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APPETITE FOR DISCUSSION
Welcome to Appetite for Discussion -- a Guns N' Roses fan forum!

Please feel free to look around the forum as a guest, I hope you will find something of interest. If you want to join the discussions or contribute in other ways then you need to become a member. We especially welcome anyone who wants to share documents for our archive or would be interested in translating or transcribing articles and interviews.

Registering is free and easy.

Cheers!
SoulMonster

1995.02.12 - Los Angeles Times - Guns Sans Roses (Slash)

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1995.02.12 - Los Angeles Times - Guns Sans Roses (Slash) Empty 1995.02.12 - Los Angeles Times - Guns Sans Roses (Slash)

Post by Soulmonster Thu May 08, 2014 11:15 am

1995.02.12 - Los Angeles Times - Guns Sans Roses (Slash) 1995_021
1995.02.12 - Los Angeles Times - Guns Sans Roses (Slash) 1995_020

Guns Sans Roses : With GNR lying low, Snakepit is Slash's low-key new side project. But it's just something to do until he and Axl What's-His-Name return to the rock-star machinery.
February 12, 1995|Lorraine Ali | Lorraine Ali writes about pop music for Calendar

Guns N' Roses lead guitarist Slash may hail from one of rock's most volatile bands, but in the Hamburger Hamlet on the Sunset Strip there are no riots, groupies or shattered whiskey bottles around the 29-year-old musician.

Slash, who's often portrayed in photos and videos as a dark and sleazy character, is laid-back as he smiles and tells jokes. He avoids eye contact the way shy people frequently do, but he graciously acknowledges fans who stop by the table to say hello.

Despite his easygoing demeanor, he is hard to miss in the lunch crowd of business people. His corkscrew hair hangs in his face, a cigarette dangles from his mouth, and tattoos, nose ring and leather pants complete the Slash look --as famous to '90s rock fans as the Keith Richards look has been to audiences through the years.

Over several mixed drinks, a shot of Jagermeister and a steak, Slash (real name: Saul Hudson) says that he prefers his new album to be referred to as a "side project" rather than a solo project because he thinks the word solo stirs up the rumors of strained relations within Guns N' Roses. He simply wanted something to do while waiting for GNR to end its year-and-a-half-long hiatus.

Slash's "It's Five O'Clock Somewhere" recalls the raw, raunchy early days of GNR. His group, called Slash's Snakepit, features bassist Mike Inez from Alice in Chains and singer Eric Dover of Jellyfish, as well as GNR drummer Matt Sorum and former GNR guitarist Gilby Clarke. ( See review, Page 72. )

Just before leaving town on a promotional trip to Europe, Slash speaks about why he wanted to make his own album, his rocky relationship with singer Axl Rose, the future of Guns N' Roses and the relevance of hard-rock music in the punk-obsessed '90s.

Question: What made you want to do a solo album? Are there certain things you can't get across with Guns N' Roses?

Answer: Well, it's more like Guns is sort of an institution. . . . All the pressure on the band, the whole stadium approach. We don't really have anywhere to go but backward into clubs, and Axl doesn't want to do that, so this is a release for me.

But creatively I haven't changed direction that much. Axl has gotten very into a lot of stuff (musically) that I don't necessarily relate to, but we still work together on it. It's like we've expanded into different realms.

(Snakepit) is just a bunch of guys who don't care about the whole grand scheme of this business. It was so nice to take all that pressure off.

*

Q: When did you realize you needed to take this break?

A: A year ago when we came back from 2 1/2 years of playing stadiums. It was hard work, but I like touring, so that part wasn't so bad. But every time I get home from a long stint like that, I would get in a bad place. I wouldn't know what to do. I'm not good at sitting at home, so I would get into whatever drugs. So this time I thought, "I'm not getting strung out again." It's old. It's over. I'm not into doing that anymore.

*

Q: Because Guns N' Roses carries so much baggage, do you feel the music you got across with Snakepit is purer in a sense?

A: It takes me back to a more roots approach to things. We can play small clubs and be more intimate with the audience. But Guns is still there in the wings, and I have every aspiration to work with Guns, but now I'm touring in a van, with no limo to whisk me away to the show. Not that that's bad. . . .

*

Q: But it maybe feels more down to earth?

A: Yeah, but I don't think I ever levitated too much. I'm pretty down to earth. It's just nice to be in that environment and have the capacity to do stuff on a whim.

