The phone rang. It was Blake, W. Axl Rose's personal assistant, asking if
I'd be up for doing an interview with the elusive and controversial GNR
vocalist. Even though I was deep into other projects, l was neither busy nor
foolish enough to pass this gig up. Then Blake made an unusual request.
Instead of chatting face to face, Axl wanted to do the interview over the
phone. Unusual, but not a problem. A date and a time were set.
What follows is our marathon talk. Instead of a formal interview, it's more
like you, the reader are being invited to listen in on a private
conversation. l know Axl as well as anyone can know him. l proudly consider
him a friend, but I'm not afraid to tell him what l feel or when l think
he's being a jerk. No, l won't give you his number, but if you want to play
along, sit by your phone for awhile tapping your foot (yes, he called late;
love him or hate him, the man is consistent), imagine a ring and pick up the
receiver...
---------------
RIP: This is kind of awkward, doing an interview on the phone.
AXL: You know one reason why l want to do it this way? Sometimes you and l
say a lot heavier things on the phone than we do in person. So l thought
this would be cool, especially because I'm trying to be private right now. l
can do this in my own space and just talk.
RIP: I've got five 100-minute tapes, so we can go till we burn.
AXL: Alright.
RIP: Even as well as l know you, l still pick up magazines to see what is
said about Guns N' Roses and, in particular, you. The last interviews of any
substance were Kim Neely's pieces in Rolling Stone, but you're still in
every single magazine. I'll be reading something that has absolutely nothing
to do with GNR, and you'll be compared to Adolf Hitler or some other evil
just to add fire to the writer's article.
AXL: I think there's a great fear of the unknown, and my new thing is, "I am
the unknown."
RIP: Sounds like something Stephen King would say. Why are you the unknown,
and have you purposely made yourself that way?
AXL: Partially, yeah, trying not to be overexposed. Negativity sells, and
the media knows that. "Axl Rose is rock 'n' roll's bad guy." There were a
lot of people who felt that the Rolling Stones shouldn't exist, who talked
crap about them. Now we're huge, and it seems the people who are most vocal
are the ones who don't like us. They'll pick up any rock to throw at us.
When I read that Guns N' Roses could be David Duke's house band, that's
wrong, and it hurts me. I'm not for David Duke. l don't know anything about
the guy except that he was in the Klan, and that's fucked. There's a lot of
people who have chosen to use that song ("One in a Million"). However that
song makes them feel, they think that must be what the song means. If they
hate blacks, and they hear my lines and hate blacks even more, I'm sorry,
but that's not how l meant it. Our songs affect people, and that scares a
lot of people. l think that song, more than any other song in a long time,
brought certain issues to the surface and brought up discussion as to how
fucked things really are. But when read somewhere that l said something last
night before we performed "One in a Million," it pisses me off. We don't
perform "One in a Million." Another reason I've been laying low is that I've
been trying to take the time to survive our success and assume
responsibility for where we're at. l didn't have enough energy to stay in
contact with the media. Instead of dealing with the media, l was trying to
grow in my own space. I've needed to do that for the last couple of years.
It took me years to rise above the success of Appetite and the people who
liked it. l was like, "Why are they liking it? These are the same people who
hated me?" There are a lot of people who are afraid of what they think l
could be. They see the power in the music and the words. They see the
reactions of people to our music, and the natural reaction is to lay
everything on the people performing the music. I'm not necessarily
responsible for the reactions l write, and the band plays, from the heart In
our songs we show instances that were really fucked, but we've risen above
those situations, and people get a real sense of surviving obstacles from
us. l was watching this thing today about de-metalizing kids. All a parent
knows is they see their kid listening to Ozzy Osbourne. The kid is doing
acid and painting upside down crosses on his wall, and they don't know what
happened to him or her, so it's Ozzy's fault.
RIP: So you're to blame for the next generation of fuck-ups?
AXL: According to parents or whoever. There's a lot of people who don't
understand or know how to handle their children's rebellion.
RIP: Yeah. Taking responsibility for your own actions and, if you have a
kid, responsibility for their actions, is really heavy.
AXL: Especially responsibility that a part of us never really wanted, but
now have.
RIP: Why does the world have this misconception about you, especially about
you being a drug addict?
AXL: Didn't Presidential candidate Bill Clinton catch a lot of shit for
admitting that he tried pot once? That's bullshit. How many cool people do
you know who survived and lived during the '6Os? GNR got to the top of a
mountain by using every pile of shit that ever happened to us. We were
living that way, living our songs, and it started killing us. It was either
die or change. Certain people who see that we've gotten control over
ourselves, control over our physical shapes and our lives, write that we're
sedate and predictable. They say we don't live on the edge anymore.
Actually, I'm living on the edge and learning how to ride it instead of
being dragged down by it.
RIP: l see what you're saying, but that doesn't answer my question about
you.
AXL: Okay, first off, I'm on very specific, high-tuned vitamins. My body
needs these vitamins. I'm also involved in extensive emotional work to reach
certain heights with myself that doing hard drugs would interfere with. I'm
doing several detoxing programs to release trapped toxins that are there
because of trauma. Doing a lot of coke would get in the way of my work.
Doing dope would definitely get in the way of what I'm trying to accomplish.
