Axl Rose says the chaos of his past wasn’t rebellion — it was pain. “People saw the anger, the late shows — but underneath all of that, I was hurting,” he admits. Now 60, the once-infamous Guns N’ Roses frontman has traded fury for peace, finding strength not in volume, but in forgiveness and quiet. “I still have that fire,” he says. “It’s just not burning me anymore — it’s lighting the way.”…
When Axl Rose walks into the room today, there’s no trace of the wild-eyed rocker who once stormed stages, smashed microphones, and made headlines for […]
