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Shadow
Boxing with Axl Rose When Musician last
checked in with Guns N' Roses, in the summer of 1991, frontman Axl Rose
was in a defensive crouch, slapping at his enemies. In the aftermath of
a riot at a St. Louis concert, the media had labeled the controversial
singer a public enemy, perhaps a dangerous nut, and Rose was defending
himself, screaming to be heard above his accusers. Since then things
have gotten a little rosier for Axl, though no progress in Guns N' Roses'
career will ever be easy. The band finally released its long-awaited albums
Use Your Illusion volumes one and two, which demonstrated the breadth
of the group's ambition - and which have now been best-sellers for eight
months. Having already gone through the tension of Rose, who has been
the subject of more psychological profiles than Gary Hart, threw himself
into deep therapy and began, he says, unlocking buried childhood traumas
(including being sexually abused by his natural father) that pointed toward
the causes of his various neuroses and his rages. Rose has also been working
extensively with a chiropractor and a masseuse to relieve physical traumas
- some of which result from his athletic stage shows, and some of which
he says are manifestations of the childhood abuses he is remembering.
When this interview took place, in early March, Rose was awaiting the
publication of a Rolling Stone interview in which he went public for the
first time with his accusations against his father and stepfather. Far
from nervous about the effect those revelations would have, the singer
expressed feelings of great relief, even liberation, at having exposed
his demons to the light of day. In his faith in the righteousness and
healing power of public confession, Rose recalls another tortured rock
star - John Lennon. But to understand Guns N' Roses one must understand
that Axl is not a direct descendant of Lennon. Or Dylan, Presley or any
of the other prototypes who first inspired most important rock musicians.
A child of Indiana, strict discipline and the 1970's, Rose grew up piecing
together his idea of rock 'n' roll from what he could glean from Top 40
radio in the era of Queen and Billy Joel. He still loves that music. He
says that when he first heard Elton John's "Someone Saved My Life
Tonight" the song had a power like no music he had ever known. He
also says that while he was growing up, forbidden access to rock culture,
the only music magazines he saw were the publications he could buy at
the local grocery store: teenage poster mags such as Circus and Hit Parader.
Axl Rose shaped his vision of rock 'n' roll out of rock 'n' roll's most
As a troubled child
Billy Bailey looked at pin-up pictures of silly heavy metal bands and
thought they really meant it. So he took that trivial style and infused
it with a powerful creative vision. He brought integrity to a shallow
genre through his own passionate belief. Billy Bailey was a sad, scared
kid who recreated himself as a rock star named W. Axl Rose. And then,
against all odds, he found himself again. MUSICIAN: Guns
N' Roses are going on tour with Metallica this summer. I heard you've
been trying to get Nirvana to join you and Kurt Cobain is saying no. MUSICIAN: How do
you feel about touring now? AXL: I pretty
much could do without touring in a lot of ways. I'm not a big fan of it.
I like the transportation, I like flying in a private plane, I like riding
in limos. I like the grandiose nature of those things and the material
comfort. But other than that, I don't have a lot of time to really enjoy
myself. I can enjoy that I've got a nice room and a police escort, but
I don't have much time to take in a movie or TV or just sit and relax. MUSICIAN: Do the
people who come to your shows and listen closely to your records really
know you? MUSICIAN: There's a part of your audience that's attracted to the possibility of disaster. There are people rooting for you to lose. AXL: Yeah,
that's like a gladiator thing. That's a morbid part of human nature and
it can be tough to deal with. Especially if you feel it from a crowd.
It's very disguised. It's not like, "Aw, you suck!" They're
screaming and they're happy but they want to see blood. To figure out
how to rise above that and still satiate the crowd is a tough job. I've
done shows where to the naked eye it looked really positive, but onstage,
being sensitive to it, it was a draining thing. These people were out
for every last drop they could get. If they're giving something back,
you can give more. MUSICIAN: When
the crowd's energy is negative, does that force you to follow them down
the road, or can you turn it into something positive? AXL: It's been
different at different stages of my career. It used to be more of a punk
rock thing where a band would take that negative attitude and turn it
on themselves. "You want to see blood? I'll give you more than you
planned on, I'll even take my own life." I've tried that avenue until
finally...it was too hard. You just go down the tubes too fast giving
in to that kind of anger. But it's really hard to stay positive when there's
that kind of taking and that kind of anger in the crowd. There's places
where we have played where we have turned it around. Sometimes it's hard
to stay focused when you're AXL: I think
it's pretty much on my shoulders and I don't mind that at all. The band
works the stage and gets off on the crowd, but I'm kind of a shield. If
I'm gone they don't really know how to get on top of it. If I'm out there
and not handling it, no one can really rescue me. It's just very hard
sometimes. We've done shows where I could feel that it was a very MUSICIAN: Yet if
you gave in to the negative the crowd would love it. AXL: I'm such
a Victory or Death type of person. I realized at one point that going
onstage and just smashing everything around and singing "Jungle"
wasn't getting
me anywhere in my own life. It wasn't enough for me. And taking it farther
and hurting myself or taking my life onstage wasn't going to
do me any good. And if people are benefiting from the music it wasn't
going to do them any good if I was gone. So I had to start working on
other ways of dealing with it and other ways of working with the crowd.
