THOSE are cool news!


Just came back from work, anxious to let you know about a cool news, as I open my computer, another great news comes out!

First, Axl will be a very special guest on Jimmy Kimmel LIVE, on October 24th.  This will be the first time Axl will be LIVE on television for an interview.  THIS IS GREAT NEWS!

 

Los Angeles, CA (October 1, 2012) – Global music icon Axl Rose is known to spend his nights on the road playing to sold-out audiences worldwide, but in an unprecedented move Rose has scheduled his first sit-down, live television broadcast interview in more than 20 years with Jimmy Kimmel on Wednesday, October 24.  The appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live is another in a series of firsts for the celebrated Guns N’ Roses frontman who will spend this fall at The Joint inside Hard Rock Hotel & Casino for a 12-night run of shows.  The historical “Appetite For Democracy” residency will run October 31 thru November 24, dates listed below.

Fans who would like to participate in Rose’s appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live can visit the website for ticket…

 

The other news, I just saw this video!  If this is true, THIS IS AMAZING!

Appetite for Democracy in Las Vegas!


Guns N’ Roses annouced today that they will take Las Vegas by storm, with a 12 shows residency from October 31st, to November 24th at the Hard Rock Hotle and casino!.

That is great news!!!!

After the India dates, the new Vegas dates makes total sense.

I am sure soon, there will be an annoucement by the band regarding new years eve…..

Just keep in mind that an APPLE a day keeps the doctor away!

Here are the Vegas date

October 31st 2012 SOLD OUT

November 2nd 2012 SOLD OUT

November 3rd 2012 SOLD OUT

November 7th 2012 SOLD OUT

November 9th 2012 SOLD OUT 

November 10th 2012 SOLD OUT 

November 14th 2012

November 17th 2012

November 18th 2012

November 21st 2012

November 23rd 2012

November 24th 2012

Tickets for all these shows will be available this friday, at 10 AM

http://www.gunsnroses.com/events

Wanna ride like a rockstar?


Wanna ride like a rockstar?  Wanna feel the power of a cool muscle car?  You like DJ Ashba & Guns N’ Roses?  Well it is the chance of your life to own a part of all that!

Nice ride hey?

http://www.ashbaauto.com/

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DJ Ashba tells emotional story of childhood abuse


Very hard on a guy to tell this kind of story to the public.  If it can help some young dudes, way to go DJ!

Guns N’ Roses guitarist DJ Ashba is sharing his emotional story of childhood abuse for the first time. Ashba says he was physically and mentally abused by his father from a very young age.

 

“It has been hard for me as it’s something I have blocked out my whole life… I moved out when I was 16, and I never looked back,” Ashba told FOX411’s Pop Tarts column exclusively. “But if I can help just one person who is being bullied, then this is worth it. It is such an important topic, and it stays with you.”

Ashba is embracing a new role apart from his famous rock band as the new spokesperson for the anti-bullying website, BULLYVILLE.com. “I had to get involved,” he told us. “I don’t get involved in things unless I believe in them 100 percent.”

In a lengthy personal account to be posted on the website, Ashba details his earliest memories being “petrified” not only for his own safety, but for his mother’s too, as “every moment of every day” would depend on his dad’s mood.

 

“Instead of a hug and a kiss, my morning wakeup call consisted of my dad’s fist coming through my closet door, similar to Jack Nicholson in the ‘Shining.’ The craziest part about all of this is I spent my youth years constantly trying to gain his respect,” Ashba wrote. “I even went as far as to put him on a pedestal, making him out to be some kind of hero in my undeveloped mind, just to have him beat me down time after time.”

But the real hero, Ashba says, was his mother.

 

“Looking back now realizing how she risked her own safety for my wellbeing. She was the real war hero, fearlessly putting herself in the line of fire,” he continued. “The fear was so overwhelming that I would literally pee my pants.”

Ashba tells of the time he spent “hiding in the back of the closet, going into convulsions as if I were somehow dancing to the destructive sound,” and reflects on the time he was about three years old, and tumbled down the stairs, crying, into the room where dad sat in front of the fireplace.

