MUSIC
Axl Rose emerges from cave with long-awaited release
LOS ANGELES — No pop star has built a fortress as maze-filled and ironclad as one W. Axl Rose. Not Michael Jackson, whose retreat was forced by scandal as much as by artistic crisis and who seems ever more weakened by his reputation’s slide. Not Zack de la Rocha, who (like Rose) went down countless collaborative roads before revamping the Rage Against the Machine template with his new project, One Day As a Lion. Not Garth Brooks, who also turned hermit but craved the crowds too much to stay inside.
Rose, the most ambitious hard rocker of the late 20th century — shout-outs to your Trents and your Bonos, but Axl is the most vividly driven — essentially quarantined the Guns N’ Roses brand for 15 years, unable, perhaps, to reconcile the sounds in his head with what is humanly possible. “Chinese Democracy,” the title track from the album finally coming out Sunday, hits like an offering pushed through a crack in a locked gate, hinting that those sounds, never completely apprehended, have now coalesced into something Rose can face.
The sound is murky, ugly and evocative of a dark cityscape; you could call it “ ‘Blade Runner’ rock,” because like that 1982 film, it’s a very dirty vision of the future.
Sirenlike effects kick off the track, and then a slicing guitar riff (courtesy of Robin Finck of Buckethead — the credits should be clarified whenever Rose deigns to do so) punctuated by squiggling, pedal-heavy licks, sets up Rose’s multiple-tracked vocal.
“It don’t really matter,” he sings. “You’ll find out for yourself.” As the cryptic verses unfold, it becomes clear that this is one of Rose’s songs from inside the cage of fame, attacking external forces he despises but can’t ignore or repel. Like “Get in the Ring” or “You Could Be Mine,” this is Rose as the nastiest kind of punk.
On one level, it’s a protest song about Chinese state oppression. More important, it’s a spit back at the audience that’s been waiting for what has to be a masterpiece, if Rose is to survive artistically.
The song builds like bile. It doesn’t behave the way radio-friendly singles usually do. The chorus is just an extension of the verses, rising a little in pitch and compression.
Still, for all the pooh-poohing this song will earn because it’s just been too long in coming to fulfill all hopes, “Chinese Democracy” brings back a passionate weirdness that the hard-rock airwaves have lacked. However overwrought or undercooked the whole album might be, it’s good to have this mad king venturing forth over his moat.






