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Author Topic: Sick Things ? An Exclusive Interview with Duff McKagan  (Read 2812 times)
FunkyMonkey
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« on: April 05, 2009, 10:54:51 PM »

Sick Things ? An Exclusive Interview with Duff McKagan

By Jeb Wright

Jeb: I love the cover to Sick. There were other songs, however, that might have been better titles. The first single, "Flatline," "Sleaze Factory" or maybe "No Shame." Why "Sick?" What made it the one?

Duff: I think Sick would be a good album title even if we didn?t have a song with that name. We wrote "Sick" back in 2002. We knew even then it would be a good album title because it reflects the way the band views life. This band has a really sick sense of humor. There is actually a very high level of intellect in the band, me not included. Mike Squires has probably got an IQ of 160. We talk about politics, the economy and art.

Jeb: You are known as being a member of Velvet Revolver and Guns ?n? Roses. However, this band shows a big Punk influence. When did that become part of your musical arsenal?

Duff: I am the youngest in a very musical family, so I grew up listening to my older brothers and sisters music, which was great. Because of them I listened to Led Zeppelin, the Rolling Stones and even Motown. It was great to discover all of those different influences. I turned 13 in 1977 and I started to discover these bands like DOA and The Lewd. They were scary. They were dangerous to me. I met some dude who had a Mohawk, who was a couple of years older than me and he started turning me onto all these bands. I also met Kim Warnick, who was the bass player in the Fastbacks, which is one of the first bands I played in. They were one of those bands that never made it. Pearl Jam would take them out with them, and everyone in Seattle loved them, but they never made it as they were just too pop. She became my friend, and my personal mentor. She turned me onto the Ramones, The Vibrators, The Damned, The Germs and The Sex Pistols. All of a sudden, I had music that was my own and didn?t belong to my older brothers and sisters. I saw The Clash in 1979. It was the tour before London Calling and there were only about 200 people there. The same year I also saw Iggy Pop?s band. Brian James, from The Damned was playing guitar and Glen Matlock was playing bass. I remember the whole gig to this day. It really changed my life.

I moved down to LA in 1984 and Punk was done. There was a lot of heroin in Seattle at the time. I was 19 at the time and I knew I needed to shit or get off the pot. I decided that I was going to move to either New York or LA. I chose LA and the first person I met in LA was Slash and the second was Izzy Stradlin. We formed the band and Guns utilized the best of all of our influences.

Jeb: Does Loaded give you the opportunity to let your inner punk out?

Duff: I guess it does.

Jeb: It is not a Punk record per say, and there is a lot of hard rock, but I am like you, I love Metal but I love Punk too.

Duff: I started the band ten years ago and I set the initial tone that the band has gone into, and now evolved into. I don?t write all the songs anymore. I wrote "Wasted Heart" and "Forgive Me" on my own. I also wrote "No More" on my own. The rest are all band written songs. People bring in their own songs and we play them but the rest is all a band effort.

Jeb: Talk about "Flatline."

Duff: That is the one that is going to radio. It is the first single and we made a video for it. We don?t have much of a budget. We have a small little record deal. We made this album for twenty grand?recording, mixing and mastering. You can do it but you have to have your shit together. You can forget about having any sort of food budget or wasting time. I know guys from huge bands that have unlimited budgets. If your budget is $800,000 then you will use all of it to make the record. You will think, "Oh, I don?t have to get in there right away. I can order some sushi for lunch." When you don?t have the luxury, then you get in and make the record quickly. I think the record sounds more urgent because of that.

Jeb: In the old days you had to get in and take care of business. I think there is something to be said for that.

Duff: Listen to a Free record. You can hear that they are in a fucking room and there are mistakes but they are great mistakes.

Jeb: Some people view this band as a hobby and a side project. How do you view the band?

Duff: Maybe at the beginning?it wasn?t a hobby. I never treat music as a hobby. I started the band when I was in college and having babies but it has been a musical lifeboat for me, especially now, with all the drama that happened at the end of Velvet Revolver. I started losing touch of what I was doing music for. We didn?t think it would take us eight years to make another record but it did.

I think Sick is one of the most musically inspired records that I have ever made in my life, and that is saying a lot. I am not saying that to sell this record or to convince anyone to go out and buy it but it really is one of the most inspired times of my life. I would like to get this band to the point to where we can play 1000 to 1200 seat clubs in the USA. We already do that in Japan and the UK. If it got to that size then it would pay for itself and everybody would make money. I really love playing in this band and I love the guys that I play with in this band. I don?t love Slash any less, but VR is a big business. There is management and merchandise companies and there are agents. VR will get back up and running but I will never let Loaded go. I will be really busy for the next few years.

Jeb: I want to switch gears for a minute. Do you have a singer for Velvet Revolver yet?

Duff: We had a couple of guys that I thought we should have went with?one guy in particular. Everybody has got to be 100% in that situation and I respect my bandmates opinion. My opinion could be wrong, and I respect that. We have written all of the material. I don?t think VR has made our best record yet. We need to find the right guy to compliment the material, and when we do, people are going to be blown away. We were just starting to hit our stride when things started going crazy. We will find the guy. There is nobody yet that we have asked. We are actively looking right now.

Jeb: Do you feel that Scott?s [Weiland] behavior defeated music being the focus of Velvet Revolver? Did his craziness take away from any musical legacy that could have been formed?

