The new Supergroup
Velvet Revolver, whose
members come from Guns N' Roses and Stone
Temple Pilots, rocks Tucson on Aug. 21.
Relative unknown Dave
Kushner (at left) rounds out an otherwise
marquee-friendly cast, with Matt Sorum
, Scott Weiland, Slash and Duff. Some
bands - like some guys, according to Rod
Stewart - have all the luck. Some are
prettier than others (Duran Duran). Some
are better musicians (Van Halen). Some
are more personable (AC/DC). Some are
better dressers (The Hives).
Then there are the luckiest of all - the
celebrity musician bands. The me-me-me-and-yes-me
bands. The multiple tour buses, I-drink-only-wine-now,
equal-spotlight-time supergroups. That
kind maiden called Time works with strong,
strong forces of nature to create these
capital-S Supergroups. The Traveling Wilburys.
Asia. Damn Yankees. The Firm, I guess.
And Velvet Revolver.
Axl Rose tried to build
his own Supergroup, but it didn't take.
So Slash, top-hat in tow, re-joined ranks
with his Guns N' Roses colleagues Duff
and Matt Sorum, and, eventually, coaxed
a fragile Scott Weiland into a new millennial
Supergroup.
As in many such RockGod
bands, there's the guy who's there but
not. The solid musician - heck-a-doodle-do,
amazing musician - there based on mere
talent, not name recognition. This guy
has no name recognition.
In Velvet Revolver, his
name, you will soon forget, is Dave Kushner.
He matters. He wouldn't be there if he
didn't. Slash and Co. could get Jimi Hendrix
to time travel to them if they wanted.
They chose Dave.
Kushner entered the fold
long before Weiland, during the time the
others practiced five days a week writing
song after song until they had some 60
to rehearse. It took some 10 months for
ex-Stone Temple Pilot Weiland to stagger
into the studio, 10 months filled with
round-the-clock listening to demos sent
in by wannabe lead singers and some live
tryouts.
"It was pretty brutal.
The process sucked," Kushner says,
reached at his L.A. home.
The process of waiting
for Weiland go through rehab after joining
the band likely sucked as well, but he
was a Supersinger worth waiting for.
"The first day he came in and sang
on 'Set Me Free,' we were like, 'OK, this
is the guy.' That's why we had to get
him in the band and work through all the
arrests and stuff," Kushner says.
And at least Weiland,
our most-guilty-pleasure frontman these
days, got his rehab in up front. Now the
band can merely push itself on to the
logical: album No. 2.
The fivesome is set to enter the studio
in September to begin recording its follow-up
to "Contraband," an album that,
as with many debuts, saw a band still
forming its sound. A lot of STP and Guns
N' Roses was still present, a lot of which
likely had to do with Weiland's late entry.
Plus, Kushner notes that the months of
writing songs sans vocalist saw the four
struggle for a direction.
"We had so many
songs. We had songs that sounded like
everything from Faith No More to the Rolling
Stones."
As the group logged 14
months on the road promoting "Contraband,"
Kushner says, a lot of writing was done
during soundchecks, and all five have
been writing over their summer break.
"In this band, it's
pretty democratic. Anyone can come in
with a part," Kushner says. "I've
been in bands where the parts pretty much
got shot down immediately. This is the
first band I've been in where everyone
was willing to at least try."
Having an audience of
Slash et al. for your creative ideas might
seem like a dream to many a guitar player,
but one that likely ends with said guitarist
running out screaming, naked and humiliated.
But while Kushner is the nonfamous member
of Velvet Revolver, he says didn't feel
nervous based on any kind of celebrity
worship.
After all, he had known
Slash since junior high school. And Kushner
had been playing with Duff around the
time the Velvet Revolver chatter started
up.
"When I first played with those guys,
it was a little like, 'wow' intimidating.
But more on a musical level," Kushner
says. "It wasn't the stature of who
they were but the musicianship that was
intimidating. And, at a point Izzy (Stradlin,
GNR's other original guitarist) had written
some songs and he was on board, so it
was four guys from Guns N' Roses, and
it was intimidating because I didn't really
know what would happen."
What would happen is that Izzy would not
officially join the band. (He has occasionally
joined them on stage.) That left Kushner
to complement Slash's trademark arena-sized
riffs and fretwork gymnastics. Again,
it's easy to imagine many an insecure
player fleeing, guitar between his legs.
But Kushner says that his interplay with
Slash has been pretty natural from the
start.
"It's the right
balance of paying attention to what he's
doing but also not paying attention to
what he's doing. I don't know, some people
get intimidated and just play along with
the bass or try too hard or freak out,
but I just kind of did what I thought
sounded good. As a guitar player, I didn't
want to fade into the background just
because it was Slash," he says. "I
just do what I do. It sounds so goofy,
but I guess that's why it works. ... And
half the time I can't even hear him because
Duff's bass is so loud."
Kushner says he doesn't
know who will produce the next album -
"we've been talking with some different
people and just tossing ideas around"
- or when the album will be released.
So, we'll have to accept some rock hyperbole:
"We're just going
to try to expand on what we've already
done," Kushner says. "Now that
we've been a band, the record will be
that much better."