Why did Axle Rose and Slash split back in the day?

Publish Date
Monday, 24 June 2024, 10:39AM

To say back in the 80s/90s things were never perfect within the Guns N' Roses camp is a bit of an understatement. Tensions between the singer and the guitarist existed long before Slash actually left the band in 1996. Rose was assertive and confrontational, whereas Slash was quieter and tried to avoid conflict at all costs.

Fame and addiction were two of the larger problems the band struggled with throughout the late '80s and early '90s, both of which led to the firing of drummer Steven Adler, the departure of guitarist Izzy Stradlin and Rose becoming paranoid about the group's future.

Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan were the only remaining members from the band's Appetite for Destruction lineup by the mid-to-late '90s. Legal contracts, substance abuse and a Rolling Stones cover song were the ultimate nails in the coffin for the trio, and by '97, the vocalist was on his own.

Slash said in an interview at the time "Axl went on to do the vocals and brought in another guitar player with him, who's a guy from Indiana who I can't stand. You'll hear my guitar, and then you'll hear this tingy little thing in the background. So that pissed me off."

Rose stayed quiet for a few years while he picked up the pieces of his band and brought in a plethora of new musicians to work on its industrial-infused new album, Chinese Democracy, which infamously didn't see the light of day for around another decade.

He and Slash exchanged words about each other in interviews from time to time during that decade, but they were eventually able to bury the hatchet to reunite in 2016, and with McKagan too.

The legends at Loudwire have put together video documenting the extensive history between the two, check it out below! 

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