We still haven't risen above a lot of things but we've risen above some.
And we're continually striving. MUSICIAN: When we go see Guns N' Roses now we're seeing three original members and three hired sidemen. You're one man away from a Steely Dan situation. AXL: Slash
and I are avid Steely Dan fans. MUSICIAN: What's
different about playing with guys you've hired, as opposed to guys you
slept on floors with? AXL: In some
ways it's not a whole lot different because in the beginning we were putting
a band together to achieve something. It was always kind of a triad between
Slash, Izzy and me. And when Izzy wasn't so much being a part of that
triad, Doug Goldstein, our manager, kind of took his place. As far as
keeping Guns N' Roses going and figuring out what we're doing, Izzy really
wasn't that much involved anymore. He wrote songs, but those songs were
on the record because I wanted them on the record and because the band
agreed to learn them and liked them and we all worked on them. I really
believed in Izzy. I was an Izzy fan for 15 years and I wanted his songs
to be a part of this project. But it was like pulling teeth to make that
happen. A lot of people might have liked the way Izzy was standing there
onstage and it was kind of cool, but the truth of the matter was that
Izzy wasn't handling any of the weight. MUSICIAN: It seems
like you have the other guys in the band over a barrel sometimes. Everyone
knows that you're capable of saying, "The hell with it, I won't go
on" or won't record or won't show up. Doesn't that force the band
to say, "We better do it Axl's way or it ain't going to happen at
all"? AXL: Yeah.
MUSICIAN: Does
that take something out of the band? It seems as if Guns N' Roses has
gone from being a shared vision to being your vision. Is that fair? AXL: Yeah,
it's somewhat fair. That's definitely the case with Izzy. Izzy wanted
the financial rewards and the power rewards of my vision. Izzy's vision
was much smaller. The other guys in the band just thought I was crazy.
In order to make certain things happen, certain people had to think certain
ideas were completely their own. I definitely knew what I wanted. I didn't
know quite how to get there. And sometimes the only way to have everybody
going the same place is to allow them to think that they're the ones who
thought of it. It's not so much that way anymore and it's been real difficult
to uncover that reality. It's been hard for people to accept. But it has
been a basic reality of Guns N' Roses since the beginning. It just wasn't
seen. Because I wasn't someone who had all the answers and all the plans,
I just had a vision. I wasn't necessarily someone that people wanted to
follow blindly and say, "He's got the plan, let's go." I've
finally earned respect from Duff and Slash that wasn't necessarily fully
there before. And Slash and I, more than anyone else, are very much a
team. MUSICIAN: In "Garden of Eden" you talk about "kiss ass sycophants." Are there people around you who can look you in the eye and say, "Hey, you're being a real jerk, knock it off"? AXL: Yeah.
I have some close friends in the band and in our organization. That's
why I'm friends with them. We pretty much can lay things on the line with
each other. MUSICIAN: Use Your
Illusion has been out for a while now. Do you find that one volume holds
together better than the other? AXL: No, I've
never really looked at it as two separate albums. That was Geffen Records'
marketing plan. I've always looked at it as an entire package. For me
it fits together perfectly for the 30 songs in a row. Everything that
we decided to record for the album made it. Actually there were 29 songs
and "My World" just kind of presented itself. MUSICIAN: Did you
suddenly say, "Hold on, there's another song coming"? AXL: Yeah.
That also happened with "Don't Cry." While I was recording the
original version I started hearing another melody and words in my head.
