P
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Duff McKagan |
rivate planes, oceans of Booze, Mountains of drugs, and
wall-to-wall women--for the 12 years Duff McKagan played Bass in Guns N' Roses,
Life was a ROCK'N'ROLL Dream, until his hair began to fall out, his fingers
started to bleed, and everything turned into a nightmare. He almost didn't
survive. In an excerpt from his autobiography, the original Duffman tells about
how a life lived too close to the edge nearly left him Dead.
“Many of these addicts have
either died or continued to live a pitiful existence to this day. With many of
them, I personally witnessed a wonderful lust for life in them as we played
music together as kids and looked toward the future. Of course, no one sets out
to be a junkie or an alcoholic.
Some people can experiment
in their youth and move on. Others cannot.
When Guns n' Roses began to
break into the public consciousness, I was known as a big drinker. In 1988 MTV
aired a concert in which Axl introduced me--as usual--as Duff "the King
of Beers" McKagan. Soon after, a production company working on a new
animated series called me to ask if they could use the name "Duff"
for a brand of beer in the show. I laughed and said, of course, no problem. The
whole thing sounded like a low-rent art project or something--I mean, who made
cartoons for adults? Little that I knew that the show would become "The
Simpsons" and that within a few years I would start to see Duff beer
glasses everywhere we toured.
These days’ tours are run
with an iron fist. The smallest possible crew, no private plane. The idea is to
come out with as much profit as possible. It was completely different back
then. By the time Guns n' Roses spent 28 months from 1991 to 1993 touring the "Use
Your Illusion" albums, the tour staff sometimes approached 100 people.
We were carrying not only backup girl singers, a horn section, and an extra
keyboard player, but also chiropractors, masseuses, a singing coach, and a
tattoo artist. Each of us had bodyguards and drivers. Money poured into nightly
after-show theme parties. There were gambling nights and toga parties; in India
polis the theme was car racing. The party staff was part of paid entourage,
too. The parties would go into the early morning hours.
Given what I'd seen, a
reputation for drinking didn't seem like a big deal. But by the "Use
Your Illusion" tour, my intake had reached epic proportions. For the
tour, Guns n' Roses leased a private plane. It wasn't an executive jet; it was
a full-on 727, with lounges and individual bedroom suites for the band members.
Slash and I christened the plane on our maiden journey by smoking crack
together. Before the wheels had left the ground. (Not something I recommend,
incidentally--the smell gets into everything.) I don't even remember playing
Czechoslovakia. We played a stadium show in one of the most beautiful cities in
Eastern Europe not long after the fall of Berlin Wall, and the only way I knew
it was because of the stamp I found in my passport.
It wasn't clear anymore
whether or not I could be one of those who could experiment in his youth and
move on.
Every day I made sure I had
a vodka bottle next to my bed when I woke up. I tried to quit drinking in 1992,
but started again with vengeance after only a few weeks. I just couldn't stop.
I was far too gone. My hair began falling out in clumps, and my kidneys ached
when I pissed. The skins on my hands and feet cracked, and I had boils on my
face and neck. I had to wear bandages under my gloves to be able to play my bass.
There are many different
ways to come out of a funk like that. Some people go straight to rehab, some go
to church. Others go to AA, and many more end up in a pine box, which is where
I felt headed.
Throughout the "Use
Your Illusion" tour, I had recorded songs on my own, ducking into
studios here and there. The project had served largely as a way to kill time I
would otherwise have spent drinking, and I didn’t know what the demos were for,
really.
I played a bit of
everything over the course of the sessions—drums, guitar, bass. I sang, too,
and it’s clear I wasn’t able to breathe through my nose on some songs; years of
cocaine use had taken their toll. Then, at some point during the tour, a record
label employee who was out on the road with us asked where I kept disappearing
to on off days. I told him. When Tom Zutaut, who had signed Guns to Geffen
records, caught wind of the demos, he asked me if I would like a solo deal.
Geffen, he said, could release the tracks as an album. I knew he was probably
being mercenary about it—by this time Nirvana and Pearl Jam had broken, and
Zutaut probably figured leveraging my Seattle roots and punk connections could
help the label reposition Gn’R.
But I didn’t care. To me it
was a chance to realize a dream. Geffen rushed it out as Believe in Me in
the summer of 1993, just as the illusion tour was wrapping. Axl talked it up
onstage during the last few gigs.
I had
scheduled a solo tour that would start immediately after Gn’R’s last shows—two
final gigs in Buenos Aires, Argentina in July 1993. My solo tour would send me
first to play showcases in San Francisco, LA, and New York and then to open the
Scorpions’ arena tour around Europe and the UK returning to LA from Argentina,
I joined the groups of friends and acquaintances I’d arranged to back me on the
road. They had already started rehearsing before I got home. Together we did
whirlwind preparations for the tour.
McKagan (L); Axl Rose |
Axl heard I was planning to
go back out on the tour. He called me.
“Are you f*cking crazy? You
should not go back out on the road right now. You are insane even to think
about it.”
