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Guns N' Roses? It was more like welcome to the jungle

How drummer Steven Adler survived 20 years of drug addiction

February 17, 2011 11:04
Steven Adler: ‘I had a stroke, a heart attack and I was in a coma'

By

Robert Collins

4 min read

Steven Adler knows he is lucky to be alive. Two decades of heroin and crack cocaine addiction will take a toll on the toughest constitution.

"I tried killing myself," he admits. "It is not easy! A human body can put up with a lot. I had a stroke, a mild heart attack and I was in a coma for four days - all at once. My doctor said I would be brain dead or lose the left side of my body. I was blessed because I can still play drums and I didn't lose my brain. Not completely anyway. I lost a lot of my speech. I'm 46 now. Most of the people I knew when I was growing up didn't make it past their 20s. I beat myself up for 30 years and I came out of it semi-OK, so at least I've got that going for me."

Adler can laugh at his own expense now. That boundless enthusiasm for life that has been his constant companion since defeating his demons.

Twenty-one years ago Adler was musical royalty; one-fifth of Guns N' Roses, the biggest and best hard rock act of the 1980s. Widely labelled as "the most dangerous band on earth', Guns N' Roses upped the ante to effectively destroy what would subsequently be called "hair metal". They ditched the makeup and turned everything up, leaving behind a critically acclaimed masterpiece, Appetite For Destruction, still the best selling debut album of all time.