2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
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2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
June 23, 2007 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Setlist:
01. Welcome to the Jungle
02. It's So Easy
03. Mr. Brownstone
04. Live and Let Die
Robin's guitar solo
05. Sweet Child O' Mine
06. Knockin' on Heaven's Door
07. Better
Dizzy's piano solo (Never Tear Us Apart)
08. Street of Dreams
09. You Could Be Mine
Richard's guitar solo
Richard & Robin guitar duet (People Get Ready)
10. Out Ta Get Me
Axl's piano solo
11. November Rain
12. I.R.S.
Bumblefoot's guitar solo (Australian National Anthem, Back In Black, Don't Cry)
13. My Michelle (w/ Sebastian Bach)
14. Patience
15. Nightrain
Encore:
16. Nice Boys (w/ Angry Anderson)
17. Madagascar
18. Paradise City
Date:
2007.06.23.
Venue:
Acer Arena.
Location:
Sydney, Australia.
Line-up:
Axl Rose: Vocals and piano
Richard Fortus: Rhythm guitarist
Bumblefoot: Lead guitarist
Robin Finck: Lead guitarist
Tommy Stinson: Bass
Frank Ferrer: Drums
Dizzy Reed: Keyboards
Chris Pitman: Keyboards.
01. Welcome to the Jungle
02. It's So Easy
03. Mr. Brownstone
04. Live and Let Die
Robin's guitar solo
05. Sweet Child O' Mine
06. Knockin' on Heaven's Door
07. Better
Dizzy's piano solo (Never Tear Us Apart)
08. Street of Dreams
09. You Could Be Mine
Richard's guitar solo
Richard & Robin guitar duet (People Get Ready)
10. Out Ta Get Me
Axl's piano solo
11. November Rain
12. I.R.S.
Bumblefoot's guitar solo (Australian National Anthem, Back In Black, Don't Cry)
13. My Michelle (w/ Sebastian Bach)
14. Patience
15. Nightrain
Encore:
16. Nice Boys (w/ Angry Anderson)
17. Madagascar
18. Paradise City
Date:
2007.06.23.
Venue:
Acer Arena.
Location:
Sydney, Australia.
Line-up:
Axl Rose: Vocals and piano
Richard Fortus: Rhythm guitarist
Bumblefoot: Lead guitarist
Robin Finck: Lead guitarist
Tommy Stinson: Bass
Frank Ferrer: Drums
Dizzy Reed: Keyboards
Chris Pitman: Keyboards.
____________________________________________________________________
Next concert: 2007.06.24.
Previous concert: 2007.06.20.
Next concert: 2007.06.24.
Previous concert: 2007.06.20.
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Re: 2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Recap of the two Sydney shows at the official site, GunsNRoses.com, June 25, 2007:
https://web.archive.org/web/20070701192306/http://web.gunsnroses.com:80/news/article.jsp?ymd=20070625&content_id=a1&vkey=news&fext=.jsp'NICE BOYS' DON'T PLAY ROCK N' ROLL
By Doug Miller/GunsNRoses.com
The Guns N' Roses 2007 trek through Australia ended on a very high note with two sold-out shows in Sydney at the Acer Arena this past weekend.
Over 10,000 fans attended each concert, and as an added bonus, at each show GN'R performed the Rose Tattoo classic "Nice Boys (Don't Play Rock N' Roll)" with none other than Angry Anderson.
With Axl and Angry trading off verses and singing the choruses together, it was truly a magical jam with scorching sonic energy coming off the stage -- the proverbial icing on the cake for an amazing series of concerts. To celebrate, GN'R threw an after-party at a Sydney night club called Ruby Rabbit that did not end until long after the sun came up.
The next stop on the tour is Auckland, New Zealand, with two shows -- Friday, June 29, and Saturday, June 30 -- at the Vector Arena. Guns N' Roses have one last performance Down Under on July 3 in Christchurch, New Zealand, before heading to Japan.
Axl with Rose Tattoo singer Angry Anderson (photo: GunsNRoses.com)
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Re: 2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Review in The Sydney Morning Herald, June 25, 2007:
Bursts of old gunner glory now and then
GUNS N' ROSES
Acer Arena, June 23
WHEN a band's lead singer is the only original member left, is it still the same band?
