Sold Date:
July 27, 2022
Start Date:
July 17, 2022
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€45.50
(EUR)
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GUNS N' ROSES
At a time when pop was dominated by dance music and pop-metal, Guns N' Roses brought raw, ugly rock & roll crashing back into the charts. They were not nice boys: nice boys don't play rock & roll. They were ugly, misogynistic, and violent; they were also funny, vulnerable, and occasionally sensitive, as their breakthrough hit, "Sweet Child O' Mine," showed. While Slash and Izzy Stradlin ferociously spit out dueling guitar riffs worthy of Aerosmith or the Stones, Axl Rose screeched out his tales of sex, drugs, and apathy in the big city. Meanwhile, bassist Duff McKagan and drummer Steven Adler were a limber rhythm section who kept the music loose and powerful. Guns N' Roses' music was basic and gritty, with a solid, hard, bluesy base; they were dark, sleazy, dirty, and honest -- everything that good hard rock and heavy metal should be.
"USE YOUR ILLUSION II"Side A: CIVIL WAR - 14 YEARS - YESTERDAYS - KNOCKIN' ON HEAVEN'S DOOR
Side B: GET IN THE RING - SHOTGUN BLUES - BREAKDOWN
Side C: PRETTY TIED UP - LOCOMOTIVE (COMPLICITY) - SO FINE
Side D: ESTRANGED - YOU COULD BE MINE - DON'T CRY (Alt. Lyrics) - MY WORLD
1991 2LP GEFFEN RECORDS GEF 24420RECORDS EX but (please, read above description)
SLEEVE EX but (please, see pictures and read above description)
Use Your Illusion II is more serious and ambitious than I, but it's also considerably more pretentious. Featuring no less than four songs that run over six minutes, II is heavy on epics, whether it's the charging funk metal of "Locomotive," the antiwar "Civil War," or the multipart "Estranged." As if an attempt to balance the grandiose epics, the record is loaded with an extraordinary amount of filler. "14 Years" may have a lean, Stonesy rhythm, and Duff McKagan's Johnny Thunders homage, "So Fine," may be entertaining, but there's no forgiving the ridiculous "Get in the Ring," where Axl Rose threatens rock journalists by name because they gave him bad reviews; the misinterpretation of Dylan's "Knockin' on Heaven's Door"; another version of "Don't Cry"; and the bizarre closer, "My World," which probably captures Rose's instability as effectively as the tortured poetry of his epics...(AllMusic)