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Axl Rose: The Rolling Stone Interview

What I'd tell any kid in school is "Take business classes, whatever else you do"

I’ve always looked at things in a versatile sense because of Queen, ELO, Elton John, especially early Elton John, and groups like that. With Queen, I have my favorite: Queen II. Whenever their newest record would come out and have all these other kinds of music on it, at first I’d only like this song or that song. But after a period of time listening to it, it would open my mind up to so many different styles. I really appreciate them for that. That’s something I’ve always wanted to be able to achieve. It’s important to show people all forms of music, basically try to give people a broader point of view.

Speaking of versatility, you’re known primarily as a singer, but you’ve been playing piano quite a bit lately.
I’ve played piano my whole life. I took lessons, but I only really played my lesson on the day of the lesson. All week long, I’d sit down at the piano and just make up stuff. To this day, I still can’t really play other people’s songs, only my own. I haven’t had a piano for years. I couldn’t afford one. I couldn’t figure out where I was sleeping at night, let alone try to have a place for a piano. So I had to put it aside and have the dream that I’d get to it. Now I really want to bring the piano out.

So far the song that’s inspired the most controversy in the band’s short career has been “One in a Million.” How did you come to write that song?
“One in a Million” was written while sitting in the apartment of my friend West Arkeen, who’s like the sixth member of the band. I wrote it at his house, sitting around bored, watching TV. I can’t really play guitar too well, I only play the top two strings, and I would write a little piece at a time. I started writing about wanting to get out of L.A., getting away for a little while. I’d been down to the downtown-L.A. Greyhound bus station. If you haven’t been there, you can’t say shit to me about what goes on and about my point of view. There are a large number of black men selling stolen jewelry, crack, heroin and pot, and most of the drugs are bogus. Rip-off artists selling parking spaces to parking lots that there’s no charge for. Trying to misguide every kid that gets off the bus and doesn’t quite know where he’s at or where to go, trying to take the person for whatever they’ve got. That’s how I hit town. The thing with “One in a Million” is, basically, we’re all one in a million, we’re all here on this earth. We’re one fish in a sea. Let’s quit fucking with each other, fucking with me.

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