The typical old fan held grave doubts about a performance by the Los Angeles hard-rock band that was missing the iconic lead guitarist Slash and the chemistry of the original line-up.
Turns out that was the least of their problems.
There hasn't been a new album for more than 13 years, but the new seven-piece band performed with great chemistry and unimpeachable chops. Three guitarists played old hits - including Slash's epic solos - with a perfectly judged mix of faithfulness to the original, feel and precision.
The fabulous lead guitarist Robin Finck, resplendent in shiny black tunic and Jethro Tull beard, opened the show (50 minutes late) with the hellbound riff of Welcome to the Jungle. Singer Axl Rose, his distinctive orange hair in braids, let fly with his blood-curdling screech. It's the sound of pandemonium being unleashed. The song remains Gunners at their best: a mix of menace, complexity and melodic brilliance. It was a reminder why they once ruled the world, selling more than 90 million albums by the early '90s.
They followed with It's So Easy, then Mr Brownstone from the blockbuster debut Appetite for Destruction, then the epic Live and Let Die, with exploding fireballs punctuating every chorus and strobe lights strafing the crowd. It was like the greatest hits edition of rock heaven. If only it had kept going like that.
There were worrying signs from the start, such as the conga player in the top corner, and the white-reggae feel to the Dylan cover Knockin' on Heaven's Door. Rose, neither as young nor as snake-hipped as he once was, was labouring from the first song. So the band's perpetual drawn-out solos between songs to give him an offstage breather should perhaps not have been surprising. There was even a really long grand piano solo from Dizzy Reed, who, it turns out, is more than just a gifted conga player.
The frustrating thing was that for every long boring piece of filler, there were bursts of glory: from Sweet Child of Mine to the three-part piano epic November Rain. If the good bits had been squeezed into 80 minutes, it would have been a great show. Instead, a padded-out gig lost its momentum repeatedly for more than two hours. Maybe they needed Slash after all.
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Re: 2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Review in the Sunday Telegraph, June 24, 2007:
Rose without thorns
STEPHEN CORBY
Sunday Telegraph
LAST NIGHT'S CONCERT
THEY used to be the self described "baddest band in the world" -- now, Guns N' Roses are just bad at reading a watch.
Guns N' Roses -- or at least one Axl Rose and a bunch of hired gunners -- kept their fast-approaching middle-aged fans waiting until 11.45pm before hitting the stage with a slightly tame version of Welcome To The Jungle.
The good news for fans was that Axl still managed to dance like an Indian snake charmer and hit all the right notes, even if some of them sounded very much like Jimmy Barnes on helium.
The bad news was that Rose was the sole remaining member of the band's legendary line-up that rocked Eastern Creek some 14 years ago.
It is impossible to avoid the comparisons with the past, and the new band embrace it to the point of including a suitably hatted guitarist standing in for the irreplaceable Slash.
Where once a riot may have ensued as the minutes ticked past waiting for Axl to appear, last night's crowd at Acer Arena sat mildly waiting for the band to take to the stage.
Old hits such as Sweet Child O' Mine, Mr Brownstone and the Gunners' amped-up version of Knockin' On Heaven's Door bought a huge cheer.
But 30 minutes into the gig material off the new, and still unreleased, Chinese Democracy album was about as welcome to the fans as a 6am wake-up call to Axl's room.
One punter in the crowd suggested China would actually be a democracy before the now mythical album was released.
Clad in dark sunglasses and with corn rows in his hair, time and a rock 'n' roll lifestyle has clearly taken a toll on Axl, but for the fans it was just good to have him and his unpredictable antics back on our stage.
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Re: 2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Article with information about the June 13 show in Adelaide, the June 19 show in Brisbane and the the June 23 show in Sydney; The Sunday Telegraph, June 24, 2007:
(The parts about the Adelaide and Brisbane shows have been also posted in the respective threads)Why his world runs on Axl time - A Guns N' Roses tour is more like a wacky sideshow fuelled by alcohol thanks to its wacky singer
By TONY VERMEER, TREVOR SEYMOUR
WHEN legendary rocker Axl Rose is on a national tour, a continent is forced to add another time zone. For the past fortnight Australia has been running on Eastern Standard, Central, Western and Axl Time.