*

Q: But you'll always be seen as the Slash of Guns N' Roses, right?

A: Yeah. If I go out to the record store or market, especially if I wear my top hat out, it's like all of a sudden I'm Mickey Mouse, you know, that cartoon character. Everybody's like, "Whoa!"

*

Q: One of the surprises on the album is that you don't sing.

A: I hate singing. I don't have the personality for it. I tried it on the T. Rex song on "Spaghetti Incident" because Axl didn't feel comfortable singing that song, so the only way it would make it on the record was if I did it. I freaked out and felt like I had to have a guitar hanging on my shoulder just to be able to stand there in front of the mike and sing.

*

Q: So what is going on with Guns N' Roses? There's been so much talk about the group feuding and falling apart. Is the band still intact?

A: Everything's fine. Guns is just sort of sitting there. . . . I mean, all this brouhaha out there about what's going on with Guns, it's like who the (expletive) cares? We're fine. Leave us alone.

Whenever I have a few days off from Snakepit, we rehearse and write songs. After I'm done touring, which won't be long, we'll start really formulating the basis for an album. Then record, then figure out a touring situation.

*

Q: It's been a long time since the last GNR album. Do you ever fear people will lose interest in the band?

A: Guns is in no hurry to rush out the next record to keep up with current trends. I wouldn't want to sacrifice what Guns does naturally to try and keep up with the generational changes in music that happen really quickly.

*

Q: But the climate in rock has changed so much now. Guns N' Roses set the standards for hard rock of the late '80s, but now there's more of an alternative-rock vibe out there. Do you worry that your style of playing will be considered obsolete?

A: Well, there's bands that came out recently that took me back to 1975 and '76, and now it seems like we're going into '78 and '79. Guns came out in 1984, so by the time this Snakepit album comes out, we'll be hip.

That's a pipe dream (laughs). But I'm not gonna sacrifice what I do to try and keep up with, say, the Seattle scene. It's not like I have any new rap material coming out.

*

Q: What is it that draws you to a certain piece of music?

A: There's a million different labels--punk, metal, etc.--but all it needs is tons of attitude. It could be Gene Vincent or the Sex Pistols. There's a pure sense of abandon and rebellion. Energy--it's that simple.

*

Q: How have you had to change your life, or just adjust, to deal with the pressures presented by Guns N' Roses' volatile reputation?

A: To me, life in general always seems teetering on the edge of some kind of disaster anyway, so you just deal with it without a second thought. We always used to joke about Guns being one test after another, and, unfortunately, the experience you gain from the last problem conquered has to be different from the next. We just keep doing it, though.

When Guns first formed, the first press quote about us was: "They'll be great if they live long enough." That was before we were even signed. We've been carrying that kind of stigma around with us since Day One. But we still managed to come out at the end of that day as a half-decent rock band. I think that outweighs all the (expletive) around us. But still, it's a constant struggle.

*

Q: Do you see other new bands now catching the same flak you guys did?

A: No! Like we did a (Charles) Manson song, and there were 20 bands before us that did Manson songs, but we're the bad guys. It's like we're supposed to be some sort of influence on the youth of America, so that was a bad example. It's Guns N' Roses, for crissakes. When did that change? Why are we all the sudden some sort of half-ass role models for people to judge harshly? Are we chosen for that? Is one band every decade allotted to be in hell?

For me personally, I get off on the unpredictability of it all, the tension, the immediacy, the hustle, all that. Sure there's situations that come up and you say, "God, I don't need this right now!"

*

Q: As Axl's friend, how do you react to the bad press he receives?

A: I defend him within reason. A lot of the stuff, like going on (stage) late and causing riots, it's just 'cause Axl's real explosive. There's things I don't forgive him for, but because I've known him for so long, I understand him. I don't judge him.

That's why I feel that if you don't know the guy, just shut up.

*

Q: You got married nearly two years ago to longtime girlfriend Renee Soren. Has that made any difference in your life?

A: Amazingly enough, the last of the Mohicans--the least likely candidate for marriage. We were together for five years before we were married, but when it got close to the pressure of marriage, I bolted but eventually came back. I shy away from stability usually and like chaos, but because she's so stable it makes the chaotic moments all the more perfect.*


Last edited by Soulmonster on Thu Sep 05, 2019 2:49 pm; edited 2 times in total (Reason for editing : Added images)
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