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Thread started 11/19/08 3:02am

MikeMatronik

Guns N' Roses' Chinese Democracy discussion Thread! since it has leaked

Wow! The album is impressive. Since yesterday I can't stop listening to it!

My favorite song is Better! cool
[Edited 11/19/08 3:02am]
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Reply #1 posted 11/19/08 3:17am

PurpleKnight

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What the fuck? This thing is actually coming out?!
The world is a comedy for those who think and a tragedy for those who feel.

"You still wanna take me to prison...just because I won't trade humanity for patriotism."
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Reply #2 posted 11/19/08 3:23am

MikeMatronik

yep

It started to be sold on mexico this week...some countries will get it friday!

The cd is so well mastered! No clipping on this baby...nothing like the mastering horror that was Death Magnetic
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Reply #3 posted 11/19/08 5:28am

IstenSzek

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MikeMatronik said:

Wow! The album is impressive. Since yesterday I can't stop listening to it!
My favorite song is Better! cool
[Edited 11/19/08 3:02am]


falloff

you crack me up mike. how can you get that excited over a new leak
five times a week haha.

than again, i'm glad you do because you always tip us off on what's
floating around the newly formed puddles.

woot!
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps
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Reply #4 posted 11/19/08 9:34am

motownlover

can this ever live up to it anticipation?
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Reply #5 posted 11/19/08 9:35am

Rightly

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MikeMatronik said:

Wow! The album is impressive. Since yesterday I can't stop listening to it!

My favorite song is Better! cool
[Edited 11/19/08 3:02am]

This is possibly the best G n R album to date!

my favourite might be "street of dreams"

thanks for the thread Mike.
small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious!
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Reply #6 posted 11/19/08 1:12pm

MikeMatronik

Prostitute is such a beautiful track
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Reply #7 posted 11/19/08 1:14pm

MikeMatronik

Scrapped sounds like the deformed brother of the Bee Gees' "Children of the World"
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Reply #8 posted 11/19/08 2:39pm

Slave2daGroove

pooptoast
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Reply #9 posted 11/19/08 4:51pm

MsMisha319

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Garbage. Utter garbage. mad


Smooches;)
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Reply #10 posted 11/19/08 6:34pm

Risico

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"Prostitute" and "Catcher in the Rye" are amazing.

"This I Love" is also something else - People will love it or hate it, but I'm fond of the raw theatricality of it.

All in all, fantastic album, with only one or two weak tracks. Makes me wonder what's next...
I've seen the future, and boy it's rough...
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Reply #11 posted 11/19/08 7:32pm

thesexofit

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I'll be getting it after its properly released. Sounds more akin to "use your illusion I and II" then their classic debut, but Iam still down.
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Reply #12 posted 11/20/08 12:49am

Militant

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moderator

I have the version that leaked back in June, but I'm definately going to pick this album up when I see it in the store. I feel like I should support Axl after all the time, effort and money that has gone into this record.
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Reply #13 posted 11/20/08 6:21am

piepie1976

the whole thing is pretty epic. i think it's going to need some digestion time for sure. "better" stands out right away, though. it just has that feeling permeating through it that any good g n' r track does.

Militant said:

I have the version that leaked back in June, but I'm definately going to pick this album up when I see it in the store. I feel like I should support Axl after all the time, effort and money that has gone into this record.
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Reply #14 posted 11/20/08 11:36am

myloveis4ever

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MikeMatronik said:

Wow! The album is impressive. Since yesterday I can't stop listening to it!

My favorite song is Better! cool
[Edited 11/19/08 3:02am]


i like the album.....Best songs > " madagascar" ....."this i love" , "better", "street of dreams , "sorry"
cool
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Reply #15 posted 11/20/08 1:33pm

purplehippieon
the1

I've already pre-ordered the album on 7digital.com .... should be able to download it from there late Saturday night but anyway, they have the whole thing streaming on their myspace page: http://www.myspace.com/gunsnroses

I'm listening right now to track 3 from the album ("Better").... sounds good so far. cool
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Reply #16 posted 11/20/08 5:20pm

dancerella

purplehippieonthe1 said:

I've already pre-ordered the album on 7digital.com .... should be able to download it from there late Saturday night but anyway, they have the whole thing streaming on their myspace page: http://www.myspace.com/gunsnroses

I'm listening right now to track 3 from the album ("Better").... sounds good so far. cool



hey thanks for the info. i'm listening to it now too. i'm surprised at how upbeat and heavy it is. i thought it would be "lighter" but thankfully it's not. one thing, do you think this album sounds 80's, 90's or of this time? i can't figure it out. so far so good though! cool
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Reply #17 posted 11/20/08 5:27pm

Imago

Oops, mods you can lock my other thread.



