Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Guitars
  • Guitar Pedals
  • Synths
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Controllers
  • Guitar Amps
  • Drums
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About Us
More
  • Radiohead theory
  • Steely Dan's drum machine
  • Deep Purple in the dungeon
  • Prince's drummers
  • 95k+ free music samples
Don't miss these
Daron Malakian of System of a Down performs live in a wide-brimmed had with a custom Flying V with an open-book Gibson headstock.
Artists Daron Malakian on how synth leads the guitar on his new album and why he doesn’t stick to one style
Zach Myers of Shinedown plays a hunter green PRS NF53 live onstage at Download Festival 2025.
Artists Zach Myers on Shinedown’s secret weapon, the limits of shred guitar, and getting schooled by BB King
Josh Homme
Bands “Playing in front of people who are stripped down to the bones…” Josh Homme talks Alive In The Catacombs
Rick Rubin .
Recording "He made so many of those songs better with just one little nudge”: Daron Malakian on Rick Rubin
Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi perform live in 2023, with Trucks playing his Dickey Betts Artist Series SG, Tedeschi playing her Les Paul Standard.
Artists Derek Trucks says Tedeschi Trucks Band have completed new album and have been sneaking in some of the tracks live
Frank Ferrer on stage in 2012
Artists How drummer Frank Ferrer powered Guns N’ Roses for 19 years
Whitesnake in 1990
Artists “We needed the right person to join the family”: How Steve Vai put the sizzle into the last big hair metal album
Exodus Gary Holt
Bands "It might have been like 12 people there”: Exodus’ Gary Holt pulls zero punches in his new autobiography
Zach Myers of Shinedown is bathed in blue stage lights and plays his custom-relic'd Silver Sky.
Artists Shinedown’s Zach Myers on Paul Reed Smith, signature model updates, and that relic’d Silver Sky
Glenn Hughes
Artists “I’m not trying to alienate my audience!”: Glenn Hughes says he's still taking inspiration from David Bowie
Steven Tyler
Artists “Love in an elevator? Yeah, I've done it!”: Steven Tyler and Joe Perry on the making of the Aerosmith classic Pump
Bono black and white in glasses
Artists “Our band is...three musicians. And a salesman”: Bono suggests next U2 album will have a looser feel
Mark Knopfler
Artists Mark Knopfler on the Dire Straits song he's come to accept that he has to start in the same way every time
Troy Van Leeuwen of Queens of the Stone Age plays a red/orange Gretsch onstage, and is framed by a triangle of yellow-green stagelights.
Artists “It was the most bizarre musical experience”: QOTSA’s Troy Van Leeuwen on playing Paris's Catacombs
Bruce Springsteen in Concert, 1984
Recording “Not necessarily the record I had planned”: Springsteen explains why he “wasn’t happy” with Born In The USA
  1. Artists
  2. Guitarists

Slash on new album Apocalyptic Love: track-by-track interview

News
By Robert Laing ( Total Guitar ) published 10 May 2012

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Slash - Apocalyptic Love, featuring Myles Kennedy and The Conspirators

Slash - Apocalyptic Love, featuring Myles Kennedy and The Conspirators

“Is this album a statement? I think I really need to stick to my guns and do things the way I think they should be done.”

Slash’s first solo album redefined a guitar icon for the next stage of his career, now he’s written with Alter Bridge’s Myles Kennedy for the follow-up and is raising the bar his way. Here, he gives us the insider's perspective.

For more on the making of Apocalyptic Love including a track-by-track guide to the new album from Myles Kennedy, check out Total Guitar issue 228, on sale 14 May 2012. Buy Total Guitar magazine on Apple Newsstand. US readers click here.

The Classic Rock Presents: Slash Apocalyptic Love Fan Pack is available for pre-order now at www.bit.ly/slash-fanpack.

Page 1 of 14
Page 1 of 14
Apocalyptic Love

Apocalyptic Love

“That was the first song I went to Myles and the guys with at some point in late 2010, maybe early 2011. I would make up stuff here and there and record it in GarageBand or Pro Tools in my laptop.

"I would get the basic ideas I had – be it two parts, three parts or a whole song – then send it to Myles and he would come up with melodies.”

Page 2 of 14
Page 2 of 14
One Last Thrill

One Last Thrill

“Nobody does that old rock ’n’ roll, Chuck Berry thing any more.

"It’s that very unbridled rock thing without any meticulous care but I actually wrote it on an acoustic.”

Page 3 of 14
Page 3 of 14
Standing In The Sun

Standing In The Sun

“For that song, as well as Halo and Bad Rain, I used my live guitar, the Gibson [Slash Appetite] Les Paul because my Derrig [the guitar used on Appetite For Destruction] was in the shop for repairs.

