Gunning it
"The road of excess," wrote Blake, "leads to the palace of wisdom." James Jackson
meets what must be the wisest band on Earth.
The guitar god Slash is sitting backstage at Detroit's elegant State Theatre
in mirrored pilot shades, a Marlboro protruding from behind his long curly mop,
looking as though he hasn't aged a day since his Guns N' Roses glory days 12
or 15 years ago. "I spend all my waking and probably sleeping hours playing,
writing, or thinking about music. That's all I do. I'm gonna be like Keith Richards
or B. B. King, doing this in my eighties." Taking a sip of chilled chardonnay,
he adds: "With Guns, we hardly got recognised for being that great a band, more
for the extremists that we were. With this new band, it seems like we're being
recognised as the second coming of rock'n'roll, which is a hell of a better label."
Welcome to the hyperbolic, post-rehab, second-chance rock world of Velvet Revolver
- or, as one music magazine has dubbed them, "The most damaged band on the planet." The
group is the most high-profile example yet of the trend for divorced early-1990s
rock bands to interbreed, seeing as it does the re-marriage of three members
of the estranged Guns N' Roses line-up (guitarist Slash, bassist Duff McKagan,
drummer Matt Sorum) alongside the lead singer of the US grunge superstars Stone
Temple Pilots, Scott Weiland, and the respected Los Angeles guitarist Dave Kushner.
Second coming or not, this new rock monster hybrid is already creating a buzz
in America - the current 15-date tour sold out in ten minutes and had to be extended
by a further six dates, while their first single, Slither, has been riding high
in the US charts. "It's a f****** rock'n'roll band. It's dirty, raunchy, it's
wild, it's loud. Everything a rock'n'roll band
should be," says Weiland. Except, that is, without the (extramarital) sex and
drugs.
What these battle-scarred veterans have been through would fill several chapters
in a compendium of rock'n'roll excess. At their screaming peak, Guns N' Roses,
whose albums still sell by the million, were heroically bombastic, inciting stadium
riots during the longest live tour in history (192 dates in 27 countries in front
of more than seven million people). The main line-up imploded in the mid-1990s
when the lead singer Axl Rose's ego became too much for the others. Slash has
remained estranged from Rose, who hung on to the band's name. "The last time
I talked to him was at rehearsal the day before we quit the band, and then I
got a lot of nasty messages on my answer machine. I haven't tried to rekindle
anything 'cos he really rubbed me the wrong way."
Stone Temple Pilots, meanwhile, were one of the five or six bands at the forefront
of the grunge explosion. During the 1990s they sold 25 million records worldwide,
but never really made it in Britain, where they were largely dismissed by the
music press as bandwagon-hoppers or Pearl Jam clones.
Off-stage excess litters both of their pasts and, whether they like it or not,
forms an intrinsic part of their "f***-you" rock image. You want examples? Take
your pick: how about the time Slash fell on a hotel maid as he "died" from an
overdose just before a G N' R show in San Francisco (he was revived in hospital,
checked out and still made the show on time). Or when he was party to a grand
piano being pushed off a hotel balcony (a step up from TV sets).
Or when he collapsed with alcohol poisoning before a show in Pittsburgh in 2000,
which landed him in hospital for four weeks. The bassist Duff drank two litres
of vodka a day, before "cutting down" - too little, too late - to 20 bottles
of wine a day. His pancreas exploded in 1994 and he hasn't had a drink since.
The drummer Sorum came down from G N' R madness by checking into rehab. And then
there is Weiland, who confesses that, preposterously, he once sold his crack
pipe to get money for crack. His notorious junk habit takes in five arrests,
a stint in jail in 1999, and an insatiable appetite for rehab - the latest stay
ended in April (he insists to THE EYE that he's now clean for good).
The new band came together, minus Weiland, two years ago when they played a one-off
gig at the funeral of a fellow rock musician. Musical chemistry duly resurrected,
they embarked on an eight-month search for a vocalist; when Stone Temple Pilots
broke up in a backstage fight, Weiland became available. "We got two offers for
movies (they provided songs to The Italian Job and The Hulk, including a cover
of Pink Floyd's Money) and it just fell together," says Slash.
