Coma (Guns N' Roses song)

"Coma"
Song by Guns N' Roses from the album Use Your Illusion I
Released September 17, 1991
Recorded A&M Studios, Record Plant Studios,
Studio 56,
Image Recording, Conway Studios & Metalworks Recording Studios 1990-1991
Genre Hard rock, heavy metal
Length 10:13
Label Geffen Records
Writer(s) Slash and Axl Rose
Producer(s) Mike Clink and Guns N' Roses
Use Your Illusion I track listing

"Dead Horse"
(15)
"Coma"
(16)

"Coma" is a song by American rock band Guns N' Roses. It appears on the 1991 album Use Your Illusion I. At 10 minutes, 14 seconds it is the longest track released by the band.

Composition

The song starts with the instruments, and then the singing. After a moderately-sized vocal section, the sound of a heartbeat on a heart monitor takes over, succeeded by another short singing session. Afterwards, more singing takes place, followed by a quiet, peaceful midsection of the song, resembling a euphoric state of tranquility. Then, loud rock music resumes, and a loud, climatic, long singing section finalizes the song.[1]

Mentioning of Song by Band Members

Slash states that he wrote the music to this song in a house he and Izzy Stradlin rented in Hollywood Hills, following the Appetite for Destruction tours.[2] In a 2011 interview, he stated he wrote the song in a "heroin delirium".[3]

In an interview, Axl Rose talks about writing "Coma":

I tried to write that song for a year, and couldn't. I went to write it at the studio and passed out. I woke up two hours later and sat down and wrote the whole end of the song, like, just off the top of my head. It was like, don't even know what's coming out, man, but it's coming. I think one of the best things that I've ever written was maybe the end segment of the song "Coma". It just poured out.[4]

In an interview, on August 31, 1990, with MTV's Kurt Loder on Famous Last Words, Axl talks about the song "Coma":

There's a song called Coma that's like 11 minutes 45 seconds long with no chorus. And I think there was only one verse that somewhere it repeats itself. It's Slash's baby. It's his monster. The song used to be called Girth.

But I started writing about when I OD'ed 4 years ago. The reason I OD'd was because of stress. I couldn't take it. And I just grabbed the bottle of pills in an argument and just gulped them down and I ended up in the hospital. But I liked that I wasn't in the fight anymore and I was fully conscious that I was leaving. I liked that. But then I go, all of a sudden, my first real thoughts were that "okay, you haven't toured enough. The record's not going to last; it's going to be forgotten. This and that, you have work to do. Get out of this." And I went "No!" and I woke up, you know, and pulled myself out of it.

But in the describing of that, some people could take it wrong and think this means "go put yourself into a coma," you know. And so it's really tricky, and I'm still playing with the words to figure out how to, like, show some hope in there.[5]

Live performances

From 1991-1993 the song was performed only four times. A rare live version was featured on Japanese and vinyl copies of the Guns N' Roses live album Live Era: '87-'93. On April 8, 2016, the song was performed for the first time in almost twenty three years (last performed April 10, 1993) and has since became a setlist regular during the Not in This Lifetime... Tour.[6]

Lyrics

The song only states its name three times: "Hey you caught me in a coma", "Kinda like it in a coma", and "Live your life like its a coma". It has no chorus. [7]

Towards the end of the song, the phrase "'It's so easy' to be social/'It's so easy' to be cool/Yeah 'It's easy' to be hungry/ When you ain't got shit to lose" is considered to be reflection on Guns N' Roses between 1985 and 1989, mainly their drug use, from which the whole ending "rant" is written about. Whether or not it was actually written about a member's overdose has not been proven, although many fans hold steadfast that Slash wrote it about his. The repeated use of the phrase "it's so easy" is also a reference to the song of the same name.

Personnel

Guns N' Roses
Additional personnel

References

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