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June
2003: Small news articles from various sites |
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Last updated: August
24, 2003
Credits: Many thanks go out to SexTypeIvy
for finding these articles!
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06/20 -
Rollingstone.com
- Revolver Unload in L.A.
Velvet Revolver -- the supergroup featuring
Stone Temple Pilots singer Scott Weiland,
former Guns n' Roses members Slash, Duff McKagan
and Matt Sorum, and Suicidal Tendencies' guitarist
Dave Kushner -- made their live debut last
night at the celebrity-filled El Rey Theater
in Los Angeles.
The band kicked off their six-song set with
the Sex Pistols' "Bodies." Next
was "Set Me Free," their single
from the Hulk soundtrack, which is already
garnering heavy spins on L.A. rock radio stations.
"You're never gonna
see anything like that, motherfuckers!"
a healthy-looking Weiland told the audience
before launching into "Sex Type Thing,"
from his other band's 1992 debut set Core.
"You wanna know who influenced that
song for me?" he asked when the song
was over. "You sure you're ready for
it?" The answer came in the form of
a rocking cover of "It's So Easy,"
Weiland's favorite Gn'R track, from Appetite
for Destruction.
The set ended with a second
new song, "Slither," which drew
raves from comedian David Spade. "When
you can hear his voice, it's good,"
Spade quipped. "He nailed some shit
in there like he does on Plush."
Velvet Revolver returned
with an encore of Nirvana's "Negative
Creep," served up special for the band's
former drummer Dave Grohl. Also in the audience
were Hulk director Ang Lee, No Doubt's Tony
Kanal, actor/musician Vincent Gallo, and
members of the Cult and Lit.
"Weiland's an amazing
frontman," Lit guitarist Jeremy Popoff
said. "It's great to see all those
guys onstage together . . . it's like watching
an all-star basketball game."
Velvet Revolver, currently
unsigned, also drew many A&R scouts
from such major labels as Columbia, Warner
Bros. and Island Def Jam. One label executive,
who didn't want to be named, said the show
"rocked" and that the band "didn't
look too old."
At a press conference before
the show, Slash said Velvet Revolver will
do more gigs around L.A. "just to get
in front of an audience" before entering
the recording studio this fall. Now, they're
rehearsing full-time, five days a week,
and still hoping for a pre-Christmas release
for their debut album, despite Weiland's
looming July 11th court date, when he'll
face his latest round of drug charges.
"What happened to
Scott could, and has, happened to all of
us," McKagan said. "There's a
common thread, and it relates to all of
our pasts."
CARRIE BORZILLO-VRENNA
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06/20 -
MTV.com
- Ex-GN'R Members, Weiland Make Live Debut
As Velvet Revolver.
LOS ANGELES Not only was Velvet
Revolver's debut performance more visceral,
more pummeling and more hypercharged than
even the most devoted Stone Temple Pilots
or Guns N' Roses fan could have expected,
but there was evidence of genuine personal
chemistry as opposed to a convenient
partnership designed to boost mutually unstable
careers between the band's key players.
Specifically, it was the
moment when Slash affectionately laid his
head on Scott Weiland's shoulder that seemed
to drive the point of the evening home:
The former "Project" is officially
a real band.
The new group's short set
at the El Rey Theatre on Thursday night,
taken in by an energetic crowd that included
Dave Grohl, Vincent Gallo, Shane West, David
Spade, No Doubt's Tony Kanal and "Hulk"
director Ang Lee as well as some lucky fans,
kicked off with a sped-up and chunky cover
of the Sex Pistols classic "Bodies,"
which led directly into the band's "Hulk"
soundtrack single, "Set Me Free."
In spite of their veteran
résumés and well chronicled
battles with various substances, the bandmembers
Weiland, Slash, the former GN'R rhythm
section of Duff McKagan (bass) and Matt
Sorum (drums) and McKagan's onetime Loaded
partner/ ex-Wasted Youth guitarist Dave
Kushner appeared every bit as youthful
and muscular as their set sounded, with
all of them winding up shirtless by the
end of the evening.
Weiland promised a couple
of "presents" before the show
began, and the group delivered, launching
into STP's "Sex Type Thing" as
if Slash wrote the riff himself, and following
up with the Appetite for Destruction track
"It's So Easy," an appropriate
choice for Weiland's vocal range. The addition
of his trademark bullhorn added a surreal
element to the proceedings.
The band next laid into
another original track the moody,
grooving and understandably STP-like "Slither,"
before exiting the stage, only to return
to encore with Nirvana's "Negative
Creep," a track so beefy in this setting
that it almost sounded like a death metal
song. As the band clobbered its way through
the track, Weiland dove into the crowd several
times, peppering the tune as he had the
entire set with his well-known arachnidlike
crouching, trippy dancing and waving arms.
Velvet Revolver's performance
was preceded by a short press conference
where the band outlined its plans for the
next few months, made light of its long
search for a suitable frontman (see "Slash/
Duff/ Matt Coming Soon, Axl Nowhere In Sight")
and downplayed its troubled new singer's
recent arrest (see "Weiland Pleads
Not Guilty To Drug Charges, Offers To Go
To Rehab").
"What happened to
Scott Weiland a few weeks ago, it really
could happen to any one of us," Duff
said. Then he added, "It has happened
to all of us."
Sorum said he and his bandmates
listened to more than 500 CDs, but when
Scott walked in they immediately knew he
was the guy. After the press conference,
Weiland revealed that he was nine songs
into a second solo album before he joined
Velvet Revolver and referred to what appears
to be the final dissolution of his former
group as merely a "very, very"
long hiatus.
"Everything [else]
is pretty much on hold now," he said.
