Michael Andrew "Duff" McKagan
(born February 5 1964) is an American musician , who is best known for his thirteen-year tenure in the hard rock band Guns N' Roses. He is currently the bassist for the hard rock band Velvet Revolver, lead vocalist and guitarist for his own solo punk rock project Duff McKagan's Loaded, and a weekly columnist for SeattleWeekly.com [1].
He also writes a weekly financial column for Playboy.com called Duffonomics. [2]
|
DUFF MCKAGAN'S LOADED TICKETS
|
Biography
Early years (1964-1985)
Michael Andrew McKagan was born in
Seattle, Washington, the youngest of eight children born to Elmer (Mac) and Alice (Marie) McKagan. They were a musical family with every member playing at least one instrument. It was his brother Bruce who taught him his first bass lines, though he developed his own skills playing along to
1999 by
Prince and
Black Flag's
Damaged.
Although best known as a bass player, Duff also played drums in several bands, including a stint with
Seattle pop-punk band the
Fastbacks (which he joined at the age of 14 in 1979) and The Vains with Chris Utting. Between 1979 and 1982 he lead and played guitar in punk band The Living who opened shows for Husker Du and DOA and had a devoted following. Initially the band included Chris Utting (The Vains) and Duff and Chris would switch on drums and guitar to play songs penned by John Conte, Chris and Duff. By 1980, Chris was out of the band so Duff could focus on guitar and newcomer Greg Gilmore was brought in as full time drummer at which point the band became considerably more powerful and focused. The band played numerous shows and recorded as yet unreleased demos. The Living were notable for the presence of future
Mother Love Bone drummer
Greg Gilmore (as well as Todd Fleischman and charismatic frontman John Conte). It could be argued that the seed of "
grunge" began with the Living as they combined Clash/Bad Brains style punk with more classic rock, midtempo songs and glam covers and were easily the most notorious band in Seattle at the time (besides The Fartz). After the demise of The Living Duff played in The Fartz before both Duff and Greg Gilmore joined up with The Fartz to form 10 Minute Warning, which also included future Skinyard bassist Daniel House. 10 Minute Warning soon replaced Fartz singer Blaine with Steve Verewolf. At the time, Greg Gilmore also played in the heavy psychedelic band Chubby Children before moving on to Mother Love Bone. Besides drums and bass, McKagan also has the ability to play other musical instruments: he plays guitar and even played piano on the song "Misery" from the Loaded album
Dark Days
.
Answering an ad for a bass player in a local magazine, McKagan headed to California, at age nineteen. In California, he met guitar player
Slash and drummer
Steven Adler of the band
Road Crew at L.A.'s legendary 24-hour deli and rock hangout,
Canter's. Duff expected some punk with a penchant for
'70s rock, but found two long-haired guys instead.
“
| When I met Slash and Steven for the first time", he said,
"it was weird, 'cause I'd never met guys like this before — L.A. locals. We went out that night and got drunk, and then we had this ill-fated band. It was Slash's band, Road Crew.
| ”
|
He describes his home city as "a rowdy
rock 'n' roll town with a hip underground."
Guns N' Roses (1985-1998)
From the wreckage of the bands
L.A. Guns and
Hollywood Rose,
Axl Rose and
Izzy Stradlin joined
Tracii Guns,
Ole Beich, and
Rob Gardner to form
Guns N' Roses. Initially formed to meet booked gigs for the disbanded acts, the new line-up was finalized on
June 6,
1985. Duff became the band's bassist, replacing Ole Beich, and after two days of rehearsal, the newly formed group played their debut gig as GN'R on a Thursday night at the
Troubadour. As with ex-rhythm guitarist
Izzy Stradlin, McKagan also had his crack at handling lead vocals on GN'R songs such as ''
Use Your Illusion IIs "So Fine" and a handful of songs off of the cover album
The Spaghetti Incident?'', including live favorite "Attitude", originally by The Misfits.
He brought his
punk rock influences to the group, being a huge fan of
Sex Pistols,
Ramones, and
The Clash; even citing
Paul Simonon of the Clash as his favorite bassist. He is also a huge fan of
Sid Vicious.
Adler and Izzy departed the band in 1990 and 1992, respectively. Meanwhile, in 1990, Duff and
Slash co-wrote and played a few songs on Iggy Pop's "
Brick by Brick."
