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« on: March 04, 2005, 07:30:43 PM »

The Most Expensive Album Never Made

Axl Rose singing at the MTV Music Awards in September 2002.
By JEFF LEEDS

Published: March 6, 2005


Guns N' Roses receiving an MTV award in 1992, with Axl Rose, center, and Slash at the podium. ?

EST HOLLYWOOD, Calif.

IN the faint red light of the Rainbow Bar and Grill, Tom Zutaut sips at his drink and spills a bit of regret. It's been 19 years since he signed the then-unknown rock band Guns N' Roses to a contract with Geffen Records, where they turned into multiplatinum superstars. Back in those days, the Rainbow was their hangout of choice.

Years after he left the label, he returned in 2001 to try to coax Axl Rose, the band's magnetic leader and by then its only original member, into completing one of the most highly anticipated albums in the industry: an opus tentatively titled "Chinese Democacy." The deadline for turning in the album had passed two years earlier.

"I really thought I could get him to deliver the record," said Mr. Zutaut, who spent nine months trying. "And we got close."

He is speaking in relative terms. Mr. Zutaut is but one of a long series of executives and producers brought in over the years to try to conjure up the maddeningly elusive album - to cajole the reclusive rock star into composing, singing, recording, even just showing up. Like everyone else who had tried, or has tried since, Mr. Zutaut came away empty-handed.

Mr. Rose began work on the album in 1994, recording in fits and starts with an ever-changing roster of musicians, marching through at least three recording studios, four producers and a decade of music business turmoil. The singer, whose management said he could not be reached for comment for this article, went through turmoil of his own during that period, battling lawsuits and personal demons, retreating from the limelight only to be followed by gossip about his rumored interest in plastic surgery and "past-life regression" therapy.

Along the way, he has racked up more than $13 million in production costs, according to Geffen documents, ranking his unfinished masterpiece as probably the most expensive recording never released. As the production has dragged on, it has revealed one of the music industry's basic weaknesses: the more record companies rely on proven stars like Mr. Rose, the less it can control them.

It's a story that applies to the creation of almost every major album. But in the case of "Chinese Democracy," it has a stark ending: the singer who cast himself as a master of predatory Hollywood in the hit song "Welcome to the Jungle" has come to be known instead as the keeper of the industry's most notorious white elephant.

AT THE STROKE of midnight on Sept. 17, 1991, Guns N' Roses was the biggest band in the world. Hundreds of record stores had stayed open late or re-opened in order to cash in on the first sales that night of "Use Your Illusion," Vols. 1 and 2, the band's new twin albums. On the strength of that promotion - and the coattails of the band's blockbuster 1987 debut - the band set a record: for the first time in rock history, two albums from one act opened at Nos. 1 and 2 on Billboards national album sales chart. But by 1994 their fortunes had changed. After years of drug addiction, lyric controversies, onstage tantrums and occasional fan riots, their members had started to drift away, their lead singer had become bogged down in personal lawsuits, and "The Spaghetti Incident?," their collection of cover versions of classic punk songs, had been released to mixed reviews and disappointing sales.

The members of the band - what was left of it - reconvened at the Complex, a Los Angeles studio, in a massive soundstage with a pool table and a Guns N' Roses-themed pinball machine, to prepare for their next album, which Geffen executives expected to release some time the following year. But they quickly began suffering from an ailment that has proved fatal to bands from time immemorial: boredom.

"They had enough money that they didn't have to do anything," said a longtime observer of the band, one of the 30 people involved with the album who spoke for this article. He spoke on the condition of anonymity, as did many others who had signed a confidentiality agreement while working with Mr. Rose. "You couldn't get everyone in the room at the same time."

Mr. Rose had appointed himself the leader of the project, but he didn't seem to know where to lead. As Slash, the band's longtime guitarist, said recently, in reference to the singer's songwriting style: "It seemed like a dictatorship. We didn't spend a lot of time collaborating. He'd sit back in the chair, watching. There'd be a riff here, a riff there. But I didn't know where it was going."

Geffen was riding toward an uncertain destiny as well: its founder, David Geffen, retired, and its corporate parent, MCA Inc., was sold to the liquor giant Seagram, led by Edgar Bronfman Jr. With all those changes swirling, and with old Guns N' Roses material still ringing up millions in new sales, executives decided to leave the band alone to write and record.