I love this album!!! mushy


Lawd, I've waited so long for this shit! lol
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Reply #18 posted 11/20/08 7:13pm

emilio319

The album is awesome....

"This I love" is incredible!

As is "Street of Dreams"...and "If The World"...there's a bunch of other great ones!

[Edited 11/20/08 19:14pm]
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Reply #19 posted 11/20/08 7:28pm

Imago

emilio319 said:

The album is awesome....

"This I love" is incredible!

As is "Street of Dreams"...and "If The World"...there's a bunch of other great ones!

[Edited 11/20/08 19:14pm]

nod

I'd place it way above Use Your Illusions I & II but probably somewhere just under Appetite For Destruction . Though I'm so burned out on those songs, I think I like this album better. lol
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Reply #20 posted 11/20/08 8:30pm

RenHoek

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On a related but very important note...

-----

Dr Pepper to deliver on its free-soda promise
Thu Nov 20, 6:26 pm ET

LOS ANGELES Dr Pepper is making good on its promise of free soda now that the release of Guns N' Roses' "Chinese Democracy" is a reality. The soft-drink maker said in March that it would give a free soda to everyone in America if the album dropped in 2008. "Chinese Democracy," infamously delayed since recording began in 1994, goes on sale Sunday.

"We never thought this day would come," Tony Jacobs, Dr Pepper's vice president of marketing, said in a statement. "But now that it's here, all we can say is: The Dr Pepper's on us."

Beginning Sunday at 12:01 a.m., coupons for a free 20-ounce soda will be available for 24 hours on Dr Pepper's Web site. They'll be honored until Feb. 28.

Dr Pepper is owned by Dr Pepper Snapple Group, Inc.

___

On the Net:

http://www.drpepper.com

FREE SODA woot!
A working class Hero is something to be ~ Lennon
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Reply #21 posted 11/20/08 8:48pm

meow85

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I'm gonna wait to get it when it's properly released. It sounds fab. smile

My only beef is the anme of the band. Couldn't they call it "Axl and a Bunch of Other Dudes"?
"A Watcher scoffs at gravity!"
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Reply #22 posted 11/20/08 10:51pm

kimrachell

listened on myspace today, and i like the music alot. just miss slash though! but i'm going to buy the cd.
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Reply #23 posted 11/21/08 1:22am

Marrk

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So who are the players in GnR these days? or who plays on the album?
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Reply #24 posted 11/21/08 4:44am

DJ506

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music
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Reply #25 posted 11/21/08 7:40am

HatrinaHaterwi
tz

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Look here, damn it! Don't shoot, I'm just the messenger! Ok? Y'all ready...Imago put it away! lol

Alright, here goes...

http://www.nytimes.com/20...ss&emc=rss

How Axl Rose Spent All That Time

By JON PARELES
Published: November 20, 2008

(Note: This article will appear in this Sunday's Arts & Leisure section.)

“ALL I’ve got is precious time,” W. Axl Rose sings in the title song of Guns N’ Roses’ new album, and he must be well aware of how that line sounds now. Mr. Rose, 46, the only remaining original member of Guns N’ Roses, needed 17 years, more than $13 million (as of 2005) and a battalion of musicians, producers and advisers to deliver “Chinese Democracy,” the first album of new Guns N’ Roses songs since 1991. It’s being released on Sunday, with CDs sold exclusively at Best Buy. (In another 21st-century fillip the album’s best song, “Shackler’s Revenge,” appeared first in a video game, Rock Band 2.)

“Chinese Democracy” (Geffen) is the Titanic of rock albums: the ship, not the movie, although like the film it’s a monumental studio production. It’s outsize, lavish, obsessive, technologically advanced and, all too clearly, the end of an era. It’s also a shipwreck, capsized by pretensions and top-heavy production. In its 14 songs there are glimpses of heartfelt ferocity and despair, along with bursts of remarkable musicianship. But they are overwhelmed by countless layers of studio diddling and a tone of curdled self-pity. The album concludes with five bombastic power ballads in a row.

“Chinese Democracy” sounds like a loud last gasp from the reign of the indulged pop star: the kind of musician whose blockbuster early success could once assure loyal audiences, bountiful royalties, escalating ambitions and dangerously open-ended deadlines. The leaner, leakier 21st-century recording business is far less likely to nurture such erratic perfectionists. (Mr. Rose did manage to outpace Kevin Shields of My Bloody Valentine, which re-emerged on tour this year but hasn’t yet released a successor to its 1991 masterpiece, “Loveless.”) The new rock paradigm, a throwback to the 1950s and early 1960s, is to record faster, more cheaply and more often, then head out on tour before the next YouTube sensation distracts potential fans.

