SLASHClient BiographySLASH “It’s been an interesting
road from the mid 90s up until now,” says Slash. “I never stopped to think, ‘What am I gonna
to do in the long term?’ Or ruminated on my solo career, where it was heading.
I’ve just been jamming around, going wherever the muse has taken me. And this
is the first time where I feel like I’m in the saddle and riding my own destiny
with some genuine focus.” For fans who’ve tracked the
broken glass and ruby slipper journey of Guns N’ Roses lead guitarist since the
release of Appetite for Destruction
two days before his 22nd birthday 25 years ago this July, one can’t
help but be radioactive with enthusiasm. Apocalyptic
Love is not just a new record by the storied musician with the black top
hat and magical gift for riff, for Slash and his three co-conspirators; it is,
indeed, destiny. And everyone involved is poised for the ride. “The entire album was
recorded like a live performance record where the band was all set up together
in the big room,” observes producer Eric Valentine, whose Barefoot Recording
Studios in Hollywood provided the fertile sonic soil for Love to blossom. “Slash played his solos live as the drums were
going down. The vocals were overdubbed because Myles Kennedy was playing rhythm
guitar live. The whole thing is Todd Kerns’ bass, Brent Fitz’ drums, and two
main guitars. Slash played the solos while the band was jamming so we didn’t
have to go back and overdub solos either, which he really dug.” “It was important to capture
the essence in that big room because as long as I’ve been doing studio
recordings, I’ve always wanted to keep my guitar tracks from the actual live
playing with the band,” adds Slash. “And I’ve kind of re-done them because I
never enjoyed playing with headphones on. So Eric built this small room within
the main room just for me, which he called the Slash Box, where I could play my
parts and solos and still see the band, which worked great.” The liberated feel of Apocalyptic Love is evident throughout
the LP’s 13 songs, as is the genuine chemistry between Slash and lead singer,
Myles Kennedy. The evolution of their creative relationship went full throttle
since the two first joined forces on Slash’s 2010 debut solo release where the
Alter Bridge front man lent his pipes to the cavalcade of venerable guest
vocalists which included Iggy Pop, Ian Astbury and Ozzy Osbourne. The Slash/Kennedy
collaboration started from intuition. “I contacted him out of the blue, sent him
one of the songs I was working on which turned out later to be ‘Starlight’.
After Myles contributed his ideas and sent it back to Slash, creative forces
congealed. “I went, ‘Wow, now that’sreally good,” recalls Slash. “I
played it for Eric so we flew Myles out to track it and this unassuming mild
mannered guy shows up, similar in demeanor to me, sort of quiet, not really
explosive in personality. He then nailed “Back from Cali” it was like, ‘You
ready to go on tour with us?’ I was so happy when he accepted the offer.” For
the Boston-born lead singer of the Florida-based hard rock quartet, Alter
Bridge, the gig was an opportunity to expand his personal portfoliowhile
exploring some musical synergy with an artist he’d long admired. The modern master of the
Gibson needed a rhythm section to flesh out his frenetic and fanciful chords. After auditioning a lot of drummers, he
settled on Brent Fitz. “He was perfect,” Slash enthuses. “And Brent introduced me to Todd Kerns who
was not only an awesome bass player but hesings like a motherfucker. It was
really magical – a throw together band that was just right.” Myles Kennedy and Slash
quickly discovered they possessed profound creative chemistry that would spawn
a wellspring of brilliant song ideas. “I’d jot down chords and concepts and
play them for Myles,” says Slash. “He
would automatically adhere to whatever the track was and add these great
melodies and lyrics. We started putting these basic arrangements together and
the songs appeared.” The communion of Slash and
Myles does ring that destiny bell a bit.
