Young_Gun Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Robin is a true artist, all about the music. He didn't need a clothing line or a chatroom or any of that shit. Glad he is finally getting his dues, although it took him leaving the band and the albums release for people to acknowledge it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Silent Jay Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 another mickey's t shirt on til Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fernomenoyde Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 I don't know if anyone has seen the LA Times review of this show, but the author captures exactly what this band, their mojo, and attitude is all about:http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2012/03/review-guns-n-roses-house-of-blues-sunset-strip.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PopHiss+(Pop+%26+Hiss+Music+Blog)Around the third-hour mark of Guns N’ Roses' House of Blues set, which wrapped up a three-date club swing Monday, a guy and his girl understandably looked as if they needed to call it a night. They put on their leather jackets and moved toward the club's exits around 3:15 a.m. Then, from their left, a drunk guy with a wispy blond pate swooped upon them. Like a circling falcon that had just spied a wounded hare, he cornered the two back into a grotto of the club. “This is GN’R on the Sunset Strip!” the stranger slurred. “You can’t go home yet, dude!” The dude and his date stayed.For those who have been waiting decades for the iconic L.A. band to return to the scene that birthed it fully formed as lithe, riff-slinging gods, this wasn’t just a kind of hard-rock Gettysburg reenactment. It was a cri de coeur for the idea that rock music -- played on guitars, sung by dudes in ripped jeans and vests with no shirts -- has not only never died but also has kept up a kind of underground resistance movement to the crafty, sleek dominance of pop. And that Axl Rose, for all the volatility and budget-sapping concept albums and curious sartorial choices, had become the movement’s Che Guevara.To leave GN’R before the final curtain call -- even at 3:30 on a Tuesday morning -- was a kind of treason. The lifer fans at the House of Blues were having none of that.For those who’ve caught a recent arena date at the Forum or one of the other club shows, this most recent GN'R appearance is but further encouragement for the devoted. Acolytes of late-era GN’R lineup changes will be pleased to know that cameos from former drum ace Bryan Mantia and guitarist Robin Finck suggest that all’s well in those camps (fans expecting a certain top-hatted axman to return to the fold should, at this point, find a new improbable fantasy to pursue). Skid Row’s Sebastian Bach went toe to toe with Axl wailing on “My Michelle.” They covered Aerosmith’s “Mama Kin” and the Stones’ “Dead Flowers,” both early-'90s covers for the group. We heard Lana Del Rey was in the audience.The band’s taken a lot of undeserved guff for being, to the purists, not really “Guns N’ Roses” but “Axl and a Bunch of Dudes.” But this lineup is probably the most well-honed mercenary army in modern rock: the guitar troika of Richard Fortus, DJ Ashba and Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal tossed licks on “Appetite for Destruction”-era tracks such as “It’s So Easy” and “Mr. Brownstone” that hit like live grenades. For the cool kids, the Replacements’ Tommy Stinson held down a savage low end.And the band’s perennial X factor, the wayward native son of Lafayette, Ind., looked as healthy and serpentine as ever. His falsetto might have lost a half step in the intervening decades. But for someone in the early '90s placing bets on Axl’s status in 2012, Rose’s hip-swinging lechery at the House of Blues would have more than covered the spread on that wager.The existential question of any Guns N’ Roses set -- what does Axl do when he disappears into his side-stage curtained chamber? -- might never be solved. Some think it’s for a hit of oxygen, some suspect it’s just for costume changes, some have more radical and spurious ideas. About every three songs or so, he'd slip away for the duration of a long guitar solo.But while Axl had a literal Rock and Roll Fortress of Solitude onstage, so too did his fans at the House of Blues. GN’R back on the Strip was, for three hours and change, a place where survivors could cordon off the outside world and breathe the pure, invigorating air of the music they know. Not just the songs themselves, but the idea that men with guitars can still command crowds through force of will and implied sexual prowess. Guns N Roses is making what’s perhaps the last stand of an entire value system in music, and that resonates in its fans’ marrow.There has always been a sadness to Guns N' Roses -- and not in the spectacle of a 50-year-old man wearing a snakeskin-patterned fedora onstage. When Axl sat alone at a piano before the forlorn “Patience” (and we defy any of you children running around South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, this week to write a better ballad), he showed the side of his personality that fights his war out of love. The man has seen and done things in Los Angeles to make Pharaohs blush, and yet there he was, past closing time, playing a lonely melody on a barroom instrument.Yeah, the whole set was indulgent and exhausting and completely out of step with irreversible tides in pop music and its demographics. “Chinese Democracy” probably didn’t need to come out. But GN’R on the Strip in 2012? Dear reader, it was worth staying to the end.Amazing review! "...the guitar troika of Richard Fortus, DJ Ashba and Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal..." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Black Sabbath Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 I'm more interested in seeing videos on Dead Flowers and Mama Kin.Better will be cool, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Silent Jay Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Schakler and This i love rocks ! great performance Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
