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- Rock in Rio
Review:
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- The amassed crowd of 200,000 at the Rock in Rio on
Sunday (Jan. 14), which waited until the late hour of 2
a.m. for confirmation that reclusive Guns N' Roses singer
Axl Rose is indeed among the living, got more than it
bargained for.
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- Not only did Rose appear, but throughout the two-hour
and fifteen-minute, 22-song set, he quite possibly
reclaimed the rock and roll crown he abandoned eight
years ago as well as used the time to make several
speeches. "Welcome to the Jngle" commenced the band's
triumphant return to Rock in Rio, a festival they also
played in 1991, sparking a crowd eruption rarely rivaled
in rock and roll today. Clad in trainer pants and an open
shirt, Rose didn't skip a beat from his control-freak Use
Your Illusion days.
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- Midway through the song, Rose demanded of security,
"Get that guy out of here. Are you listening to me Mr.
Security guard? That guy. Out." It wasn't clear what
sparked the outburst, but clearly one man's Guns N' Roses
dream ended after a mere two minutes. For the rest of us,
it went on until nearly sunrise. Rose's revolving-door
band -- currently consisting of Buckethead, Robin Finck,
Tommy Stinson, Paul Tobias, Dizzy Reed, Chris Pittman,
and Brain -- was spot-on musically, proving that the
band's triumphant Las Vegas show was not a fluke.
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- After "Mr. Brownstone," Rose enlisted the use of a
translator for first of many speeches on the evening in
which he addressed his former bandmates, the Internet,
his new band, and his life in general for most of the
'90s. "I know that many of you are disappointed that some
of the people that you came to know and love could not be
here with us here today," said Rose.
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- "Regardless of what you have heard or read," he
continued, "people worked very hard -- meaning my former
friends -- to do everything they could so I could not be
here today. I say fuck that. I am as hurt and
disappointed as you that unlike Oasis, we could not find
a way to all just get along... so much for the past. This
is "Live and Let Die."
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- Guns played five new tracks on the night, one of
which was not included in their New Year's Eve warm-up
show in Vegas ("Madagascar"). The first, "Oh My God,"
appeared five songs into the set. The live version scaled
back the industrial feel of the recorded version and
featured a heavy, crunching guitar line courtesy of
Buckethead. After "Think About You" and "You Could Be
Mine," Finck took center stage, addressing the crowd in
Portuguese, and grinding through a take on Brazilian
funk-soul legend Tim Maia's "Sossego." As Finck wreaked
funky havoc on the guitar, his vocals on the song were
overshadowed by the crowd's own singing. It was a gesture
much appreciated by the band's Brazilian fans.
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- The highlight of the set came next, as "Sweet Child
O' Mine" sounded as fantastic as it did the day it was
recorded. "Madagascar" followed, the best of the new
tracks. A subtle electronic backbeat and
keyboard-produced horn section propelled the mid-tempo
ballad, which featured Rose lamenting, "I can't find my
way back anymore..." before succumbing to a flood of
movie and speech samples. If the new tracks maintain this
level of aptitude, he won't need to go back
anywhere.
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- Before another new track, "Chinese Democracy," Rose
explained the band's stance on the old material. "We've
done one show before this and already we have been
criticized for playing old songs," he said. "But I have
no intention and I never did of denying you all something
you enjoyed. And I thought it was only fair for you to
see that this new band can play the fuck out of these
songs. It's very hard to ask a musician to learn to play
the part or parts played by other musicians before that.
These guys here have worked very hard."
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- As the set winded down, "The Blues," another new
track (the closest of the new efforts to the Use Your
Illusion era), saw Rose hop on top of the piano where he
sang the respectable rock ballad. Before "Nightrain,"
Rose lashed out at the Internet. "I used to go on the
Internet but the Internet seems to be the big garbage can
so I don't read the things that they say on the Internet
anymore," he said. Rose's vocals faded in and out of the
mix during the song, which ended the main set.
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- The band returned for "My Michelle" and another new
track, "Silkworms." An unworthy electro-funk jam
featuring a near-rap by Rose, the song fell flat and is
probably a good example of the kind of electronic rock
Rose has been working on for the past eight years.
Altered from the version played in Vegas on New Year's,
the song did not work in the context of an encore for a
show of this magnitude.
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- As the band departed once more, fans were oddly
treated with a Brazilian dance interlude courtesy of
several traditionally dressed rump shakers. Now pushing
past the 4 a.m. mark, Rose and Co. appeared for one last
song, "Paradise City," which began with onstage
pyrotechnic explosions and fireworks and followed suit
sonically.
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- When it was over, Rose introduced his Brazilian
assistant, who he credited with holding down the Axl Rose
fort for the last seven years. In tears as his assistant
translated the speech into Portuguese, the moment was a
truly genuine streak of humbleness for the singer, as the
weight on his shoulders throughout the '90s had surely,
after his reception in Rio, been lifted.
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- "Peace," said Rose in closing. "I love you. I will be
back here next summer with a whole bunch of new songs. Be
good to each other and we'll see you later."
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- Source: CD NOW
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