CHRISTOPHER: Ex-Gun McKagan is ?Loaded?Published: Friday, May 15, 2009
By MICHAEL CHRISTOPHER Times Music Columnist
Duff McKagan has road tested his musical career in a couple of well-known bands. Now, he?s decided to temporarily ditch the bass, pick up the guitar and stand behind the mic for Loaded, a straight ahead rock outfit that combines hooky pop melodies and a powerful snarl that looks to upstage the rest of the bands on the heels of its new record ?Sick? at the ?MMR*B*Q? this Sunday at the Susquehanna Bank Center.
?I come from an age where you have to be good live first,? McKagan told Rock Music Menu this week. ?You have to have good songs first. You can?t go into the studio and let Pro Tools do the writing for you ? and you can?t depend on running Pro Tools onstage to supplement your sound, you gotta just go out and rock.?
To the casual music fan, heck, even to the dedicated rock and roller, it might come as a surprise that McKagan, the ex-Guns N? Roses/current Velvet Revolver bassist, has been toying around with Loaded for a decade.
He first put the band together in 1999, headed over to Japan for a tour, and came back to the States to concentrate on his family and finishing up his degree in business before unleashing his new musical project here.
?We had made a record in 2001, but I was in school full time, and it was kind of more of a thing just to keep playing music,? he said. ?I couldn?t just go to school and I was learning how to raise children at that point, and it wasn?t something I could put all of myself into then. We were about to do an American release, but then VR started and that was it.?
VR stands for Velvet Revolver, where McKagan rejoined forces with fellow ex-Gunners Slash and Matt Sorum and along with guitarist Dave Kushner began the search for a singer. Former Stone Temple Pilots frontman Scott Weiland landed in the slot, but left the band under a cloud of acrimony a little over a year ago. The hiatus while searching for a replacement left McKagan time to revive Loaded with a new line-up and album.
?This is the coming out, this is where I felt brave enough to go ?OK, we?re not just going to release this in Japan; hell or high-water this is going to have a worldwide release,?? he said. ?This band is just so much fun to be around and I think that easy sort of friendship that we have makes us just a killer, kick-ass rock band live.?
McKagan?s singing style has grown notably since laying down inspired but often out of tune vocals on Guns? tracks like ?So Fine? and his 1993 solo record ?Believe in Me.?
?I was singing on that record more Johnny Thunders-ish, but then I got sober, and I started actually thinking about singing,? he said. ?By the time I made this record, it seems I?m finally comfortable, I know my range. Maybe now, this will be the first Loaded record where ?Ok, I feel comfortable, I can sing.??
?Singing live is great, I?ve figured out some tricks and by the next record I hope to be able to do some full voice screaming; that?s one of my goals. Like Dave Grohl ? he can scream full voice. And Dave wasn?t a singer to begin with, but made himself into a pretty great rock singer.?
Back when he was in G N? R, McKagan was always known as the the one waving the punk rock flag, with streaked hair, Misfits? t-shirts and the perpetual ripped jeans/leather jacket combo serving as his wardrobe. Unfortunately, it?s a label that has stuck, leaving many a lazy critic to put Loaded in a category it doesn?t belong.
?The easiest thing to say and the most uninformed thing to say is ?Duff McKagan?s punk rock record!?? he said. ?Number one, yeah, I came up in an age where punk rock hit, but that was a long time ago; it?s not like I carry around punk rock in my writing and in my playing. What I listen to has morphed since then ? big time.?
His tastes may have grown, but McKagan?s roots are still strong. Back in the early-eighties, he was a staple on the tight-knit music scene in his hometown of Seattle before leaving for Los Angeles.
?I knew a lot of the Soundgarden guys; I knew Chris (Cornell), Kim (guitarist Thayil),? he said. ?I knew the Mother Love Bone guys really well, (singer) Andy Wood and I were good buddies.?
?When I saw Soundgarden for the first time, when they came down and played in L.A. in ?89, I was like, ?(Expletive) I could?ve stayed home and been in Soundgarden ? that would?ve been killer!? I definitely did wonder, ?I could?ve been in Alice in Chains, but the band that we formed was a whole different animal, and it was my path, for sure.?
He?s referring of course to the reckless life in Guns N? Roses, which combusted completely in the early ?90s, leaving frontman Axl Rose the sole remaining original member. McKagan, for his part, has had nary a bad thing to say about Guns or Rose, despite being consistently baited by the press.
?For this ?Sick? record I?ve done all different sorts of media, and I?ve probably done 300 interviews thus far, and I marvel that people ask me what I think about ?Chinese Democracy,?? he said. ?And first of all, the record came out last November, and what does my opinion really matter? I think that maybe people try to get a rise out of me, or ?Maybe we?ll get a quote that nobody else has! He?s gonna diss it!??
McKagan is now a financial columnist for Playboy magazine, writes for Seattle Weekly and is excited to finally get the chance to show rock fans in the States what Loaded is all about. The show this weekend is one of a handful of performances lined up to date.
?Philly has always been (expletive) great,? he said. ?The first time Guns played there was at The Trocadero, an amazing place to play.?
?The rock audiences in Philly are some of the best ever and it?s just a great town and I?m glad Loaded is playing one of our first American gigs there. We?re on the big radio festival which is fine, but I?d love to come back and play like an 800,000 seat club in Philly that?s packed and people are just hanging off the rafters; that would be really, really great.?
Tickets are still available for the MMR*B*Q this Sunday at Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden, NJ, featuring ZZ Top, Offspring, Papa Roach, Puddle of Mudd, Saliva, Duff McKagan?s Loaded and Halestorm. Check out livenation.com for more info.
Music columnist Michael Christopher appears Thursday nights at 9:45 p.m. on 1210-AM ?The Big Talker? with Dom Giordano. To contact him, send an e-mail to
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