Only a decade younger than the Sex Pistols and with a shared appetite for self-destruction, it’s just as heartening to encounter the core Guns N’ Roses trio as it was Messrs Jones, Cook and Matlock two nights ago.
Of the three, bassist Duff McKagan is the lean, clean punk elder, six-string legend Slash one of history’s most recognisable hat-wearers this side of Abraham Lincoln. Axl Rose, meanwhile, seems match-fit and in good humour – always a relief. That said, his voice takes long enough to warm up during an opening Welcome To The Jungle that the thought occurs: this could be a very long three hours for everyone concerned.
As it turns out, Axl’s vocals are an inconsistent instrument. During Live And Let Die, even he seems surprised at how well he holds a long scream. And, sensibly, many of the biggest choruses receive back-up vocal ballast from Duff and the dual keyboard team of Melissa Reese and the stalwart Dizzy Reed, GN’R’s longest-serving member besides Axl. Rounding out the band are Slash’s guitar foil, the Ronnie Wood-esque Richard Fortus, and sparkling new drummer Isaac Carpenter.
Junkie logistics anthem Mr Brownstone lacks a little oomph tonight, but most of the band’s other non-negotiable bangers hit the mark. You Could Be Mine remains spine-tinglingly exciting, while It’s So Easy – its intro actually sounding a little like the Pistols – retains the dark menace of the one-time Most Dangerous Band In The World, questionable sexual politics included. And if Nightrain’s paean to excess doesn’t quite pass muster this evening, there’s always the funk swagger of Rocket Queen and, with Slash on fine form, the legendary Sweet Child O’ Mine.
A rare example of imperial period GN’R taking an interest in geo-politics, or indeed anything beyond stimulants, ladies and fighting, Civil War might be tonight’s most surprisingly effective moment. Unless you count Axl’s turn at the piano, in a sparkly showbiz jacket that could have been loaned from one-time supporter Elton John, for an eminently successful November Rain.
Said jacket is one of about five that Axl sports throughout 180 minutes that pack in plenty. Slash gets his talk box out for an extended Rocket Queen, and later drops some Hendrix into a solo turn. Covers range from the brilliant (a Duff-led run-through of The Stooges’ I Wanna Be Your Dog) to the tragically unwise (Jimmy Webb’s Wichita Lineman is a country rock evergreen, but you wouldn’t know from tonight’s reading).
This rock’n’roll circus leaves town with Paradise City, its unmistakably iconic groove probably the first clue that this band would one day be huge headliners. And here they still are, a little battered round the edges, but bonded by music that left an indelible mark on the world – as it does tonight on an old airfield outside Hradec Králové.