“Chinese Democracy” is such an old-school event that at this point no album could easily live up to the pent-up anticipation and fascination. Over the last two decades Guns N’ Roses’ 1987 debut album, “Appetite for Destruction,” has sold 18 million copies in the United States alone. The original band, particularly the guitar team of Slash on lead and Izzy Stradlin on rhythm, collaborated to forge a scrappy combination of glam, punk and metal behind Mr. Rose’s proudly abrasive voice, which could leap from a baritone growl to a fierce screech. Singing about sex, drugs, booze and stardom, Mr. Rose was a rags-to-MTV success story for the 1980s: a self-described abused child from heartland America who got himself out of Indiana and reinvented himself as a full-fledged Hollywood rock star, charismatic and volatile, never pretending to be controllable.

Amid tours, band members’ addictions and liaisons with models, Guns N’ Roses went on to make an EP and the multimillion-selling albums “Use Your Illusion” I and II, which were released simultaneously in 1991. Those were followed by a desultory collection of punk-rock remakes, “The Spaghetti Incident?,” in 1993, before the band splintered and left Mr. Rose as the owner of the Guns N’ Roses brand. Clearly it would be a very different band, but there was little doubt that Mr. Rose had more to say.

He has been announcing the impending completion of “Chinese Democracy” since at least 1999 and has been singing many of its songs on tour since 2001. Concert bootlegs and unfinished studio versions circulating online have defused some of the surprise from the finished album. Yet meanwhile, year after year, Mr. Rose worked on and reworked the songs. The album credits list 14 studios.

For years Mr. Rose has been tagged the Howard Hughes of rock, as his manager at the time was already complaining in 2001. That didn’t have to be a bad thing; estrangement and obsession have spawned great songs. But “Chinese Democracy,” though it’s a remarkable artifact of excess, is a letdown. Mr. Rose’s version of Guns N’ Roses, with sidemen he can fire rather than partners, leaves his worst impulses unchecked.

Guns N’ Roses is still collaborative; the songs on “Chinese Democracy” are credited to Mr. Rose along with many of the musicians who have passed through the band since the mid-1990s. The guitarists Buckethead and Robin Finck, the bassist Tommy Stinson and the drummers Josh Freese and Brain pushed Mr. Rose toward rock, others toward ballads. By way of comparison with the old Guns N’ Roses, Mr. Rose’s latter-day songwriting tilts more toward the pomp of “November Rain” than the thrust of “Welcome to the Jungle” or the pealing guitar lines of “Sweet Child o’ Mine.” The one song on “Chinese Democracy” written by Mr. Rose alone, “This I Love,” is by far the album’s most maudlin track, and he hams it up further with a vibrato vocal homage to Queen’s Freddie Mercury.

Like the old Guns N’ Roses albums “Chinese Democracy” whipsaws between arrogance and pain, moans and sneers. The present-day Mr. Rose presents himself as someone beleaguered on every front, a cornered character with nothing to lose. He’s tormented by inner demons and, from outside, by antagonists, lovers and users who constantly betray and exploit him. “Forgive them that tear down my soul,” he croaks in “Madagascar,” amid French horns playing a dirge. (The middle of that song inexplicably gives way to a collage of movie dialogue and speeches by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.)

All the labors of Mr. Rose and his various lineups, both inspired and overblown, come through the finished album. Mr. Rose and his co-producer, Caram Costanzo, just keep piling up the sounds. String orchestra? Toy piano plinks? Voices muttering in foreign languages? Harp? Drum machines? Choirs? “I Have a Dream”? They’re all there, along with indefatigable drums and phalanxes of guitars.

“Chinese Democracy” reveals multiple archaeological layers, including what might have been passing fascinations as the 1990s and early 2000s rolled by: the Metallica of “Enter Sandman” in the surly, self-righteous “Sorry”; the distortion effects of Nine Inch Nails in “Shackler’s Revenge”; U2’s sustained guitars and martial beat to begin “Prostitute”; a combination of Elton John piano and strings (arranged by Mr. John’s longtime associate Paul Buckmaster) with Smashing Pumpkins guitar crescendos in “Street of Dreams.”

Some of the album’s best moments are its intros. Flaunting what time and money can accomplish, there are gratuitous ear grabbers like an a cappella vocal chorale in “Scraped,” a siren matched by a siren swoop of Mr. Rose’s voice in “Chinese Democracy” and the narrow-band, filtered beginning of “Better.” That track goes on to hurtle across so much of what Guns N’ Roses does well — from steel-clawed hard-rock riffs to metallic reggae-rock to arena-anthem melodies — that it almost makes up for the whininess and lazy “-tion” rhymes of the underlying song. “If the World” opens with acoustic guitar lines suggesting a Middle Eastern oud but segues into wah-wah rhythm guitar and sustained strings fit for a blaxploitation soundtrack, while Mr. Rose unleashes something like a soul falsetto.
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Is it demented? Sometimes. Does Mr. Rose care? Apparently not. “I am crazy!” he belts over the frantic guitar and tom-toms of “Riad N’ the Bedouins,” while he’s a potentially trigger-happy maniac in “Shackler’s Revenge.” In “Scraped” he’s alternately depressive and manic, warning “Don’t you try to stop us now” over a riff fit for Led Zeppelin. “Catcher in the Rye” echoes the Beatles in its melody while it alludes to Mark David Chapman, who was carrying that book when he killed John Lennon: “If I thought that I was crazy/Well I guess I’d have more fun,” he sings.

