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Love of my Life – Queen

FORMED: 1971, London, England DISBANDED: 1995 1968: Smile In 1968, Brian May and Tim Staffell, both students at Imperial College, decided they wanted to form a group. Brian placed an advertisement on the college notice board for a “Ginger Baker type” drummer, and a young medical student called Roger Taylor auditioned and got the job. They called the group Smile. Smile were signed to Mercury Records in 1969, and had their first experience of a recording studio in Trident Studios that year. Tim Staffell was at Ealing College of Art with Freddie Bulsara, and introduced him to the band. Freddie soon became a keen fan. Sadly, in 1970 Smile decided to call it a day, as nothing seemed to be happening for them. Tim went off and joined a band called Humpy Bong, and Freddie left his band Wreckage and joined up with Brian and Roger – it had all begun. 1970: Queen’s birth Freddie changed his name by deed poll to Mercury, changed the band’s name to Queen, and John Deacon was asked to audition as their bass player (they had had three temporary ones so far in their short history). In February 1971, John Deacon was taken on as the fourth member of Queen. The band rehearsed tirelessly and played several small gigs at Imperial College, where they rehearsed for close friends. Then they were offered the chance to test a new recording studio called De Lane Lea. In return for trying out the new equipment, they could also make free demo tapes. They did. No one was interested! They had signed a
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Part 2: www.youtube.com Slash and Adler met their future Guns N’ Roses bandmates when they placed an ad in The LA Times searching for a bassist for their band. Duff McKagan responded to the ad, and later worked with Axl Rose and Izzy Stradlin in Hollywood Rose, who Slash had originally auditioned for, before merging with LA Guns (Rob Gardner, Tracii Guns and Ole Beich) to create Guns N’ Roses. The three joined Axl Rose and Izzy Stradlin to create the most famous and “original” line-up of Guns N’ Roses. Adler drummed on the first two GN’R albums: the multi-platinum Appetite for Destruction and GN’ R Lies. Adler’s work also appeared on one song on Use Your Illusion II, the opening track “Civil War”, although his drum track is said to be heavily edited.[5] In late 1987, while Guns N’ Roses was on tour, an intoxicated Adler broke his hand when he punched a streetlight after a barroom brawl. Fred Coury from the band Cinderella substituted on drums for several shows until Adler recovered.[6] At the 1989 American Music Awards, where Guns N’ Roses performed their latest single, “Patience,” Nobody filled in for Adler on drums because no drums were planned for the song and it ended up being acoustic only song. Officially, the absence was attributed to a case of the flu; it was later revealed that Adler had actually been in a drug rehabilitation program at the time. Problems continued in 1990, as the band recorded “Civil War” for Nobody’s Child, an album benefiting the Romanian