After thorny start, promoter cancels Guns N' Roses tour

— When Guns N' Roses announced it was going on tour this fall after a nine-year hiatus, fans of the heavy metal band snapped up tickets. Axl Rose was back and there was talk of a new album.

But the comeback has been no "Paradise City."

Rose, the mercurial frontman whose disappearing acts have long irritated fans, failed to show up for the opening show Nov. 7 in Vancouver, prompting thousands of ticket holders to riot outside the venue. The band was a no-show again last week in Philadelphia, and fans got unruly.

By then it became apparent that the "Chinese Democracy" tour was finished. On Wednesday, promoter Clear Channel Entertainment made it official: The rest of the tour has been scrapped. Clear Channel didn't offer a reason.

The group's management, Sanctuary, referred all calls Thursday to Guns N' Roses' label, Interscope Geffen A&M, which declined comment.

"In a strange way, this tour has been very reflective of pretty much everything that has happened to the band since about 1992," said Chuck Klosterman, a Spin magazine writer.

Led by Rose's screeching vocals and Slash's fiery guitar, Guns N' Roses broke onto the scene in 1987 with the hugely successful "Appetite for Destruction."

Containing the hits "Welcome to the Jungle," "Paradise City" and "Sweet Child O' Mine," the album was filled with rage, paranoia and profanity.

But Guns N' Roses was plagued by a series of ugly episodes. Drug and alcohol abuse were rampant, band members had scrapes with the law, and Rose's volatility and eccentricities put a strain on the group.

Still, the band managed to carry over the success of "Appetite" into the 1991 "Use Your Illusion" double set. The album and ensuing world tour enhanced its popularity, but infighting persisted and band members parted ways in the mid-1990s.

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