Guitar ace Slash rose to prominence with an unmistakable look because the anchor of Weapons N’ Roses. A real rock ’n’ roll persona, the artist was as soon as not often seen with no drooping cigarette and a prime hat, the latter of which may barely include his face-engulfing curly hair.
Now, as of this week, he’s a theme park character at Common Studios Hollywood.
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Slash, or, moderately, a skeletal facsimile of him performed by an actor, shall be out there for photograph alternatives and meet and greets at Common’s Halloween Horror Nights, which runs most evenings by means of Nov. 2. For the musician, born Saul Hudson, it’s a dream fulfilled. A lifelong devotee of theme parks and coasters, Slash has been intently aligned with Halloween Horror Nights since 2014, when he first started scoring music for its haunted homes.
And the character, he says, was partly his concept.
“I went to them and said, ‘Hey, can we have one of those stilt walkers?’” says Slash, referring to the larger-than-life lurkers who hang-out friends through the festivities. “That would be really cool. So they came up with one and he looks pretty menacing.”
Slash enjoys the thought of being a towering, typically intimidating presence. That’s clear when he’s on stage because the attention-demanding cornerstone of quite a few bands. And he likes to scare, as evidenced by his personal horror-focused movie manufacturing firm, BerserkerGang. However get Slash one-on-one, and he actually simply needs to geek out on his favourite theme park rides.
Common Studios has launched a second vinyl compilation of music Slash has composed for Halloween Horror Nights through the years.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / For The Occasions)
We talked to Slash a few week earlier than Halloween Horror Nights opened from Orlando, Fla., the place he was holed up recording an album along with his band the Conspirators. That work, he says, shall be launched in 2027 because of deliberate 2026 touring obligations with Weapons N’ Roses. He lamented that he wouldn’t have time to go to Walt Disney World and Common’s new Epic Universe. The latter Florida park is residence to a monsters-themed land that Slash stated he was desperate to see.
His love of theme parks runs deep, and is, in fact, nonpartisan.
“I’m a real Disney head,” he says, joking that such a declaration might not make his Common companions joyful. He says he first visited Disneyland within the early Nineteen Seventies. “I really can’t put into words what makes it so magical, but there is a definite thing there that you feel when you’re actually there. I’ve loved it since I was a little kid.”
“But I love theme parks in general,” he continues. “I love roller coasters. I love that carnival energy going on. I love arcades. I love everything about that festive outdoor thing, and I’ve never grown out of it.”
Arguably, he’s grown into it.
Halloween season means it’s time for Universa’s Halloween Horror Nights, which runs by means of early November on the theme park.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / For The Occasions)
Slash has a deep fascination with Common Studios, made clear by his data of how the park’s backlot tram trek — formally designated because the World-Well-known Studio Tour — has shifted through the years. And as a lifelong horror fan who speaks nostalgically of watching Nineteen Seventies movies corresponding to “The Wicker Man,” “The Omen” and “The Exorcist” along with his mother and father, Halloween Horror Nights is very pricey to Slash’s coronary heart.
Slash was first drawn to the occasion in 2013 because of a haunted home themed across the music and pictures of Black Sabbath. The artist was given a tour of Horror Nights by John Murdy, who has lengthy overseen the West Coast version of the festivities.
“I was so blown away,” Slash says. “I was elated. I remember physically making giddy sounds. The whole thing, from the stilt walkers to the invisible bush figures who would hide in the bushes and were camouflaged, it was unbelievable. I wanted to be involved.”
Murdy was open to the thought. “The first time I walked into his personal recording studio, the first thing I noticed was a huge print of ‘Bride of Frankenstein,’ our 1935 classic, hanging on the wall. And I was like, ‘Oh, we have something in common.’”
Halloween Horror Nights is full of haunted homes and scare actors.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / For The Occasions)
Slash would go on to write down the music for six Halloween Horror Nights homes centered round Common’s basic monster characters. This yr, he’s returned to Horror Nights with a rating set to a relaunch of an authentic, Melancholy-era set maze, “Scarecrow.” Musically, it’s a departure for the artist. “Scarecrow” features a Slash-composed cowl of conventional folks quantity “O Death.”
“We started talking ‘Scarecrow,’ and as pure coincidence, he said, ‘Oh, I just learned the banjo and the dobro,’” Murdy says. “He was learning all these traditional Appalachian instruments, and I said, ‘That’s awesome because my house is set in the Dust Bowl.’”
That Slash has been dipping into extra Americana-influenced music isn’t an entire shock. His 2024 solo effort, “Orgy of the Damned,” leans blues as an illustration, together with a blistering, rootsy tackle early Fleetwood Mac rocker “Oh Well” with nation star Chris Stapleton. Picks from Slash’s Halloween Horror Nights work, minus the brand new “Scarecrow” music, will once more be out there on a limited-run vinyl bought at Common Studios throughout Halloween Horror Nights.
Slash is featured this yr as a “character” at Halloween Horror Nights, a skeletal, stilt-walking interpretation of the artist.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / For The Occasions)
“As soon as they gave me the concept, my brain went into that realm — I could pull out my pedal steel, and do an Americana-type approach, as opposed to the goth, kind of pseudo-metal thing I was doing for all the Universal Monsters,” Slash says.
Slash has develop into such a Halloween Horror Nights fixture that this yr will function a bar centered across the artist, one full with a mini prime hat as a dessert. When requested how he feels to be immortalized as a sculpted sponge cake with coconut lime mousse, he doesn’t flinch.
“I wish I could explain in words how much I love that kind of stuff,” Slash says.
He’s, in any case, a theme park common, though his favourite rides are discovered just a few miles from Common Studios in Anaheim. “I love the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland. That and Pirates of the Caribbean will always be my two favorite rides,” he says. “The attention to detail and the creative element and everything that is going on with those old Disney rides is still, to this day, second to none.”
Halloween Horror Nights at Common Studios
The mark of any true theme park aficionado is an appreciation of slow-moving, old-school darkish rides, sights which can be set in darkened present buildings and infrequently full of an assortment of vignettes. Slash singles out Common’s “The Secret Life of Pets: Off the Leash” as one other spotlight.
“I went with my stepdaughter and we went on that ride and it’s great,” Slash says. “The ‘Pets’ one is really sweet. I’m a big animal guy. We love our cats, so that was a lot of fun.”
Crowds lined as much as enter “Scarecrow,” a haunted home at Halloween Horror Nights featuing music by Slash.
(Gabriella Angotti-Jones / For The Occasions)
And earlier than Slash can end his subsequent thought, he begins gushing a few current journey to Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, the place he visited Ferrari World, residence to plenty of celebrated curler coasters.
“I can talk about this stuff all day,” he says.