Solo years (1993-2002)
After a half-hearted attempt at drug rehabilitation, he kick-started a solo career with 1993's
Believe in Me
. In 1994, McKagan's
pancreas had swelled to football sized dimensions (due to acute alcohol-induced
pancreatitis) and he underwent emergency surgery at
Northwest Hospital and Medical Center in Seattle, WA. The doctors told him that if he did not quit drinking, he would be dead within a month, so McKagan quickly became sober.
[3]
In 1995 he collaborated with Slash in his solo project "
Slash's Snakepit", co-writing a song called "Beggars and Hangers-On", which he played live at the Palace during a Snakepit show in May of that year. He would go on to form
Neurotic Outsiders, an alternative rock super-group consisting of GN'R drummer
Matt Sorum, "
Sex Pistols" guitarist
Steve Jones, and
John Taylor of
Duran Duran on bass. They played the L.A clubs circuit in the late 90s, and toured the
U.S. in 1996. A self-titled album was released in September 1996. After that, he put back together
10 Minute Warning, the band he played in before joining
Guns N' Roses. They recorded some of their songs to release an album with the
Seattle-based label
Sub Pop, published
May 5,
1998.
In the years that followed, McKagan became a father and concentrated on his solo career. He recruited
Abe Laboriel Jr., Michael Barragan, and
Izzy Stradlin to help him record
Beautiful Disease
, with a 1999 release on
Geffen Records. However, this album was never released due to a merger between Geffen and Interscope, which caused McKagan to be dropped from the label. Despite this, he went on tour recruiting former
Black Flag's
Dez Cadena, ex
Twisted Roots'
Paul Roessler, and former
Morning Glories'
Michael Barragan.
Duff also tried an acting career in 1997. He had a part in the TV serial
Sliders
, which aired in May of that year, as a dead rocker vampire.
On
August 27,
1997, he had his first child, Grace, with model/swimsuit designer Susan Holmes. They married on
August 28,
1999. On
July 16,
2000, they had their second child, another girl, Mae Marie.
In 1999, he recruited drummer
Geoff Reading (
New American Shame), guitarist
Dave Dederer (
The Presidents of the United States of America), and keyboardist
Martin Feveyear to form
Loaded. They recorded the album
Episode 1999: Live
, which was sold only through their web site.
Then, he participated to the album
Humanary Stew: A Tribute to Alice Cooper
, and helped his former GN'R bandmate Izzy Stradlin with the album
Ride On
.
In 2000, he put together another band called Mad for the Racket, also known as The Racketeers, with
MC5's
Wayne Kramer and
Damned's Brian James. For a drummer, they recruited several guest stars, such as
Stewart Copeland (
Police),
Clem Burke (
Blondie), and
Brock Avery. In 2001, he reunited with Loaded for the club circuit in Seattle. He also ran a marathon in 2001 with bib number "11468."
In August 2001, a new version of Loaded, with
Michael James Squires on guitars and
Jeff Rouse on bass, toured
Japan during his spring breaks while getting his Bachelor's Degree and released the album
Dark Days
, a mix of new material and re-recorded tracks from the unreleased album
Beautiful Disease
. Duff also toured Japan with Izzy Stradlin to support Izzy's new album
River
. Duff also appeared with
J, ex-
Luna Sea bassist, in a number of magazines and venues during his tour in Japan that J opened for.
Duff produced the controversial debut EP
Get Off
by
Betty Blowtorch and also appeared in the documentary film
Betty Blowtorch And Her Amazing True Life Adventures, directed by
Anthony Scarpa.
Velvet Revolver (2002-Present)
Since April 2002, Duff has played bass guitar for the group
Velvet Revolver together with ex-Guns N' Roses' members,
Slash and
Matt Sorum, as well as guitarist
Dave Kushner and former
Stone Temple Pilots singer
Scott Weiland. Their debut album
Contraband
was released in 2004 and peaked at the top of the Billboard 200 chart. The group's second album, entitled
Libertad
, was released on
July 3,
2007. McKagan toured with the band, until Singer
Scott Weiland left the band on
April 1,
2008, to reunite with Stone Temple Pilots.
Other appearances
Duff has more recently been seen playing bass with
The Presidents of the United States of America.
On March 6, 2006, Duff made an appearance along with
Pantera and
Down vocalist
Phil Anselmo, playing guitar for
Alice in Chains for VH1
Decades of Rock Live
show.
