Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Guns fire on all cylinders at T-Mobile

Rose doesn’t let broken foot hold him back

- By DAVE HERRERA

Well, what do you know? There are some things in life that actually are worth the wait.

On Friday at T-Mobile Arena, Guns N’ Roses made its much-ballyhooed return to the big stage, and the band did not disappoint — far from it, actually — which was pleasantly surprising. With all the buildup leading up to the eagerly anticipate­d semi-reunion, there was plenty of potential for Guns to, well, fire a bunch of blanks, as it were.

For starters, the guys hadn’t played an arena show together since August 1993. Add to that the fact that the act’s appearance wouldn’t serve as a full-scale reunion as everyone had hoped for featuring all of the original members. After months of speculatio­n, confirmati­on finally came down after the first of the year that the old band was getting back together, minus a couple of key members. Then there was the news from Rose on Friday afternoon that he would be in a cast after having undergone surgery sometime earlier in the week to repair broken bones in his foot.

So, yeah, on paper this was poised to be a perfect letdown. Instead, it was exactly the opposite. Guns N’ Roses completely tore down T-Mobile Arena on Friday night with a 23song set that lasted nearly two and a half hours. While it would be remiss to say that the guys picked right up where they left off more than two decades ago — Rose’s range isn’t entirely what it used to be at the act’s peak, but he can still hit many of the notes in his upper register and he sounds even more seasoned on the lower notes — they’ve still got it, no question.

The show didn’t start until midnight, which caused some handwringi­ng in the crowd, with minor murmurs of “here we go again,” and rightfully so. In the past, Guns N’ Roses has had problems with punctualit­y. Once the band took the stage, however, all of that stuff was all but forgotten.

The band started the set off in the same sequence as their warmup show at the Troubadour a week ago. Tearing into two tracks from “Appetite for Destructio­n,” “It’s So Easy” and “Mr. Brownstone,” Rose and company came out swinging with a strapping one-two combinatio­n that had everybody howling in delirious delight. For the first five songs, the emphasis seemed to be entirely on Rose, his mononymous­ly monikered bandmate Slash and Duff McKagan, as if to address the glaring absence of the other original members, Izzy Stradlin and Steven Adler.

Not only were those three individual­s spotlighte­d, but Rose, seated center stage perched on a throne borrowed from Dave Grohl of the Foo Fighters, was wheeled out directly in front of the drum riser, completely obscuring the outfit’s ace timekeeper Frank Ferrer from view, until being slid over stage right in time for an especially vibrant version of “Estranged.”

Ferrer and the other members of the outfit, Dizzy Reed — who might as well be considered a core member at this point, considerin­g he’s been part of the lineup since 1990 and was included in the act’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction — guitarist Richard Fortus, and keyboardis­t Melissa Reese, played their parts to near perfection.

There were countless highlights over the course of the set, which included almost two dozen songs from the entire catalog, eight songs from “Use Your Illusion I & II,” more than half of “Appetite for Destructio­n,” at least three tunes from “Chinese Democracy,” and a solid selection of covers, including some standbys, “Live and Let Die,” “New Rose” by the Damned, “Layla,” by Derek and the Dominoes, “Speak Softly, Love,” from “The Godfather,” and a surprise with “Wish You Were Here” by Pink Floyd.

Rose himself was positively personable on stage. While there didn’t necessaril­y seem to be any added chemistry between he and his formerly estranged bandmates, he was refreshing­ly reserved, leaving them plenty of room to share the spotlight, and respectful, saying Slash was “a man that needs no introducti­on but gets one anyway.”

On the first night of its return, Guns N’ Roses gave everybody one hell of a show, replete with a dynamic set that dipped without losing any momentum — ballads like “November Rain,” which featured Rose on piano, were beautiful — and arena-worthy production, plenty of pyro, “Mind’s Eye”-worthy visuals, confetti cannons, and go-go dancers partially silhouette­d in the background. When Rose’s reconfigur­ed version of Guns N’ Roses played their pair of Las Vegas residencie­s in 2012 and 2014, it was billed as “Appetite for Democracy” and “Evening of Destructio­n,” respective­ly. This run could be called “Insatiable Appetite,” as this was the kind of show that you instantly wanted to see again as soon as it was over.

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