With songs like the debut single, “You’re a Lie,” “Standing in the Sun,”
“No More Heroes,” “Bad Rain,” and the riveting ballad, “Not for Me,” voice,
lyric and axe form a holy performance trinity of extraordinary passion, power
and authenticity. “Not For Me’ might be my favorite track on the record, a
labor of love and retrospection,” confesses the vocal acrobat. “The lyrics stem
from conversations I had with Slash regarding some of his bad behavior from way
back, combined with things that I lived through. I went through a pretty dark
period about 12 years ago, experimenting with things I probably should have
avoided that didn’t really work for me. That song is about waking up and having
this epiphany that things needed to change and it was time to take a different
route in life. I think that’s something a lot of people, not just artists or
rock stars, go through under different circumstances. It could be anything
that’s not working, a mindset, habit, pattern or relationship.” The dynamic balance between
front men and their six-string reflections is notoriously precarious. Flammable
egos can torch even the most stunning synergy into a smoldering ash heap.The rock
n’ roll road less traveled is littered with the scattered carcasses of damaged
duos. But Slash and Myles have fused dynamic forces like two elements creating
a natural compound of unique rock energy. Their genuine sense of mutual
admiration and respect transcends profile and personality. “What I love so much
about Slash’s playing is the immense emotion he devotes to his craft,” says
Myles. “There is a certain ache to the way
he bends a note, the vibrato. He plays so brilliantly on this record, as he has
on all the records he’s made, but there’s a touch more beautiful pain in his
technique now. Being a guitar player myself, I’m just in awe of his method and
style.” Few will argue that Slash has
evolved with grassroots relevance and reverent pace over the past decade where
he now rightfully belongs in the pantheon of axe mythology, having been selected
by a Time Magazine survey as second
only to Jimi Hendrix among electric guitarists. Staying focused on your current
musical project whilst in the midst of swelling adulation and swirling speculation
is no easy feat. But somehow, Slash manages to keep his eye on the apocalyptic
prize. “I know that GN’R’s induction
into the Hall of Fame and the 25th anniversary of Appetite are on a lot of people’s
minds,” admits Slash. “But when you’re
making a record, you just commit to keeping those distractions out of the
process. You have to sort of roll with everything as it happens.” When you’re a quarter century
into your career, how do you maintain personal clarity and connection to your
fans? Slash makes no secret that he enjoys the tools of social networking and
new technology. “I don’t consider Twitter and Facebook a distraction,” he says.
“It keeps me in touch with the fans. That’s always been something I feel very
strongly about given the opportunity through new media and the Internet –which
is of course a double edged sword – YouTube all that stuff is a way an artist
can stay toe to toe with the people. I
never liked to alienate myself but rather made an attempt to let the fans know
where I was playing and invite them along to rock out, sort of makes me feel
like I was part of a big gang –we’re all doing this together.” Much to the delight of old and new fans, Slash’s resume builds
along with his worldwide fan base. Since
making
history and amassing global sales in excess of 100 million units with Guns N’
Roses, returned with Slash’s Snakepit
in 1994, followed by Velvet Revolver’s two hit LPs, 2005’sContraband (for which the single, “Slither” won a Grammy for Best
Hard Rock performance) and 2007’s Libertad. Finally, Slash reemerged with his groundbreaking,
guest-star studded 2010 solo debut. In 2011,
Slash was honored by the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce who named him as an
official selection to receive a star in 2012 on Hollywood’s iconic Walk of Fame. After making numerous session appearances and
lending his laid-back, six-string genius to an eclectic mix of artists which
include Michael Jackson, Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, filmmakers Quentin
Tarantino and Darren Aronovsky; not to mention Guitar
Hero III: The Legend of Rock and co-authoring a bestselling memoir--the
question begs: What’s next for the London-born, L.A. schooled kid who discovered
his musical soul when his father played him the Beatles, Stones and Yardbirds?
“Touring Apocalyptic Love and having a great time,” Slash says humbly. “As long as I can plug my Les Paul into a
Marshall amp, I’ll just keep doing what I’m doing.” Not a bad destiny at all.
--Lonn M. Friend author of Life on Planet Rock (2006) and Sweet
Demotion: How an Almost Famous Rock Journalist Lost Everything and Found
Himself (2011). April 2012
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