He also played some songs on
Zilch's album
Skyjin
, a tribute to
hide.
In 2001 Duff appeared on
Mark Lanegans fifth solo album
Field Songs and in 2004 Duff also appeared on the Mark Lanegan Band album
Bubblegum along with
Izzy Stradlin.
In 2009 Duff appeared at his daughters school,
The Buckley School's benefit charity concert and Loaded members Mike Squires and Jeff Rouse, where they covered
Knockin' on Heaven's Door by
Bob Dylan.
Duff has started doing an occasional hour-long radio show on
KISW 99.9FM in Seattle called 'Duff McKagan's Radio-Loaded.'
Equipment
Bass guitars
McKagan's longtime main bass was a white mid-'80s
Fender Jazz Bass Special, which had been pieced together with an ash body, a maple neck and a rosewood fretboard. Currently McKagan only uses it during recordings. The bass has also been replicated and released as a Duff McKagan signature P Bass
[4] model in October 2007 by Fender, several copies of this bass were also built by the Fender Custom Shop in the original and various other finishes to be used during tours. McKagan has also become a fan of the new
Fender bass as well as the more expensive Duesenberg Star basses. In the past, he used Kramer basses, most notably in the
Sweet Child O' Mine
video and a Gibson Les Paul standard bass. He exclusivley uses Seymour Duncan Pickups and Rotosound swingbass strings. In addition to bass McKagan also plays an acoustic Guild guitar on various acoustic songs such as
Patience
.
Amplification
McKagan has been using
Gallien-Krueger amplifiers throughout his entire career, his first being a GK400RB model. He used up to four Gallien-Krueger 800RB heads with GK 4x10 and 1x15 cabinets with Guns N' Roses. His current set up includes a Gallien-Krueger solid state 2001RB head, however a second head is brought along as a backup. His signal is then fed to four GK 4x10RBH which gives him sixteen speakers being run by one head putting out 2000 watts. For effects he usually only uses a chorus effect most often a
Yamaha SPX-90 or occasionally a Boss pedal.
[5] Other effect he's been known to use are the Z-vex Wooley Mammoth fuzz and an MXR M-80.
Personal life
On August 27, 1997, he had his first child, Grace, with model/swimsuit designer
Susan Holmes. They married on August 28, 1999. On July 16, 2000, they had their second child, another girl, Mae Marie.[citation needed]
Discography
With Burden Brothers
With Fastbacks
- It's Your Birthday (1979)
With The Living
- 7 song demo (1982) (as yet unreleased)
With The Fartz
- You We See Crawling (1982)
- Because This Fuckin' World Still Stinks (1998)
With Iggy Pop
- Brick by Brick (Tracks 1, 5, 11, 12) (1990)
With Guns N' Roses
- Live ?!*@ Like a Suicide (1986)
- Appetite for Destruction (1987)
- EP (1987)
- G N' R Lies (1988)
- Use Your Illusion I (1991)
- Use Your Illusion II (1991)
- "The Spaghetti Incident?" (1993)
- Live Era: '87–'93 (Live) (1999)
- Greatest Hits (2004)
Solo
- Believe in Me (1993)
- Beautiful Disease (1999)
With Teddy Andreadis
- Innocent loser (Tracks 8) (1996)
With Neurotic Outsiders
- Neurotic Outsiders (1996)
With The Outpatience
With Izzy Stradlin
- 117° (1998)
- Ride On (1999)
- River (2001)
- On Down the Road (2002)
- Concrete (2008)
With 10 Minute Warning
With Loaded
- Episode 1999: Live (1999)
- Dark Days (2001)
- Wasted Heart EP (2008)
- Sick (2009)
With The Racketeers
- Mad For The Racket (2000)
With Zilch
- Sky Jin (Tracks 4, 6, 7, 10) (2001)
With Mark Lanegan
- Field Songs (Track 12) (2001)
- Bubblegum (Track 7) (2004)
With Velvet Revolver
- Contraband (2004)
- Melody and the Tyranny (2007)
- Libertad (2007)
References
- Seattle Weekly: Duff McKagan on Reverb
- Duffonomics
- ''My Life Story''
- http://www.fender.com/products//search.php?partno=0146500323
- Dunlop TV - McBob, bass tech for Duff McKagan