MÖTLEY CRÜE Guitarist JOHN 5 Talks Staying True To MICK MARS Recordings When Performing Live - "I Wanted To Give Those Songs Respect" | News @ METAL.RADIO.FM
Sunday, 10 November 2024 03:18

MÖTLEY CRÜE Guitarist JOHN 5 Talks Staying True To MICK MARS Recordings When Performing Live - "I Wanted To Give Those Songs Respect"



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19:15 Sunday, 13 August 2023
MÖTLEY CRÜE Guitarist JOHN 5 Talks Staying True To MICK MARS Recordings When Performing Live - "I Wanted To Give Those Songs Respect"

Guitarist John 5 is featured in a new Guitar World story, where he discusses replacing founding guitarist Mick Mars in Mötley Crüe. He reveals that he spent "every day for months" going through Mötley Crüe’s back catalog in order to learn every solo and every refrain note for note.

John 5: "I wanted to play those solos exactly as they were written. Those solos are so important to me as a fan, and they’re so important to the audience. The squeals in 'Looks That Kill' or the harmonics in 'Dr. Feelgood' – these are very important to me and the world. That’s how those songs were written, how they were recorded, and how they should be performed. I wanted to give those songs respect."

Read the complete story here.

In another recent Guitar World interview, Mötley Crüe bassist, Nikki Sixx, talks about moving on without guitarist Mick Mars, who retired last October due to health issues. Sixx explains how Mars’ decision to leave came completely out of the blue.

“We never saw it coming that Mick wasn’t going to be able to tour and was going to have to quit the band,” says Sixx. “In the middle - not even the middle - of a huge tour, we had to ask ourselves, 'Do we want to let the fans down? Do we want to let Live Nation down? Do we want to let Def Leppard down? Do we want to let ourselves down because an original member of our band can’t tour anymore?' We had to have a deep, deep look into what we were going to do.”

Sixx went on to describe John 5’s appointment as “a no-brainer in a horrible situation”, given their existing relationship to each other.

“[In regard to] John, knowing all the members of the band, and me having this relationship with him writing and as friends, and even being in the studio with him writing stuff with the band for The Dirt, it felt like a no-brainer in a horrible situation - something we did not ask for or want.

“And then it was just kind of obvious. If there was 'the guy', John was the guy. Like I said, we didn’t choose this, but since we had to be put in this position, we’re very happy with where we’re at right now.”

Read the full story at Guitar World.





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