Their first album, Contraband, to be released on Monday, almost wallops you over
the head with its "we're back" sense of urgency. A police siren heralds the first
track in a blatant signal that danger is on the cards. One song after another
kicks in with aggressive verses and huge choruses - melodic, confessional accounts
of frustration and emotional breakdown. While hints of both G N' R and STP poke
through, Velvet Revolver has its own identity: a slick, modern punk-metal machine
that may prove too furious, too American, for British fans of G N' R's more MOR-ish
output. It's not until track six (Fall to Pieces) that you reach a truly radio-friendly
single, a soft-rock power ballad built for arenas, complete with a clifftop guitar
solo from Slash. ("That's going to be our big one," says Weiland.) For an album
imbued with such a punk spirit, it feels curiously solid and professional.
"To me, this is the first dangerous band to come around in a while. We're pretty
hyped-up, pretty aggressive," says a toned but frazzled Duff in a hospitality
room backstage. The first VR tour is only five dates in, and spirits are on a
(natural) high. Spread out on the table are health foods and bottles of mineral
water. Outside stands his pneumatic blonde wife with their two beautiful daughters,
who wave sweetly to daddy. Daddy waves back, besotted. It's quite touching, and
Duff admits: "I sometimes cry with happiness when I see them." But danger? Aggression?
Where's the rock'n'roll, Duff?
He explains patiently: "I saw the Clash in 1979 in Seattle and some security
guy broke a guy's nose. There was this old wooden barricade, and bassist Paul
Simonon went back in the wings, got an axe and chopped the barricade
down. The band and crowd were as one. I was 13 years old - it was my snapshot.
And that stays in my gut; that's what's at the core of this band, the pure energy
of what it was about. It's not about strippers and drugs. I went through it all
- I resigned myself to the fact that I'd live till I was 30 or 31. I wasn't bummed
out about it. It was just like that's the way it was. But now it's a pure energy
band. I'm sure when I saw the Clash, they weren't all f***** up; they were like
we are now, just a cool, pure energy band."
Later Slash invites THE EYE past the fans at the backstage door and on to the
tour bus. Far from being an eight-wheeled chariot of chaos, this is the sleek
equivalent of first-class deluxe. When we reach the air-conditioned, mirror-walled "meeting
room" at the back (complete with a "meeting in progress" sign), it's like entering
the band's inner sanctum. Informed of Duff's theory, Slash - who has a knack
of making you feel like a best buddy within minutes of meeting him - nods in
agreement: "There's nothing more poignant than delivering the kind of music that
still has that flying-by-the-seat-of-your-pants spontaneity. That's what we're
still all about. In the case of a band like this being a little bit older and
a little bit wiser, well, it's almost lunacy to think that, for example, Duff's
bloated, stumbling-around-out-of-it look from back in the day is going to excite
anyone more than him being together and a better bass player."
Indeed, in the late 1990s, Duff depressurised from G N' R madness by moving to
Seattle and doing a finance degree, which led to job offers from Microsoft, no
less. He was considering a career move to Wall Street until VR came along. If
accountants have ever dreamt of an exciting life as a rock star, this might well
be the first rock star to have contemplated life as an accountant.
So what happened to rock'n'roll being one prolonged adolescence? "Domesticity
is something I didn't welcome too easily," Slash says. "I fought it real hard.
But I love my wife and having a kid came at just about the right time. When he
came along it sort of straightened my wife and I out, 'cos we were still partying
pretty hard - actually harder and more consistently than I was in the Gunners
days."
Growing up is hard to do in a business that feeds a teenage audience's need for
instant gratification, an audience wanting a new train wreck story from their
rock idols every week.Which brings us to the singer Weiland. "I was trapped in
a Peter Pan time-loop for a long time," the 36-year-old admits (the rest of the
band are knocking on 40's door, if not already through it). "It's so easy being
in the world of rock'n'roll to get trapped into the perpetual world of being
a kid. I remember when I was kicking my heroin habit last June on an island in
the West Indies - when I was puking and sweating and shaking - thinking that
I had to 'man up'. Duff has been my inspiration for showing me what a man acts
like. I admire the way he is with his wife - he still manages to be a punk rocker,
a good musician and a rock star."