A cover of the Rolling Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil," however, which was released as part of a movie soundtrack, would be the last addition to the original band's catalog. Slash quit the band in 1996; the drummer Matt Sorum and the bassist Duff McKagan were the next to go. Of the founding members, that left just Mr. Rose. But instead of starting something new, he chose to keep the band's name and repopulate it with new musicians. Geffen wasn't in much of a position to deny him. The label was on a cold streak and wagered that fans would still flock to the singer, even if a band had to be rebuilt around him.

Geffen wasn't in much of a position to prod him forward, either. In 1997 Todd Sullivan, who was then a talent executive for the company, sent Mr. Rose a sampling of CD's produced by different people, and encouraged him to choose one to work on "Chinese Democracy." Mr. Sullivan says he received a call informing him that Mr. Rose had run over the albums with a car.

The singer had encouraged everyone in the band's camp to record their ideas for riffs and jams, hours and hours of song fragments that he hoped to process into full compositions. "Most of the stuff he had played me was just sketches," Mr. Sullivan recalled. "I said, 'Look, Axl, this is some really great, promising stuff here. Why don't you consider just bearing down and completing some of these songs?' He goes, 'Hmm, bear down and complete some of these songs?' Next day I get a call from Eddie" - Eddie Rosenblatt, the Geffen chairman - "saying I was off the project."

Around the start of 1998 Mr. Rose moved the band that he had assembled to Rumbo Recorders, a three-room studio deep in the San Fernando Valley where Guns N' Roses had recorded parts for its blockbuster debut, "Appetite for Destruction." The crew turned the studio into a rock star's playground: tapestries, green and yellow lights, state-of-the-art computer equipment and as many as 60 guitars at the ready, according to people involved in the production. But Mr. Rose wasn't there for fun and games. "What Axl wanted to do," one recording expert who was there recalls, "was to make the best record that had ever been made. It's an impossible task. You could go on infinitely, which is what they've done."

As time and dollars flew by, pressure mounted at Geffen. The label's dry spell lingered, making them more dependent than ever on new music from their heavy hitters. "The Hail Mary that's going to save the game," the recording expert who spoke on the condition of anonymity explained, "is a Guns N' Roses record. It keeps not coming and not coming." The label paid Mr. Rose $1 million to press on with the album, with the unusual promise of another $1 million if he delivered "Chinese Democracy" by March 1 of the following year. Geffen also offered one of the producers Mr. Rose had recently hired extra royalties if the recording came in before that.

He never collected. The producer, who goes by the name Youth (his real name is Martin Glover), started visiting the singer in the pool room of his secluded Malibu estate, to try to help him focus on composing. But that collaboration didn't go any better than his predecessors' had. "He kind of pulled out, said 'I'm not ready,' " Youth said. "He was quite isolated. There weren't very many people I think he could trust. It was very difficult to penetrate the walls he'd built up."

Youth's replacement was Sean Beavan - a producer who had previously worked with industrial-rock acts like Marilyn Manson and Nine Inch Nails - and under his care the riffs and song fragments that the band had recorded slowly began to take shape. But costs were spiraling out of control. The crew rented one piece of specialized equipment, for example, for more than two years - at a cost well into six figures - and used it for perhaps 30 days, according to one person involved with the production.

Mr. Rose appeared sporadically, some weeks just one or two days, some weeks not at all. "It was unorganized chaos," the same person said. "There was never a system to this. And in between, there were always parties to go to, different computers Axl was trying out or buying. There were times when we didn't record things for weeks."
« Last Edit: March 05, 2005, 05:24:05 PM by Booker Floyd » Logged
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« Reply #1 on: March 04, 2005, 07:31:02 PM »

In late 1999 he invited Rolling Stone to preview about a dozen tracks. The magazine reported the album appeared "loosely scheduled" for release in the summer of 2000. In fact, Mr. Rose's visits to the studio had become so irregular, according to several executives and musicians involved with the band, that an engineer working with him, Billy Howerdel, and the band's drummer, Josh Freese, found time during that period to start their own project, the band A Perfect Circle, and to begin recording an album, "Mer de Noms," which went on to sell 1.7 million copies.

Label executives still clung to the idea that if they could just bring in the right producer, he could find a way to finish the album and finally bring a return on their ever-growing investment. They summoned Roy Thomas Baker, famed for his work with the art-rock band Queen. (Mr. Beavan, who was said to have tired of the project, soon bowed out.) But instead of wrapping things up, Mr. Baker decided that much of what the band had needed to be re-recorded - and painstakingly so, as he sometimes spent as long as eight hours on a few bars of music.

