame this coming April, METAL SLUDGE is utterly intrigued by all things GNR.
We tracked down Alan Nevin, Guns N’ Roses’ manager beginning in 1986 when the band first singed to Geffen through the “Appetite For Destruction” era until 1991, when Niven was forced out just before the release of “Use Your Illusion I” and “Use Your Illusion II.”
In this, the third part of Metal Sludge’s three-part series with the manager who guided Guns N’ Roses into America’s Led Zeppelin, Niven lets it all hang out. You can read read part one (HERE) and part two (HERE).
But this final chapter, this is like gold. This is all-new Guns N’ Roses news, the likes of which no one has ever heard before.
Compelling stuff. Onward and upward.
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Aerosmith members on drum riser with Steven Adler, Axl Rose & Slash
METAL SLUDGE: OK, here we are with part three. Backing up just a bit, we were talking about the Aerosmith/Guns N’ Roses tour, the one that Axl didn’t want to do but you kind of forced him into it, and that caused a rift. Looking back now, when you consider “Appetite For Destruction” really took off following the momentum of that tour, was that the turning point? Was that the key to Guns N’ Roses success?I don’t know if anything was a turning point. What you have is a progression of history, and what happened is what created the history.
METAL SLUDGE: There was a lot of success ahead, but some tough times ahead, too – the deaths at the Donnington concert, the ex-Jetboy guy Todd Crew OD’ing in New York City, the firing of Steven Adler, the firing of yourself. Can I ask you about some of these things?
Of course.
METAL SLUDGE: Let’s start with Steven Adler. When you and the band fired him, how tough a decision was that?
Losing Steven was frustrating and painful. But we tried and tried to pull him through. The problem was, he just could not connect to the more intricate material Axl was writing for the Illusion albums. Time and again, Slash and the others would bemoan that he just couldn't get it, and that he would play the same section the same way twice instead of fixing it.
The bullshit that he was fired for his addiction is just that – bullshit. It was a performance matter. There were other issues between Steven and Axl that certainly didn't help, and may have been sufficient within themselves to see him go. I will say the band never quite felt the same after Steven Adler was gone. He may not be the best drummer in the world, but he had a great exuberance to his playing when he was “on.”
"Losing Steven was frustrating and painful." Alan NivenMETAL SLUDGE: The deaths at the English rock festival at Donnington, when two fans were accidentally crushed to death. Your thoughts?
Slash put it best when he said that the sense of freewheeling carefreedom dissipated after that moment. It was a heartbreaking day. You don't go play rock shows for this to happen. Rock and roll is the highest means of celebrating the significance, relevance and vitality of every soul. You don't want to come home grieving for ones lost.
METAL SLUDGE: What about Axl's chronic lateness. What were some of the methods you used to try to coax him to show up on time?
Well, like I said, I understand stage fright, and the difficulty of a singer's consistent commitment to excellent performance. But being late is just plain ill-mannered and rude -- to your paying audience. In some situations, it is actually and genuinely dangerous to their safety and well-being at the paid party you are throwing for them.
METAL SLUDGE: What about your general comments about Axl's professionalism?
Would you want to be on his crew, and have to break down a stage, at 3.30 a.m. and pack it and drive it 200 miles to rebuild it for the next night's show? I worry that one day some sad accident will occur because of crew fatigue. It’s one thing to reserve the right not to be high-profile, to not pander to the insatiable appetite of superficial media, to be aloof. It’s quite another to put your own people at risk and not appreciate their contribution. Some people have little sense of appreciation and a high sense of entitlement.
But one thing I will say about Axl Rose. He was interesting. He was frustrating and beguiling, but he was never boring.
METAL SLUDGE: Oh, one thing I was wondering about: Was there ever a time when Guns N’ Roses almost broke up before all the success?
Yes, in Phoenix. There was a riot. I sat the band down and said, “Look, I made a commitment to this band, but if you decide on another singer, I’ll stand by you.” They thought about it, too.
METAL SLUDGE: What about a crazy Guns N’ Roses moment that’s never been talked about. Give us something that no one has ever heard about, Alan.
Well, OK. There was this one time, we’re at the airport, at LAX, and Izzy is showing me how he has hidden his smack in a small boom box in the battery compartment. I tell him to get rid of it now! He does. He comes back, he’s standing next to me, and we’re watching the swirl of passengers below – we were in a reserved area up top in the international building – and Izzy collapses. Yeah, he got rid of his shit – he swallowed it. He was “out” the whole flight, according to our tour manager, Doug Goldstein. I had to wait for Axl who did not show up for the flight. When Izzy woke up, he didn’t even know he was in Tokyo. He thought he was still in the Valley. Steven had to nudge him and say, “Does that look like the San Fernando Valley?”
Childhood friends from Indiana, Izzy & Axl share a fun moment on the road.
METAL SLUDGE: So go through your last day with the Guns N’ Roses, the day you were fired. What happened?I was in the Meadowlands, in New Jersey, in 1991. I got a phone call in the production office. It was Axl. He very quietly said, “I can’t work with you anymore.” I said, “Sorry to hear that. I’ll be back in Los Angeles in two days, let’s go out and have dinner together and talk about it.” That was the last time I ever spoke to him. To this day, we’ve never spoken a word to each other.