But, as Slash says: "There's still that sense of unpredictability going on with
Scott." Since his last court hearing in January, Weiland claims he is now clean
for good. But he remains hugely suspicious of the media. Having snubbed other
interviews all week, this particular one looks ready to fall apart when he apparently
goes Awol on the afternoon of the concert. Finally, an hour before the gig, he
turns up, explaining ominously: "This is the last interview I'm doing for a long
time. I'm sick of talking about drugs, about arrests. Journalists kiss my ass
and then, when they get a safe distance away, they type up whatever they like.
If I ever run into one of them and I'm outside the state of California (where
he's on probation), I'll f****** bitch-slap them in the face."
Unlike Slash and Duff, who couldn't be more amiable, Weiland radiates edginess
and neurosis. In the past ten years, he has played with his look, taking in goateed
grunge clone, cross-dressing Bowie whore and heavy-bearded
1970s troubadour. Today, his dyed-black hair is cropped short, his face older
and more drawn, and a faded Lynyrd Skynyrd T-shirt is stretched over his wiry
frame. He slouches moodily low in his chair and speaks in a veerry sloow Californian
drawl, his theorising worthy of Jim Morrison.
"People never used to buy tickets for an Evel Knievel performance to see him
jump. People went to see him f****** eat shit. It is the same thing for me. There
needs to be danger in rock'n'roll, but it doesn't mean you have to use drugs.
For real rock'n'roll there has to be reckless abandon in it, that chaotic element
to it. There's kind of an artform in learning how to wander on the edge of that
without falling off the precipice. " Several of his high-profile peers, including
Kurt Cobain of Nirvana and Layne Staley of Alice in Chains, failed to stay up
there. He nearly followed them.
"The lowest point in the past few years would definitely be the nine months previous
to kicking my heroin habit, a year ago. Before getting arrested in May, which
I look at as God intervening in the shape of a black-and-white police car, I
was suicidal. My wife kicked me out of the house and left with my children. I
stopped taking my psychiatric medication, so I was really crashing hard. I convinced
myself that the most unselfish thing to do would be to take myself out of the
equation.
Then somebody explained to me that I would be leaving my children a horrible
legacy of shame, and they would forever have to carry that burden. So having
looked at it differently, I pulled myself away from that obsession."
Soon afterwards, on stage, Weiland is a man possessed ("There's another character
which takes over, another ego more akin to the person I am when I'm having sex
with my wife," he says); wheeling, weaving and writhing in suitably narcissistic
fashion around the stage. Both Slash and Duff reckon "he's the last great genuine
rock'n'roll singer". Slash duckwalks Chuck Berry-style across the stage, less
of the cool, faceless guitar-noodler of old, more a euphoric individual who has
rediscovered his purpose in life and can hardly believe his luck. Indifferent
songs from the album become riff thrillers, but soon enough there's a series
of G N' R and STP covers which receive the barmiest crowd reaction (the VR album
has yet to be released). By the time it ends amid a furore of tattooed bare torsos
and the white noise chaos of Nirvana's Negative Creep, it has all become a bit
best-of- 1990s rock, complete with the presence of Slash's trademark top hat.
A conspicuous feeling of nostalgia charges the auditorium. But afterwards, of
the 60 or so fans milling around outside the stage door, not one of them looks
more than 21.
In a bar somewhere in the hazy early hours, a party is taking shape; a well-lubricated
Slash props up the bar wearing a Led Zeppelin II T-shirt and drinking JD and
coke. He could be 19 years old. Shots of JD are clinked and downed - it seems
booze isn't off the menu, after all - and everything starts to come a bit unstuck. "I'm
a touring guy through and through," he beams, "and I don't feel complete when
I'm not. With everything I 've been through, this has the same feeling of going
out there and doing it for the first time." Then the harried tour manager enters
and bundles out the errant guitarist back to the tour bus. Some rockers just
aren't designed to fade away.
Note: In the above quotes, the expletives that appeared every other word have
been removed. The album Contraband is out on Monday on RCA. The single Slither
is out on July 5"