Events Calendar
In This Section
Most Read Stories
Suitcase causes bomb scare at Akron bus terminal
Akron City Council OKs higher speed on I-77
Chapel Hill isn't rolling right along
Motorcyclist killed, wife injured in Stark County crash
Man says he was punched, robbed by 3 people in parking lot
Unusual sports bar to be sold at auction
Family found dead in Ohio home
Louisville athlete commits to play for Boston College
New eateries expand menu of options
Blogs:
Pets:
More dancing dogs, the Salsa edition
The Heldenfiles:
Tuesday Notebook
Patrick McManamon:
First and 10: Some ideas for a better second half
Akron Zips:
MAC Roundtable
Tribe Matters:
Indians announce spring dates
Cleveland Browns:
Mangini doesn't name a quarterback
Kent State Sports:
Bye week coming at good time for Flashes
Cleveland Cavaliers:
Shaq: It’s All About Winning Championships
Buckeye Blogging:
Buckeyes Roll 100-60 / Season Outlook
Varsity Letters:
Report: Walsh baseball player commits
All Da King's Men:
More On The Fort Hood Jihadist
Blog of Mass Destruction:
Simply Incapable of Telling The Truth
Akron Law Café:
Health Care Financing Reform: (63) Commonwealth Fund Report on Primary Care
See Jane Style:
Muffle Your Muffler
Car Chase:
Clock Tender- Extending the Life of Collector Car Clocks
Let's Talk Real Estate:
Rumors: Akron Starbucks Closing
Ohio Travels with Betty:
Jack is looking for a trip to Southern Ohio the week of November 16.
Sound Check:
Aeromsith looking for new singer as Steven Tyler contemplates solo career
HRLite House:
Personal Rant – Why People Do Not Live in Northeast Ohio
Akron Gamer:
Video: 'Modern Warfare 2' hits the streets
'Chinese Democracy' a better idea for the '90s
By Glenn Gamboa
Newsday
POSTED: 09:30 a.m. EST, Dec 01, 2008
Guns N' Roses' new album, Chinese Democracy, took Axl Rose and dozens of musicians and producers an estimated $11 million and 13 years to complete.
It wasn't worth it. That probably goes without saying especially since this particular album contributed to the downfall of Geffen Records, the layoff of hundreds of workers and the high-profile exits of numerous band members, producers and music execs.
Nevertheless, all that would probably have been forgiven if Chinese Democracy turned out to be a great album, if it even came close to matching the legendary brilliance of Appetite for Destruction. It doesn't.
Chinese Democracy is a good effort and it would have seemed even better if it had come out in a decent amount of time, say, you know, a decade ago. The hard-hitting title track is potent, but whatever shock value it may have had has been diminished by what has come in the meantime, with Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor perfecting that industrial snarl years ago and System of a Down dominating virtuoso metal guitar solos for at least two albums now. Better is a stronger song, maybe the album's best chance for a radio hit with its grand hook and Rose's impassioned vocals, but even that sounds a little retro.
Sometimes, it sounds like Rose knows he went too far with this album. ''It was a long time for you, it was a long time for me,'' he sings in the overstuffed There Was a Time, with its choirs and elaborate string parts. ''It'd be a long time for anyone, but looks like it's meant to be.''
In many ways, Chinese Democracy plays merely as the follow-up to Use Your Illusion I & II, which arrived in 1991 and signaled the broader artistic ambitions of the band. If Appetite for Destruction's Welcome to the Jungle and Paradise City were all about rage and swagger, and Use Your Illusion's Don't Cry and November Rain were about crafting songs that were bigger than life, Chinese Democracy shows what happens when it becomes more about craft than emotion.
Tales of Rose's quest for perfection came from many of his collaborators, of how he would record songs repeatedly to get just the right sound. He must have agonized over the way the electric guitars fade out on the surprisingly funky If the World, leaving only flamenco picking and piano tinkling. It's a nice effect, but the effort would have been better used to smooth out the vocals.
That Chinese Democracy came out at all is a monument to Rose's artistic vision and his belief in himself. But all its excesses and its occasional lack of focus also serve as a testament to the kind of ridiculous spending and star-coddling that led to the music industry's current sales-dropping predicament. All along the line, this project would have benefited from someone telling Rose ''no,'' but any check on him came too late.
The once-mighty Guns N' Roses fan base has been worn down by false starts, combined with long waits and erratic behavior. Maybe some fans will eventually come to appreciate Chinese Democracy maybe the power of Better or the edge of Madagascar but they will first have to face the feeling of ''Was this worth all of that?'' Unfortunately for Rose, the answer will almost always be ''no.''
Guns N' Roses' new album, Chinese Democracy, took Axl Rose and dozens of musicians and producers an estimated $11 million and 13 years to complete.
It wasn't worth it. That probably goes without saying especially since this particular album contributed to the downfall of Geffen Records, the layoff of hundreds of workers and the high-profile exits of numerous band members, producers and music execs.
Nevertheless, all that would probably have been forgiven if Chinese Democracy turned out to be a great album, if it even came close to matching the legendary brilliance of Appetite for Destruction. It doesn't.
Chinese Democracy is a good effort and it would have seemed even better if it had come out in a decent amount of time, say, you know, a decade ago. The hard-hitting title track is potent, but whatever shock value it may have had has been diminished by what has come in the meantime, with Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor perfecting that industrial snarl years ago and System of a Down dominating virtuoso metal guitar solos for at least two albums now. Better is a stronger song, maybe the album's best chance for a radio hit with its grand hook and Rose's impassioned vocals, but even that sounds a little retro.
Sometimes, it sounds like Rose knows he went too far with this album. ''It was a long time for you, it was a long time for me,'' he sings in the overstuffed There Was a Time, with its choirs and elaborate string parts. ''It'd be a long time for anyone, but looks like it's meant to be.''
In many ways, Chinese Democracy plays merely as the follow-up to Use Your Illusion I & II, which arrived in 1991 and signaled the broader artistic ambitions of the band. If Appetite for Destruction's Welcome to the Jungle and Paradise City were all about rage and swagger, and Use Your Illusion's Don't Cry and November Rain were about crafting songs that were bigger than life, Chinese Democracy shows what happens when it becomes more about craft than emotion.
Tales of Rose's quest for perfection came from many of his collaborators, of how he would record songs repeatedly to get just the right sound. He must have agonized over the way the electric guitars fade out on the surprisingly funky If the World, leaving only flamenco picking and piano tinkling. It's a nice effect, but the effort would have been better used to smooth out the vocals.
That Chinese Democracy came out at all is a monument to Rose's artistic vision and his belief in himself. But all its excesses and its occasional lack of focus also serve as a testament to the kind of ridiculous spending and star-coddling that led to the music industry's current sales-dropping predicament. All along the line, this project would have benefited from someone telling Rose ''no,'' but any check on him came too late.
The once-mighty Guns N' Roses fan base has been worn down by false starts, combined with long waits and erratic behavior. Maybe some fans will eventually come to appreciate Chinese Democracy maybe the power of Better or the edge of Madagascar but they will first have to face the feeling of ''Was this worth all of that?'' Unfortunately for Rose, the answer will almost always be ''no.''