METAL SLUDGE: The others went along with it?
They had to. My understanding of the situation was that Axl stated to the band he would not go on tour if I remained as manager. Didn't give the others much of a choice there, did he?... By this point, Axl was kind of taking over. Let’s look at the first thing he did once I left: He had everyone else in the band sign the name over to him. It was a control move between Axl and Doug Goldstein. They both knew I would never stand for anything like that. Axl never even brought it up when I was the manager because he knew what I would tell him to do with it.
METAL SLUDGE: So what are you saying? Axl and Doug Goldstein had a secret alliance?
That sounds very accurate.
METAL SLUDGE: Wow.
All the prep work for “Illusions” and its tour, all the renegotiations, everything had been done. So I was then dispensable. Simple really. … I effectively sold my rights to all pipeline and future earnings for a fraction of their worth back in 1991. Such was my emotional condition at the time that all I desired was to be rid of all future dealings with Axl and Goldstein.
I did not get contrary or better advice from those whose responsibility it was to make such effort – like my attorney at the time, my accountant at the time. I am probably more disappointed in them in the longterm than members of Guns N’ Roses. Overall though, it was my own decision and thus my own responsibility, and I made it for reasons of emotional and spiritual health. I have not been paid any further monies by GNR since 1991.
I think that both Axl and Goldstein were, at that time, both controlling and greedy. Axl complained all the time that Steven Adler got a percentage of composing royalties. I had recommended that the band have a share-and-share-alike approach to such income -- as did Van Halen, Great White, and others – because my observation was that the primary factors that destroyed bands were women and arguing over differential splits of income, especially mechanical royalties. Hence, I would recommend equal sharing of royalties -- and not women!
In any case with GNR, Axl got more than anyone else, and Adler got less. The other three got the same: less than Axl and more than Adler. Ultimately, the fracture between Axl and Adler was exacerbated by the two factors that always rupture bands -- money and a woman.
Axl Rose, Doug Goldstein, John Kalodner & Slash
METAL SLUDGE: You settled for $3.5 million. How did you come up with that number, and was there a lot of bargaining. Did you start at $5 million or anything like that?I was emotionally ground and feeling down at that point. My attitude was just give me the check so I don’t have to deal with any of you again. It sounds like a lot, but $3.5 million was much less than I was already due in sales of records, certainly way less. I had an awful lot more money due to me compared to that amount. And by the time you get through with the IRS and with my silent partners, it was not a lot of money, though I never got into it for the money.
I guess I just came up with a number to sell my rights back to the band so I wouldn’t have to chase anyone for commissions. The $3.5 million, I literally just pulled that number out of the air, and it was agreed. We didn’t bother by doing due diligence and doing a forensic accounting. Let’s just say I had more than that in the pipeline, plus there was no sunset clause in our contract, so Guns N’ Roses was getting a bargain, and I was getting a clean break. I didn’t want to chase money and be fighting with people. I didn’t really care.
Guns N' Roses (minus Izzy/Adler) with new members Gilby Clarke, Matt Sorum
& Dizzy Reed at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards show in Los Angeles.
METAL SLUDGE: Looking back, between Guns N’ Roses and Great White, you were managing two multi-platinum bands at the same time. Did you have a bunch of assistants?Not at first. I knew there was a problem when I was catching a plane at LAX and passed myself catching another plane. (laughs) Looking back now, I don’t know how I did it. I was entirely on my own till the end of 1987, and by November, Great White had gone gold, and by December, Guns N’ Roses had sold a quarter of a million records. That’s doing pretty well for a one-man operation.
METAL SLUDGE: Do you ever remember another manager trying to steal away Guns N’ Roses?
No, but one time Axl asked Cliff Burnstein and Peter Mensch to be their manager, they’re at Q Prime, and they were managing Metallica. But Peter had the grace and ethics to say no. Cliff and Peter are good people. In my experience, they’re really good people, and they’re good at what they do.
Izzy Stradlin, Steven Adler, Duff McKagan, Slash & W. Axl Rose as Guns N' Roses
They went from back stage rags to sold out stadiums & became millionaires!METAL SLUDGE: Who in the band have you stayed most close with?
Izzy Stradlin. I think it’s self-evident what he thought about me leaving by the fact he left three months after I did. Later, he was involved in The Project that would become Velvet Revolver. I actually had dinner with Slash and Duff one night, and they asked me to get involved as the manager of the project, but for a number of reasons, I thought it was a bad idea. The level of expectations was just too high.
METAL SLUDGE: Oh, one last thing before I forget: Did you ever get in a fight or a physical confrontation with anyone in Guns N’ Roses?
Well, I popped Jack Russell once, and I don’t care who knows that!
#905 Re: Guns N' Roses » gunsnroses.com (Merch store now open, SALE!) » 742 weeks ago
I tried clicking on the link USPS for postage but couldn't, it was greyed out when I tried yesterday.
My cheapest postage option was over $50 lol.
#906 Re: Guns N' Roses » DJ Interview With NWI Times » 742 weeks ago
Yeah release the stuff thats already done, if it's still got Finck and Bucket on it, then so be it.
Let DJ and Ron start on something fresh.
#907 Re: Guns N' Roses » gunsnroses.com (Merch store now open, SALE!) » 742 weeks ago
I'm the same, if there s something cool and value for money I will sign up. At the moment for me there's not.
Hopefully there will be in the future.
Although you only get one cance to make a good first impression so it's been strange how they have rolled the site out in an adhoc piecemeal fashion.
#908 Guns N' Roses » DJ Interview With NWI Times » 742 weeks ago
- Aussie
- Replies: 29
New Guns' lineup coming up Roses
DJ Ashba, Guns N' Roses guitarist
"Chinese Democracy" took Axl Rose and his Guns N' Roses more than a decade to complete and, upon its release in 2008, paled with many a music fan when compared to the band's past triumphs.
But Guns guitarist DJ Ashba encourages listeners to give the set a few more listens before casting a final verdict.
"'Chinese' is a very artistic record," he said. "The more and more you listen to it, the more and more things you hear. It's really an intense record if you sit down and listen to it as a whole. It's Axl's vision. I do believe more and more people are getting it."
Stepping out of stadiums and arenas for a brief club tour, which includes a stop at Chicago's House of Blues Feb. 19, Ashba, like Rose, traces his roots to the Midwest; he was born in Monticello and reared in Fairbury, Ill., before making his way to the west coast in the ’90s.
Ashba was a seasoned hard rock veteran before he joined forces with Rose and Co.; along with releasing material on his own or in a myriad of bands, Ashba served as Motley Crue leader Nikki Sixx' creative partner in crime in his side project, Sixx:A.M., and also penned songs with Sixx for Motley Crue. In addition, he lent production expertise to albums by bands such as Drowning Pool and the Last Vegas.
In 2009, shortly after "Democracy" hit record store shelves, Ashba became the newest addition to Guns N' Roses and has spent most of his time under Rose's thumb on stages worldwide. While GNR lore is filled with tales of intra-band turmoil, this, Ashba said, is hardly the case with the current lineup.
"It feels like a family," Ashba said from his Las Vegas home base last week. "We're all up there and we've all got each other's backs. And the musicianship is just incredible. There's nothing that these guys can't play. It's a lot of fun."
Guns N' Roses has also won over fans and the music press with their live prowess since Ashba came on board. While the band's history is riddled with troubled shows, the Ashba-era band is known for shows that clock in and past the three-hour mark.
"We just wanted it to go well and we're really, really happy that it did," Ashba said of their recent live outings. "The press was really good to us, which is nice, and I think the fans finally got to really see Axl's vision. When he put together this new lineup, he put together some solid players, some of the best players out there. And it's a true honor to share the stage with all of them."
Late last year, Guns N' Roses were named as inductees to the 2012 class of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It has yet to be announced what, if any, past or present members will perform at the ceremony, which is scheduled to be held in Cleveland next month.
Ashba, however, has his fingers crossed on Rose summoning his fellow GNR bandmates into the studio in the near future for a follow-up to "Democracy."
"I'm super excited about (the prospect of recording), being a songwriter and a producer," Ashba said. "That's one thing I've been looking forward to ... hearing some of the ideas and songs that are already done that Axl has, I can't wait to get my hands on them."
Read more: http://www.nwitimes.com/entertainment/m … z1mgfD179J
#909 Re: Guns N' Roses » gunsnroses.com (Merch store now open, SALE!) » 742 weeks ago
Yeah Im somewhat with you DCK. I would rather something other than a bandanna and t-shirt. Something that I might actually use. A cool piece of artwork, limited lithograph etc might be cool. Something else more practical, fuck a stubbie holder would at least be used by me compared to a bandanna. (God knows I've got enough shithouse GNR memorabillia in this house now, gimme something practical - lol)
I'm getting a bid old to wear just any band related t-shirt, Im pretty picky now what I would or wouldn't wear. The fact I can't even see this shirt is annoying.
Then throw on top the postage to me here in Oz which is over $50 it makes for a pretty expensive exercise effectively just so I can post on a forum.
I know lots of other bands have fan club sites and pay for access etc so that's cool. But Guns have their work cut out for them. At least these other bands are active, communicate, release new stuff have lots of cool things associated with it, e.g. the Metalliclub stuff they offer is cool (those knobs were pretty damn cool) etc. Not saying Guns won't, but their history doesn't give me a lot of confidence. You gotta give some value and hopefully they will.
A rerelease of CD with the right artwork sold only to members would be cool.
Re the above posts - Im with you Riad when did Doc talk about leaking Jackie Chan or adding another track for a rerelease?
#910 Re: Guns N' Roses » Feb 16 Hiro Ballroom New York - Private Gig » 742 weeks ago
Yeah I was curious about that too.