“It’s what I do,” I told
him. “I play music.” I also knew that if I stayed at home it would probably
devolve into more drug insanity. I didn’t have any illusions about getting
sober, but at least out on the road—with a band made up of old Seattle
punk-rock friends—I figured I had some chances of toning things down. And of
staying off coke.
But Axl was right. Before
the first gig in San Francisco, my then-wife Linda got into a fistfight
backstage with another girl and lost a tooth. Blood splattered everywhere.
Hells Angels packed the show at Webster Hall in NY, and brawls broke out. I
shouted at the crowd to settle down, thinking I could somehow make a
difference. After the show people tried to come backstage, but I wanted to be
alone.
I toured the record as
planned until December 1993. There was still fervor for all things Guns,
especially in Europe. Audiences knew my songs and sang along. And for the most
part I stayed off the coke, though it was by no means a clean break. There were
slipups. I also switched from Vodka to wine.
Downshifting to wine was
all well and good, but the volume of wine quickly sky-rocketed till I was
drinking to 10 Bottles a day. I was getting bad heartburn from the wine, taking
Tums all the time. I wasn’t eating, but I was badly bloated; my body felt
awful.
At the end of the European
leg, our lead guitar player pulled a knife on our bus driver in England. I had
to fire him—luckily the tour was finished. Back in LA, I called Paul Solger, an
old friend I had played together with as a teenager in Seattle, and asked him
to fill in for the next part of the tour. Solger had gotten sober in the 10
years since I had last played with him. Needless to say, I had not. Still, he
agreed.
I returned to my house in
LA before the next leg of the tour in Australia. I’d bought the place in 1990.
It was in Laurel Canyon, right at the top perched on a cliff overlooking Dead
Man’s Curve on Mulholland Drive. The place was up the hill from the old mansion
built by Houdini. Here on the Hollywood side of the hills, Laurel Canyon was
still quite countercultural. It was certainly no Beverly Hills. By the 1980s
the Houdini mansion had been spilt up, and a bunch of reformed hippies lived
there in a sort of wizened dorm party milieu.
The pool behind the house
offered a spectacular view out over the valley side of the Hollywood hills. At
the time, I was partying for nights on end at various LA clubs, at that basin
of blue water often ended up a naked free-for-all. One of the girls I started
to hang out with was a newscaster. She had pictures of herself with Ronald
Reagan and Jesse Jackson. She repeated catchphrase to close all her on-air
reports. Years later she landed a job at a national news network, and every
time I heard her finish up with that catchphrase, the image on TV would fade
and I would see her paddling around nude in my pool.
A circuit of clubs
dominated by Hollywood—Bordello, Scream, Cathouse, Vodka, Lingerie, Spice.
There was a club to go to each night of the week except Wednesday. I have no
idea why Wednesday was an off night. I didn’t care. Wednesdays—and after hours
the rest of the week—the party came to my place. I plucked the stand-up bass to
accompany Tony Bennett one night in the VIP section of Spice. I got up and played
drums with Pearl Jam the first time they came to LA for a show at the Cathouse.
There was a lot of alcohol consumed that night, but I think we played a song by
the Dead Boys together.
When Alice in Chains came
to LA for their first gig—at the Palladium right as “Man in a Box” was blowing
up as a single—they asked me to come down to the show and play that song with
them. Awesome. After their gig that night, I invited the whole band and various
hangers-on back up to my house for an after-show party. The party went on for
three days straight.
But now, back home after
the tour several years later, I felt as sick as I ever had. My hands and feet
were bleeding. I had constant nosebleeds. I was shitting blood. Sores on my
skin oozed. The house was awash in the fetid effluvia of my derelict body. I
found myself picking up the phone to tell my managers and band that we were not
going to Australia.
I’d bought a house in
Seattle at that point—a dream house, right on Lake Washington—and I could feel
its pull. I had bought it a few years before, sight unseen, in a neighborhood
where I used to go to steal cars and boats when I was a kid. In the interim I
had barely had a chance to spend anytime there because of the endless "Use
Your Illusion" tour. I thought it might be the right place to try to
recover, relax, recharge.
On March 31, 1994, I went
to LAX to catch a flight form LA to Seattle. Kurt Cobain was waiting to take
the same flight. We started talking. He had just skipped out of a rehab
facility. We were both f*cked up. We ended up getting seats next to each other
and talking the whole way, but we didn’t delve into certain things. I was in my
hell, he was in his, and we both seemed to understand.
When we arrived and went
toward the baggage claim, the thought crossed my mind to invite him over to my
place. I had a sense he was lonely and alone that night. So was I. But there
was a mad rush of people in the terminal. I was in a big rock band; he was in a
big rock band. We cowered next to each other as people gawked. I lost my train
of thought for a minute, and Kurt slipped out to a waiting limo.
Arriving in front of my
house in Seattle, I stopped and looked up at the roof. When I’d bought the
place, it had been old and leaky, and I had paid to have the cedar shakes
replaced. The new roof was rated to last 25 years, and looking up at it now I
thought it was funny: That roof would surely outlast me. Still, staying in the
house gave me the feeling I had finally made it.