axlslash Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 "When Axl sat alone at a piano before the forlorn “Patience” ..."Would love to see the video of Axl playing piano on Patience Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KiraMPD Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 "...the guitar troika of Richard Fortus, DJ Ashba and Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal..." Yeah I think we should start referring to them as the "guitar army" or that^^^. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest gunns5 Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Robin is a true artist, all about the music. He didn't need a clothing line or a chatroom or any of that shit. Glad he is finally getting his dues, although it took him leaving the band and the albums release for people to acknowledge it.I admit I was critical of robin but now I wish he never left, I'm sick of this swag shit Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
no refrain Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Great vids but... still waiting for BETTER!!!!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cotgra Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Better Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tsunta Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coma16 Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 He messed up the intro but made up for it in the solo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ppruks Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 I don't know if anyone has seen the LA Times review of this show, but the author captures exactly what this band, their mojo, and attitude is all about:http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/music_blog/2012/03/review-guns-n-roses-house-of-blues-sunset-strip.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PopHiss+(Pop+%26+Hiss+Music+Blog)Around the third-hour mark of Guns N’ Roses' House of Blues set, which wrapped up a three-date club swing Monday, a guy and his girl understandably looked as if they needed to call it a night. They put on their leather jackets and moved toward the club's exits around 3:15 a.m. Then, from their left, a drunk guy with a wispy blond pate swooped upon them. Like a circling falcon that had just spied a wounded hare, he cornered the two back into a grotto of the club. “This is GN’R on the Sunset Strip!” the stranger slurred. “You can’t go home yet, dude!” The dude and his date stayed.For those who have been waiting decades for the iconic L.A. band to return to the scene that birthed it fully formed as lithe, riff-slinging gods, this wasn’t just a kind of hard-rock Gettysburg reenactment. It was a cri de coeur for the idea that rock music -- played on guitars, sung by dudes in ripped jeans and vests with no shirts -- has not only never died but also has kept up a kind of underground resistance movement to the crafty, sleek dominance of pop. And that Axl Rose, for all the volatility and budget-sapping concept albums and curious sartorial choices, had become the movement’s Che Guevara.To leave GN’R before the final curtain call -- even at 3:30 on a Tuesday morning -- was a kind of treason. The lifer fans at the House of Blues were having none of that.For those who’ve caught a recent arena date at the Forum or one of the other club shows, this most recent GN'R appearance is but further encouragement for the devoted. Acolytes of late-era GN’R lineup changes will be pleased to know that cameos from former drum ace Bryan Mantia and guitarist Robin Finck suggest that all’s well in those camps (fans expecting a certain top-hatted axman to return to the fold should, at this point, find a new improbable fantasy to pursue). Skid Row’s Sebastian Bach went toe to toe with Axl wailing on “My Michelle.” They covered Aerosmith’s “Mama Kin” and the Stones’ “Dead Flowers,” both early-'90s covers for the group. We heard Lana Del Rey was in the audience.The band’s taken a lot of undeserved guff for being, to the purists, not really “Guns N’ Roses” but “Axl and a Bunch of Dudes.” But this lineup is probably the most well-honed mercenary army in modern rock: the guitar troika of Richard Fortus, DJ Ashba and Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal tossed licks on “Appetite for Destruction”-era tracks such as “It’s So Easy” and “Mr. Brownstone” that hit like live grenades. For the cool kids, the Replacements’ Tommy Stinson held down a savage low end.And the band’s perennial X factor, the wayward native son of Lafayette, Ind., looked as healthy and serpentine as ever. His falsetto might have lost a half step in the intervening decades. But for someone in the early '90s placing bets on Axl’s status in 2012, Rose’s hip-swinging lechery at the House of Blues would