Some pot doesn't really get in the way too much. If gets in the way of the
work for, like, the next day, but sometimes it's a grounding thing. It I'm
flipping out in the middle of Idaho, then a little bit of pot helps me be
sedate. Also, coming off stage, going from such high energy into a very
sedate world, is heavy -- I don't care how many strippers you have. It's
like going off a cliff in a car, and that's when I can use some smoke.
RIP: You don't even smoke that much anymore.
AXL: I know. About a year ago, while we were recording the records, I smoked
a lot of pot. I was in a lot of pain, and that was the only way I could keep
myself together enough to work. It was the only thing that could take my
mind off my problems, so I could stay focused and record. It helped keep me
together. Now it would interfere with things.
RIP: Remember when you actually moved into The Record Plant and set up camp?
AXL: There was no heat in that room. It was a cold, lonely place, but it was
the only place I could stay to keep myself in the work. It was cool looking,
but it was dark, cold and weird. It got to the point that certain people
could tell just by the way I was talking, the tone of my voice, that l
wasn't right. A friend brought by some Christmas presents. Another flew out
unannounced and stayed with me Christmas Day, because they were very worried
that I wasn't going to make it through. I couldn't leave the studio, but I
couldn't go back to my condo because of my neighbor. That was a nightmare.
It was also wild, because these people didn't know anything about the
Christmas before, when was driving to your house, trying to find someone
with dope on the way because l wanted to OD. I could always relate to the
Hanoi Rocks song "Dead by Christmas." It's been two Christmases since then,
though, and this past one was probably the nicest I've had in 29 years.
RIP: Did Robert (John, GNR's photographer) ever take any photos of you
there?
AXL: No.
RIP: That's a drag
AXL: Yeah, it's a shame.
RIP: That would've been a great photo. That, and the time you threw your
piano out the sliding-glass windows of your house.
AXL: Those were two major things that didn't get on film that should've.
John Lennon wasn't nearly as self-conscious as l am. He could keep a camera
rolling at all times.
RIP: l remember being backstage at San Diego, and you were late. People were
seriously tense. Half of the concern is the job itself, but the other half
is concern for you. It's not a case of, "Oh my god, my check's going out the
window," it's, "Is Axl alright?"
AXL: I've never been in a position before where I've been responsible for
the income and livelihood of at least 60 people, like our road crew and
such. That's hard for me to deal with. If we didn't have an album out right
now, l wouldn't be on tour; l wouldn't have chosen to take on that
particular responsibility at this time. But I didn't really have a choice,
especially if I want to keep my career going. I would've liked to be more
together emotionally and mentally before this tour. Part of the job of being
in Guns N' Roses is coming onstage and being superhuman. We're supposed to
rise above the energy in the crowd, rise above whatever bad may have
happened that day, rise above whatever is in your head, while at the same
time trying to rise above the damage in your own life. When l say GNR are
striving to rise above, I mean we're doing our best to survive, not like,
"Hey, look at us, we're better than you." I don't mean rising by being
power-hungry and vicious to people. We're just trying to rise above and be
healthy and secure with ourselves, and trying to spread some of that around.
That's what I'm working on.
RIP: Everyone seems to be harping on your tardiness to gigs.
AXL: I addressed the crowd in Phoenix and explained, "Maybe I was just too
fuckin' bummed out to get my ass up here any quicker." They loved that.
Maybe l couldn't move any faster than I was because it was a bitch. l don't
mean to inconvenience the crowd by being late. Maybe by reading this
interview they can understand a little of what go through regularly.
Sometime it's really hard getting onstage, because l feel like I just can't
rise above and win. I don't want to get onstage unless I know l can win and
give the people their money's worth. I'm fighting for my own mental health,
survival and peace. I'm doing a lot of self-help work and, fortunately, I
can afford the people I work with. People say that I'm just spoiled. Yeah, I
am; but the work I'm doing is so l can do my job. I've learned that when
certain traumas happen to you, your brain releases chemicals that get
trapped in the muscles where the trauma occurred. They stay there for your
whole life. Then, when you're 50 years old, you've got bad legs or a bent
back. When you're old, it's too hard to carry the weight of the world that
you've kept trapped inside your body. I've been working on releasing this
stuff, but as soon as we release one thing and that damage is gone, some new
muscle hurts. That's not a new injury; it's a very old injury that, in order
to survive, I've buried. When l get a massage, it's not a relaxing thing;
it's like a football player getting worked on. I've had work done on me --
muscle therapy, kinesiology, acupuncture almost every day that we've been on
the road.
RIP: It always seems like a crapshoot as to which Axl is going to show up at
the gig. Why is that?
AXL: Part of it is because GNR is like a living organism. It's not an act.
Even if I'm doing the same jump during the same part of a particular song,
it's not an act. That's the best way for me to express myself at that point.
l get there, and l let it out. Certain ways l move, like during
"Brownstone," is the way to get the best out of myself. It's like, how can l
give the most at that moment without giving up my life? How can l give life
and still walk away with it? We don't go onstage like Guns N' Roses used to,
or like a punk band -- and I'm not knocking punk bands --thinking that if we
don't make it to tomorrow, that's okay. Now there's a lot of things
depending on tomorrow and GNR. It's like, how can we give the most and turn
around tomorrow and give that much again? It takes a lot of work, a lot of
effort and a lot of maintenance. When l went onstage in San Diego, l got on
thanks to Nirvana. l used their music to inspire me. I took their attitude
and got up in jeans and a T-shirt I never do that. l got out there and told
Slash that didn't know what was going to happen. I thought was going to go
out there and quit. If l go out there and can't do it because l have no
energy, then l have to walk away. When l got out there, the crowd was very
giving with their energy towards us, and it actually fueled me. There's
energy in the crowd that, unless you've seen and felt it, there's no way to
describe. It's fuckin' scary. Darby Crash (lead singer of the L A. punk band
the Germs) was scared to death of that energy, and his only way of rising
above it was by getting wasted, acting like it didn't exist and showing that
he could do more damage to himself than the crowd could. That's how he rose
above it, but it finally killed him.
RIP: That's so weird you brought him up. Yesterday we were talking about how
great the Germs record is.
AXL: Today l was watching The Decline of Western Civilization. l really
liked this guy, and l felt bad.
RIP: You know. someone's gonna read this, see you say "living on the edge,"
and assume you mean drugs and rowdiness and all the other Hollywood cliches
AXL: Well, that used to be. A lot of those were ways of dealing with pain.
It was a survival mechanism. When see someone famous saying, "The road to
success was not the drugs, blah, blah, blah,' I'm like. "Hey, they kept you
alive during that time, didn't they? If you didn't have those things, you
might not have made it." There's a lot of things that none of us were taught
when we were kids. There is a lot of pain built up over the years. You're
taught to believe that it's normal to get smacked in the head if you don't
eat your food. By the lime you're in your teens, you're like, "Gimme a beer.
Life's a bitch." I could never see myself trying to take away anyone else's
emotional suppressants, especially if that's what helps keep them going and
surviving. I would like to show people that you can get past these things
and not need them anymore. I'm not about escaping through drugs and sex
anymore, because I've reached a point where l can't escape. There is no
escape. l have to deal with and face my life l was one of many people that
didn't think l was gonna live to see next week, let alone 21. I felt that
the world was so fucked up and that l was so underneath it all that just
getting successful was not rising above it. That was rising above a couple
things, like financial things, but then you had to learn how to handle the
money, or you could get buried by it all over again and be even more
depressed.
RIP: I know what you mean.
AXL: It you're operating out of fear that you're not going to live past a
certain point anyway, then the attitude is, "Fuck it." In certain respects
we've gotten lucky, those of us who are still alive, that we did get past
that. There's a lot of people involved in rock 'n' roll who were running
from something. They got involved with drugs and alcohol to help ease their
pain. A large portion -- probably the majority -- of rockers and metal fans
are damaged people who are trying to find some way to express themselves.
They can relate to the anger, the pain, the frustration of the band that's
performing.... Can l call you back in. like, half an hour?
RIP: Yeah. What's up?
AXL: l just want to get something to eat.
You can't have a music conversation without W. Axl Rose's name popping up.
Rock n' roll's favorite enigma, he conjures many images. Everything from
Damien Thorn (you know the antiChrist kid from "The Omen") in a kilt to a
mixed-up misogynist come to mind.
He has certain qualities women love to mother but if you rub him the wrong
way, he can be a real motherfucker. If there's one thing I'd like the world
to know about Axl, it's that he truly cares about his people. What few
understand, however is that we are ALL his people. That's why he shares his
pain in his songs; that's why he performs when he feels like shit. On the
days regular folks call in sick, he has to entertain 20,000 fans. If he
didn't care about them, he'd shine them.
When the riots were going down in L.A., Axl invited me and my family, as
well as many of his other friends, up to the safer environs of his house. He
was in constant communication with us throughout the crisis, when he could
just as easily have kept himself locked in or split the scene entirely --
but that's not his style.
Even though his manners seem unorthodox at times, he does care. Maybe that's
one of the reasons he's such an easy target for detractors. Cynics can't
deal with sincerity.
This issue we pick up where we left off last time. Axl has just phoned me
back after a short break.
----------------------
RIP: At the beginning of the tour -- with Skid Row, then Soundgarden -- the
show seemed Illusion-heavy. The majority of the songs were off the new
records. Then, towards the end of the tour, it seemed quite Appetite-heavy.
Why?
AXL: That was just the mood for those nights. It was just what we felt like
playing and what came out. l mean, in San Diego we opened with "It's So
Easy," and we never do that anymore.
RIP: l hear you, but there are certain songs, especially newer ones, that
should be in the set. If l go see GNR, and "Estranged" or "November Rain"
aren't in the set, I'm gonna be slightly bummed.
AXL: I'll remember that the night we don't play them. I'll say, "Del would
be bummed," and 20,000 people in Iowa will be going, "What?"
RIP: It's just that those two songs are classics. You could put them next to
"Bohemian Rhapsody" or "Layla" on a cassette.
AXL: l think, musically, "November Rain" could possibly stand there.
Vocally, l purposely wanted the sound I have on that. I'm very happy with
it, even though it's very abrasive.
RIP: The same could be said about Steven Tyler's singing on "Dream On," and
very few songs come close to that intensity.
