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Guitarist Slash on money: '$6 million here,
$90 million there'
By Larry
Getlen Bankrate.com
The members of Guns N' Roses, arguably
the greatest rock band of the '80s, behaved like stereotypical rock
stars: drank and drugged to excess, dated porn stars and self-destructed.
On stage, however, there was energy and discipline,
mainly supplied by Slash, GNR's former lead guitarist. Slash (birth
name: Saul Hudson) supplied tasteful blues-oriented licks that perfectly
augmented GNR's catchy riffs.
Talking with Slash today, soon after the second release
from his band Slash's Snakepit, is a decidedly mellow experience.
Slash conveys a sense of enjoying life. His heavy drug days and
equally heavy success are behind him, and he still enjoys playing
with his band as much as ever. Bankrate spoke to Slash about the
business side and aftermath of the musical monolith that was Guns
N' Roses.
Bankrate.com: Many
rock bands wind up in much worse financial shape than they should
be. How did GNR leave you situated, financially?
SLASH: You know what?
It's neither here nor there (Laughs). It's never been the issue
with me. But obviously when you're at the airport or some local
restaurant bar, and your credit card doesn't work because of any
number of whatever incidents might have happened, there's some people
that, when they're talking about $6 million here and $90 million
there, not any person on this planet can sit there and go, 'I wonder
if he has any real financial problems?' When you're getting $180
million a season, it's like 'I bet his parents call him a lot.'
But then, life does happen in some shape or form,
and you start to lose track of where it's all going. So you end
up having to grow up a little bit, and stay a little bit grounded
or rooted so you don't blow everything. It's not like when you got
your first big record advance check, and you bought your old lady
a Lamborghini Countach and yourself a Countach and a new house,
and then next thing you know you're broke.
I've seen people do that. That does happen. But for
me, I basically have been focused around playing, and the only money
I really lose, the only big expenditure, the most frivolous I am
with money, is dealing with attorneys. You have to watch them, and
you have to hire people to help you watch them (laughs). So that's
where the money really goes, it's not really me or my old lady or
my eccentricities, having this lifestyle, or drugs or anything like
that. But I am aware of what to watch out for. It doesn't mean I'm
all that great at it, but I have my act together. No matter how
much of a rock 'n' roller you are, at some point you have got to
pay attention.
Bankrate: Were you
lucky enough to have your money managed by someone who was trustworthy?
Slash: Nope. In a perfect
world, it could have been, but the more money that guys like us
make, the more money that people who work for us rip off. Being
a musician and doing what it is that we do, we actually have a life.
A lot of the people who work around us live vicariously off of
that for fun, and financially off that because they think we're
not paying attention. There are people who've been working together
for years, and have a mutual relationship where one hand feeds the
other and it just goes smoothly that way, but in my short experience,
I realize you have got to watch your back (laughs).
Bankrate: Are you still
making a lot from catalog sales and guitar endorsements?
Slash: Yeah. But we're
also still paying back a lot of people. I'm not tremendously excited
about it. My whole reality is that I'm not sitting around and waiting
for the next Guns check to come in. I just move forward
and try and keep my slate clean as I go.
Bankrate: Are you in
the stock market?
Slash: I didn't
get caught up in all the stock stuff. Don't expect to. Being as
I'm as disinterested in finances as it is, and I don't gamble, not
as a rule, it just never interested me. Money for me is a necessity,
depending on your lifestyle standards, and mine aren't necessarily
that high. I need a TV set, I need a couch -- you know, basics.
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