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- MTV Report on GNR's
Show.
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- It was over seven years in the making, but the
general consensus is that it was well worth waiting
for.
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- Axl Rose debuted his new Guns N' Roses lineup at Las
Vegas' House of Blues in the wee small hours of New
Year's Day, belting out an array of old favorites and
introducing a handful of new tunes to a capacity crowd of
1,800 ecstatic patrons.
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- GN'R kicked off the show with "Welcome to the Jungle"
and finished with an equally rousing "Paradise City,"
delivering other GN'R classics such as "Mr. Brownstone,"
"Sweet Child o' Mine," "November Rain," "Patience," "My
Michelle" and "Think About You" in between.
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- The band also rolled out a handful of previously
unheard songs, including "Chinese Democracy" - the title
track off the band's long-long-long-awaited album and
"The Blues," "Silk Worms" and one untitled track, GN'R
management confirmed.
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- GN'R also offered up a version of 1999's "Oh My God,"
their contribution to the "End of Days" soundtrack.
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- Rose was "a little emotional" at the event, according
to his longtime manager, Doug Goldstein, who added that
the singer hugged his close friends in attendance and
thanked them for their support.
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- The concert featured the expected lineup: guitarists
Buckethead, Robin Finck and Paul Tobias (a.k.a. Paul
Huge); keyboardist Dizzy Reed; former Primus drummer
Brian "Brain" Mantia; and former Replacements bassist
Tommy Stinson, who inspired Rose to joke, "'The
Replacements' would be a good name for this band."
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- Keyboardist Chris Pittman, perhaps best known as a
member of the Replicants and for his work on Tool's
Aenima, also joined the group onstage.
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- "Axl really looked happy to be playing with those
guys," said LeAnne Eden, a GN'R fan who flew in from Los
Angeles for the show. "That's something that didn't seem
to be happening with the old band - during their last
tour, anyway."
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- Onstage, Rose alluded to how he had begun rehearsals
with his new bandmates a few days prior to the show,
another situation that rarely happened in days gone by.
(The band usually rehearsed without Rose in
attendance.)
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- "[Rose] looked young and healthy. He was
slimmer than when I saw him sit in with Gilby last
summer," Eden said, referring to Rose's only other outing
in seven years: an impromptu performance with former
guitarist Gilby Clarke in
- June.
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- The two-hour show got underway at 3:30 a.m., after
the club cleared the house following a performance by the
Goo Goo Dolls. GN'R started an hour later than expected,
although the club's publicist said the group never
intended to go on much earlier than 3:30 and that Rose's
fabled tardiness was not a factor.
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- Rose was "awesome" and totally at ease with the HOB
staff as well as with the audience, the publicist
said.
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- Concertgoer Jeff Sheldon, who flew from Chicago for
the show, said that Rose made a point of crediting
guitarist Tobias with getting him through the past seven
years, conveying that the two had played together since
they were 12 years old.
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- Tobias - described alternately as a Kurt Cobain
lookalike and as a paler nondescript version of Rose
himself - stuck to rhythm duties, concertgoers said,
while ex-Nine Inch Nails member Finck, sporting eyeliner
and black lipstick, faithfully revisited ex-GN'R member
Slash's guitar parts. New twists and turns were added to
the sonic texture by Buckethead, who wore his customary
white facemask and Kentucky Fried Chicken bucket atop his
head.
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- Even though the audience was positioned directly
before the stage, the band's backdrop was a
JumboTron-style, 25-foot, floor-to-ceiling video screen
augmented by a number of smaller monitors.
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- "It looked like they fit an arena-sized show into
this club," Eden observed.
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- Security was incredibly tight, so fans may be
hard-pressed to find live MP3s
- or photos on the Web. "Not only were they
confiscating cameras," Eden said "they were even going
after cell phones."
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- The band's performance was preceded by an animated
feature that poked fun at Rose's media-perpetuated
persona. The mercurial frontman was depicted in bed -
presumably having spent the last seven years in Brian
Wilson-like seclusion - carrying on conversations with
Buddha and the odd alien, with a music magazine used in
lieu of toilet paper following a bedpan sequence. Footage
depicting a journey through a birth canal was also
presented, among other esoteric endeavors.
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- Next up, the band heads to South America, where it
will play the gigantic Rock in Rio festival on January
14.
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- --Sorelle Saidman, with additional reporting
- by Kara Manning
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