__WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE__

SLASH: It's _welcome_ to the jungle-the perfect introduction to Guns N' Roses.

AXL: I consider this song to be the most representative of what we're like.

IZZY: It's about Hollywood streets; true to life.

SLASH: That's the first song I had that Axl wrote lyrics to and helped me
write.  I had the riff part of it.

AXL: Yeah, I wrote the words in Seattle.  It's a big city, but at the same time
it's still a small city compared to L.A. and the things that you're gonna
learn.  It seemed a lot more rural up there.  I just wrote how it looked to me.
If someone comes to town and they want to find something, they can find
whatever they want.

SLASH: It came across, I think it was, on the third take.  We did the whole
album that way.  Second or third take.  That's where spontaneity comes from. 
If you don't get it by then, you've lost the feel of it.

STEVEN: I like the cowbell part.



__IT'S SO EASY__

DUFF: A song West (Arkeen) and myself wrote.  It's an account of a time me
and him, and also the rest of the band, were kinda going through-we didn't have
money, but we had a lot of hangers on and girls we could basically live off
of...things were just too easy.  There's an emptiness; it's so easy.

AXL: I got the greatest picture.  I cut this ad out of Hustler magazine. 
It's this girl bent over so her ass is up in the air and it says: "it's so
easy."

DUFF: No way!

AXL: Yeah, it's an ad for Easy Dates.

SLASH: There's a lot to say for that period of time when you start to lose
the excitement of just chasing chicks.  You start going after really bizarre
girls, like librarians and stuff.  Just to catch 'em; to say I finally went out
and caught a girl that wouldn't be my normal kinda date, cause everything
else is starting to get...'it's so easy'.

AXL: I sang in a low voice because that fit the attitude of that song
better.  Wasn't something I really thought about, I just started doing it. 
People ask why I don't sing like that on a lot of songs and it's only because I
just sing whatever the song deserves.  And it deserves being sung different
than the other material.  It's a hard tight, simple, punk rock song.  When I
went to England they said punk's been dead for ten years.  And I said, "it's
really weird because America doesn't know that."

STEVEN: Great rhythm.  Just rocks.  Personally I like the guitar solo in it.  I
like that part of the song 'cause me and Duff are rockin'.  Has more feel to it
than just a machine.



__NIGHTRAIN__

SLASH: At the grocery store the other night some kid saw me looking for wine
and he says, 'hey man, let's get some Nightrain.'  Anyway...so Nightrain is
just like Jungle, it's very indicative of what the band's all about.  I
remember when it first came together, we'd hitchhiked to the Rainbow and were
walking down to the Troubadour and just started yelling 'Nightrain' 'cause we
were drinking it...

AXL: It's a dollar a bottle, 19% alcohol and a quart of it, you'll black
out.  It's cheap.

IZZY: We hung out at the Troubadour, but it was dead and we just started
fantasizing and walking back up to the Strip just singing along.

DUFF: We were living in the Gardener Street studio, where we had one little box
of a room.  We had no money but we could dig up a buck to go down to this
liquor store.  It happened to have this great wine called Nightrain that
would fuck you up for a dollar.  Five dollars and you'd be gone.  We lived
off this stuff.

AXL: At the time we didn't know anything about anybody else's version of a song
called Nightrain either.

SLASH: It's more attitude and describing how you feel when you're on it, rather
than necessarily how you may be.  You feel invincible.



__OUT TA GET ME__

AXL: The lyrics are saying 'I've always been in trouble but I'm still
handling it.'  Like every time you turn around, someone is trying to screw
you over financially, or the cops are banging on your door and you didn't do
anything.  It's just being railroaded into something and trying to get out from
underneath it.  You know - parents, teachers, preachers... everybody.  The last
verse Slash and I put together as a joke 'cause we were talking about how we
get in fights sometimes, and how some people get pissed off that you're drunk. 
But they're the ones that bought the bottle of whiskey to get you drunk on. 
Some people say I got a chip on my shoulder.

SLASH: I know a big rock star right now who buys all the fucking booze and then
drinks it all up and he gets fucking irate.  'Out Ta Get Me' is Guns N'
Roses' big anarchy statement.

AXL: We had that as one of our opening numbers for a while 'cause we were
headed to a Roxy show and got pulled over by four cops.  They picked up a bag
off the street; said we threw it out the window and there were drugs in it. 
There were no drugs in it.  And they were just trying to hassle us, saying
our advance money in our pockets was drug money.  They searched everything,
pushed us around and we were late for a show.

SLASH: It's kinda hard to explain this so people can understand it.  We were
one of the most opposed bands.  We had opposition from everywhere, the whole
fucking time.  Still do.  It's not as bad now 'cause we're signed and some
people like the shit we do.  But we started out with so many people from so
many different directions trying to lash out at us.  And trying to say don't
let them in here, and don't let them do this, and don't let them do that, and
watch them, and this and that and the other.



__MR. BROWNSTONE__

AXL: When we moved out of our place on Fountain and La Cienga, I was the last
one to leave, and found this piece of yellow paper wadded up in the corner
where Izzy's and Steven's room was.  It had the lyrics to Brownstone on it. 
I read it and went, "this is great".  They said they had music for it and we
ended up starting to rehearse this thing.

SLASH: A lot of people have a misconception about this song.  They think it's
about drugs.  It's not so much a statement about our drug habits; it's a more a
statement about other people's drug habits.  It's a good little ditty that
people can listen to and maybe think about what they're doing.  Try and get
themselves in perspective.  I know one thing, a lot of people who are doing a
lot of fucking drugs all the time don't have any kind of...

AXL: They don't have a job that they're doing at the same time.