Duff: It sucks. You put it in better words than I could ever find. I am not a guy to slag another person. It happened on the second tour and the wheels came off of his personal life. Unfortunately, it took a toll on the band. We knew what we were getting into. I have the same disease as he does, so I understand it.

Jeb: Isn?t it tough for you to be around active drug addicts?

Duff: It strengthens my sobriety to be around people like that. Drama is not good for my sobriety.

Jeb: I have been through it and have been clean and sober for years. It would just be weird for me to be around guys like Scott and Slash and be straight. It has to be weird.

Duff: It can be weird. Slash is sober now. For me, it is the drama. I had a relapse on pills in 2005. It came out of nowhere. It was because of all this bullshit. Xanax was prescribed for me. I was supposed to take one if I had a bad panic attack. I had them in my bag and that was my first mistake. I took one, and the next day, I took two. In only nine days, I was up to 22. That is what guys like you and I do.

Jeb: You are lucky you didn?t really screw yourself up. Some pills can damage the liver just like booze.

Duff: I was running the game and doing the whole thing in just two weeks.

Jeb: You live with fan worship, unlimited drugs and booze, girls lined up for you and then you also have fame and money. How do you keep those things from interfering with A) your music and B) your creativity?

Duff: Does anyone have any money left anymore? I think you are making a grand assumption [laughter]. You are asking me how all those factors affect my music.

Jeb: It is easy to become a Rock Star due to those influences and then that distracts a person from what got them into making music for in the first place.

Duff: I have an ego but I hate the term ?rock star.? I am not one of those guys. My wife would snicker if she heard you call me a rock star. She would say that you had the wrong guy. My older brothers and sisters always helped keep me in check. I remember when Guns got really huge and I started to get a little cocky, my oldest brother, Jon, who is twenty years older than me said, "Oh is that you are going to roll? Is that what you are doing?" That is all he had to say for me to come back to earth.

It has always been about the music for me, as long as I can remember. There were instruments around my house growing up and I started getting into it all when I was only four years old. I know guys who got into bands just to get chicks and stuff. There are those guys but I was never one of them. I just have always wanted to write the best song that I can be capable of writing. I have not done that yet. I am still on that quest and I am still exploring what I am capable of musically. I have made some money on this journey so far, and that is great. You have to make money to keep going. My job is making music.

Jeb: I was backstage at Rock Honors with Slash a few years ago. He told me that Guns almost got back with Axl. Do you have the same recollection of that happening?

Duff: No. How long ago was that?

Jeb: It was about three years ago.

Duff: Slash was not back on the planet yet.

Edited to fit, complete interview here: http://www.classicrockrevisited.com/interviewduffmckagan.htm
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« Reply #1 on: April 06, 2009, 12:25:06 AM »

"Jeb: I want to switch gears for a minute. Do you have a singer for Velvet Revolver yet?

Duff: We had a couple of guys that I thought we should have went with?one guy in particular. Everybody has got to be 100% in that situation and I respect my bandmates opinion. My opinion could be wrong, and I respect that. We have written all of the material. I don?t think VR has made our best record yet. We need to find the right guy to compliment the material, and when we do, people are going to be blown away. We were just starting to hit our stride when things started going crazy. We will find the guy. There is nobody yet that we have asked. We are actively looking right now."

Who the hell do you think they guy Duff wanted was?
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jacdaniel
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« Reply #2 on: April 06, 2009, 03:55:41 AM »

hmmmmmm, i wonder too!  I also wonder who didnt want him.  probably slash i guess
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russkwtx
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« Reply #3 on: April 06, 2009, 02:10:13 PM »

Jeb: I was backstage at Rock Honors with Slash a few years ago. He told me that Guns almost got back with Axl. Do you have the same recollection of that happening?

Duff: No. How long ago was that?

Jeb: It was about three years ago.

Duff: Slash was not back on the planet yet.


Was this about the time the Slash showing up on Axl's front door rumor was making the rounds?
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« Reply #4 on: April 06, 2009, 03:17:33 PM »

Was this about the time the Slash showing up on Axl's front door rumor was making the rounds?


No rumor, it happened for real.
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WTTJ_91
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« Reply #5 on: April 06, 2009, 03:21:55 PM »

Was this about the time the Slash showing up on Axl's front door rumor was making the rounds?


No rumor, it happened for real.

Yeah that happened, wow that had to have a been an akward moment I don't think he was referring to that though I think Slash just mean in general that it was "going" or "might" happen, and Duff was just saying he still didn't have his head out of the gutter.
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ppbebe
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« Reply #6 on: April 06, 2009, 03:33:35 PM »

2009-3=2006

remember those annoying smoke like this one http://www.heretodaygonetohell.com/board/index.php?topic=30235.msg453902#msg453902

Now we know who was puffin.
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chineseblues
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23/11/08


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« Reply #7 on: April 06, 2009, 04:58:12 PM »

Was this about the time the Slash showing up on Axl's front door rumor was making the rounds?


No rumor, it happened for real.

Yeah that happened, wow that had to have a been an akward moment I don't think he was referring to that though I think Slash just mean in general that it was "going" or "might" happen, and Duff was just saying he still didn't have his head out of the gutter.

No Slash was TRYING to make it happen. He was actively trying to get back in the band back then and probably didn't even tell Duff about it....
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