You mightn't have noticed but the fans who turned up to see Guns N' Roses for the first time in 14 years have been left in no doubt that Rose is not a morning person.
On stage and behind the scenes, the tour has proved the flamboyant frontman has shed none of the idiosyncrasies that have earned him the sobriquet "the Howard Hughes of hard rock".
Fans have been warned that, unlike other acts, Guns N' Roses does not officially take the stage until 11pm. But that's 11pm Axl time. In reality it's more like 11.30. And that's only if Rose has cranked up his private Lear jet in enough time to make it.
Last Tuesday night, when support act Rose Tattoo took to the stage in Brisbane at 8.30pm, the jet was still on the tarmac at Melbourne airport warming up its engines, tour insiders say.
The rest of the band was waiting patiently for him in Brisbane. They fly commercial; only Rose, as the sole original member of the Gunners, travels on the Lear.
Eventually he made it to Brisbane in the nick of time and strolled onto the stage at the Entertainment Centre at 11.45 to kick off the set.
But the punters in a town which generally goes to bed early were none too impressed. A flying can of soft drink -- bought earlier from the centre's Farnham or Torvill and Dean bars -- narrowly missed Rose 10 seconds into the opener Welcome To The Jungle.
"Is that what you want? You want a battle," Rose said, wiping the liquid from himself. "If you're going to act like that, then you know I don't have to be here."
Rose then proceeded to walk off stage in the middle of several songs, leaving the rest of the band to invent extended solos to cover his absence. Later one of them called it the worst gig of the tour.
But it didn't stop them partying in the dressing room till after 6am. The effects were obvious the next night when Rose told his fans, who paid up to $175 for tickets: "I just want a big truck to hit me".
However, the parties are certainly not as wild as they used to be. Photographer Simon Cross, who was invited up to Rose's suite after the Adelaide concert, said the frontman, now 45, and the rest of the band behaved themselves impeccably.
There were trolley loads of beer and spirits, but no sign of illegal substances and fruit platters had replaced the "selection of men's magazines, Playboy and Penthouse" that previous tour contracts stipulated had to be available in the dressing room.
In Sydney -- where the Gunners played the first of two concerts at Acer Arena last night -- Cityrail changed the Olympic Park timetable to cope with the post 1am Axl-time finish.
The venue warned ticket buyers that the extra services -- for which Cityrail picked up the tab -- were limited. "This concert runs unusually late so we recommend you plan your journey ahead of travelling and check to see if public transport services operate in your area to get you home," it said.
Overall the reviews have been generally positive for the reconstituted band that was the world's biggest rock draw in the late '80s.
Promoters optimistically called it the Chinese Democracy tour -- the name given to the now almost-mythical new unreleased album that Rose has been threatening to produce for the past 16 years. The record is already one of the most expensive in music history, costing $13 million and counting.
Rose has hired and fired almost every session musician in the States and sent record industry execs into fits of depression.
So far only a couple of songs have made it into the Gunners' concert sets and diehard fans haven't been overly impressed.
Rose deserves his reputation for weirdness. His Hughes-like persona was confirmed when he failed to attend his own lavish 37th birthday party, to which the cream of the music industry had been invited. In 1991 he dived into the crowd at a concert in St Louis after he spotted a fan wielding a video camera.
Last year he was involved in a fight, with of all people, fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger.
It happened after Rose moved a drink belonging to Hilfiger's girlfriend at a birthday party.
Rose later told Los Angeles radio station KROQ: "He just kept smacking me. It was the most surreal thing, I think, that's ever happened to me in my life."
Two months later Rose was arrested and put in a Swedish cell after a fracas with a hotel security guard.
BIZARRE LIFE OF AXL ROSE
FEBRUARY 1962: Born William Bruce Rose Jr in Lafayette, Indiana, Rose has a turbulent upbringing with claims of sexual and physical abuse.