The process was drawn out even further after Mr. Rose hired two new musicians - the guitarist Buckethead, a virtuoso who wore a mannequin-like face mask and a KFC bucket on his head, and the drummer Brian "Brain" Mantia - whom the singer directed to re-record all the music that their predecessors had spent months performing.

Still, Mr. Rose seemed to be emerging from his sullen shell. In mid-2000, for what was thought to be the first time since the "Illusions" tour ended in 1993, he performed in public, with the Thursday night bar band at the Cat Club on the Sunset Strip. "He was psyched," recalled one person who worked with the band at Rumbo. "It seemed like it boosted him again, people still want to hear him."

At about 4 a.m on New Year's Day 2001, at the House of Blues in Las Vegas, he and the new lineup of the band finally unveiled some of their new material. "I have traversed a treacherous sea of horrors to be with you here tonight," Mr. Rose told the crowd, which received him with roars of approval. Warm reviews followed. Making the most of the moment, he took his band on the road, going to Brazil to play in the Rock in Rio festival.

With the band's return, Mr. Rose's machinery cranked up again. One internal cost analysis from the period pegs the operation's monthly tab at a staggering $244,000. It included more than $50,000 in studio time at the Village, a more modern studio where Mr. Baker had moved the band. It also included a combined payroll for seven band members that exceeded $62,000, with the star players earning roughly $11,000 each. Guitar technicians earned about $6,000 per month, while the album's main engineer was paid $14,000 per month and a recording software engineer was paid $25,000 a month, the document stated.

Label executives were losing patience. Interscope turned to Mr. Zutaut, the original band's talent scout. Could an old friend succeed where so many others had failed? He was offered a roughly 30 percent bonus, he said, if he could usher the project to completion within a year.

But Mr. Rose's renewed energies were not being directed toward the finish line. He had the crew send him CD's almost daily, sometimes with 16 or more takes of a musician performing his part of a single song. He accompanied Buckethead on a jaunt to Disneyland when the guitarist was drifting toward quitting, several people involved recalled; then Buckethead announced he would be more comfortable working inside a chicken coop, so one was built for him in the studio, from wood planks and chicken wire.

Mr. Rose was far less indulgent of his producers and label. Around Christmas, he ousted both Mr. Baker and Mr. Zutaut (who said there had been a miscommunication). It would be weeks before the singer would even allow an Interscope executive to visit him in the studio, according to people involved with the production. Interscope dispatched a senior talent executive, Mark Williams, to oversee the project. Mr. Williams declined to comment for this article.

If Mr. Rose appeared more remote, his vision of the project became more grandiose, people involved with the band said. He directed that music produced by Mr. Baker be redone again, those people said. He now spoke of releasing not merely one album but a trilogy. And he planned one very big surprise.

At MTV's annual awards show in 2002, publicists buzzed through the audience whispering about a big finale. And with just minutes to go in the broadcast, a screen lifted away to reveal the band and Mr. Rose, in cornrows and a sports jersey, looking strikingly young. The musicians burst into "Welcome to the Jungle," one of the original band's biggest hits, and the crowd went wild. But on television Mr. Rose quickly seemed out of breath and out of tune. He ended the performance, which included the new song "Madagascar" and the original band's hit "Paradise City" in a messianic stance, raising his arms and closing his eyes. He left the audience with a cryptic but tantalizing message: "Round one."

Round two never came. The band went on a successful tour, but in the hours after their triumphant Madison Square Garden appearance, Mr. Rose was reportedly refused entry to the Manhattan nightclub Spa because he was wearing fur, which the club does not allow. That killed the mood. He didn't show up for the band's next performance, and the promoter canceled the rest of the tour.

Months dragged on as the band waited for Mr. Rose to record more vocals. In August 2003 when label executives announced their intention to release a Guns N' Roses greatest-hits CD for the holidays, the band's representatives managed to hold them off with yet another promise to deliver "Chinese Democracy" by the end of the year. But the album, of course, did not materialize. And then the game was over.

