Duff McKagan (Guns ‘n’ Roses)

Courtesy of Fender Com

By Thomas Semioli

 

You either loved or despised Guns ‘n’ Roses – which is the ultimate gauge of a great rock ‘n’ roll band. Muti-instrumentalist, composer, author, economic advisor, masculine mentor,  media host, and bassist Michael Andrew “Duff” McKagan distinguished himself from the majority of his hard rock peers – most of whom played the instrument as a root-note-only buttress – with fluid counter-melodies which weaved their way through Axl’s banshee wails and Slash’s raucous riffage.

 

Born and raised in Seattle, Duff (an Irish nickname) started off as a drummer. He gravitated to the bass by way of his brother Bruce. Plying his craft in various local punk bands, Duff migrated to Los Angeles in the early 1980s.  He answered an ad in a music paper and met his future GNR bandmates Slash and Steven Adler, and the rest, as they say is history… Fans are advised to read his intriguing autobiography It’s So Easy and Other Lies (2011) for the GNR story.  

 

Guns ‘n’ Roses emerged as one of the world’s biggest rock bands in the late 1980s – filling stadiums, whilst moving multi-platinum platters and merch. Akin to their ancestors the Rolling Stones, and Sex Pistols, GNR were the last of rock and roll’s bad boy bands.  Fans dressed like them, and musicians were inspired by them. They were among the few rock bands of any era that were recognized outside the parameters of the music business. GNR’s unsavory public behavior (mostly hype) garnered them headlines aplenty which further fueled interest in the band. Regardless of their persona, GNR delivered the goods: they were exemplary players, writers, performers, and recording artists.  

 

Sadly the original band (mostly) collapsed after four studio albums. However if you were to cherry-pick choice cuts from the members’ ensuing solo slabs: Duff’s Believe In Me (1993), all the Izzy Stradlin albums, Gilby Clarke’s Pawn Shop Guitars (1994), and a Slash’s Snakepit disc or two; you’ve got a few killer GNR sides. Axl’s hired Guns cut a dud of an album sans memorable songs, and fans attended the live performances to hear the classic Duff/Slash/Izzy/Adler era material.

 

Duff’s debut solo slab Believe In Me and his most recent release Tenderness (2019) show him to be well versed in a variety of musical styles – spanning hard rock, blues, funk and Americana.  His band Loaded waxed three sides intermittently between 2001 -11 with Duff on guitar – a collective which echoed his Seattle punk daze with a modern metal modus operandi.

 

McKagan also anchored super-group Velvet Revolver with Scott Weiland, Slash, Matt Sorum, and David Kushner which kept the LA style hard-rock flame burning in pop era of the early 00’s with two fine releases. Among Duff’s other high-profile projects include Neurotic Outsiders with Sex Pistol Steve Jones and John Taylor of Duran Duran, a brief stint in Jane’s Addiction, and Alice Cooper’s star-studded Hollywood Vampires to cite a few. McKagan has also guested on slabs by Iggy Pop and Ozzy, among many others.  In 2015 Duff, Axl, and Slash began a series of GNR reunion tours which resurrect the old glory for those who missed it the first time around. No word as of 2020 if they’ll cut another disc.

 

Duff the bassist is a song-player who renders deep pocket grooves and countermelodies – usually with a slight flange / chorus effect.  Fender feted the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame bassist with a signature model (basically a P/J combo), attitude not included! Duff’s main weapon of choice during the Guns heyday was a Fender Aerodyne bass.