 

“Stockings hung from the mantle and lights shone bright through the greenery,” he recalled. “My dad stood up from the couch and sternly commanded that men don’t cry. He said, ‘you want to be a little cry baby, I’ll give you something to cry about,’ as he beat me.”

Ashba said he has used his tumultuous past as motivation to be the best person he could be and, saying that despite everything, he has come to forgive his dad.

“I don’t hate him, I don’t wish anything bad on him – nobody gives you a handbook on how to be a father,” Ashba added. “I don’t know what to expect (from him) now that I have told my story, and I don’t really care. This time it is about me, not him.”

A source close to Ashba says he and his estranged father have recently started texting once in a while to work towards resolving their differences, and that the father has come to see him at performances.

 

Ashba’s father could not be reached for comment, but his current wife, reached on the phone, denied any knowledge of him having abused his son.

 

Ashba says that while he is working to mend family fences,“Anger sort of fuels the fire that keeps me going inside, and in a way, success today really comes from seeking approval that I never got when I was little. But no matter how big or successful you become, there is always a hole in your heart.

“I’m lucky that I am in a position where I have a voice, I can step up and bring awareness, and I wanted to share my story and be a spokesperson for Bullyville because it provides an online community and a place for people getting bullied to get help and understand they aren’t alone… But this is by far the hardest thing I have ever done.”

 

Danielle Jones-Wesley contributed to this report.

SOURCE:  http://www.bullyville.com/?page=press&id=102

DJ’s new interview!


As lead guitarist for Sixx:A.M., DJ Ashba has played for thousands of fans worldwide.

The band’s first album, The Heroin Diaries, launched them to success with “Life Is Beautiful,” radio’s most-played rock song in 2008. Their recently released sophomore disc, 2011′s This Is Gonna Hurt, is likely to surpass its predecessor, having already charted a No. 1 rock single, “Lies of the Beautiful People.”

Ashba’s road to the stage began in Fairbury, Illinois. Raised in a religious household, he worked in the cornfields to earn enough money to buy his first guitar. A little boy with big dreams, Ashba spent hours woodshedding. As a teenager, he moved to Los Angeles, where he co-founded Beautiful Creatures with Bang Tango vocalist Joe Leste. Signed to Warner Brothers, they opened for Kiss, played Ozzfest and placed songs in movie soundtracks.

Ashba rose to international prominence with Sixx:A.M., but his resume includes a lot of session work, live gigs and a solo album, all of which helped to build his credibility as an A-list musician. On his own, he built Ashbaland, with Ashba Swag, a clothing and accessories line; Ashbaland Studios, his production company; and Ashba Media, the graphic design agency he started in 2003.

He has signature-edition guitars with Gibson and Ovation and has beta tested for Line 6 since the company’s launch. He also plays lead guitar for Guns N’ Roses. Ashbaland, it seems, has become Ashbabrand.

GUITAR WORLD: How many projects had you done with Nikki [Sixx] and James [Michael] before Sixx:A.M.?

Quite a few. I worked on Marion Raven with James. With Nikki I wrote for Trapt, Drowning Pool, Motley Crue, things like that. We’ve all worked together in some way. James and I wrote together before I knew that he was a singer. I knew him as a producer and he was really easy to work with. I’d write songs for artists and take them to James to produce.

What made you feel that you could work with them?

After I worked with James a couple of times, I could tell he was a really great, great guy to sit in the studio with. He makes you feel comfortable and brings out the best performance. He has a really good ear. He has also become one of my best friends.

Nikki has more of a twisted mind, a lot like mine — I have a demented mind! — and I learned so much from him about the business side of the industry. I’m like a sponge when it comes to Nikki. He took me under his wing as a little brother. He’s a genius when it comes to marketing a product. And he’s so sincere — he lays his heart on the table, good and bad. He’s the most honest friend I’ve ever had. That kind of honesty is hard to find, and I admire him for it.

Your first instrument was piano, then drums. Do you still play?

