Just because bands get onstage and jam together doesn't mean everything about their relationship
rocks.
In fact, some of the biggest, greatest, most popular musical acts in the world spend just
as much time squabbling among themselves as they do shredding solos and pounding on drums.
KISS
Currently, two original members of KISS — Ace Frehley and Peter Criss — are on the outs
with the group.
Frehley and Criss left in the early '80s and, apart from a brief nostalgia-fueled reunion
in the late '90s, have stayed away ever since.
In response, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley have disparaged both their estranged bandmates,
with Stanley saying that they don't deserve to be in the band and that he didn't want
to perform with them during their Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction.
Stanley went one step further in his 2014 autobiography, -
claiming that Frehley and Criss were anti- and collected stuff
Frehley fired back in a 2014 Vice interview, saying that the anti-Semitic claims are bogus
and that Paul and Gene hate him because he was a drug addict — even though he's now
been clean for years.
Although they got along real well when entering the Hall of Fame, it looks like that was just
as much of an act as wearing face paint and calling yourself "Starchild."
Blink-182
Blink-182 has a reputation as a fun band, but apparently there's some real turmoil behind
the scenes which isn't likely to go away anytime soon.
According to guitarist Tom DeLonge in a 2015 Facebook post, his relationship with Blink
is "poisoned."
DeLonge left Blink in 2005 and returned in 2009, but by 2015 the old feelings of animosity
were back.
The band's, quote, "squabbling and politics" forced them to shelve plans a new EP, which
apparently devastated DeLonge.
Drummer Travis Barker, meanwhile, told Rolling Stone that DeLonge was "disrespectful and
ungrateful" and wouldn't even tell the band that he was leaving in person.
Kings of Leon
They may not have been around as long as some of the other bands here, but Kings of Leon
can apparently in-fight with the best of them.
As reported by The Telegraph, most of the trouble stems from frontman Caleb Followill's
drinking — in 2010, he claimed to be sober "for the first 30 minutes of every day" and
nothing more.
According to Rolling Stone, Followill told an audience in 2011: "I'm gonna go backstage
and I'm gonna vomit, I'm gonna drink a beer and I'm gonna come back out and play three
more songs."
He managed everything on that list — except the songs.
The band canceled the rest of the tour.
After a brief hiatus, the band was back with a new album in 2013.
Guns N' Roses
Guns N' Roses' epic problems began in the early '90s, but for a while, nobody knew for
sure why Axl Rose and Slash hated each other so much.
According to the band's old road manager, the feud can be boiled down to Michael Jackson,
of all people.
In an interview with Rolling Stone Brazil, Doug Goldstein revealed that Axl, who was
allegedly molested as a child, hit the roof after Slash agreed to play guitar on Jackson's
new song "Black or White."
Axl and Slash only buried the hatchet recently, with a reunion tour that kicked off in 2016.
Chances are these two aren't drinking beers together after shows — but as long as they
can bang out "Paradise City" night after night, fans will happily pay.
Aerosmith
Joe Perry and Steven Tyler of Aerosmith rock best when they're together, even though they're
almost certainly happier apart.
In his autobiography, Rocks: My Life In and Out of Aerosmith, Perry details several incidents
where Tyler's antics have driven him up a wall.
The basic issue, according to Perry, is that he and the band are in it for the music, while
Tyler's in it for fame and women.
Tyler, meanwhile, isn't a huge fan of Perry either.
In his own autobiography, Does the Noise In My Head Bother You?
Tyler claims Perry is aloof and almost completely lacking in that sweet emotion.
As he claims Perry once told him, "Just because we're in a band together doesn't mean we have
to be friends."
So basically, Perry and Tyler are two Employees of the Month who keep the company thriving,
even though they avoid each other in the break room every day.
Van Halen
Don't worry — there's no issue between Eddie and Alex Van Halen.
They're brothers, best friends, and love each other.
But Eddie and longtime lead singer David Lee Roth have more than a few issues.
As Eddie told Billboard, "Roth's perception of himself is different than who he is in
reality.
We're not in our 20s anymore.
We're in our 60s.
Act like you're 60."
So basically, Eddie sees Roth as a giant man-child, and embarrassing stunts like his camera-hogging
and mugging at the 1996 MTV Video Music Awards didn't help matters.
Eddie has even worse things to say about ex-bassist Michael Anthony, whom he claims can't play
bass, saying: "Every note Mike ever played, I had to show him…He'd come over with a
video camera and I'd have to show him how to play all the parts."
Simon and Garfunkel
Since splitting in 1970, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel have reunited a handful of times,
and it never lasts because the two can barely stand one another.
The tiffs began almost immediately, when the pair recorded an album and Simon jetted off
to England to record his own solo material instead of promoting the album.
Then there was the time both men vetoed each others' suggestion for the 12th song on Bridge
Over Troubled Water — the album was released with 11 songs.
After that, the duo called it quits.
Since then, clashes between the iconic duo have popped up over the years.
For his part, Garfunkel has admitted to being open to recording a new album, although when
asked if it was going to happen, he couldn't resist a jab at Simon, saying: "You'll have
to ask him, it takes two to tango.
I like to tango, so count me in.
You'll just have to bring a psychiatrist in as the third member."
It doesn't sound like anyone's building a bridge over these troubled waters.
Oasis
Few bands are defined by their squabbling more than Oasis.
Brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher were seemingly always spatting with each other — as Noel
told ABC in 2000, "It was just drunken, f**king nonsense.
… It's just two brothers in a band who have strong opinions about how things within that
band should be."
Apparently, those drunken opinions got stronger and stronger, until the band combusted entirely
in 2009.
As Noel described it during a 2011 press conference, Liam missed a gig because he was hungover.
Soon, things escalated — to fruit throwing.
"And on the way out he picked up a plum.
And he threw it across the dressing room.
And it smashed against the wall."
The brothers have yet to make up, by all accounts.
At the 2010 BRIT Awards, Liam Gallagher accepted Oasis's award for Best Album of the Last 30
Years and thanked everyone except Noel.
He also keeps calling his brother a "potato" on Twitter — because why not?
Hopefully Mama Gallagher is used to family dinners without the entire family around.
The Kinks
Oasis may have perfected sibling rivalry, but the Kinks did it first.
Ray and Dave Davies have been at each others' throats for decades now and, by this point,
it'll probably never get better.
The two have been going at it since childhood — as Dave said in a Telegraph interview,
"I think Ray has only been happy for three years of his life … the three before I was
born."
Years of back-and-forth arguments did their best to overshadow the band's amazing catalog
of songs, until it killed the band in 1996.
Over 20 years later, the band has yet to reform, and the brothers' relationship is stone cold
at best.
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