"HAVING EXCEEDED ALL budgeted and approved recording costs by millions of dollars," the label wrote in a letter dated Feb. 2 , 2004, "it is Mr. Rose's obligation to fund and complete the album, not Geffen's." The tab at Village studio was closed out, and Mr. Rose tried a brief stint recording at the label's in-house studio before that too was ended. The band's computer gear, guitars and keyboards were packed away. Over a legal challenge by Mr. Rose, the label issued a greatest-hits compilation, in search of even a modest return on their eight-figure investment.

Released in March of 2004, it turned out to be a surprisingly strong seller, racking up sales of more than 1.8 million copies even without any new music or promotional efforts by the original band. The original band's debut, "Appetite for Destruction," which has sold 15 million copies, remains popular and racked up sales of another 192,000 copies last year, according to Nielsen SoundScan. It is a sign that Mr. Rose's audience still waits.

Mr. Rose is reportedly working on the album even now in a San Fernando Valley studio. "The 'Chinese Democracy' album is very close to being completed," Merck Mercuriadis, the chief executive officer of Sanctuary Group, which manages Mr. Rose, wrote in a recent statement. He added that other artists including Peter Gabriel and Stevie Wonder "have throughout their careers consistently taken similar periods of time without undeserved scrutiny as the world respects that this is what it can sometimes take to make great art." There's certainly more than enough material; as Mr. Zutaut says, even years ago "people felt like the record had been made four or five times already." But of course, rumors of the album's imminent release have circulated since almost the very beginning of the tale, more than a decade ago.

And at the center of that tale, now as then, is the confounding figure of Axl Rose himself. A magnetic talent, a moody unpredictable artist, a man of enormous ideas and confused follow-through, he has proven himself to be an uncontrollable variable in any business plan.

His involvement on "Chinese Democracy" has outlasted countless executives, producers and fellow musicians - even the corporate structure that first brought the band to worldwide celebrity. Even, in fact, the recognizable configuration of the recording industry as a whole, which since the band first went into the studio in 1994 has consolidated to four major corporations from six, and staggered amid an epidemic of piracy, leaving it more focused than ever on the bottom line, and on reliable musicians with a proven track record of consistent performance. The sort of rock stars that the original members of Guns N' Roses, who recently submitted a claim seeking $6 million in what were called unpaid royalties from its catalog, used to be. But which Mr. Rose, with his mood swings, erratic work habits and long dark stretches, no longer is.

He hasn't disappeared entirely. His voice can be heard on the latest edition in the "Grand Theft Auto" video game series, in the character of a grizzled 70's-style rock D.J. "Remember," he advises the radio station's audience, "we're not outdated and neither is our music."

Interscope has taken "Chinese Democracy" off its schedule. Mr. Rose hasn't been seen there since last year, when he was spotted leaving the parking area beneath Interscope's offices, where witnesses reported that a small traffic jam had congealed when attendants halted other cars to clear a path for his silver Ferrari. Mr. Rose punched the gas and cruised into the day.



« Last Edit: March 05, 2005, 05:19:45 PM by Booker Floyd » Logged
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« Reply #2 on: March 04, 2005, 07:43:59 PM »

What a sad thing to read. I dunno , it just makes me so sad to read that. Some things seem positive , I guess , but overall it paints a sad picture of Axl. I hope he can finally finish this project to his own satisfaction and finally be happy enough with it to put it out for everyone , including himself.

If he feels like "going away" afterwards the more power to him .. but for himself , even more then us , the fan .. I just hope he can actually get this album out.  ok

Good luck Axl!  peace
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« Reply #3 on: March 04, 2005, 07:45:38 PM »

This is a great article. Nice find Booker.

My overall emotions are.  Undecided   no   and  drool
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« Reply #4 on: March 04, 2005, 07:46:30 PM »

Interesting read. A balanced view that withholds judgement and neither crucifies or canonises the man. There's nothing in there thats incredibly new or overly controversial, but some cute storys about the creative process of cd.

cheers for that, it's been a while since i've read a report on the production of the album without it being horribly biased or misinformed.
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« Reply #5 on: March 04, 2005, 07:51:04 PM »

Interesting read. A balanced view that withholds judgement and neither crucifies or canonises the man. There's nothing in there thats incredibly new or overly controversial, but some cute storys about the creative process of cd.

cheers for that, it's been a while since i've read a report on the production of the album without it being horribly biased or misinformed.

Do you really think the article withholds judgement?  I think that it doesn't withhold judgement, it's just more subtle about displaying it than most articles about Axl Rose.