 

 

Duff McKagan Sound & Vision…

 

Guns ‘n’ Roses:

“Pretty Tied Up” https://youtu.be/uOzA23ibxjU

“So Fine” (written and sung by Duff) https://youtu.be/2bM4sdnrNf0

“Paradise City” https://youtu.be/Rbm6GXllBiw

 

Velvet Revolver:  

“Fall to Pieces” https://youtu.be/9JhsUFuqbCM

“Slither” https://youtu.be/BKz2U4fvA4U

Neurotic Outsiders: “Jerk” https://youtu.be/bOs3wBAfwMo

 

Solo Duff:

“Believe In Me” https://youtu.be/2-Xd6I-hMgU

“Wasted Heart” https://youtu.be/uY8TEcR5vjM

“How to Be a Man” https://youtu.be/yyIn8hvue7A

“Flatline” https://youtu.be/tcDS_7p99bA

 

Mike Watt (Minutemen, fIREHOSE, Stooges)

Courtesy of Mike Watt Com

By Thomas Semioli

 

Witness the continual evolution of this astonishingly prolific and diverse bass icon: Michael David Watt. You never know where this cat is coming from – he can play farther out than any other bassist I’ve heard, or he can groove in the pocket akin to the studio icons of yore.

The tones Mike conjures from his instrument range from no lows to no highs to midrange perfection to fuzzed out madness and variations thereof.

With the legendary Minutemen, Mr. Watt was a feverish proponent of punk meets free jazz – and to my ears, his work on the band’s masterpiece Double Nickels on the Dime (1984) evokes comparison to his peer Jamaaladeen Tacuma as heard with (and without) Ornette Coleman’s Prime Time.

In the fIREHOSE trio Mike streamlined his playing to support band-mate Ed Crawford’s pop inclinations along with his own growth as a songwriter as evidenced on such platters as If’n (1987) and Fromohio (1989).

On his  solo bow Ball-Hog or Tugboat (1995), Watt draws the support  “alternative” rock superstars including Eddie Vedder, Flea, Frank Black, Dave Grohl, Henry Rollins, Pat Smear, Evan Dando, Dave Pirner, J. Mascis, and Lee Renaldo.

Watt’s membership in Pornos for Pyros (Good God’s Urge, 1996) and the revamped Stooges on The Weirdness (2007) and Ready to Die (2013), and scores of collaborations and cameos with artists spanning Rickie Lee Jones to Kelly Clarkson to Black Flag to are a testimony to his importance as a player and an innovator.

An actor, author, producer, label owner and entrepreneur, among Watt’s recent collaborations include Big Walnuts Yonder, Hidden Rifles, Mike Watt & The Missing Men, and Jumpstarted Plowhards.

 

Mike Watt Sound & Vision….

Minutemen: “This Ain’t No Picnic” https://youtu.be/UDr25zjd4yM

fIREHOSE:  “Brave Captain” https://youtu.be/VSv8FVJtbAk

Mike Watt: “Big Train” live with Eddie Vedder, Dave Grohl, and Pat Smear https://youtu.be/4cfQaQO-YD4

The Stooges: Live in Sydney 2013 https://youtu.be/ZMfOGqTwNB4

Pornos for Pyros: “Gods Good Urge” https://youtu.be/g6F0sYsJN04

Big Walnuts Yonder: “Raise the Drawbridges” https://youtu.be/dR1DEVfPQ6Q

Hidden Rifles: “Cranial Escrow” https://youtu.be/a-cTchZ8ejY

Jumpstarted Plowhards: “On The Counter” https://youtu.be/EVTZViFDA_c

 

Tony Sales (David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Todd Rundgren)

His overdriven, deep-in-the-pocket Bo Diddley / Armed Forces Signal Call inspired bass motif defines one of rock ‘n’ roll’s greatest anthems as rendered by the former James Newell Osterberg – “Lust For Life.”

 

Tony Fox Sales, son of the iconic comic Soupy, is among modern rock’s most inventive bassists. Given his show-business pedigree, Tony’s musical career took off at a relatively young age. With his drummer brother Hunt, Tony’s first band was aptly dubbed Tony and The Tigers, which featured guitarist Jon Pousette-Dart. They waxed a few singles and appeared on the Steve Allen Show, and Hullabaloo programs hosted by their dad’s famous pals.

 

At 19, Tony and Hunt anchored Todd Rundgren’s Runt ensemble, which cut two extraordinary slabs: Runt (1970) and The Ballad of Todd Rundgren (1971).