Even when he’s presumably being himself, Mr. Rose is forever overwrought. He pushes his multiply overdubbed voice every which way — rasping, sobbing, cackling, yowling — while at the same time Mr. Finck, Buckethead and Ron (Bumblefoot) Thal are playing frantic guitar solos, with a mandate to wail higher and zoom faster.

The craziness on “Chinese Democracy” isn’t the wild, brawling arrogance that the young Mr. Rose and his rowdy ’80s band mates gave the fledgling Guns N’ Roses. It’s the maniacal attention to detail that’s possible in the era of Pro Tools: the infinitude of tiny tweaks available for every instant of a track, the chance to reshape every sound and reshuffle every setting, to test every guitar solo ever played on a song — or all of them at once — and then throw on a string arrangement for good measure. That microscopic focus is obvious throughout “Chinese Democracy”; every note sounds honed, polished, aimed — and then crammed into a song that’s already brimming with other virtuosity. At points where the mix goes truly haywire, like the end of “Catcher in the Rye,” a Meat Loaf song title sums things up: “Everything Louder Than Everything Else.”

It’s easy to imagine Mr. Rose determined to outdo his own brazen youth and his old band, but with less perspective and hundreds of new tracks as each year goes by. If Guns N’ Roses had released “Chinese Democracy” in 2000, it would still have been an event, but it might also have been treated as the transitional album in a band’s continuing career. By holding it back and tinkering with it for so long, Mr. Rose has pressured himself to make it epochal — especially if, on this timetable, the next Guns N’ Roses studio album doesn’t arrive until 2025. And fans were waiting for him to defy the world again, not to do another digital edit. Sometime during the years of work, theatricality and razzle-dazzle replaced heart.

As Mr. Rose bemoans the love that ended or vows to face life uncompromised and on his own, the music on “Chinese Democracy” swells and crashes all around him, frantic and nearly devoid of breathing space. It’s hard to envision him as the songs do, that besieged antihero alone against the world, when he’s sharing his bunker with a cast of thousands.
I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart.
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Reply #26 posted 11/21/08 9:05am

2freaky4church
1

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Rolling Stone gave it 4 stars.
All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #27 posted 11/21/08 9:07am

2freaky4church
1

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Better's a hit.
All you others say Hell Yea!! woot!
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Reply #28 posted 11/21/08 9:46am

yoshimaroka

GN'R Break My Space Record



NME News
Guns N' Roses' 'Chinese Democracy' breaks MySpace record



Guns'N' Roses Axl Rose

Album playback received 25 listens a second


Guns N Roses' new album 'Chinese Democracy' has broken all records after being streamed on MySpace.

The album received around 25 listens a second up until today (November 21) after being streamed in full on the site yesterday (November 20).

Up until 4pm (GMT) today the title track had been played over 826,000 times, with the total amount of plays all the album tracks have received adding up to over 3 million.

The figures mean an average of 25 people per second were listening to one of the songs on the album at MySpace.com/gunsnroses.

The data means that the streaming of the album, dubbed a "listening party", has attracted the largest amount of listeners for an artist album stream launch on the site to date.

Head to MySpace.com/gunsnroses to hear 'Chinese Democracy' in full, and get the new issue of NME, out now, for a two-page review of the album.[img][/img]
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Reply #29 posted 11/21/08 9:56am

Bfunkthe1

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2freaky4church1 said:

Rolling Stone gave it 4 stars.

Yea not sure how to read that. confused
They are notorious for giving what I consider to be less-than stellar artists how marks and praise and stellar artists the brush off. So whatever.
On terms of Chinese Democracy, I have to say I like quite a bit of it.
I really like the mish mash of styles and forward thinking approach. Very epic like as well. Keep in mind this is coming from someone who dislikes older GNR and Axle. I know blasphemy to some. Who cares.Just my preferences.
But probably because of the cast involved (Buckethead,Bumblefoot,Finck,Freeze,Brain,Marcos Beltrami,etc) I enjoy this release. Kinda GNR meets NIN meets Praxis. And I love the latter two. cool
Fantasy is reality in the world today. But I'll keep hangin in there, that is the only way.
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