AXL: One of the things like about the vocal roughness in "November Rain" is
that anyone can think that they can sing it as good or better. They can feel
like a part of it.
RIP: You really haven't yet addressed why Izzy Stradlin left GNR. If you
would, explain what happened and, more importantly, how you feel about Izzy.
AXL: l feel like he shit all over me, and I wiped it off and ain't too happy
that it happened. l think for a long period of time Izzy wanted to be more
independent, but Guns N' Roses took off fast, and he was such a part of it,
it was hard to take that step. That's my opinion. There are certain
responsibilities to Guns N' Roses that Izzy didn't want to face. He
basically didn't want to work as hard at certain things as we did. He pretty
much just showed up before we went on onstage, would get upset that l wasn't
on time, played, then split. There were times when we'd get off stage, and
five minutes later he was gone. He didn't socialize with the band on any
level, and he had a real problem being sober and being around us. Izzy's
always been very compulsive and impulsive, and although he's quit abusing
various substances, he still hasn't gotten to the base of the reason why he
was abusive. He hasn't solved that, so instead of doing drugs, drinking and
womanizing, he was keeping himself busy traveling, bicycling and buying lots
of toys. There's nothing wrong with any of that, except that he wasn't able
to do the things required of him in Guns N' Roses. Getting Izzy to work hard
on the album was like pulling fucking teeth. Everybody dreaded it. Nobody
would go by the studio while he was there, because no one wanted to deal
with it. He'd play something out of key, and we'd ask him to do it again,
and he'd be like, "Why? l just did it." Izzy was very unsupportive of me in
general. He was very concerned about his free time, and he didn't have a
whole lot of understanding of what it takes me to do my job. As far as I'm
concerned, he was a lazy, selfish user. There are ways that miss him and
wish it could've gone on, but he was a real fucking asshole to me. I was
always a massive Izzy fan and supporter, but now that he's working with Alan
Niven (former GNR manager), fuck him -- and you can print this. Even if we
work things out between us, l won't regret what's coming out in this
interview, because it's how l feel. I'm glad we got the songs out of him
that we did, and I'm glad he's gone.
RIP: He really hurt you, huh?
AXL: You wanna know how he really hurt me? When he came up here to my
fucking house and acted like, "What's wrong, man?" It's really weird; I knew
he was coming. I could literally feel his car driving up as l was getting
dressed. l went outside and sat down, because Izzy couldn't come into my
house. l couldn't act like he was my friend after what he'd done to me. He
came up and acted like he hadn't done anything, but he let us down at a
weird time. It wasn't like someone leaving the band because they couldn't
take it anymore; he left in a shitty way. Izzy called up members of the band
and tried to turn them against me by saying that l pushed him out, and
that's not how it went down. He said a lot of shit behind my back. He tried
to make a power play and damage us on his way out, and that's real fucked
up.
RIP: Want to talk about another former member of Guns, drummer Steven Adler?
AXL: The misconception is that we kicked him out for the hell of it, and
that l was the dictator behind it. The truth is, l probably fought a little
harder to keep him in the band, because l wasn't working with him on a daily
basis like the other guys were. They grew tired of not being able to get
their work done because Steven wasn't capable of it. I've read interviews
where he's saying that he's straight. Most of the time he isn't. He's the
type of person who wants everything handed to him, and he did get it handed
to him. He got it handed to him from me. At one point, in order to keep this
band together, it was necessary for me to give him a portion of my
publishing rights. That was one of the biggest mistakes I've made in my
life, but he threw such a fit, saying he wasn't going to stay in the band.
We were worried about not being able to record our first album, so I did
what l felt l had to do. In the long run l paid very extensively for keeping
Steven in Guns N' Roses. I paid $1.5 million by giving him 15 percent of my
publishing off of Appetite for Destruction. He didn't write one goddamn
note, but he calls me a selfish dick! He's been able to live off of that
money, buy a shitload of drugs and hire lawyers to sue me. If and when he
loses the lawsuit he has against us, and he has to pay those lawyers, if he
has any money left, it'll be the money that came from Guns N' Roses and
myself. At this point l really don't care what happens to Steven Adler,
because he's taken himself out of my life, out of my care and concern,
completely. I feel bad for him in ways, because he's a real damaged person,
but he's making choices to keep himself in that damage. There's nothing we
can do at this point. We took him to rehabs, we threatened his drug dealers,
we helped him when he slashed his wrists. l even forgave him after he nearly
killed my wife. I had to spend a night with her in an intensive-care unit
because her heart had stopped thanks to Steven. She was hysterical, and he
shot her up with a speedball. She had never done jack shit as far as drugs
go, and he shoots her up with a mixture of heroin and cocaine? l kept myself
from doing anything to him. I kept the man from being killed by members of
her family. l saved him from having to go to court, because her mother
wanted him held responsible for his actions. And the son of a bitch turns on
me? l mean, yeah, I'm a difficult person to deal with, and I'm a pain in the
ass to understand, and I've had my share of problems, but Steven benefited
greatly from his involvement with more than l did from knowing him. Steven
had a lot of tans, but he was a real pain in the ass. l need to keep him in
my life for you? Fuck you!