A few days later my manager
called to tell me Kurt Cobain had been found dead at this Seattle house after
putting a gun to his head. I’m embarrassed to say that upon hearing the news I
just felt numb. I didn’t pick up the phone and call Kurt’s band mates, Dave
Grohl and Krist Novoselic. I figured my condolences would be meaning less
anyway—a few years prior I’d gotten into a scrap with Krist backstage at the
MTV awards, where Guns and Nirvana both performed. I lost my shit when I thought
I heard a slight of my band from the Nirvana camp. In my drunken haze, I went
after Krist. Kim Warnick from the Fastbacks—the first real band I played with
as a kid in Seattle—called me the next day and scolded me. I had felt so low.
Now I felt lower still, staring at the phone, incapable of calling to apologize
for the earlier incident and to extend my sympathy for his loss and Dave’s.
Not that Kurt’s death made
any difference in how I dealt with my own funk. I just didn’t deal at all,
until one month later.
The morning of May 10, I
woke up in my new bed with sharp pains in my stomach. Pain was nothing new to
me, nor was the sickening feeling of things going wrong with my body. But this
was different. This pain was unimaginable, like someone taking a dull knife and
twisting in my guts. The pain was so intense I couldn’t even make it to the
edge of the bed to dial 911. I was frozen in pain and fear, whimpering.
There I was, naked in my
bed in my dream home, a home I had bought with the hopes of one day having a
family to fill it.
I lay there for what felt
like an eternity. The silent seemed as loud as my raspy, muffled moans. Never
before in my life had I wanted someone to kill me, but I was in such pain I
just hoped to be put out of my misery.
Then I heard Andy, my best
friend from childhood, come in the back door. He called. “Hey, what’s up,” just
as he had ever since we were kids. Andy, I’m upstairs, I wanted to answer. But
I wasn’t able to. I heard him start up the stairs—he must have seen my wallet
in the kitchen. He made it upstairs and came down hall.
“Oh,shit, it’s finally
happened,” he said when he reached my room.
I was thankful to have my
friend there. It was comfortable to think I would die in front of Andy. But he
had other ideas. He pulled some sweats on me and began to try to move me. He
must have felt the jolt of adrenaline—otherwise there is no way Andy could have
carried the 200 pounds of dead weight of my bloated body. As he carried me down
the stairs and out to his car, the searing, stabbing pain in my intestines
spread further down to my quadriceps and around to my lower back. I wanted to
die.
The doctor I had since I
was a kid lived just a two blocks away, so Andy took me there. Though Dr. Brad
was my longtime physician, I hadn’t let him see me very often once I’d
descended into full-blown alcoholism. Together Andy and Dr. Thomas carried me
to his first-floor office. I heard my condition being discussed, and I felt the
prick of needle. Demerol. Nothing. Another shot of Demerol, and again nothing,
no relief whatsoever. One more shot. Again nothing. The pain kept on spreading,
and I was starting to panic. I groaned as my spirit began to blacken and fade.
They decided to rush me to
the ERat Northwest Hospital. Dr. Thomas told Andy to drive me, as it would be
faster than waiting for an ambulance. Andy drove as fast as he could without
jerking the car too much—every movement made me moan.
As they put an IV drip of
morphine into my left arm at the hospital, the staff asked me questions I could
not answer.
“Name?” “Address?” Andy
answered.
“How much do you drink on a
daily basis?”
“Are you on drugs right now?”
I just whimpered.
I was mute from pain. The
morphine wasn’t working as I knew it should. I knew a thing or two about
opiates by that stage in my life. I knew the warm rush they offered, yet I was
getting none of it.
They wheeled me into a room
next to another guy on a gurney. The motion made me writhe I agony.
“Dude, I broke my back,”
said the guy in the other bed. “And I’m glad I don’t have what you have.”
Dr. Thomas and a technician
ran a scanner over my organs, and I saw my doctor’s face go white. My pancreas,
apparently swollen to the size of football from all the booze, had burst I had
third-degree burns all over the inside of my body from the digestive enzymes
released by the damaged pancreas. Only a few parts of the inside of your digestive
tract can handle the enzymes, and the outsides of your stomach muscles are
definitely not among them—it just burns all that tissue.
A surgeon with thick
glasses explained the surgery. They had to take out the top part of
pancreas—cut it off. Sew me back up. And then I’d have to be on dialysis for
the rest of my life.
Suddenly I understood the
pleading mouthed by miserable souls back to antiquity, those left breathing
after being run through with a rusty sword or scalded with hot oil. I was
there.
I summoned all my power to
whisper to the ER Doctor.
“Kill me.”
I begged over and over.
“Please, kill me. Just kill
me. Kill me. Please.” ”
Source: Maxim, Sept. 2011, p.87
Dark Story Behind the Life of Rock Star: Guns n' Roses Nearly Killed Me!
I didn't know that.
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