"The outro riff I play at the end of this was a very spontaneous thing – I made it up on the spot because we couldn’t think of an ending! Whatever the first idea is when I’m working on a song, that’s the one that stays. Then I’ll play it every time we rehearse and it’ll start to take on a life of its own.”

Page 4 of 14
Page 4 of 14
You're A Lie

You're A Lie

“This song was the second one I presented to the band during writing and it had a different chorus for a while there. Then it had another chorus riff and just before we decided to can the song I came up with the idea for the chorus that’s there now.

"I don’t like to work on anything for too long, I just move on.”

Page 5 of 14
Page 5 of 14
No More Heroes

No More Heroes

“I used my neck pickup with the tone off for the main riff. It had a longer solo originally and we shortened it because it was going on and on and on. I was trying to get the same amount of punch out of it in a shorter amount of time. That was a little tricky for me at first – I kept wanting to go off.

"And I’m sure some people will say, ‘You should have gone off’, but it sort of lost the direction of where the song should go – and the effectiveness of the arrangement. After a couple of plays through it worked itself out.

“I used a pedal that I’ve designed with Dunlop, an octave fuzz pedal, which was cool. It’s coming out soon.”

Page 6 of 14
Page 6 of 14
Halo

Halo

“It is definitely a metal riff but it was actually inspired by some music I heard when I was in Spain at a hotel. It was the kind of music you’d never have guessed could inspire it in a million years. I got the melody stuff in my head and your brain has a way of turning things around. When I got to the gig that night in the dressing room I turned it into this other thing and that’s what Halo is.

“A lot of this record was written on the road – musicians that say they can’t write on the road are usually busy doing something else! I think it’s been my way of keeping myself out of trouble, to take all the energy I used to put into partying and spend it on the guitar. But it’s very inspired. It’s not like I make myself do it. I get to my room and I’ve got ideas so I’ll work on them, rather than waiting until later.”

Page 7 of 14
Page 7 of 14
We Will Roam

We Will Roam

“It’s a little different from other things I write. I wrote this song at home when I was off the road. I play both the rhythms on here. The first guitar that you hear in the intro is a baritone then I did it again on a regular guitar.

"It was written on a baritone, too – a Music Man that I have at home. It’s a very spontaneous fingerpicking solo in We Will Roam. All solos should take on the life of the song. I think that’s really important.

Page 8 of 14
Page 8 of 14
Anastasia

Anastasia

“This track was born out of something I started doing during my guitar solo during the live shows. It turned into an entire song and there’s an extended outro solo and an extended fingerpicking intro. It’s probably the most guitar-focused song on the record.

"Am I harking back to the Use Your Illusion-era epics? Well, I wouldn’t compare it to Use Your Illusion but it’s definitely a guitar epic.”

Page 9 of 14
Page 9 of 14
Not For Me

Not For Me

“This was the last song we wrote on an acoustic when we were out on the road. I was really attached to it and when I sent all that random leftover stuff to Myles it was one of the songs he didn’t react to right away. So I thought he didn’t like it. But then he told me, ‘Oh, I have a really great thing for that’. It’s really cool. It’s one of the slow songs on the record but it’s very heavy. It starts off mellow but then it turns into heavy choruses.

“That particular song has a really poignant lyric – it’s very whispery in the beginning. It’s about when you decide that enough is enough when it comes to all your partying. It touches on it in such a way that really makes you think. I’ve never heard a song that talks about when you finally decide you’ve had enough. It’s really affective. I said to Myles, ‘Now you have to write a song about falling off the wagon!”

Page 10 of 14
Page 10 of 14
Bad Rain

Bad Rain

“That was something I remember recording on Pro Tools on my laptop. It takes forever to set that shit up, then by the time you’ve set it up you don’t feel like playing any more.

"It was something I heard in my head and it pretty much came out as I heard it. It’s pretty cool. It’s in drop D.”

Page 11 of 14
Page 11 of 14
Hard And Fast

Hard And Fast

“It’s a flat out riff in A, C, D and E. It was written in between takes of another song we were working on.

"After working on something for a long time you need to break out of it. That came up spontaneously on the spot and we put it together real fast then went back to work on the other song.”

Page 12 of 14
Page 12 of 14
Far And Away

Far And Away

“There’s no what you would call ‘ballads’ on this record. But this is the closest thing to it – a slow picking blues song.

"It’s really cool. Myles actually plays some blues licks on this song as well.”

Page 13 of 14
Page 13 of 14
Shots Fired

Shots Fired

“The chorus is one of the guitar parts that Myles came up with for the record.