He is arrested many times during his teen years on a range of misdemeanour charges. At high school he becomes involved in music and meets future band mate Izzy Stradlin. At 17 he moves to Los Angeles to pursue a musical career.
1985: Guns N' Roses are formed and the band, consisting of Axl Rose (lead vocals), Slash (lead guitar), Izzy Stradlin (rhythm guitar), Duff McKagan (bass guitar) and Steven Adler (drums), release their major label debut Appetite For Destruction in 1987. It becomes a No1 hit.
1988: Two fans are trampled to death during the Gunners' set at the Monsters of Rock Festival at Castle Donington in Leicestershire, England.
Guitarist Slash is nicknamed Slosh by less kind pundits for his penchant to appear on stage intoxicated, while the band was also referred to as Lines N' Noses.
1990: Drummer Steven Adler is sacked during the recording of Use Your Illusion I and II. Released in September 1991, the albums debut at No1 and 2 on the charts and the band embarks on a two-year world tour.
Izzy Stradlin leaves the band and is replaced by Gilby Clarke.
JULY 1991: Rose dives into the crowd at a concert in St Louis after he spots a fan wielding a video camera. The volatile singer then bad mouths security and storms off stage, resulting in a riot.
AUGUST 1992: The crowd riots after another Gunners' gig in Montreal. Rose reportedly calls a halt to the show because his throat hurts, and the crowd, already agitated when Metallica cut short their gig go berserk.
JANUARY 1993: On the verge of imploding, the Gunners play to 71,000 people at Sydney's Eastern Creek with Rose Tattoo and US hard rockers Skid Row opening for them.
1994-1998: The band lose momentum with members repeatedly quitting and then rejoining. Eventually Axl becomes the only original member still left in the group.
FEBRUARY 1998: Rose is arrested by Arizona police after an altercation at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix. Arrested and photographed, Rose eventually pleads guilty to a charge of disturbing the peace.
FEBRUARY 1999: Rose's bizarre behaviour leaves a crowd of assembled musicians and industry bigwigs astounded when he refuses to attend his own 37th birthday party.
2000-2006: Rose becomes known as the Howard Hughes of hard rock and is rarely seen in public, instead spending millions recording Chinese Democracy, an album which still remains unreleased. Session musicians include the talented but bizarre Buckethead, so called because of his penchant for wearing a KFC bucket on his head.
MAY 2006: Axl Rose becomes involved in a fight, with of all people, fashion designer Tommy Hilfiger. The stoush happens after Rose, who was about to take the stage to do an acoustic set at a birthday party, moves a drink belonging to Hilfiger's girlfriend. The designer attacks the rocker with a series of wild slaps. For once Rose shows considerable restraint and eventually security guards pull Hilfiger away.
JUNE 2006: Axl Rose is arrested and put in a cell after a fracas involving a hotel security guard in the Swedish city of Stockholm's Berns Hotel. The security guard accuses Rose of biting him and the singer eventually agrees to pay fines and damages of $9000 to avoid any time in jail.
Last edited by Blackstar on Mon Mar 08, 2021 1:27 am; edited 1 time in total
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Re: 2007.06.23 - Acer Arena, Sydney, Australia
Article about the two Sydney shows in the Daily Telegraph, June 25, 2007:
Patience, then into the jungle of Rose's
BAD boy of rock `n' roll Axl Rose welcomed Sydney's Guns `N Roses fans to his jungle of concert madness at the weekend during the last leg of his Australian tour.
After nearly 15 years, the American hard rock heavyweights returned to Sydney, playing a collection of the band's greatest hits to more than 23,500 concert-goers over two nights.
Rose, 45, the only original member of the band, screeched into his first song Welcome To The Jungle as the clock struck midnight, rocking Sydney's Acer Arena for two hours on Saturday before backing up the antics last night.
While fans in Brisbane were agitated with the starting time, throwing a soft drink can at Rose, Sydney's crowd remained tame -- a stark contrast to the rowdy scenes that met the performer at Eastern Creek in 1993.
Hits including Sweet Child O' Mine and November Rain emerged as crowd favourites, as were the tributes to Australian legends INXS and AC/DC.
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