have more than covered the spread on that wager.The existential question of any Guns N’ Roses set -- what does Axl do when he disappears into his side-stage curtained chamber? -- might never be solved. Some think it’s for a hit of oxygen, some suspect it’s just for costume changes, some have more radical and spurious ideas. About every three songs or so, he'd slip away for the duration of a long guitar solo.But while Axl had a literal Rock and Roll Fortress of Solitude onstage, so too did his fans at the House of Blues. GN’R back on the Strip was, for three hours and change, a place where survivors could cordon off the outside world and breathe the pure, invigorating air of the music they know. Not just the songs themselves, but the idea that men with guitars can still command crowds through force of will and implied sexual prowess. Guns N Roses is making what’s perhaps the last stand of an entire value system in music, and that resonates in its fans’ marrow.There has always been a sadness to Guns N' Roses -- and not in the spectacle of a 50-year-old man wearing a snakeskin-patterned fedora onstage. When Axl sat alone at a piano before the forlorn “Patience” (and we defy any of you children running around South by Southwest in Austin, Texas, this week to write a better ballad), he showed the side of his personality that fights his war out of love. The man has seen and done things in Los Angeles to make Pharaohs blush, and yet there he was, past closing time, playing a lonely melody on a barroom instrument.Yeah, the whole set was indulgent and exhausting and completely out of step with irreversible tides in pop music and its demographics. “Chinese Democracy” probably didn’t need to come out. But GN’R on the Strip in 2012? Dear reader, it was worth staying to the end.This blows the ArtistDirect reviews out of the water...I like the style, although I think it's pretty clear what Axl does in his tent...everyone who has seen what's in there knows it....so it's not really an 'existential' question per se......and I agree about the part of 'fighting his war out of love'... and don't agree with what he said about CD but at least this guy has an opinion and is able to articulate it without sounding retarded Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Silent Jay Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Excellent. it's funny, the band looks different with Finck. But on stage, dj is better. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steveysham Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 just awesome. Axl nails it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
realpoti Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Finck nails it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djtripp20 Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Awesome Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nicc Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 (edited) ppruks:"This blows the ArtistDirect reviews out of the water...I like the style, although I think it's pretty clear what Axl does in his tent...everyone who has seen what's in there knows it....so it's not really an 'existential' question per se......and I agree about the part of 'fighting his war out of love'... and don't agree with what he said about CD but at least this guy has an opinion and is able to articulate it without sounding retarded"Yeah he/she doesn't fall into one side of stanning hard or the other, nor do they have to mention for millionth time that this band isn't this or that, (as if it's some kind of pledge of allegiance that'll make the old members jizz in their pants or something) just keep it moving with sh*t, we get it now, trust me when we say Edited March 14, 2012 by Nicc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ohmygod Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 OMG!!!! So amazing. His guitar playing is so emotional and just straight up original n rock n roll!!!! The final seconds of that clip when Axl n him are playing side by side is just so awesome. From 2002 I've always been a huge Robin supporter, he just fits in so well with Guns N Roses. Fuck I miss that dude in this band. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nicc Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 so I guess all's well ends well, even for just one night, and/or it ain't wasn't so bad as one thought in the end (well at least this time I guess ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Young_Gun Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Better Fucken awesome. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ohmygod Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 I robin. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hitmanhart408 Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 holy shit Finck just schooled DJ there. I want Finck back Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cassette tape hiss Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 Better Fucken awesome.agreed! fucking awesome!! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TiedHands Posted March 14, 2012 Share Posted March 14, 2012 That clip almost brings a tear to my eye. Robin is one of a kind. I could watch him play all day. Never seen someone so physically emotive. I like DJ and all but Robin is a HUGE part of GNR for me. Miss him every day... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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