RIP: Now that we've taken care of that, what about the flip side of the
coin: the new guys, especially guitarist Gilby Clarke?
AXL: Gilby is awesome, and a pleasure to be around. He works the stage and
the crowd really well. Also, he helps give us a sense of rock 'n' roll
normalcy -- if there is such a thing. Gilby has a way of understanding and
dealing with situations that makes the whole trip more tolerable. His
insights from being on the outside of GNR help us. He has his opinions of
what's going on with us, and it helps us get a different perspectives
because Slash, Duff and myself have been in GNR for so long and are so close
to it that sometimes we don't see things like other people would. Every now
and then he'll say something to me, and I'll go, "Wow, l didn't see it that
way." He's been putting himself through his own rock-and-roll education with
his other groups for years. Now he's a part of Guns N' Roses.
RIP: Is he a "member" of Guns N' Roses?
AXL: This "member" thing is quite interesting. l read in an interview where
Matt (Sorum, GNR's drummer) said that if he didn't get made a member, he
wasn't going to be in Guns N' Roses. The truth of the matter is, Matt's a
member of GNR, but it doesn't really mean anything. It's kind of like a
clubhouse/gang thing. We're all members of this gang. What it boils down to
is, whose yard is the tree house in? Matt's a member of GNR, and his
opinions are taken into consideration. As far as that's concerned, Gilby is
a member too. Dizzy is a member of the band. With all of the background
singers, horn players, keyboardists -- we look at if like we're all Guns N'
Roses. But the bottom line is, the business is basically run by Slash and
myself. Then we run whatever it is we're discussing by Duff and see if he's
cool with it. Guns N' Roses is basically Slash, Duff, Doug Goldstein and
myself, but theres a lot of other people involved that are a part of our
lives and a part of our family.
RIP: Do you think Matt's gonna be pissed when he reads this?
AXL: If would be nice if he wasn't. I love everybody in this band. It's
kicking ass and feels really warm and really cool onstage. At this point its
the 12 of us that get onstage and fucking go all out.
RIP: Theres 12 of you?
AXL: Theres Teddy, theres Dizzy, theres Roberta, Tracy, Lisa, CeCe, Anne,
Gilby, Matt, Duff, Slash and me. Slash put this new band together, did all
of the groundwork. He did such an amazing job that I just can't believe it
really happened. I'm glad to be a part of it. Its a pretty huge thing, and
we might even add some dancers, like we used to have back in the old
Troubadour days. Its something we've considered.
RIP: When you and Slash aren't at each others throats, you're really a force
to be reckoned with.
AXL: Let me say something about us being at each others throats: We haven't
really been that way in the past year and a half. l love the guy. We're like
opposite poles of energy, and we balance each other out. We push each other
to work harder and complement each other that way. We had a run-in in Dayton
(Ohio), because both myself and Dougie thought he said something shitty to
me onstage. That was the night I cut my hand to the bone. Backstage we have
monitors much like the ones onstage; and while l was back there dealing with
my hand, I thought I heard him take a potshot at me. I wrapped my hand up in
a towel and was like, "Lets get it taken care of, so l can finish the show."
I came back onstage and was a dick to him and told him I'd kick his fucking
ass in front of 20,000 people. That was fucked up. l was wrong, and l
apologized the second l realized I was mistaken. Someone who is supporting
me as strongly as he does is a hand I never want to bite.
RIP: The tribute to Freddie Mercury was very cool. What was it like jamming
with legends like Queen and Elton John?
AXL: The Queen gig was the most humbling experience of my life. It was
fucking intense. When we first met Brian May last summer it was wild. None
of us would let him out of the room. He's one of the nicest people I've met.
When we did "Bohemian Rhapsody," that was unrehearsed. Brian asked me to do
it that day, and it felt right. l spoke to Elton before the show, and he was
kind of uneasy about meeting me, you know, I'm supposed to be the most
homophobic guy on Earth. When we talked, l was excited, but serious, telling
him how much his music meant to me. By the end he was like, "Whoa." Onstage
l was trying to be as respectful to him as could. l was purposely vibing
out, and if you look close, you can see it at times, how much love and
respect I have for Elton. There was some heavy eye contact going down. It
was amazing. MTV's John Norris kept saying, "This could be the last time
you'll ever see Elton John and Axl Rose together onstage." Not if I have
anything to do with it.
RIP: When speaking of Oueen, one must speak of AIDS. How has this disease
affected you?
AXL: I want to learn more and start helping people. Freddie Mercury's death
is a marker in my life that says there's no turning back, and I'm going to
do whatever can to inform the public about certain things. We can't sit idly
and hope someone will change things and hope things will be alright. There
are alternative forms of medicine that are having high success rates in
treating AIDS victims. There's things like vibrational medicine,
oxygen-ozone therapy, there's homeopathic medicines, there are Chinese
medicines and different forms of vitamins. The government is denying the
public this information. That's because the government, the FDA and the
pharmaceutical companies are making billions of dollars off of people dying.
The FDA invests money in companies they're supposed to be regulating -- that
makes no sense. Over the last 50 years there have been different cures for
different illnesses that have been kept from us. Freddie Mercury's death
made me want to fight for people to have the right to know about these
alternative treatments. Everyone has a God-given right to health, and it's
being denied by power-hungry, greedy people who want control.
