Riding the Nightrain.....
Ok- apologies to John Cusack. But now that you’ve been officially Welcomed to the Jungle let’s stop for a breather. Thank you for joining us for One Week One Band’s celebration of the music of Guns n Roses. When I first pitched GnR to blogmaster-in-chief Hendrik he sent me an intriguing response: “I've always thought that GnR is one of *the* big holes in the site's catalogue, just because there is so much rock and roll mythology tied to this band.” That got me thinking: how to approach a band that is simultaneously so culturally ubiquitous but largely ignored by today’s music tastemakers? So before we dive back into the music, bear with me as I lay out the game plan.
My goal this week is to show that Guns N Roses is so much more then just the hit trifecta that anyone who has ever been in to a professional sports game knows by heart. In fact, let’s just get them out of the way now. Not only is Welcome to the Jungle one of the greatest Side One, Track Ones of all time, its one better: a member of the mythical Side One Track Ones off a debut album club. Sweet Child o’ Mine is the greatest hair metal song of all time, and its not close. And Paradise City has rightly achieved its place alongside We Will Rock You and Seven Nation Army as perennial locker room anthems.
There, I did it. Obviously, no exploration of GnR would be complete without those three songs. But we will speak of them no more- now we can move on to the juicy stuff. This week we’ll go deep into the mythology of Guns N Roses- we’ll study the fascinating personalities that composed the group, and consider the baffling missteps that nearly led to the band’s destruction time and time again. Most of all- we’ll think about how Guns N Roses was a product of rock n roll mythmaking- one of the last superstar bands and a leftover relic from when gods walked the earth.
Special thanks to Hendrik, who knew this was a story that needed telling. I hope everyone at home enjoys, and please feel free to leave feedback, song requests, or suggestions in the comments or write me at my Instagram or personal email. Now, please enjoy one of GNR’s perennial live openers, a song that comes close to encapsulating GNR’s attempts to self- project their exaggerated mythology as a…. well I’m getting ahead of myself.