It really surprised me. I told Mike Clink, our producer, "Put me
on another MUSICIAN: In it
you refer to your "socio-psychotic state of bliss." AXL: I'll expose
a little more of myself - we were also on 'shrooms. A friend of mine had
stuck some mushrooms in my tea and I didn't know it. All of a sudden we
were being really mellow. So it was kind of a socio-psychotic state of
bliss. MUSICIAN: Some
musicians will mess up their personal lives in order to keep the
music coming. AXL: I think
everybody's different. A lot of people, myself included, will choose to
stay in certain situations whether you like them or not because they are
what you know. That's what you're used to. You can even leave one set
of conditions and move into another and it's a whole other mess, but there's
some of the same essence in that mess, the same type of chaos. I think
that a lot of people hold onto these things because it's pretty natural
to have fears of moving beyond something. Like feeling you need to keep
a certain anger in your life because that's how you defend yourself and
deal with the world, rather than learning how to let it go. You hold onto
certain fears and frustrations because it's so much a part of you that
you don't know what you'd be without it. The truth is that you'd be better,
but try convincing your unconscious mind of that. MUSICIAN: It would
be tough for anybody to peel back those layers, to confront
those demons and let go of that anger. But it must be even tougher for
someone in your position. You have been rewarded for your anger, you have
had lots of reinforcement. When you go out onstage and express your rage
people cheer. It must be very hard for you to let go of it. AXL: It's like
signing a contract with a big record company and being promoted as the
bad boys. Then after your success reaches a certain point you're expected
to be able to just talk with the lawyers and be very social and business-wise,
communicate properly. And you're like, "Wait a minute, the reason
we're here is because of what we were and now we're supposed to be something
completely different?" That's taken a long time for me to get on
top of, and to turn things around in myself so I wasn't just the bad boy.
All of a sudden in order to keep things rolling smoothly business-wise
and MUSICIAN: To some
degree the entertainment business expects you to be a hypocrite. "Well,
surely that's just an act. Now let's get in the limo and talk about the
franchise rights for Japan." AXL: Yeah,
and you're expendable. If it's not an act, well then you just couldn't
cut it and you're out. It's a real law of the jungle. The strongest survive.
Maybe there are some people trying to help you, but you have to get on
top of it yourself. And if you don't, well, see ya. MUSICIAN: The reason
a lot of musicians say, "Just put me in the car and tell me what
city I'm in" is because they don't want to deal with business, they
don't want to have to make those decisions. They just say, "Let me
be a performing monkey, put me onstage and I'll dance around." AXL: But nine
times out of 10 that attitude comes back and slaps you in the face later.
For me one of the greatest examples of that is that there is no Alice
Cooper band like there used to be. I think that's a reason why a certain
level of success and creativity isn't there anymore. Alice is a great
human being, but something was killed a long time ago. MUSICIAN: Are there
artists that you see as an example of doing it right? Of whom you say,
"That's the kind of career I'd like to have"? AXL: I look
at U2 that way. They're my favorite band right now. I'm finally getting
certain songs that I never understood before or couldn't relate to. I've
always listened to them, but the only song I really got into was "With
or Without You." I couldn't relate to their other songs because I
was like, "That's great, but I just don't see that part of the world."
Now I can see more of the things he's talking about. I bought Achtung
Baby and the third song, "One" - I actually want to do a MUSICIAN: To what
do you attribute that? AXL: I've done
a lot of emotional therapy and getting in touch with my real self, rather
than the self I've created to deal with life. Even though I was fighting
to be myself, I wasn't really in touch with who I was. I guess I allowed
it, but what are you going to do? You're a baby and things happen. You
get affected. MUSICIAN: You're
talking about being abused as a child? AXL: Yeah.
I was affected by what I saw at such an impressionable age. I kind of
separated from the self I came here with. Man, I did a really good job
of putting together a reasonable facsimile of who I thought I was. I was
an angry pissed-off person most of the time. At least I was very honest
to that. I didn't then try to split off and be somebody else from that.
If I had you'd be seeing me on "Oprah" talking to my 23rd personality.
MUSICIAN: You were
sexually abused by your father and then your stepfather abused your sister? AXL: Yeah.
