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Guns N' Roses "Chinese Democracy" Review — 5 out of 5 stars


Angeles_

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Guns N' Roses "Chinese Democracy" Review — 5 out of 5 stars

In 2008, Guns N' Roses unleashed a new classic with Chinese Democracy.

Almost exactly three years since the album's release, it still reverberates with the same intensity, perhaps even more since the band is playing select cuts nightly on tour right now. Still, looking at the band's revered catalog—Appetite for Destruction, G N' R Lies, Use Your Illusion I, Use Your Illusion II, and The Spaghetti Incident?—Chinese Democracy is a masterpiece in its own right. There are a few reasons for that.

Mastermind Axl Rose constructed Chinese Democracy as a record that's meant to be experienced from start to finish. A cackle of voices and sirens set the stage for the ticking time bomb riff at the beginning the title track. His voice gets deep on the verse, practically bellowing out firestarter lyrics, "I know that I'm a classic case. Watch my disenchanted face." It's impossible not to look away once the incendiary refrain begins. Everything spirals out into a deluge of solos, and the final howl culminates with a big bang. Among Guns N' Roses openers like "Welcome to the Jungle" and "Right Next Door to Hell", "Chinese Democracy" is a 21st century powder keg primed to blow on stage or on your iPod.

After a snaky wah sound, industrial flourishes color the dreamily destructive "Shackler's Revenge". Rose darkly croons, "I'm going to pull the trigger and blow them all away". He certainly does as soon as his heavenly high falsetto rises on the chorus. Underneath, his impeccable delivery the song plummets into jagged shredding.

"Better" tows the line from elegant soulfulness to full-blown arena rocker as it flies on the wings of another bluesy lead. Rose simply sounds on fire, seamlessly shifting between his baritone crooning into that scream that revolutionized rock music. His classy piano line adds an epic heft to "Street of Dreams" that makes for another mega ballad to sit proudly on your playlist alongside "November Rain" and "Knockin' On Heaven's Door". After a Spaghetti Western style hum, the six-minute plus "There Was A Time" continues down that path a little later on that album, winding down a darker road simultaneously.

"If the World" shimmies from Latin guitars into airy electronics that sees Rose treading new ground victoriously again. Chinese Democracy envelopes an entire spectrum of genres flawlessly, connecting to Rose's constant boundary-pushing. "Riad N' the Bedouins" is a symphonic rocker that comes to life with a surge of energy directly from that undeniable, unmistakable voice.

"Prostitute" stands alongside Rose's proudest moments as a writer. It balances an orchestral verse alongside lyrical prose that's utterly transfixing. Lines like "I told you when I found you all that amounts to is love that you've crippled for fortune and fame" resound palpably, especially when supported by such impeccable soloing.

Ultimately, Chinese Democracy is exactly everything that a timeless record should be. It has the requisite instrumental virtuosity, daring moments, unpredictable shifts, and the best voice in rock 'n' roll.

You can witness it live right now as Guns N' Roses is rolling across the United States. Experience one of the shows and spin Chinese Democracy again for the full effect…

— Rick Florino

http://www.artistdirect.com/entertainment-news/article/guns-n-roses-chinese-democracy-review-5-out-of-5-stars/9805309

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I love Chinese Democracy to death... easily my 2nd favorite Guns album after Use Your Illusion II- which is high praise for me considering UYI II is literally my musical bible. So I don't really disagree with anything the reviewer said. His comments about "Prostitute" are dead on in particular.

That said- I wish the review was a little less "fan-boyish" in tone (i.e. more like the Ficke RS review). I appreciate the enthusiasm but I think most casual rock fans will suspect this guy runs around in Axl Rose biker shorts all night rocking out to AFD or something and won't regard the review as objective at all... :tongue2:

Edited by AXL_N_DIZZY
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Great review.

I fuckin love Chinese Democracy. For me that song is up there with one of my all time favourite songs. Even Live I think it rocks. I always have it notched it up full blast on the surround sound followed by Shacklers and Better...it is unbelievable

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Would be nice if they give other band members some credit. The best they can do is compliment Axl but they don't seem to give any mind to Buckethead, Robin or Bumblefoot. I have yet to see an article where they give credit to the rest of the band.

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I love the album and in no way saying anything bad about it, but his twitter link is provided at the bottom of the article.

He gives 5 star reviews to Chris Cornell, GymClassHeroes, Korn, The Social Network Soundtrack and about 50 other artists on the first page of his twitter updates.

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Daaaaamn that's a good review.

Is that really the line from Prostitute though? I've always heard it differently. "Love that you fed with perversion and pain" or "love that you paid for with perversion and pain."

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Daaaaamn that's a good review.

Is that really the line from Prostitute though? I've always heard it differently. "Love that you fed with perversion and pain" or "love that you paid for with perversion and pain."

I actually just put this cd back in my cd player. Great review! Keep the positive reviews coming!

Ang

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Daaaaamn that's a good review.

Is that really the line from Prostitute though? I've always heard it differently. "Love that you fed with perversion and pain" or "love that you paid for with perversion and pain."

It's "fed by perversion and pain" according to the booklet. I've seen the "crippled" line so many times on the Internet that I almost doubted the booklet.

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