RIP: I take it you're not very big on the way things are being run?
AXL: Our government talks about freedom and liberty while they exercise and
maintain and enforce and strive for and fight for all the control they can
have over the people. Since day one we've been taught to support our own
oppression, and l think its time for things to change.
RIP: Well put.
AXL: How's this interview going?
RIP: Really cool.
AXL: To put all of this in an interview would've taken weeks a couple of
years ago.
RIP: Yeah, but two years ago we were less skilled at this.
AXL: And on dope. Also, with a lot of these issues I have the support of
Guns N' Roses, but I'm not necessarily speaking for the other members here.
I'm speaking for myself and where I'm coming from.
Even in the earliest days of Guns N' Roses -- l'm talking Tuesday night gigs
at the Troubadour -- it was apparent that W Axl Rose had "it," the
unexplainable force that draws people to him. It's a double-edged sword,
this personal magnetism, because while one side of Axl needs the attention,
needs to share his art, and needs to bring people closer to him, the other
side wonders why those who didn't embrace him early on want to know him now.
Anyone who has been able to get close to Axl understands that his needs run
deeper than your average Joe. The reason people are willing to go out of
their way to accommodate him is that if the situation were reversed and one
of his friends needed something from him, whether it was shelter from a
storm (or more close to home, a riot) or an understanding ear Axl would be
there as soon as the call for help was raised.
The enigmatic superstar has always had the ability to cause a stir, but it
should be said here that even when AxI would rather curl up into a ball and
die than step onstage, 99% of all GNR concerts go off without a hitch.
Controversy seems to follow Axl everywhere, but before judging him, one has
to ask just where the controversy is really coming from. It's usually
created by people (i. e., yellow journalists spicing up their stories, media
selling you product and hype, overly-ambitious prosecutors who see Axl as
their opportunity for 15 minutes of fame, or lonely people desperate for
attention) trying to get close to Axl by any means available.
That's the dark side of having "it."
This third and final installment of my conversation with Axl gets quite
heavy towards the end. In my many hours of interviews with him (this summer
I'll begin writing an authorized Guns N' Roses biography which will come out
when the time is right) he's often revealed things that left me feeling kind
of awkward. 'Are you sure you want me to print this?" I'd ask, and the
answer was always yes. l'm starting to understand why. Although it hasn't
always gone as smoothly as he might have wished, by publicly sharing the
truth about himself and Guns N' Roses, Axl is shedding layers of buried pain
as well as growing spiritually. He readily faces the chaos and agony most of
us hide from as he frees himself from the shackles of old conditioning. What
some people haven't noticed is that he's been trying to get at the hard
truth about himself and the world around him, failing sometimes, succeeding
more often, but always trying, since he first stepped onto a stage. And,
I've got to say, that's what makes him one of the bravest souls l know
------------------------------
RIP: Let's talk about music.
AXL: Alright. One of my favorite bands is U2. They used to not be, but they
are now. l used to not get it. I didn't see the world they were singing
about. Love and pain and caring? Only in a few instances, like "With or
Without You," could relate or understand. That was the song l saw right
before l OD'd because my relationship (with his ex-wife Erin) was so fucked
up. I could barely see the things they were singing about in a few of my
friends, and I could believe it in theory, but my true expression didn't see
it at all. I can see a different thing in U2's music now, and it has nothing
to do with how it's performed or what the people are wearing. There's just a
different feel in the music. l think their song "One" is one of the greatest
songs ever written. Now l can see and understand why people were into U2
years ago.
RIP: U2 never had a song like "One in a Million."
AXL: My opinion is, the majority of the public can't be trusted with that
song. It inspires thoughts and reactions that cause people to have to deal
with their own feelings on racism, prejudice and sexuality.
RIP: But Axl Rose said "faggots" and "niggers."
AXL: So have a lot of other people.
RIP: Yeah, but it's real easy to feel self-righteous and point the finger at
you.
AXL: l wrote a song that was very simple and vague. That was the type of
painting l was painting for myself, because that's how l write songs. Try
going to a museum and not seeing paintings that depict pain and suffering
and confusion. l think I showed that quite well from where l was at. The
song most definitely was a survival mechanism. It was a way for me to
express my anger at how vulnerable l felt in certain situations that had
gone down in my life. It's not a song l would write now. The song is very
generic and generalized, and I apologized for that on the cover of the
record. Going back and reading it, it wasn't the best apology but, at the
time, it was the best apology I could make.
RIP: Given all of the static that's come out of "One in a Million," do you
ever regret having shared it with the world?
AXL: I'm on a fence with that song. It's a very powerful song. l feel, as
far as artistic freedom and my responsibility to those beliefs, that the
song should exist. That's the only reason l haven't pulled it off the
shelves. Freedom and creativity should never be stifled. Had l known that
people were going to get hurt because of this song, then l would have been
wrong. l was definitely wrong in thinking that the public could handle it.
RIP: Have you written any new songs?
AXL: Yeah, I've written one, but it doesn't have a title yet. Why?
RIP: Because in the time that's been allotted GNR, you certainly have
released a lot of important music. One has to wonder what's next.
