Try GOLD - Free
Slash
RollingStone India
|September 2018
The Guns N Roses guitarist on his new solo album and the bands wildly successful reunion
Sheep . . . sheep . . . Axl. You can see some amazing things out the window of this mansion-turned-hotel in rural Eng land, where Slash is currently hanging out in a backward Thrasher cap and talking up his new album, Living the Dream, with Myles Kennedy and the Conspirators. But he and his other bandmates have traveled to this vast green estate because he’s playing the nearby Download Festival tomorrow with Guns N’ Roses — and he hasn’t, until this interview, talked much about their fantastically successful reunion. He doesn’t want to detail exactly how he and Rose mended their relationship after two decades of estrangement, and he snaps when I mention how punctual Guns N’ Roses have become. “All right,” he says, “I’m getting sick and tired of talking about this shit.” But he keeps talking.
Your first solo LP was a sign of doom for the original GNR. This time, were you just finishing something you’d started?
I started preproduction on this new material, and then I went back on the road [solo]. At some point, Axl and I hooked up on the phone, and then we met for a little bit and started talking about doing Coachella. Just for the fun of it, because we were sort of back on friendly ground again. That turned into a whole fucking extended tour, which is still going. So all that material sat on the back burner. On our last big break, I got back together with Myles and everybody, and we revisited those songs.
How does it feel to be trying to write big rock riffs with the genre so far out of the mainstream?
This story is from the September 2018 edition of RollingStone India.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM RollingStone India
RollingStone India
KING: 'ONE PART OF ME IS CORE HIP-HOP AND THE OTHER PART WANTS NOTHING TO DO WITH IT'
It's one of those sticky summer afternoons in early March as I wilt away in the lobby of the Warner Music India office, waiting for King to arrive.
8 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
This Is Why There Are Seven Of Us: J-HOPE
J-Hope is “softly spoken and kind of elegant,” says one of his Arirang collaborators, songwriter James Essien.
5 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
I'm A Good Fit For This Job: SUGA
The story goes that Suga, born Min Yoongi, got his nickname from the phrase “shooting guard,” but he prefers to focus on another, more apropos meaning: “It’s a nickname you sometimes give to athletes that have great technique,” he says, pointing to Sugar Ray Leonard and the UFC fighter “Suga” Sean O’Malley.
5 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
BAZ HALPIN'S SPECTACULAR VISIONS
He's masterminded tour productions for Taylor Swift and more — and now he's helping bring No Doubt to the Sphere
3 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
IMPROVISING FATE: THE UNEXPECTED STORIES BEHIND ICONIC JAZZ RECORDINGS
Orne of the most wonderful aspects of jazz recordings is their uniqueness. Just as jazz is essentially an improvised art form, there are instances where certain recordings were made against the odds albums with stories behind their making and contexts that lend the music a much deeper meaning.
7 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
ROHIT MANE IS REWRITING THE SOUTH ASIAN FASHION PLAYBOOK WITH SAREES, NOSTALGIA, AND FUTURISM
THE 27-YEAR-OLD INDIAN FASHION DESIGNER BEHIND ICONIC LOOKS BY SZA, LARA AND RHEA RAJ, LEOMIE ANDERSON, AND SOPHIE BENSON DISSECTS HIS ROOTS, AND THE FUTURE OF BROWN CREATIVES TAKING UP MORE SPACE IN FASHION
6 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
BREAKING CHARACTER: BROWN REPRESENTATION ON THE GLOBAL SCREEN IS WRITING ITS OWN SCRIPT
IN CONVERSATION WITH TWO SOUTH ASIAN STORYTELLERS WHO'VE BUILT ENTIRE WORLDS BY VULTUROUSLY PICKING APART THEIR VULNERABILITIES
8 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
JAAFAR JACKSON DREW FROM PERSONAL MEMORIES, MANTRAS AND INTERVIEWS FOR ‘MICHAEL'
Michael Jackson's nephew Jaafar Jackson tells Rolling Stone India about accessing some of the pop legends 'personal writings' and creating a 'research room' to prep for the role
2 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
THIRUMALI IS REDEFINING NOSTALGIA IN MALAYALAM HIP-HOP
'Kulasthree' produced by ThudWiser brings a visual straight out of the Nineties, while 'Nonsense' featuring an Eighties movie song sample produced by Jay Stellar
3 mins
March - April 2026
RollingStone India
CATCH ME OUTSIDE: HOW FAN CULTURE IS REWRITING THE EXPERIENCE ECONOMY
FANDOMS HAVE TRANSFORMED FROM BEING SUBCULTURAL HOTSPOTS TO KEY ECONOMIC DRIVERS, GAINING FULL ACCESS TO THEIR FAVORITE ARTISTS' FAVORITE ARTISTS – AND BRANDS ARE TAKING NOTE.
8 mins
March - April 2026
Translate
Change font size

