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A FOUNDING MEMBER OF GUNS N' ROSES AND VELVET REVOLVER SHARES THE
STORY OF HIS RISE TO THE PINNACLE OF FAME AND FORTUNE, HIS
STRUGGLES WITH ALCOHOLISM AND DRUG ADDICTION, HIS PERSONAL CRASH
AND BURN, AND HIS PHOENIX-LIKE TRANSFORMATION.
IN 1984, AT THE AGE OF TWENTY, Duff McKagan left his native
Seattle--partly to pursue music but mainly to get away from a host
of heroin overdoses then decimating his closest group of friends in
the local punk scene. In L.A. only a few weeks and still living in
his car, he answered a want ad for a bass player placed by someone
who identified himself only as "Slash." Soon after, the most
dangerous band in the world was born. Guns N' Roses went on to sell
more than 100 million albums worldwide.
In "It's So Easy, "Duff recounts Guns' unlikely trajectory to a
string of multiplatinum albums, sold-out stadium concerts, and
global acclaim. But that kind of glory can take its toll, and it
did--ultimately--on Duff, as well as on the band itself. As Guns
began to splinter, Duff felt that he himself was done, too. But his
near death as a direct result of alcoholism proved to be his
watershed, the turning point that sent him on a unique path to
sobriety and the unexpected choices he has made for himself since.
In a voice that is as honest as it is indelibly his own, Duff--one
of rock's smartest and most articulate personalities--takes readers
on a harrowing journey through the dark heart of one of the most
notorious bands in rock-and-roll history and out the other side.
One wouldn't usually turn to a veteran of Guns N' Roses for advice
on how to live, but Duff McKagan is not a typical rock musician. He
got sober at thirty, went back to school, got smart about money,
fell in love, became a father, and got his life back on track.
Through trial and considerable error, Duff learned to strike the
balance between family and work, travel and contentment, financial
aptitude and sacrifice.In How to Be a Man , Duff takes the reader
into the life of an international rock musician and shares, with
disarming candour and humour, the solid life lessons he's learned
along the way to success and fulfillment in both his family life
and career. From hard-won advice on basics like starting with a
strong base and staying humble to techniques on staving depression
and transforming darker impulses into something productive, How to
Be a Man is the ultimate guide to rocking life- not as a dissolute
train-wreck "rock star" but as a man bound for success and
longevity.
Explosive autobiography of Guns N' Roses and Velvet Revolver bass
guitarist Duff McKagan Duff McKagan was a co-founder of Guns N'
Roses, with a 13-year tenure on bass in what was at the time the
biggest band on earth. As well as pulling together the classic
line-up (Slash on guitar, Steven Adler on drums, rhythm guitarist
Izzy Stradlin and vocalist Axl Rose), Duff was the unofficial
musical director of the band and the most experienced musician, and
played bass, drums and guitar, as well as co-writing many of the
songs. Over the years, Guns N' Roses have broken many records in
rock history - APPETITE FOR DESTRUCTION is the most successful
debut album in the history of recorded music; the band's 1991
records, USE YOUR ILLUSION parts 1 and 2, debuted at one and two on
the album charts, a feat never achieve before or since; and their
28-month ILLUSION world tour is still the longest running concert
tour in history. Duff charts the rise of the group, and his own
fall, as with success came heavy drinking and drug use, culminating
in his hospitalisation for acute pancreatitis in 1994. Forced to
sober up, Duff started taking an interest in business, eventually
completing a degree in economics and making a killing on the stock
market. He has since worked with Slash in another band, Velvet
Revolver, and has continued to play with various artists over the
last 15 years. IT'S SO EASY (AND OTHER LIES) is the explosive
memoir of a great rock musician who, against the odds, has lived to
tell the tale.
Let me guess: your Facebook page is littered with baby studies and
you're hearing "Having a baby changes everything" more often than
"Having a baby is pure joy." The sad fact is that pregnancy has
been turned into a cataclysmic medical emergency and parenthood's
become an obstacle course of optimization.Music journalist Chris
Kornelis has no patience for any of it. He didn't know the first
thing about pregnancy when his wife gave him the good news, but he
knew that the birth of a child should be a joyous occasion, not a
minefield of stress and shame. Rocking Fatherhood provides a
week-by-week guide to pregnancy for twenty-first century fathers,
but unlike most pregnancy books, it doesn't address every scenario
and statistic you and your lady could encounter in the next nine
months. Rather, Chris encourages you to make decisions based on
what you think is best for your family, not to conform to someone
else's definition of ideal. To write the book, he mined his own
time as an expectant pop and new dad, but he also solicited wisdom
from doctors, scientists, songwriters, and the real rock
stars,moms. His entertaining insights include:You don't need a book
or birthing course (only a 3x5 card.Babies can't change everything.
They can't even change themselves.Pregnancy sex can be great
sex.Nobody else knows how they're going to make it work,
either.Bottle or breast: you decide what's best.
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