 

The Sales brothers hooked up with Iggy for Kill City (1975), Lust for Life (1977), and TV Eye (1978) and several tours with Bowie and the former Stooge.

 

Anchoring the unfairly maligned, still ahead-of-its-time Tin Machine collective with Hunt, David Bowie (sax/vocals), and virtuoso guitarist Reeves Gabrels, Tony rendered bass passages that belied harmonic tradition yet propelled the ensemble’s quirky canon by way of old school rhythm and blues phrasing throughout their triumvirate of absolutely essential releases; Tin Machine (1989), Tin Machine II (1991), and the live set Oi Vey Baby (1992).

 

Among Sales additional collaborations of note included Checqered Past with Michael Des Barres, Steve Jones, Nigel Harrison, and Clem Burke; and Hired Guns with Hunt.

 

 

Tony Sales Sound & Vision…

 

Tony & The Tigers on Hullabaloo https://youtu.be/cRQiFwYtGRk

 

Todd Rundgren: “I’m in the Clique” https://youtu.be/0KXOEn_dE9U

 

Iggy Pop:

 

“Lucky Monkeys” https://youtu.be/CAgFa1YGrN4

 

“Lust for Life” https://youtu.be/jQvUBf5l7Vw

 

“The Passenger” https://youtu.be/-fWw7FE9tTo

 

Tin Machine

 

Video Compilation https://youtu.be/3H0hS1lxq4I

 

“Baby Universal” https://youtu.be/E7q3FDDmqmA

 

“You Belong in Rock and Roll” https://youtu.be/Ok5A8VoOMis

 

Checquered Past: “Underworld” https://youtu.be/xS-lbCFFZk4

 

Hired Guns:

 

“Shiftin’ Soul” https://youtu.be/oIhpY5dX8n0

 

“You Really Know How to Love” https://youtu.be/L6NQpBAL39c

 

George Murray (David Bowie, Iggy Pop)

Courtesy of David Bowie Com

 

He was the former David Jones’ bassist during his watershed “Berlin “era from 1976 through 1979.

 

With producers Tony Visconti, Brian Eno; guitarists Earl Slick, Robert Fripp, Ricky Gardiner, Adrian Belew, and Carlos Alomar; keyboardists Roy Young and E Street Band pianist Roy Bittan; drummer Dennis Davis, and bassist George Murray as the core band– the Thin White Duke erased the boundaries of soul, hard rock, avant-garde and dance into works of aural art hitherto unheard.

 

Plying unadorned funk grooves, George anchored Station to Station (1975), Low and Heroes (1977), the live twofer Stage (1978), Lodger (1979), and Scary Monsters (1980) which are among the most influential of the era and of Bowie’s entire canon.

 

Murray also served as the bassist with David in the producer’s chair for Iggy Pop’s best album The Idiot, and Talking Head Jerry Harrison’s underrated The Red and Black (1980).

 

In the studio, George’s weapon of choice was the Fender Precision. On stage Murray utilized the Precision, Kramer, and Gibson Ripper basses.

 

After Bowie dispatched this band, Murray moved to Los Angeles and forged a career as an educator.

 

George Murray Sound & Vision…

 

David Bowie

 

“Sound & Vision” https://youtu.be/ZV_UsQPTBy4

 

“TVC 15” https://youtu.be/Dh8RDktOdnc

 

“Ashes to Ashes” https://youtu.be/HyMm4rJemtI

 

“Boys Keep Swinging” https://youtu.be/2KcOs70dZAw

 

“Heroes” https://youtu.be/YLp2cW7ICCU

 

“Panic in Detroit” Live on the Station to Station Tour 1976: https://youtu.be/3CVK_rNXMRA

 

Jerry Harrison

 

“Worlds In Collision” https://youtu.be/mrANQizoaAM

 

Iggy Pop

 

“China Girl” https://youtu.be/slU0PSJedbU

 

“Sister Midnight” https://youtu.be/LAiQZGDmVXg