Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Guns N Roses Music Tour Dates: Enter The Virgosis: NWA and Guns N .

nwa Enter The Virgosis: NWA and Guns N' Roses: Kindred Spirits
The 1st time you hear "Straight Outta Compton", it sounds like a sonic assault of fury and inner-city anger. It's safe and so when you hear Ice Cube's booming voice on the intro, it's on like a runaway train. The 1st time you hear "Welcome to the Jungle," you get the like feeling. It's raw, violent and dangerous. The soundtrack to the sinister face of Hollywood and Axl Rose's wail sounds like a maniacal host.

NWA and Guns N' Roses. Two of my favorite artists linked by their meteoric rise, being in LA and sad fall. Both of them changed the plot by bringing some edge into it. Both scared folks and made them step their back up. Five men in each group being among the better in their craft. Axl Rose = Eazy-E: The leader and volatile personality who was the character of the group. Slash = Ice Cube: The most talented member, regarded as one of the better to always do it. Duff = MC Ren: Underrated yet valuable and consistent Izzy = Dr. Dre: The round of the group, the locomotive that made it churn. Steven Adler = DJ Yella: The 5th wheel who's important in their own way.

Guns N Roses Enter The Virgosis: NWA and Guns N' Roses: Kindred Spirits
Appetite for Death and Straight Outta Compton were released 13 months apart yet both albums were incredibly similar. Los Angeles was defined by the hair metal scene and it was all around the society without the substance. Popular music needed a swift rush in the rise and on came these two albums that paved the way for Nirvana's nail in the casket in 1991. No Guns N' Roses song matches the social commentary and Black anger as "F The Law" or "Gangsta Gangsta" (Paradise City might capture that indulgence in its blistering 2nd half). No NWA song was anywhere around the beautiful ballad "Sweet Child O' Mine" (although Express Yourself might get close). Yet both albums were almost mirror images of angst, chemistry and purposed rage in that summer of 1988. I'm pretty sure both of them knew how well they were. Axl started wearing an NWA hat on tour and NWA had a song called "Appetite for End" on the Efil4zaggin album. I admire both of them because they represented the person of a Los Angeles that's rarely seen. LA isn't all surf and sun (c) Ice Cube - it's got some grit mixed in there. And almost of my favorite L.A. bands captured that.
The saddest thing was both were too near to last. Comets in the sky. Axl and Eazy-E played key roles in destroying what they built. By 1993, NWA was splintered and Guns N'Roses released their live album as we make it (Chinese Democracy doesn't/shouldn't count). Yet their legacies remain as two of the greatest artists of not only the past 25 years, but of all time. Watching this NWA documentary on VH1 tonite, it made me have the office of Dre's early beats, Ice Cube and MC Ren's booming voices and Eazy-E walking about like a boss. And it reminded me of Axl's powerful voice and the twin guitar attack of Cream and Duff. Absolutely brilliant. Music doesn't scare or challenge people lyrically or sonically in the mainstream anymore and this is a reminder when music could belegitimatelyhard and yet have a scratch on the pop charts. Killer Mike and Win Against are two of the few artists today that remind me of that raw, potent energy. Here's hoping that we can get an NWA reunion on Dre's final album Detox (10 years since "Chin Check" and "Hello") and a true G'N'R reunion at the Rock'N'Roll Hall of Celebrity in 2012.
9e69a0998ec89cec63d79655917 Enter The Virgosis: NWA and Guns N' Roses: Kindred Spirits

No comments:

Post a Comment