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src:All Music Guide
William Bruce Rose was born on February 6, 1962, in Lafayette, IN, and
suffered sexual abuse from his biological father and physical abuse from his
eventual stepfather at an early age (Rose changed his name to William Bailey
after his mother remarried).
Rose was also an
outcast in school, where he was picked on for being "different," but found
solace in singing with his school and church vocal choir and eventually rock
music.
His rough teenage years were eased a bit when he befriended a Keith
Richards-worshipping chap by the name of Jeff Isbell, who shared
Rose's interest in
music. Isbell left Indiana for the streets of Los Angeles in the early '80s
with hopes of forming a rock band, and Rose followed shortly thereafter,
changing his name to
W. Axl Rose (while
Isbell soon adopted the name Izzy Stradlin).
The L.A. rock music scene at the time was split done the center between
rough and ready punk rock and hair spray-soaked glam rock/heavy metal, and
Rose wanted to form an outfit that borrowed equally from each genre.
Stradlin and Rose plowed through several outfits that went nowhere
(Hollywood Rose being one), before hooking up with fellow streetwise rockers
Slash (guitar, real name Saul Hudson), Duff McKagan (bass), and Steven Adler
(drums). After slugging it out on the Sunset Strip and honing their act, the
newly christened Guns N' Roses signed a recording contract with Geffen
Records after issuing an independent live EP (1986's Live Like a Suicide).
Their full-length debut, Appetite for Destruction' was released a year later
and at first the public didn't know what to make of the album or of the
band. Slowly but surely, rock's fickle audience came around and by the
summer of 1988, Guns N' Roses was fast becoming one of the world's top rock
bands (on the strength of such hit singles/MTV-saturated videos as "Welcome
to the Jungle," "Sweet Child O' Mine," and "Paradise City").
But with fame came death-defying drug and alcohol abuse amongst all five
bandmembers (as well as last-minute tour/concert cancellations) -- it
appeared as though the more successful they became, the more problems arose.
To fill the void for a new G N' R album, Geffen put out the 8-track stop-gap
EP, G N' R Lies, in late 1988, amidst widespread rumors of an impending band
breakup. The album was another big seller (on the strength of the hit
acoustic ballad "Patience") but Axl Rose came under immense fire and
criticism for the song "One in a Million," in which Rose had derogatory
comments for gays, blacks, and immigrants. Undeterred, Rose and co.
regrouped and worked on their much-anticipated true follow-up to Appetite,
which seemed to always miss its numerous projected release dates. Adler was
sacked during the recording, while 1991 finally saw the release of the
two-part sophomore effort Use Your Illusion. Both discs were massive hits,
but the band appeared to have reinvented themselves as a bombastic and
indulgent rock act, often recalling the music that their punk rock idols
attempted to destroy in the mid-'70s. A mammoth two-year tour followed (with
Stradlin leaving the band mid-tour) in which G N' R found themselves losing
their validity as a streetwise rock act in the face of the stripped down
grunge movement (which included such acts as Nirvana, Pearl Jam,
Soundgarden,etc.).
It only made Rose seem more out of touch from reality when he would hold the
band up from going onstage, resulting in ridiculous multi-hour delays. His
public image took a few more shots when several concerts were marred by
audience riots caused by Rose's notorious hijinks and when he tried to pick
a fight with Nirvana leader Kurt Cobain backstage at the 1992 MTV Video
Music Awards for disparaging (yet quite on the mark) remarks Cobain made
about Rose in the press. When the tour finally ground to a halt in 1993, G
N' R issued a lukewarm-received collection of covers, The Spaghetti
Incident, and took a well-deserved rest. But after numerous aborted
writing/recording sessions for their third proper studio album, the
remaining other two original members (Slash and McKagan) either quit the
band or were dismissed by Rose. Rose had been granted full ownership of the
name Guns N' Roses, so he slowly formed a whole new band around him.
With rumors running rampant that he had become a bloated, bald, and
drug-addled hermit (due to the fact that he did not grant a single interview
between 1994-1999, staying completely out of the spotlight), Axl Rose
continued to work on G N' R's next release himself. 1999 saw G N' R's first
new song released in nearly eight years -- the industrial rocker "Oh My God"
from the End of Days soundtrack, as well as a live compilation of old-school
G N' R tracks (Live Era: '87-'93), yet both came and went without much
fanfare. But all that changed when Rose and his new cohorts (which included
ex-Nine Inch Nails guitarist Robin Finck, mask-wearing solo guitarist
Buckethead, ex-Replacements bassist Tommy Stinson, ex-Primus drummer Brian
Mantia, plus longtime G N' R keyboardist Dizzy Reed) played their first live
shows together in early 2001, receiving unanimously favorable reviews. With
a world tour booked and album nearing completion (reportedly to be titled
Chinese Democracy), the G N' R/Axl Rose-hype machine appeared to be building
up to a feverish pitch once again. ~ Greg
Prato, All Music Guide
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