AXL: What's next is, l would like to have a cleaner, more focused
expression. We've pretty much stayed within the parameters of rock 'n' roll
music as we know it. I'd like to see if we could add anything to GNR,
possibly bring in a new element that hasn't been there before. Guns N' Roses
is not just me. There are other members in this band, and everyone's
growing. There was a certain focus we all wanted to keep for Illusion l and
II, but when l did "My World," everyone dug it and wanted it on the record.
By the next record I think we can branch out a lot further. I would like to
move in a direction where I'm more in touch with life and love but still
remain as strong in terms of exposing ourselves as GNR has always been. l
don't feel now like I did when l wrote "Estranged." I'm not as bummed out as
I was then. I've grown past that.
RIP: Most bands tend to shy away from the honesty and pain that come out in
your songs, especially the ones dealing with your relationships. It's not
very macho to be hurt.
AXL: It's about facing your pain, and not too many people want to do that.
That's pretty normal. l resist and fight endlessly to avoid having to expose
certain parts of myself to myself.
RIP: When people read that you're in therapy and working on your problems,
those terms are pretty vague. Do you want to explain them?
AXL: I'm continuously learning that when l get depressed there may be a
reason for it that I'm not aware of. It could be something that happened a
long time ago, and I've carried a base thought ever since. That base thought
hasn't been exposed since it happened, and it's never been healed. I've
buried it so deep that l don't even know it's there. l can talk about life
and love and happiness, but beneath that there's some ugly thought. Or
hatred. Or fear. Or hurt. Something I'm still acting on. By going back
slowly-
RIP: How?
AXL: There's all kinds of methods, but it's basically figuring out how you
feel and what really bothers you, getting more focused. Then, with my
therapist, l work on releasing my unconscious mind. Unless your true self is
in pain, why would you want to be detached from it? Yet most people are
detached. Who knows how to go back and heal their own pain? Having help and
being able to accept it is a lot stronger and sometimes easier. Sometimes
it's harder though. l mean, who wants to need help? I found someone l trust
and can work with. The methods aren't necessarily important, what's
important is the getting there and the healing. A therapist could talk about
it better than l could; and if do, it may throw certain people off. It
probably sounds really weird, but the important thing is that it's working.
l have certain emotional, mental and physical problems that don't want to
have to live with any longer than l have to, so I'm obsessed with getting
over them. The only way a person can tell if they need help is if underneath
however happy you think you are, you know that you're miserable. I've been
miserable for a long fucking time, and now I'm not so miserable.
RIP: There's definitely been a noticeable change -- for the better -- in the
way you carry yourself.
AXL: l still carry certain "punk" elements, but if lived like that now, l
would be going backward. People need to go through their different stages.
Some band made up of 19- or 20-year-olds who say, "Everything sucks," has a
right to feel that way, and they have a right to express themselves. But
there is life after 21 if you can get to it -- which is a bitch for all of
us. Who knows, I could get really depressed and OD next week; but l don't
think so, and I'm hoping not to.
RIP: Do you take your therapist out on tour?
AXL: Sometimes, when feel I'm going to be needing to do some work. If we
weren't on tour, would've concentrated harder on getting this work finished
and then gone out, but that was impossible. The albums needed to be worked.
It's not so much because l wrote them, but l feel "November Rain" and
"Estranged" have a chance at getting embedded in music culture, so I'm gonna
fight for them and seed them with as many people as possible. l get bummed
when l hear a great track off a record and the artist says, "Yeah, but the
public wasn't into it." I'm like, what do you mean? The public wasn't into
"Jungle," either.
RIP: The public WAS into "Welcome to the Jungle."
AXL: Not necessarily, dude. We released it three times.
RIP: l remember when l was living with Duff, having to wait until 3:00 a.m.
to see the video because MTV wasn't really pushing it. Then it fought its
way to being the most-requested video; so it's pretty hard to remember it
not being successful.
AXL: Well, it wasn't.
RIP: Check it out, Fear is playing on the 13th.
AXL: l was watching them in "The Decline of Western Civilization." And
people think I'm homophobic. l was going, "Man, if they were out now, and
the world knew about 'em, they'd be destroyed."
RIP: Yeah, but bands like Fear, the Germs, and the Pistols could say just
about anything, and the media really wouldn't have cared, because the bands
were Iabeled punks.
AXL: When l was living in Indiana, l was labeled a punk, a punk rocker. When
l moved to L.A., the punks called me a hippy and didn't want anything to do
with me. The Hollywood rock scene was a war zone back then. I tried out for
a punk band and didn't make it because they said l sounded like Robert
Plant. l was bummed because l thought I had a gig and really liked the
music. Dude, I'm building a robot.
RIP: What?
AXL: I'm building a robot. It's about 7" inches tall, and it's called a
TXRO02. It's remote-controlled and kind of looks like the robot that fought
Robocop in Robocop 2. It's got these lights, and it's totally radio remote.
It's got a motor in each leg and walks around.
RIP: You should get two and make 'em fight.
AXL: That's cool. I haven't put a model together since was a kid and I'd
smash 'em. Today l was watching my "Decline" movies and doing business on
the phone while was building a model, and was thinking, I'm turning into
Slash.
