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- Brian May Talks New Guns
Album On BBC Radio 1:
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- MAH: Speaking of good
singers, we've heard a lot of rumours about the fact that
you've been doing some recording with Axl Rose. And, in
fact, many of the listeners, people including Louise in
Inverness, Charlie Dixon, Ravi and Seth Luthin have sent
e-mails in saying you must ask Brian what's he been doing
with Axl. What's the score?
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- BM: Okay, well, I have a lot
of history with those guys, as you know, because, well, I
was on tour with them for a while. My own band supported
them, which was great fun. They also did the Freddie
tribute with us and I think I regard them as great
friends, Axl in particular. And they just said come over
and do some stuff. It's a long story, to be honest, and I
won't bore you with all the details. But Axl was feeling
he that was in a difficult place because the guitarist
he'd been working with on this new album had, sort of,
replaced Slash, because they fell out, sadly. I think
that is sad actually because they're both brilliant
talents and great with each other. But the guitarist
that'd done most of the tracks had departed and Axl had a
real emotional attachment to what he'd done, and yet he
didn't want him on the album, I hope I'm not saying too
much here, he didn't really want him to stay on the album
because he'd disappeared, you know. So, he's sort of
feeling a kind of divided loyalty and he said, 'Brian can
you come and do stuff which I will like and I won't feel
too bad about ditching this other stuff?'. So I did. I
went over there and I think I played on three tracks and
messed around on various other things. But it worked out
pretty well, as far as I can tell. And it's very strange
'cause most of the Guns N' Roses people are not there
'cause Axl's sacked 'em all. So you're talking about Axl
and the 'new' Guns N' Roses but, boy, is there a lot of
energy there and his singing is outrageous. There's some
great tracks on it.
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- MAH: Now this is really
interesting because there has been so much speculation
about this new album, 'Chinese Democracy' (potentially
it's called) and there are many, many people who've
spoken to journalists, who've played with Axl over a
number of years now, who have laid claims recently that
the only one track that Axl has ever laid down a vocal
part for is 'Oh My God' but you're saying that there are
more vocal parts then?
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- BM: Oh yeah, there's a whole
album of vocal parts. In fact, there's two albums worth
that they've got there, at least. They played me
everything. Axl actually sat down and made me listen to
everything (laughs) and there's some wonderful stuff
there.
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- MAH: How do you deal with
somebody like Axl though, when he sits you down and says
listen to all of this? I mean can you really critique him
and sit there and say, 'D'ya know what Axl, that's
rubbish mate, you wanna bin that one'?
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- BM: Well, Axl sort of holds
Queen and our whole thing in a great deal of respect, so
I always figure as long as I tell my truth, he's fine,
and it's always held out so far. He's always been very
good to me. He will tell you if he doesn't agree with
what you say, you know, I mean I went in and immediately
Brian May opens his mouth and blab, blab, blab and I told
him exactly what I thought of the stuff as it was, and
some of it he went "yeah", and some of it he went "I
couldn't do that". You know, like some of the suggestions
and that's it, and Axl's a very emotionally, kind of,
connected person, I mean to the point where he's so
intense about every single note that's on there and the
solos that I played, he was totally into it, very much in
the way that Freddie used to be. You know, Freddie used
to go through my solos and say, you know
- there's this particular note
here and, I think, if you did this and this and this. I
thought I would go in there, you know, I'd forgotten what
Axl is like and I thought I would just go in there and
he'd like it. He did like it but he wanted to get into
every single take of every single note and, you know,
from one day to another Axl would've been in there like
from 5 o'clock in the morning 'till 7 o'clock in the
morning comping little bits of my solos and saying, 'can
you get Brian to try this'. You know, he's utterly
meticulous.
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- MAH: That's amazing. So,
what's your position, you've just played this amazing
solo, as far as you're concerned, and Axl comes along and
says, 'you know what, I really don't like that B flat, or
whatever it is, can you just change that?' Do you say..
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- BM: Oh I'm fine, I don't
care because I'm there to deliver, you know, and in this
context I'm a session player and people can take what
they want, it doesn't bother me. I'll give my best and if
someone will make a comment, generally it will be
You know, if someone makes a comment to you about your
playing, and it's someone who cares, then it's probably
going to do you some good, whether you like it or not.
So, I'm always open to that stuff always. There's always
room for improvements.
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- MAH: Interesting. The other
big question on the lips of our listeners this evening,
"Would you ever consider touring with Axl, if he asked
you to join the band?"
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- BM: I don't know if I would
be up for those long tours anymore, you know, I did that
for twenty years of my life, nine months of the year, and
I'm not in that position anymore in my life. You know, I
don't feel like I want to have that chaotic lack of
balance in my life anymore. I dealt with it, and I loved
it, but I'm just not in that place anymore. I don't think
I could do that. If it was a short tour, it's possible.
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- MAH: Even if he promised
never to ruin one of your solos again? (laughs)
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- BM: I'll tell you, Axl is a
very persuasive guy. He's magic really, he is, you know,
and I think he's not always easy, as genius very often
isn't, you know,Fred was not the easiest person in the
world to get on with, but someone who has that amount of
passion and gives a million percent of themselves, you'll
take any amount of stuff from, and I would from Axl, I
think he's that good.
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- MAH: Shall we play one of
his records? What have you chosen?
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- BM: Mmm. It's 'Welcome To
The Jungle'. I heard this many, many a night
- because we toured with him
all round the States and had a great time and everyone
goes 'oh was it really terrible, are they complete
bastards?' And I go, no, because they treated us with the
utmost respect and consideration and had some very good
times.
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- Welcome To The Jungle is
played.
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- MAH: Brian May smiling.
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- BM: Mmm, familiar sound.
They were such a great live band, you know, it's one of
those moments in time when everything happened in the
right way; I think really the last dangerous, magnificent
rock 'n' roll band really, so far..
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