"I know that there is talk about a
greatest-hits album for STP, but I don't
know anything about it really, because my
heart and soul is into Velvet Revolver right
now. ... We were in the middle of our set
[at sound check] and I just kind of went
over to those guys and went, 'I feel like
we've been on tour for about a year now.'
The chemistry's there. It's a band."
"The chemistry is
perfect," offered Slash. "It just
fits. It's like all of a sudden we are just
us, all five of us, and it just happened
like that." "And we really bonded
as friends, as brothers, in a relatively
short time," Duff chimed in.
"Duff, Dave [and I]
spent a month together in the mountains
in Washington in a secluded area, just recently,"
Scott said, "so we've gotten to know
each other pretty intimately."
Velvet Revolver are currently
sorting through close to 50 songs (around
10 of which were written with original GN'R
axeman Izzy Stradlin) for their debut album,
which, Weiland's legal hassles notwithstanding,
they hope to release by Christmas. In addition
to "Set Me Free" and "Slither,"
Weiland said he's written vocals for around
four more of the band's instrumental tunes
so far. They're still looking for a producer
and they'll probably record the album on
their own before bothering with a record
deal. For now, it's back to the practice
room, where Weiland said Velvet Revolver
have been writing and rehearsing every single
day.
For more sights and stories
from concerts around the country, check
out MTV News Tour Reports.
Ryan J. Downey.
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06/05 -
MTV.com
- Scott Weiland Gets Official Nod To Lead
Ex-GN'R Members.
After months of auditions and wavering
between top contenders, the group known simply
as the Project featuring ex-Guns N'
Roses members Slash, Duff McKagan and Matt
Sorum has finally decided upon a singer.
Stone Temple Pilots frontman Scott Weiland
officially gets the coveted singer spot.
The band also finally gets
an official name, Velvet Revolver, according
to the group's spokesperson.
Weiland announced himself
as the singer in mid-May, which the band
at the time said was premature, since no
contract had been signed. Sources close
to the band also said there needed to be
a resolution to the singer's rehab issues.
But Weiland had long been considered to
be in the lead, despite that frustration,
and had recorded two songs with the band
for films a cover of Pink Floyd's
"Money," which can currently be
heard in one scene and in the closing credits
for "The Italian Job," and an
original song called "Set Me Free"
for "The Hulk," the soundtrack
for which hits stores June 17.
"Set Me Free"
which leaked onto the Internet late
this week has already started getting
radio play on WBCN in Boston, where they're
fielding requests for the track.
The only known live performances
by the band with Weiland on vocals
were staged during a presentation
for film studios at the band's rehearsal
space in April and during a filming of an
electronic press kit for "The Hulk"
in May. After the film studio presentation,
the band received several requests to contribute
songs to movies as far off as 2004 (see
"Slash/ Duff/ Matt Coming Soon, Axl
Nowhere In Sight").
The announcement comes
three days after Weiland pleaded not guilty
to drug charges in Burbank, California,
following an arrest last month on two felony
counts of possession of heroin and cocaine
(see "Weiland Pleads Not Guilty To
Drug Charges, Offers To Go To Rehab").
According to sources close
to the band, Velvet Revolver had been trying
to help the singer lessen his risk of a
relapse, including exploring options such
as rehab, methadone treatment, 24-hour supervision
and martial-arts programs that would require
mental discipline. Weiland volunteered to
attend a rehab program before his next court
date, which was set for July 11. He faces
up to a year in county jail if convicted.
Before starting up with
Velvet Revolver, Weiland had begun work
on his second solo album with producer Josh
Abraham, and the Stone Temple Pilots remain
on hiatus, according to the group's spokesperson.
Jennifer Vineyard.
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06/02 -
MTV.com
- Weiland Pleads Not Guilty To Drug Charges,
Offers To Go To Rehab.
Scott Weiland pleaded not guilty to charges
of drug possession Monday (June 2), and offered
to put himself in rehab before his next court
date.
The Stone Temple Pilots
singer had been arrested last month in Burbank
after police stopped him for a minor traffic
violation and found what they believed to
be drugs (see "Stone Temple Pilots
Singer Weiland Arrested For Drugs").
He was charged with two felony counts of
possession of heroin and cocaine. Jennifer
Lynn Sires, a 29-year-old woman traveling
with him whom he reportedly met in rehab,
was also arrested on the same illegal substance
possession charges (see "Weiland's
Arrest Follows Tumultuous Addiction Spiral,
Friends Say"). Her arraignment is on
Tuesday.
According to a spokesperson
for the Project, a supergroup with which
Weiland has been collaborating, the drugs
did not belong to the singer, but to the
female he was with. The Project includes
ex-Guns N' Roses members Slash, Duff McKagan
and Matt Sorum, and the band has recorded
two songs with Weiland a cover of
Pink Floyd's "Money" for "The
Italian Job," and an original song
called "Set Me Free" for "The
Hulk" (see "Slash/ Duff/ Matt
Coming Soon, Axl Nowhere In Sight"
).
Looking somber in a black
suit, Weiland spoke little during his arraignment
at the Burbank division of Los Angeles Superior
Court, other than to say, "yes, your
honor" and "thank you, your honor."
He volunteered to attend a rehab program
before his next court date, which Judge
Chesley McKay set for July 11.
That program is currently
being decided, according to a source close
to the Project, who have been trying to
help the singer lessen his risk of a relapse,
including exploring options such as methadone
treatment, 24-hour supervision and martial-arts
programs that would require mental discipline.
Outside the courtroom,
Weiland told reporters, "It went great
today."
He faces up to a year in
county jail if convicted.
Jennifer Vineyard
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