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« Reply #6 on: March 04, 2005, 07:53:34 PM »

Looks like the NY Times article is going to be in more papers than one.

I guess this is the same article as the one I was told is gonna be published on Sunday. I don't think they'll run two GN'R articles in the New York Times in just a few days.  hihi



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« Reply #7 on: March 04, 2005, 08:00:10 PM »

Quote
In 1997 Todd Sullivan, who was then a talent executive for the company, sent Rose a sampling of CDs produced by different people and encouraged him to choose one to work on "Chinese Democracy." Sullivan says he received a call informing him that Rose had run over the albums with a car.

rofl rofl

Great article Booker. Thanks for sharing.

The main thing I get from this is what Ive been saying all along. Axl is going to do this when he is ready. All the failed dates seem to be from the company forcing and pushing Axl to release the album when in reality he never wanted until he feels hes ready to do this.

Great read

« Last Edit: March 04, 2005, 08:04:44 PM by younggunner » Logged

"...regardless of the outcome, our hearts, lives and our passion has been put into this project every step of the way. If for no other reason, we feel those elements alone merit your consideration..."
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« Reply #8 on: March 04, 2005, 08:05:11 PM »

Wow!! Great find. I bet this will be the same story that will run in Sundays NY Post.

Interscope has taken "Chinese Democracy" off its schedule. Rose hasn't been seen there since last year, when he was spotted leaving the parking area beneath Interscope's offices, where witnesses reported that a small traffic jam had congealed when attendants halted other cars to clear a path for his silver Ferrari.

If you would of asked me a year ago when CD is to come out I would say its closer than ever but, over the last year I have became very skeptical that CD will ever surface. Axl come on get your shit together and deliver!! I have almost came to the conclusion there will never be a CD unless Axl and the former members rejoin.

Rose is reportedly working on the album even now. "The 'Chinese Democracy' album is very close to being completed," Merck Mercuriadis, chief executive officer of Sanctuary Group, which manages Rose, wrote in a statement

Havent we heard this to many times. I guess I will try to stay positive and relay on the boots of the failed tour and the old albums to keep me going on this guy. Because it could be awhile before we get CD.
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« Reply #9 on: March 04, 2005, 08:07:15 PM »

Quote
In 1997 Todd Sullivan, who was then a talent executive for the company, sent Rose a sampling of CDs produced by different people and encouraged him to choose one to work on "Chinese Democracy." Sullivan says he received a call informing him that Rose had run over the albums with a car.

 rofl rofl


The main thing I get from this is what Ive been saying all along. Axl is going to do this when he is ready. All the failed dates seem to be from the company forcing and pushing Axl to release the album when in reality he never wanted until he feels hes ready to do this.


Great article Booker. Thanks for sharing.



I don't get that when I read that at all.

I see no GN'R period. ?It's all Axl and he obviously isn't in a rush to put anything out.

No wonder why Tommy has been giving the info he has said. ?This article shows that the band has no clue what Axl is up to.

I hope I am wrong. ?If Axl carries on like this in reality, we won't have CD anytime soon. no


This article makes me realize CD isn't coming out. Cry
« Last Edit: March 04, 2005, 08:21:35 PM by dolphin » Logged
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« Reply #10 on: March 04, 2005, 08:14:25 PM »

My opinion is that Axl has problems that we cannot even begin to relate to. I used to feel upset when the other guys left in the mid 90s, it seems like they had no choice. It completely shows that Axl has no idea what he wants. A total Bi Polar headcase, but Ill follow him till the day I die.
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« Reply #11 on: March 04, 2005, 08:16:58 PM »

IMO, this article confirms allot of fears we've all had about axl and CD. ? Embarrassed

Axl has no direction or motivation to put out his material and it's no suprise why we haven't seen the new album. ? Regardless of what band members have told us it's probably no closer than 5 years ago. ?The posturing by the band members is probably a way to encourage axl and to keep hope alive.

What i'm reading, axl has a million ideas and no idea of how to put them together. ? To make matters worse, he refuses to let others put any pressure on him to collect his ideas and make them into something (what a decent producer would do for an artist). ?He simply makes those people go away (see star trek).

His mental illness must be tremendously worse than we thought. ?

Maybe the Brian Wilson analogy isn't that far off and we should check back in 20 years.