"This one was another song that was written at my house and then I sent it to Myles and he came right back with the chorus part and it pretty much wrote itself after that.”

Want to see Slash, Myles Kennedy and The Conspirators live in 2012? Go here for tour dates and ticket information.

For more on the making of Apocalyptic Love including a track-by-track guide to the new album from Myles Kennedy, check out Total Guitar issue 228, on sale 14 May 2012. Buy Total Guitar magazine on Apple Newsstand. US readers click here.

The Classic Rock Presents: Slash Apocalyptic Love Fan Pack is available for pre-order now at www.bit.ly/slash-fanpack.

Page 14 of 14
Page 14 of 14
Categories
Guitars
Robert Laing
Stay up to date with the latest gear and tuition. image
Stay up to date with the latest gear and tuition.
Subscribe and save today!
More Info
Read more
Daron Malakian of System of a Down performs live in a wide-brimmed had with a custom Flying V with an open-book Gibson headstock.
Daron Malakian on how synth leads the guitar on his new album and why he doesn’t stick to one style
 
 
Zach Myers of Shinedown plays a hunter green PRS NF53 live onstage at Download Festival 2025.
Zach Myers on Shinedown’s secret weapon, the limits of shred guitar, and getting schooled by BB King
 
 
Josh Homme
“Playing in front of people who are stripped down to the bones…” Josh Homme talks Alive In The Catacombs
 
 
Rick Rubin .
"He made so many of those songs better with just one little nudge”: Daron Malakian on Rick Rubin
 
 
Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi perform live in 2023, with Trucks playing his Dickey Betts Artist Series SG, Tedeschi playing her Les Paul Standard.
Derek Trucks says Tedeschi Trucks Band have completed new album and have been sneaking in some of the tracks live
 
 
Whitesnake in 1990
“We needed the right person to join the family”: How Steve Vai put the sizzle into the last big hair metal album
 
 
Latest in Guitarists
Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi perform live in 2023, with Trucks playing his Dickey Betts Artist Series SG, Tedeschi playing her Les Paul Standard.
Derek Trucks says Tedeschi Trucks Band have completed new album and have been sneaking in some of the tracks live
 
 
Spinal Tap's Nigel Tufnel plays a custom Marshall stack Jackson guitar while David St Hubbins sticks to the classic Les Paul in this live pic from 1992.
Seymour Duncan celebrates Spinal Tap sequel with custom pickup that has an “eye-watering” 111K DCR
 
 
Andy Summers of The Police performs at Oakland Coliseum on June 13, 2007 in Oakland, California
“Every culture has accessed it and made something of their own of it”: Andy Summers to front new docu-series about the guitar
 
 
Biran May and friends
"It's a classic... one of the best rock songs ever”: Which 2013 track could Brian May be talking about?
 
 
Jackson Pro Series Limited Edition Phil Demmel KV King V: the V-style electric is finished in black-and-white polka dots, and looks good in all settings, against a white background or barroom scene alike.
Jackson and Phil Demmel salute Randy Rhoads with limited run Pro Series King V in polka dot finish
 
 
John McLaughlin plays his PRS live onstage. He wears a black tennis wristband; the guitar has a highly figured flame maple top and he wears a blue shirt. On the right, Jimi Hendrix plays his Gibson Flying V with the psychedelic paint job.
John McLaughlin on how his first encounter with Jimi Hendrix ended in “disaster”
 
 
Latest in News
Jackson Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas: these retro S-styles take the high-performance electric guitar brand back to the '80s, offering single and dual-humbucker platforms for shred with the choice of rosewood or maple fingerboards – and what about that "Two-Face" black-and-white finish?
“These guitars empower metal artists with the authentic, crushing tone that built Jackson’s legendary reputation”: Jackson takes us back to the heyday of shred with the Pro Origins 1985 San Dimas series – and what about that Two Face finish?
 
 
Mark Ronson and Michael Jackson
How a teenage Mark Ronson convinced Michael Jackson to write him a bassline so he could make a hit song out of it
 
 
English singer-songwriter FKA twigs attends the MTV Video Music Awards at UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, on September 7, 2025
"It shows the breadth of talent from across all of our nations”: The Mercury nominations are out and diverse as ever
 
 
The new Gibson Murphy Lab Light Aged Acoustics released on 9 September 2025, all lined up in a wood-panneled show room with round windows and a rural landscape outside.
Gibson expands acoustic Murphy Lab collection with five Light Aged classics – including a Nick Lucas 1929 reissue
 
 
A mac book being closed
Transform your MacBook into a theremin! Or a creaking door!
 
 
Elektron Tonverk
“Made for expansive sound design and immediate play”: Elektron Tonverk is real, and it's out now
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...