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- Las Vagas Review from the LA
Times
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- New Guns N' Roses Gets Right Back in the Jungle Pop
Music Review!
- Axl Rose resurfaces with a different lineup, sounding
as if he never went away.
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- By STEVE APPLEFORD, Special to The Times
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- LAS VEGAS--"Good morning," Axl Rose declared with a
grin New Year's morning at the House of Blues during his
first live performance with Guns N' Roses in more than
seven years. "I've just woke up. I've been taking a nap
for about eight years."
- If waiting all these years for the return of what was
the most explosive hard-rock band of its generation
wasn't enough for fans, they also had to wait until
nearly 4 a.m. for Rose and the new Guns lineup to take
the stage.
- But drama seems an inescapable part of Rose's
world.
- The most suspense Monday revolved around the show
itself.
- Eight years away from the action is an eternity in
the fickle world ofpop-rock, so the question on the minds
of the sold-out crowd, many of whom came from Los Angeles
and paid far above face value for the $150 tickets, was
whether Rose's new material and bandmates would satisfy
their appetites.
- The performance--whose scheduled 1 a.m. starting time
was pushed back because a Goo Goo Dolls concert at the
venue didn't end until after midnight--began amid a storm
of flashing lights and the familiar staccato guitar riff
of "Welcome to the Jungle," the band's 1987 breakthrough
hit.
- Rose, appearing superbly confident, then marched
abruptly to the stage, his red hair back down to his
shoulders, his wailing vocals easily hitting the old
screeching high notes. For all the mystery and
uncertainty that has surrounded him in recent years, it
was like he'd never left.
- Guns N' Roses first exploded out of the Los Angeles
'80s metal scene with a sound mixing classic rock melody
with real grit, raunch and dementia.
- If those hard-rock excesses sometimes drifted into
cliched excess, the band was never less than genuine in
its bad habits, which in later years degenerated into
infighting and self-destruction.
- By the early '90s, Guns N' Roses seemed the rightful
heirs to a certain brand of potent, defiant,
straight-ahead, big rock 'n' roll, epitomized by the
Rolling Stones. The inability of the original Guns N'
Roses lineup to hang together and build on the monumental
stature was a tragic failure of potential and nerve.
- With the likes of Rage Against the Machine and Korn
crafting a new, dynamic metal blend, Rose will never
again enjoy that kind of influence, but his appearance
here could mark the beginning of a new period for him as
a surprisingly forceful player of contemporary rock, not
unlike the resurgence experienced by Aerosmith in the
late '80s.
- At the House of Blues, Rose and the new Guns N' Roses
band focused largely on familiar material, which was
played with unexpected fire and precision.
- It was an unlikely cast of characters sharing the
stage, including (in the sidekick role of Slash) the
eccentric guitar virtuoso Buckethead, known for his
robotic stage movements and for wearing a Kentucky Fried
Chicken bucket as a hat. The band also included former
Replacements bassist Tommy Stinson, guitarists Robin
Finck and Paul Tobias, former Primus drummer Bryan
"Brain" Mantia, and keyboardists Chris Pittman and Dizzy
Reed, a longtime Guns sideman.
- The band was extra tight musically without being
mechanical, clearly feeding off its first time in front
of a live audience. Buckethead and Finck were never showy
as they traded sharp guitar leads during "Sweet Child o'
Mine," while the crowd sang along.
- The best news in Las Vegas for Guns followers was
that the new material frequently held up against the
band's older work. The title song for "Chinese Democracy"
(the album is scheduled for a June release) was lean,
quick-paced and dramatic, constructed along dark, modern
riffing and Rose's impatient vocals.
- Another new rock ballad, "The Blues," was rich with
melody and romantic torment. The singer also revealed a
taste of the electronic-based experiments of these last
several years with a song riddled with frantic beats and
panicked vocals, landing somewhere in the vicinity of
Prodigy.
- Fans began lining up outside the House of Blues
several hours before the scheduled 1 a.m. show time, many
of them proudly dressed in vintage Guns N' Roses
T-shirts. Waiting patiently at the front of the line were
a pair of Los Angeles 20-year-olds, Armen Gevorkian and
Garen Garabidian, who bought their tickets online via
EBay for $300 apiece.
- Both first discovered Guns N' Roses as children, not
long after arriving as immigrants from Iran, and they
expect to attend the band's next gig, at the Rock in Rio
festival later this month in Rio de Janeiro.
- Gevorkian had to skip work on Sunday to be in Las
Vegas. "My boss was OK with that because he knows I'm
crazy," he said with a laugh. "And I was going to quit
the job."
- Like many others in line, he said he was only
slightly disappointed that the band on stage would not be
the original lineup, saying, "Guns N' Roses is all about
Axl."
- That sentiment was echoed later in the show, when the
crowd spontaneously began chanting: "Welcome back!
Welcome back!" It was a disarming moment even for the
notoriously strong-willed frontman, who could only smile
and turn his head, seemingly speechless. "Now you're
embarrassing me," he said.
- Maybe so, but the most memorable aspect of Rose's
long-delayed return to the stage is that the singer never
came close to embarrassing himself or the legacy of Guns
N' Roses.
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