No one could’ve predicted Guns N’ Roses‘ reunion going from strength-to-strength — both as a touring outfit and a recording unit. Coming on February 25th is GNR’s four-track EP, titled Hard Skool, marking the first set to feature Axl RoseDuff McKagan, and Slash since the band’s 1993 covers album “The Spaghetti Incident?”

Slash spoke with Classic Rock magazine and was asked if he thought the band would still be going this strong half-a decade after joining forces again: “Um, no. When we got together, Axl and I really got over this major sort of hump of negativity that we’ve been carrying around for years and years. It was a real simple, relatively short conversation that we had, which pointed a lot of fingers in the direction of s*** that we were going through in the past, and people we were working with at the time. So we got past that.”

He went on to say, “We decided that we would honor these requests to play Coachella that we’d been getting for years. That was really the main driver — to get together for the fun of it, and do the Coachella gigs. I didn’t really have any expectations, but it was such a magical kind of thing, such an overwhelmingly positive experience, that we just started doing it in earnest across the planet. And it’s continued for a pretty long time.”

Regarding the newly revamped Guns tracks set for the upcoming album that had been recorded prior to him and McKagan rejoining the band, Slash revealed, “The bass and the guitars are all re-done, for the most part, but the original drums are still intact, and the vocals.”

When pressed as to which era or album the upcoming Guns album most strongly resembles, Slash explained, “I really don’t have the vantage point to be able to have that perspective. I’m just not able to sort of objectively look at it like that. It’s just what it is. But it’s cool. I’m enjoying working on the stuff and having a good time doing it.”

DID YOU KNOW???

  • Guns N’ Roses‘ 2021 summer tour grossed $50 million and sold 363,000 tickets.
  • Billboard Boxscore reported, “The tour alternated between stadiums and arenas, with 10 outdoor shows and 14 indoor shows. Despite more arena dates, the stadium concerts, perhaps unsurprisingly, carried the bigger gross ($28.6 million) while managing a slightly lighter ticket price ($121), compared to arenas with $21.5 million on an average $169.48 ticket.”

FAST FACTS

  • Slash featuring Myles Kennedy & The Conspirators will release their latest album, titled 4, on February 11th.
  • The album marks the collective’s first studio set since 2018’s Living The Dream.

CHECK IT OUT: Guns N’ Roses’ 2021 lyric video for “Hard Skool”: