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Rock band Guns N’ Roses has released its first studio album
in fifteen years and its provocative title – “Chinese Democracy” – has
understandably irked China’s Communist Party.
A newspaper published by the Chinese Communist Party
caustically criticized Guns N’ Roses’ most recent album as an attack on the Chinese
nation, reports the Associated Press, quoting the Global Times. The album is
said to “turn its spear point on China.”
Guns N’ Roses released their last studio album in 1993; “The
Spaghetti Incident?” consisted of cover versions of 1970s and 1980s punk and
glam rock songs. Their previous “Appetite for Destruction,” “Use Your Illusion
I” and “Use Your Illusion II” albums had already turned them into a superband.
The band has been working on “Chinese Democracy” since 1994
– in the end, Axl Rose, the 46-year-old frontman, is the only original member
left. The album became available in North America
this Sunday, November 23.
Then again, many fans had already listened to the music when
it was mysteriously leaked on the Internet by a man that pleaded not guilty to
breaking copyright laws in a Los
Angeles court last month. Kevin Cogill, a 27-year-old
man from Culver City, California, is alleged to have leaked nine
new songs from the album on his website, Antiquiet.com, in June. He afterwards took
them down but the harm had been done.
In August, he was arrested and then released on $10,000
bail. Authorities said at the time he faced up to three years in jail if
convicted. If he is found to have had a profit from uploading the songs, he can
face an even longer sentence. Cogill has no known direct connection to the
band.
While fans of the rock band from around the world have been
eagerly awaiting the long-delayed release of the album, it is unlikely that
“Chinese Democracy” will be released in China. The Associated Press reports
spokespersons for the Culture Ministry and State Administration of Radio, Film
and Television could not be reached for comment as of Monday. These are the
government bodies which regulate album releases and performances in China.
The album has not been officially banned yet. It is not only
the title that may worry Chinese authorities. The record’s title track makes
reference to the Falun Gong movement that was banned in China as an
“illegal cult.”
One song from “Chinese Democracy,” titled “Shackler’s
Revenge,” was made available in September, when Harmonix and MTV Games released
Rock Band 2. All of the tracks are available for listening, but not
downloading, on Guns N’ Roses’ MySpace page.
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