|
[ back to Band
Info ]

Duff 'Rose' McKagan:
Full Name:
Michael McKagan
Date and place of birth: February 5, 1964
in Seattle, WA; U.S.A..
Marital Status: Duff married Susan Holmes
on August 28, 1999.
Children: Two daughters, Grace (b. August
27, 1997) and May Marie (b. July 16, 2000)
Instruments: Bass, Guitar, Drums, Vocals
Previous bands: 10 Minute Warning, Loaded,
The Racketeers, The Gentlemen, Guns N' Roses,
Neurotic Outsiders.
This Duff biography
is courtesy of Allmusic.com and from Carl:
The youngest of
eight children, Duff McKagan was born in Seattle,
WA, in the spring of 1964. His real name is Michael,
but his family gave him the nickname Duff at the
age of two and it stuck. He grew up rebellious,
falling in love with punk and glam rock by the
time he was a teenager.
His brother, Bruce,
introduced him to the bass, but he did not take
to the instrument right away. At the tender age
of 16, the Fastbacks hired him on as their drummer,
giving him his first shot in the developing Seattle
rock scene. He left the band toward the end of
1981 and began playing in countless other punk
combos in the area. Most influential was his work
with the Fartz, a band that never made it that
far but served as one of the primary influences
on grunge innovator, Mudhoney.
While McKagan enjoyed
the gigs he was working, he tried his luck in
Los Angeles after a few years of playing in the
Northwest. Upon moving to the town, he met future
Guns N' Roses founders Slash and Steven Adler,
and decided to form a trio with the others called
Road Crew. The band gave them the kind of visibility
they craved, but upon meeting Indiana transplants
Izzy Stradlin and Axl Rose, the five flirted with
the idea of combining their forces, until finally
Guns N' Roses became a reality in 1985.
After a self-released
EP gained them more attention in the Los Angeles
area, Geffen Records signed them for an album
in 1986. The result, Appetite for Destruction,
would be one of the most important rock records
ever released, although it would be hard to tell
from the initial impact. The album floundered
at first, McKagan even considered going back to
Seattle, until "Welcome to the Jungle"
became a runaway hit.
The band instantly
became a huge sensation, and the media ate up
their bad boy reputation and incredible live performances.
The whole band let fame get to them, but no member
took it as seriously as Axl Rose, who began to
shake up the band with his increasingly controversial
statements to the media and erratic behavior.
Things became serious during the release of the
Lies EP, which featured a racist rant in the song
"One in a Million" that McKagan and
Slash both spoke out against in the press.
Rose slowly continued
to dominate the band, driving out Adler and Stradlin
and replacing them with less vocal contributors
Matt Sorum and Gilby Clarke. Ironically, McKagan
and Slash bonded with these two members strongly,
making the distance between Rose and the other
members only larger. When the band hit the road
for the endless Use Your Illusion tour, the backstage
decadence and wild spending became ridiculous,
as opening bands would report to the press about
orgies and pig roasts.
McKagan was disillusioned with
the music he was making, and after contributing
songs to Iggy Pop's Brick by Brick, he tried his
hand at a solo album. His drinking had gotten
wildly out of control, and the resulting Believe
in Me was a disjointed and awkward effort that
failed to spark the public's interest. When the
tour ended, McKagan discovered that his pancreas
was in such terrible shape that he had to immediately
give up drinking or face almost-certain death.
After a cover of the Rolling
Stones' "Sympathy for the Devil," the
band separated to take time away from one another.
Thinking that Guns N' Roses was just taking a
break, McKagan started working with Slash on the
Slash's Snakepit project along with the other
members of Guns N' Roses, except for Rose.
Sessions for a new Guns N' Roses
album continually fell apart, and McKagan started
working with the Neurotic Outsiders and several
solo projects from fellow- and former-Guns N'
Roses members. As the years began to tick away,
Rose finally sent news to the remaining members
of the band that they had to stop working on other
projects or they were going to be fired. That
was the final straw for McKagan, as he separated
from the band and joined Seattle punk rockers
Ten Minute Warning, a band he had played in almost
15 years before.
Since that point, McKagan has
continued to release solo projects, perform with
his fellow Guns N' Roses outcasts, and was married
for the third time. He even had his first child
in 1999, and managed to get acting jobs on television.
He ran a marathon in 2001, right before reuniting
with Izzy Stradlin for a tour of Japan. The likelihood
of the original Guns N' Roses reuniting looks
slimmer every year, but even his brief time with
that band will forever give McKagan the notoriety
that has made him one of the most recognizable
bassists in rock music.
Appears on:
Velvet Revolver:
The Hulk soundtrack (2003); Contraband (2004)
Loaded: Episode
1999: Live (1999); Dark Days" (2001).
Neurotic Outsiders:
Neurotic Outsiders (1996).
Duff McKagan: Believe
In Me (1993); Beautiful Disease (Unreleased in
1999).
Guns N' Roses: Appetite
For Destruction (1987); GN'R Lies (1989); Use
Your Illusion 1(1991); Use Your Illusion II (1991);
The Spaghetti Incident (1993).
|