Just fucking sad ........ ?"there's nothing sadder than wasted talent" ?- A Bronx Tale
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« Reply #12 on: March 04, 2005, 08:42:02 PM »

Great article.
Quote
His mental illness must be tremendously worse than we thought
That's what? I've always thought. All genius are mad. Axl is definitely a musical genius, and his madness is proportional to his genius (another exemple: Mickael Jackson)
« Last Edit: March 04, 2005, 09:50:49 PM by nesquick » Logged

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« Reply #13 on: March 04, 2005, 08:44:36 PM »

Quote
His mental illness must be tremendously worse than we thought
That's what  I've always thought. All genius are mad. Axl is definitely a musical genius, and his madness is proportional to his genius (another exemple: Mickael Jackson)

i'm sure axl appreciates that example.
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« Reply #14 on: March 04, 2005, 08:47:26 PM »

that was just an example. I canTake "Prince" if you prefer. Prince is well known to be also extremely "special" in his head...
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« Reply #15 on: March 04, 2005, 09:11:13 PM »

that was just an example. I canTake "Prince" if you prefer. Prince is well known to be also extremely "special" in his head...


get a fuckin life. So has has bi polar? what does that have to do with you? Although from some of your posts, you seem to be a little "special" in the head too....
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« Reply #16 on: March 04, 2005, 09:26:20 PM »

Very interesting. there were always rumors that axl had fragments of songs lying around everywhere but no cohesion pulling the threads together and, more importantly, no vocals.

However, I have to say that we know a number of songs do exist; the new guys heard a completed or near completed album late last year, so this harbinger of creative implosion can't be as bad as this article has purported.  Maybe circa 1998/1999 but not now.

This is probably the make or break year for Mr. Rose; he either proceeds with this project and awaits judgement or probably faces litigation from the label.  Something inside me says that no legitimate buisness would wait this long and invest this much money without some confidence that it would pay off.
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« Reply #17 on: March 04, 2005, 09:32:45 PM »

Very good read.

Nothing new we hadn't really heard, but I do find the harping on the lack of direction to be very interesting. You started to get that feeling around he Illusions that GNR was a band lacking a true identity (at least musically). From what it sounds like there is a whole lot of different stuff out on the table, but that there is no direction in terms of putting together a cohesive album. That was my biggest personal fear about the project is that it is going to be too far from one extreme to another in terms of musical content. If he has that many ideas maybe he should release theme albums rather than 1 album of songs that will have no flow to them. That would be pretty cool actually. It sounds like he genuinely wants more out of this album than is possible to satisfy with just 15 songs.
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« Reply #18 on: March 04, 2005, 09:46:35 PM »

Interesting read. A balanced view that withholds judgement and neither crucifies or canonises the man. There's nothing in there thats incredibly new or overly controversial, but some cute storys about the creative process of cd.

cheers for that, it's been a while since i've read a report on the production of the album without it being horribly biased or misinformed.

Do you really think the article withholds judgement? I think that it doesn't withhold judgement, it's just more subtle about displaying it than most articles about Axl Rose.

Ali

Sorry, i meant final judgement. Obviously the writer makes judgement on his actions, but he doesnt go down the road of either saying

a) If ever released, CD will probably be the greatest album ever and axl declared a genius.

or, as is the case more often than not

b) Even if it is good, its still taken too long and cost too much. Axl is completely nuts.


Oh, and to all the armchair psychologists out there - Please shut up. Your ignorance of psychology is baffelling. You're trying to analyze a man you've never met on the basis of an article written by a man who has never met him. Add to that the fact that you're not even trained psychologists and i think you'll be able to second guess what my point is. You all seem to be able to guess axl's mental state.
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GNFNR_UK
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I want to believe...


« Reply #19 on: March 04, 2005, 09:50:42 PM »

Thanks for the article, great read but...

This album really isn't coming is it  Cry I'm sorry but I get bad vibes reading this, Axl planning a trilogy, I mean Jesus, we just want one album of new material but he wants to create this 3 disc masterpiece and do something that hasn't been done before. His visions for the album seem to change so much that I just fear he's never going to be happy with it. However IF it does ever come out I think we all know it is going to be something fucking amazing and that is what keeps us holding on, but for how much longer?Huh
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'This is just a horrible divorce, now he (Axl) is looking for a new wife.  His ex wife, Duff and Slash, are remarried and happy' - Smoking Guns on the break up of the original GNR.
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