Entertainment Weekly - August 9,
1991
by David Browne
22 MINUTES OF MUSIC PER YEAR: GN'R
ON RECORD
Talk about unprolific: over the course
of 5 years, Guns N' Roses have released only 22 songs. But those tracks
encompass flat out rockers, uneasy lullabies, and epochal castles of
sound, more stylistic maneuvers than most bands accomplish in a career.
A few questions about the band's ultimate worth remain unanswered: For
instance, are Slash's wah wah guitar hurricanes innovative, or despite
their power merely a salad-bar smorgasbord of rock guitar cliches? Even
so, the Gunners' abbreviated discography (in all one album, one lengthy
EP, one song on a soundtrack, another on a charity compilation and a
new single) is a force to be reckoned with.
Appetite for Destruction
"I got something I been building up inside" sings Axl Rose
on "Out ta Get Me", and over the course of this tour
de force debut, he and the band let it out, making hard rock platitudes
-- pop star as outlaw, drug references, the fed up voice of society's
underdog -- sound fresh and relevant. You could also credit the album's
success to timing (competition was scarce), marketing, songs that stuck
to your gut ("Paradise City" and "Welcome to
the Jungle") and producer Mike Clinks sonic-rush production,
just don't forget the ways Slash's guitar veers from sounding like a
soothing violin to imitating a castrated jungle beast in "Sweet
Child O' Mine".
(Grade: A)
GN'R Lies
Appetite had been riding the charts for nearly two years, and
with no second album even remotely in sight, the band filled in the
gap by releasing this eight-song toss-off, which combines their 1986
EP Live?!*@ Like A Suicide (originally release on an independent
label) with four new acoustic tracks. On their old cuts, the young club
band nearly careens off the stereo with manic energy, if not originality.
The new material is more problematic: The mantra-like Patience
is one of the band's most delciate moments but on the notorious One
in A Million, Rose, spitting out epithets like nigger and faggot,
comes of as inexcusably racist and homophobic.
(grade: B)
Knockin' on Heaven's Door
(on the Days of Thunder Soundtrack)
Who else could pull off the upteenth cover of Bob Dylan's ode to the
Billy the Kid's murder? These guys, of course, who use the song's resigned,
ready to meet my maker tone to embellish their fast-lane image, while
putting their own steamroller stamp on it.
(grade B+)
Civil War (from Nobody's
Child: Romanian Angel Appeal)
An old-fashioned protest song: Axl railing against "the world we're
killing" when "we feed the rich and bury the poor" during
wartime. But as seven monolithic minutes build to a tense, moving crunch,
there's nothing retro about it. Hearing this is like taking a long hike
up a mountain -- when you make it to the top the view is breathtaking.
(grade A)
You Could Be Mine (on
the Terminator 2: Judgement Day Soundtrack)
The first official tidbit to be released from the long-delayed dual
albums Use Your Illusion I and II, this is a return to
the band's bludgeoning metal roots. The melody isn't one of their most
shining, but a ferocious Rose yowl redeems it.