RIP: You recently went public in Rolling Stone about your childhood abuse.
AXL: l definitely get my share of sticks and stones and rocks and stabs from
people trying to bait me into something for whatever reasons. l would like
to be more "actionary" than "reactionary." l have a lot of damage, and I'm
not saying that like, "Oh, pity me," or anything. Instead of being myself, l
was definitely a product of my environment, and that was something GNR has
thrown back in the worlds face. "You don't like us? Fuck you! You helped
create us! Your ways of doing things helped make sure we exist the way we
are. We didn't have a choice to exist any other way." When you feed someone
shit, and they have the balls to tell you what it tastes like, most people
have a problem with that. As a child l was beaten a lot. People can't handle
a troubled child who doesn't know how to accept help.
RIP: What do you mean by that?
AXL: If a kid's being beaten, and someone offers help, and the kid goes off,
a lot of the time the punishment is just compounded. Instead of helping him
and trying to break through to him, it's like, "No, you're going to work on
your problems right now! Do you understand me?" That doesn't work. "Shut up,
sit down" commands are outdated if you're trying to help someone heal. l was
brainwashed in a Pentecostal church. I'm not against churches or religion,
but l do believe, like l said in "Garden of Eden," that most organized
religions make a mockery of humanity. My particular church was filled with
self-righteous hypocrites who were child abusers and child molesters. These
were people who'd been damaged in their own childhoods and in their lives.
These were people who were finding God but still living with their damage
and inflicting it upon their children. I had to go to church anywhere from
three to eight times a week. l even taught Bible school while l was being
beaten and my sister was being molested. We'd have televisions one week,
then my stepdad would throw them out because they were satanic. l wasn't
allowed to listen to music. Women were evil. Everything was evil. I had a
really distorted view of sexuality and women. I remember the first time l
got smacked for looking at a woman. I didn't know what l was looking at, and
l don't remember how old l was, but it was a cigarette advertisement with
two girls coming out of the water in bikinis. I was just staring at the TV
-- not thinking, just watching -- and my dad smacked me in the mouth, and l
went flying across the floor. Someone can say, "Dude, just get over it."
Yeah? Fuck you! Whether l wanted it there or not, that incident was locked
into my unconscious mind. Whenever there was any form of sex, like a kissing
scene, on TV, we weren't allowed to look. Whenever anything like that
happened, we had to turn our heads. Dad had us so brainwashed that we
started turning our heads on our own. We scolded each other. My mom allowed
all of this to happen because she was too insecure to be without my
stepfather. She assisted in me being damaged on a consistent basis by not
being there for me or my sister or my brother. I've always felt this great
urge to go back and help my Mom. l felt obligated to, but l don't anymore.
She fed me and put clothes on my back, but she wasn't there for me. I'm
still experiencing anger over this situation, but I'm trying to get over it.
Burying it doesn't work for me anymore. l buried it for too long. That's why
theres a grave stone at the end of the "Don't Cry" video. I watched almost
everyone in this church's lives go to shit because their own hypocrisy
finally consumed them.
RIP: What effect did this have on the kids?
AXL: Well, it gave us a real high opinion of God. It really confused things.
The Bible was shoved down my throat, and it really distorted my point of
view. Dad's bringing home the fatted calf, but I was just hoping for two
hamburgers from McDonald's. We were taught "You must fear God." l don't
think that's healthy at all. I'll tell you, I don't know what God is or
isn't, but I don't fear him or it. l feel a helluva lot better about that.
I'm not afraid of it anymore, and l don't feel like I'm being punished by it
with the obstacles that occur in my life. If sound a bit self-righteous, I'm
not. I'm just pissed off FOR not AT, people. l don't like seeing people
miserable, and I don't like watching people kill themselves while they're
telling me they're happy. With the help of regression therapy I uncovered
that my real dad, not my stepdad, sexually abused me. The most powerful
anger was this two-year-old child's anger because it was hurt. Nothing could
really scare me, because I'd already seen hell. I'd been killed at two and
lived through it, and l was miserable because I'd lived through it. l was
miserable for 28 years. My stepdad came into my life when l was three or
four, and didn't even know my real father existed until l was 17. l was
separated from myself at an early age, and my stepfather made sure I never
put myself back together, with his confusing mixed messages of love and
brutality. He'd love me one minute, then beat me the next. I've had to learn
how to shed both of these men's personalities. I'll take two steps forward,
then one step back, but I'm into it. A lot of things are new to me now, but
l won't let my fears stop me from progressing.
RIP: How do you think your childhood traumas affected your adult sexuality?
AXL: l couldn't be with someone sexually in a nice way, because l was made
to feel like l was doing something wrong even if it was someone l liked. The
only way could enjoy sex was if I got into being the "bad guy." Finally l
grew tired of being the bad guy. l love this person I'm with. Why do l have
to always maintain a low level of self-esteem in order to feel alright? l
don't feel alright feeling like a piece of shit, and l don't want to be a
fucking piece of shit. Even though it was put into my head years ago, by
reading up on abuse and doing the work I'm doing, I've found out that's how
it works. It's a real weird thing to have to deal with. You know, I'm grown
up now. That was a long time ago. I'm supposed to have gotten past that.
Yeah, maybe.
