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Hollywood Rose Roots of Guns 'N Roses By Frank Meyer, Contributing Editor Thursday, November 18, 2004 @ 11:27 PM
So what ya get here is the entire demo in its raw form, plus remixes by later-era GNR guitarist Gilby Clarke, and Cinderella drummer Fred Coury. The Gilby connection makes some sense, after all he was in the band and is known as a pretty capable producer these days. But Fred Coury? A little out of left field, wouldn't you say? I know he filled in for Adler on tour in '88 for a minute, but does that really qualify him to remix their music? He must have a production deal with the label or something.
As for the songs, the generically named “Killing Time” and “Rocker” are completely by-the-numbers headbangers in the Iron Maiden-meets-Motley Crue vein. Not bad at all, but nothing special. “Anything Goes,” however, is an early version of the Appetite For Destruction tune with a completely different verse riff and alternate lyrics. Even in it’s primordial form, it rocks. “Shadow of Your Love,” which appeared later as Guns B-side, sounds terrific here, almost completely the same as the more famous version, yet even more raw and randy. Ditto with Live Like a Suicide’s “Reckless Life,” another Weber tune that scorches here, despite the bootleggy quality of the recording.
The remixes do much justice to the sonics of this from-the-vaults release, though one has to wonder why we needed two sets of ‘em. Gilby’s mixes feature Tracii Guns on additional, added-on-later guitar, which is kind of a cool treat, considering he was an original member of the band. His fiery leads add that missing ingredient Hollywood Rose lacks without Slash’s axe-work. Coury’s mixes are nice ‘n’ beefed up too, but by the time you get to your third mix of “Killing Time”… you really are doing just that.
* * * ½
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