SLASH: Yeah, a band can keep you together.  Like, we can all go through all
kinds of shit, but the band keeps us just enough together.  But if you don't
have a band, don't have a job, don't have anything you're trying to do, then
somehow drugs seem to take over.  It's not preaching.  Just a statement-you can
listen to it or not.  You can just listen to the guitars or the
drums...whatever you want.

IZZY: It can mean a million different things to a million different people. 
It's like when you listen to a Zeppelin song, what do you think?  I have all
kinds of fucking wild ideas about what "Custard Pie" is about.



__PARADISE CITY__

DUFF: The chords to that song I wrote when I first moved to L.A., when I didn't
know me anybody and was kinda feeling a little down.  So that kinda came out,
like reaching for something, you know?

SLASH: The best songs we do, they're collaborations.  The best way to do it
is to have the whole band sit there and listen to everybody else's ideas, and
out it all together to make something that everybody enjoys playing.

DUFF: If one person brings in a song to this band, it always gets raped by
the other four people.  It always gets changed around to where its Guns N'
Roses.

AXL: The verses are more about being in the jungle; the chorus is like being
back in the Midwest or somewhere.  It reminds me of when I was a little kid and
just looked up at the blue sky and went "Wow, what is all that, it's so big out
there."  Everything was more innocent.  There are parts of the song that have
more of a down home feel.  And when I started putting the overlayers on the
vocals (I put five tracks on there), it seemed that it came out like some Irish
or Scottish heritage.  One of the weird things is I had a feeling it would go
over good in Europe.  The kids there sang Brownstone, they sang It's So Easy,
Mama Kin, and these other songs that they'd heard on the EP.  They also sang
Paradise City and they'd never heard it!

IZZY: They sang as loud as our stage monitors.  We could hear them over the
monitors.



__MY MICHELLE__

AXL: I know a girl named Michelle and she became a really good friend of the
band's, and I was going out with her for a while.  It's a true story.  Slash
and some other members of the band said that's kinda too heavy to say about
poor, sweet Michelle; she'll freak out.  I'd written this nice sweer song about
her, and then I looked at it and thought 'that doesn't really touch any basis
of reality,' so I put down an honest thing.  It describes her life.  This
girl leads such a crazy life with doing drugs, or whatever she's doing at the
time, you don't know if she's gonna be there tomorrow.  Everytime I see
Michelle, I'm really relieved and glad.  I showed her the lyrics after about
three weeks of debating, and she was so happy that someone didn't paint just
a pretty picture.  She loves it.  It was a _real_ song to her, not something
hokey.



__THINK ABOUT YOU__

IZZY: It's a quick love song about drugs, sex, Hollywood and money.  Next song.

DUFF: It's Izzy's song.

IZZY: it's just a song, I don't want to dig deeper than that.



__SWEET CHILD O' MINE__

AXL: That's a true story about my girlfriend at this time.

IZZY: That's a real love song.

AXL: I had written this poem, reached a dead end with it and put it on the
shelf.  Then Slash and Izzy got working together on songs and I came in, Izzy
hit a rhythm, and all of a sudden this poem popped in my head.  It just all
came together.  A lot of rock bands are too fucking wimpy to have any sentiment
or any emotion in any of their stuff unless they're in pain.  It's the first
positive love song I've ever written, but I never had anyone to write
anything about before, I guess.

DUFF: It was probably the hardest song for me and Steve to record, just because
you have to keep a steadiness and also keep the emotion in it.



__YOU'RE CRAZY__

IZZY: No.. it's called 'Fucking Crazy.'

SLASH: It's called 'You're Crazy' on the record.

AXL: Yeah, it's called 'You're Crazy' 'cause I didn't want some asshole picking
it up and they go, 'they put fuck on here,' and then they won't even give it
a chance.  It was written on acoustic, about another girl we know who was
crazy.

SLASH: When I play that song, I don't even know what I'm playing.  It's just
such a kick in the ass for me, so I run around.  I try to concentrate on the
music and keep kinda stationary, except on that song.  I don't play the same
solo every night 'cause I'm not on the same wavelength as other nights.



__ANYTHING GOES__

DUFF: That used to be a 12 1/2 minute song.

AXL: Me and Izzy and this guy Chris Weber wrote it a long time ago.  It's had
different verses at different times.  Everytime I'd do it live, people liked
it, but it just depressed the shit outta me on stage.

IZZY: Used to be speed metal too.

AXL: Yeah, we did it real fast.  Then we wrote another version about our
times at the old studio and we kept that for a while.  Then we came down to
record it,  we decided we didn't want to cut the track.  But Tom (Zutaut,
Geffen A&R man) was very adamant about having that song recorded, so we figured
'we're gonna have to rewrite it.'  In preproduction we came up with something
we liked a lot better, but the verses weren't written until the night we
recorded the song.  Basically, I just wanted that song an 'anything goes in
sex' type song.



__ROCKET QUEEN__

IZZY: I wrote this song for this girl who was gonna have a band and she was
gonna call it Rocket Queen.  She kinda kept me alive for a while.  The last
part of the song is my message to this person, or anybody else who can get
something out of it.  It's like there's hope and a friendship note at the end
of the song.  For that song there was also something I tried to work out with
various people - a recorded sex act.  It was somewhat spontaneous but
premediated; something I wanted to put on the record.

IZZY: All these qoutes were Axl's 'cause I wasn't there.

AXL: It was a sexual song and it was a wild night in the studio.  This girl
we know was dancing; everyone wasa getting real excited.  The night coulda
gotten really explosive, lots of trouble for everyone, and I thought wait a
minute, how can we make this porductive.  And this is what we got.