Every day. I love playing piano. I have a couple of different ones. All the instruments and orchestral stuff I play on piano. I have an old Alesis that I love and save because it has creepy piano stuff I use for movies. I don’t have a grand piano, but I want one. We grew up with two pianos in the living room. I began playing drums at a very early age and I love them. They’re fun to play and I really enjoy programming them.

You also do session work.

I do. A lot of times it’s kind of a hushed thing. I play on a lot of people’s records.

Can you play everything you hear in your head?

That’s all I do. I can’t read music. I write songs by finding notes on the guitar to match the notes in my head. If I hear something once, I can play it. I didn’t have the patience to learn theory; it didn’t make sense to me. When I saw sheet music, I felt confined. The notes are there and music shouldn’t be that way. I don’t write guitar solos. I say, “Hit ‘record,’” and play five or ten takes immediately. It’s a feel, and you know if it’s good, if you get goose bumps.

Do you consider yourself a disciplined or spontaneous player?

I’ve very disciplined, but it’s hard to describe. Certain things, like a weird chord arrangement, I’ve got to work certain solos out, but the most fun ones are when I can just jam and not follow a guideline.

Onstage, do you concentrate on what you’re playing, or do you free-fall and let it carry you every night?

During the first couple of shows it’s a “wing it” thing. Then you start doing certain things that stick with you — you like the way something felt, or the crowd reacted to it. You keep certain things and get rid of others. What’s weird is that I don’t think about what I do when I’m in front of a crowd. I rarely look down at the guitar. You just feel it. The adrenalin takes over and you don’t think so much about what you’re playing. It’s the most amazing feeling in the world.

Your solo album [Addiction to the Friction] received a lot of recognition and awards for your guitar playing. Is there another album in the works?

A lot of people ask me that, and no, not really. There definitely isn’t. OK, I don’t know. I don’t think anytime soon. How’s that? [laughs] Showing off on guitar is not my idea of a great time. I’d rather focus on Sixx:A.M. I love shredding, but at this point I’m all about the song, whether that’s Sixx:A.M., Motley Crue, a film or anyone else. Maybe one day. I’ll definitely never say never.

I have another instrumental record that was never released; I wrote it after the first album with a guitar remake of “Dueling Banjos.” Learning a banjo song on guitar is really difficult! I remember playing Beethoven’s “Ode To Joy” at the piano with my guitar, and I remember when my mom would play [sings “Fur Elise”], and the coolest thing is transferring other instruments to the guitar. You come up with the weirdest chords. Piano chords lay out differently and you come up with weird fingering. It’s the same with “Dueling Banjos” or “The Devil Went Down To Georgia.” It’s so cool, the fiddle. It makes you look at the guitar differently.

How does your approach to the guitar change from acoustic to electric?

I prefer writing on acoustic. I always have. The clarity of the notes allows me to hone in on good melodies. It’s not about chords when I write. It’s about melody. People remember the melody, not “The G chord under that was awesome!” I always choose a great melody and change my parts to create that melody.

I was never the guy saying, “This riff is bad-ass! Change your melody to go around it!” Without a doubt, I’m the first to change the riff. With an electric guitar, you can put so much passion into a lead and tell the other half of the story. I always admire guitar players. I love the shredders, but if you hit one note with everything you have, you’ll turn every head in the room. People like Slash, who are not necessarily shredders [sings “Sweet Child O’ Mine”] — the melody is so memorable. That’s the perfect example of writing for a song. The guitarist plays a simple melody that tells the story and sells the song. I love that.

Does that change for you from the studio to the stage?

You find out live what does and doesn’t work. You watch other bands play every night. I study, I watch the crowd, I see what beats get people off the ground. You take mental notes of what feels good live, what sounds good on record. Some songs translate great, some not so much, and you focus on that and hone in. The ultimate goal is to constantly better yourself, your style and your songs. If you do that, you’re headed in the right direction.

SOURCE:

http://www.guitarworld.com/interview-guitarist-dj-ashba-sixxam-and-guns-n-roses