And it was a very strict spare-the-rod, spoil-the-child uptight religious
family. It was okay to beat the kids. Those situations embedded themselves
deeply within my personality. Going back through those situations and
experiencing the anger or the pain or the hurt and letting them go is
the healing process. Then you start to become who you really are. Usually
a person is going to be a lot more happy with who they really are than
whoever they think they are. There is really nothing to be afraid of,
but it seems scary. MUSICIAN: Are you
in touch with your family now? AXL: No, I
haven't talked with my parents in over a year-and-a-half. I sent them
some letters just recently to let them know this was happening, but when
I started to uncover things they let me know, very adamantly, to drop
the issue. MUSICIAN: When
you uncover things that are buried that deep and that happened
in early childhood, how do you know that what you're remembering is even
real? How do you know you're not uncovering a dream or a fantasy or some
projection or demonization? AXL: I have
a lot of corroboration from people who knew something horrible happened.
Even now I could talk about it with my grandmother and she'd nod her head
yes, but would not talk about it. Also, the emotions that end up surfacing
and the amount of weight that is lifted each time we get into certain
issues kind of makes me go, "Wait a minute, I can trust myself here."
I can trust myself because I feel a hell of a lot better. I mean, you
could go to a medium and talk to someone in your family who had died and
when you come out you'll feel much different. Someone will say, "Was
it real?" and you'll say, "I don't know, but I know I feel a
lot easier with the situation and acting on it isn't going to hurt me." MUSICIAN: Sure,
but if it makes you feel better to believe in a phony medium, that affects
no one but you. When you say publicly that your father molested you and
your stepfather abused your sister, you're affecting your whole family.
The rules of evidence would have to be stricter. AXL: Oh yeah.
My sister is involved with my life and works with me, so I know what happened
there. I know what reaction my mom has to dealing with any of it. Her
eyes turn black. It's complete anger and she will fight to the death to
not have to re-experience that. That somewhat justifies it. The physical
damage manifesting itself is another thing that puts it together. Certain
thought patterns are there that would have no reason to be there unless
something happened. I don't believe too many people are born evil or born
fucked up. Something had to happen somewhere. You go back and find the
time that something happened and work through and finally find the base
underneath. And by letting it go, all of a sudden you don't have certain
problems in your life. That somehow validates the situation. I've gone
back and realized that I had thought my whole life that sex is power and
also that sex leaves you powerless. MUSICIAN: Because
sex was used as a weapon against you as a child, it made you grow up assuming
that sex equaled power over people? AXL: Without
even realizing it. It's like, wait, I'm trying to have a happy life here
- why do I keep getting in my own way with it? What's going on here? MUSICIAN: I could
sit here and play pop psychologist and say, "Oh well, that explains
why you use sex as a weapon in your songs" or explains the antagonism
toward women in some of your songs. What do you see in your music that
you understand better for going through this therapy? AXL: Well,
the things you just said made sense. So there you are, pop psychologist.
Now I feel I know why I've gotten myself into negative situations and
how I've kept that ball rolling whether I wanted to or not. I can see
a lot of that in my life and in the albums. I was pretty much trying to
express the anger and frustration and I was blaming certain things on
the women involved. That's not to say that when I was writing a song like
"Locomotive" that the person I was inspired by wasn't doing
something completely fucked up. You know, I can even have some love for
my real father now, which I never had before, but that's not to say that
he wasn't an asshole. I can understand Izzy leaving the band and be fine
with that, but that's not to say he didn't go about it like an asshole.
Someone could understand why I stormed offstage but I have to take responsibility
for that. I could have been bein' a fuckin' baby. I'm trying to learn
how to take more responsibility for my actions. I just wish I didn't have
so many actions that were fucked up that I had to take responsibility
for. MUSICIAN: It's got to be good for some kid who is into Guns N' Roses because he finds a manifestation of his anger to be presented with the possibility that anger is not an end in itself. AXL: Yeah,
that's what I'd like to promote. It's very hard because for a lot of people
that's a new concept. And rock 'n' roll music is so huge, with all the
amps and the watts of power, that someone can think, "This means
I should go home and scream at my girlfriend for giving me shit."
And I'm saying, "No, that's not what it means. It means you can feel
like that and that's okay, and then you need to communicate so you can
let that go." Expressing your anger can be really good. I know it's
really good for me. But using anger as a tool to try to achieve something
doesn't necessarily work. MUSICIAN: When you're talking to your therapist, are you Axl or Bill? AXL: It's Axl. Bill was something that got left behind long ago. I was named after my real father and that wasn't something I was a big fan of. If I'm getting in touch with the child in me then I'm dealing with Billy. But I'm Axl. That was the name of a band I had with Izzy and at one point he said, "You live, breathe, eat, sleep, walk and talk Axl. Why don't you just be Axl?" So I was like, "Good. Now I'm Axl Rose." And I won. |