Guns N' Roses
Latest about Guns N' Roses

Watch Axl Rose take a tumble during Guns N' Roses show in London's Hyde Park
By Fraser Lewry published
Axl Rose fell backwards during Guns N' Roses' performance of Bad Obsession in London, but bounded to his feet with the athletic grace of a gazelle

"We freaked everybody out": Why no one wanted to work with Guns N' Roses on Appetite For Destruction
By Niall Doherty published
Even in the early days, Guns N' Roses' reputation preceded them

“Led Zeppelin write weak, unimaginative songs”: 10 original reviews of classic albums that got it completely wrong
By Paul Travers published
Everyone from Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath to Iron Maiden and Guns N’ Roses had their haters

If you thought Axl Rose's voice kept disappearing at Glastonbury you can blame your television
By Fraser Lewry published
The BBC gets blamed for reported problems with Axl Rose's voice during his Glastonbury performance, while the band call out critics by name on Twitter

Watch Guns N' Roses play Paradise City with Dave Grohl at Glastonbury
By Fraser Lewry published
Dave Grohl had a bigger Glastonbury weekend than most, rounding off a busy schedule by guesting with Guns N' Roses

Guns N' Roses rock Glastonbury: a fun, energetic headline set in unfamiliar territory
By Merlin Alderslade published
Guns N' Roses might be an odd fit for Glasto, but you wouldn’t know it from how much fun they were having

Slash and Axl were in the studio this week. So, are Guns N' Roses working on new music?
By Stef Lach published
Axl Rose and Slash were listening to "new mixes" – sparking hopes that fresh Guns N' Roses material is on the way

Noel Gallagher thinks that Guns N' Roses headlining Glastonbury is "mad", and not in a good way: "Are you being serious? That’s crazy sh*t"
By Paul Brannigan published
Americans headlining at Glastonbury? In 2023? Someone get Noel Gallagher a chair, he's feeling faint

"We had to die" - A history of The Grunge Wars, told by those who were there
By Henry Yates published
Three decades ago, GN’R’s Use Your Illusion and Nirvana’s Nevermind were released just two weeks apart, setting two musical cultures against each other. We asked combatants from both sides: who won the war?
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