Artist Name
Slash's Snakepit

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Members
members icon 5 Male

Origin
flag USA

Genre
genre icon Hard Rock

Style
style icon Rock/Pop

Mood
---

Born

born icon 1994

Active
calendar icon 1994 to dead icon 2002

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Alternate Name
Slash Snakepit

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2 users heart off Slash's Snakepit - Good to Be Alive
2 users heart off Slash's Snakepit - Neither Can I
2 users heart off Slash's Snakepit - Be the Ball
2 users heart off Slash's Snakepit - Just Like Anything


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Artist Biography
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In 1994, Slash formed Slash's Snakepit, a side project that featured his Guns N' Roses band mates Matt Sorum and Gilby Clarke on drums and rhythm guitar respectively, as well as Alice in Chains' Mike Inez on bass and Jellyfish's Eric Dover on vocals. The band recorded Slash's material originally intended for Guns N' Roses, resulting in the release of It's Five O'Clock Somewhere in February 1995. The album was critically praised for ignoring the then-popular conventions of alternative music, and fared well on the charts, eventually selling over one million copies in the US alone despite little promotion from Geffen Records. Slash's Snakepit toured in support of the album with bassist James LoMenzo and drummer Brian Tichy of Pride and Glory, before disbanding in 1996. Slash then toured for two years with the blues rock cover band Slash's Blues Ball.
In 1999, Slash chose to regroup Slash's Snakepit with Rod Jackson on vocals, Ryan Roxie on rhythm guitar, Johnny Griparic on bass, and Matt Laug on drums. Their second album, Ain't Life Grand, was released in October 2000 through Koch Records. It did not sell as well as the band's previous release, and its critical reception was mixed. To promote the album, the band—with Keri Kelli on rhythm guitar—embarked on an extensive world tour in support of AC/DC in the summer of 2000, followed by their own headlining theater tour. Slash disbanded Snakepit in 2002.
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Last Edit by bullbutch
22nd Mar 2013

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