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Slash:
Full Name:
Saul Hudson
Date and place of birth: July 23, 1965
in Stoke-On-Trent, U.K.
Marital Status: Slash married Perla Ferrar
on October 15, 2001.
Children: London Emilio Hudson (born August
28th, 2002); Cash Anthony Hudson (born June 23, 2004).
Instruments: Lead Guitar
Previous bands: Tidus Solan, London, Road
Crew, Hollywood Rose, Guns N' Roses, Slash's Snakepit, Slash's Blues Ball.
This Slash biography
is courtesy of Allmusic.com:
As the lead guitarist
for Guns N' Roses, Slash established himself as
one of hard rock's finest and most soulful soloists
during the late '80s, technically adept yet always
firmly grounded in the gritty Aerosmith and Stones
licks he loved.
Slash was born Saul Hudson on July 23, 1965 in
Stoke-on-Trent, England, to artistic parents both
involved in the entertainment industry; his mother
was a clothing designer who worked on David Bowie's
film The Man Who Fell to Earth, and his father
designed album art for such artists as Neil Young
and Joni Mitchell.
The family eventually moved to Hollywood, where
Hudson attended junior high, received his first
guitar, and met future G N' R drummer Steven Adler.
With Hudson adopting the nickname Slash, given
to him by a family friend, the two formed a band
called Road Crew; although it proved unsuccessful,
it was the vehicle through which they met and
eventually joined up with the other members of
Guns N' Roses.
The Gunners debuted in June 1985, and even before
Appetite for Destruction was released in 1987,
the band acquired a reputation as notorious alcohol
and drug abusers. As their popularity soared,
the reserved Slash established himself as an important
part of the band's visual image, with a top hat
and a mound of shaggy black hair covering his
face as he typically staggered around the stage
with a cigarette dangling from his mouth. Hedonistic
excess consumed most of the band, with such incidents
as Slash and Duff McKagan's drunken, profane acceptance
of the band's American Music Award on live television.
In 1990, opening
for the Rolling Stones, Axl Rose's infamous onstage
pronouncement that he would leave the band if
certain members did not stop "dancing with
Mr. Brownstone" (using heroin) was primarily
directed at Slash and Adler; Slash kicked his
habit within a year, but Adler did not and was
fired. In 1992, Slash courted
controversy again with a product endorsement for
Black Death vodka. Later that year, he was married
to actress and model Renee Sorum, a union that
lasted five years.
Meanwhile, in spite of controversy
and personnel turnovers, Guns N' Roses had actually
continued to record music. After the Use Your
Illusion sets of 1991 and the 1993 punk covers
album The Spaghetti Incident?, the band went on
hiatus. Slash formed a side project called Slash's
Snakepit, which consisted of fellow Gunners Matt
Sorum (drums) and Gilby Clarke (guitar), plus
bassist Mike Inez and vocalist Eric Dover.
The group released an album in
1995 titled It's Five O'Clock Somewhere; Slash
hit the road with a slightly different touring
lineup, with Brian Tichy and James Lomenso signing
on as the rhythm section. In 1996, Slash put together
a different band to play at a blues festival in
Budapest, an endeavor that evolved into Slash's
Blues Ball. Featuring vocalist/harmonica player
Teddy Andreadis, rhythm guitarist Bobby Schneck,
saxophonist Dave McClarem, bassist Johnny Griparic,
and drummer Alvino Bennet, Slash's Blues Ball
devoted themselves primarily to a repertoire of
classic blues covers, plus occasional G N' R and
Snakepit material.
Rumors about the status of Guns
N' Roses had been swirling for some time, and
in October 1996 it was confirmed that, owing to
his unwillingness to follow Axl Rose's interest
in industrial and electronic music, Slash was
no longer a member of the band (although he left
the door open for a reunion if Rose decided to
return to guitar-based rock & roll).
He gigged off and on with the
Blues Ball into 1998, although a rumored live
album never materialized. Instead, Slash decided
to re-form the Snakepit in 1999 with an entirely
different lineup (the original members were by
this time involved in other projects, and the
Blues Ball was more suited to touring than developing
original material).
Raspy-voiced singer Rod Jackson
and ex-Venice drummer Matt Laug came on board,
along with Blues Ball bassist Griparic (now Johnny
Blackout) and Teddy Andreadis, who contributed
keyboard and harmonica work. After trying out
ex-Alice Cooper guitarist Ryan Roxie, Slash settled
on rhythm guitarist Kerry Kelly, who had previously
worked with Warrant and Ratt.
The new Snakepit played some
gigs together and in the spring of 2000 completed
a new album, which was originally slated to be
released on Interscope/Geffen. However, feeling
that a more traditional guitar rock album would
get lost in the promotional shuffle, Slash moved
over to Koch, which finally released Ain't Life
Grand in October 2000.
Appears on:
Velvet Revolver:
The Hulk soundtrack (2003); Contraband (2004)
Slash' Snakepit:
It's 5 O'Clock Somewhere (1995); Ain't Life Grand
(2000)
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).
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