The first rebellion started in 1986.
New Jersey kids, punk and metal attitude, determined to conquer the world. All for one, banded together with single-minded
purpose. The battlefield was the stage, the songs their arsenal in an us-against-them musical coup d'état.
Top Ten singles. Gold and multi-platinum sales. No. 1 on the Billboard album chart. The world was theirs, the rebellion won,
until there was nothing left to fight for — so they fought each other. Following an ill-advised South American tour in 1996, the
band was finished. But the core camaraderie never died. Snake Sabo, Scotti Hill and Rachel Bolan vowed that SKID ROW wouldn't fade into
rock and roll obscurity. Skid Row returned to the big stage — literally — opening for Kiss in 2000. Exhilarated to tour with the heroes who rallied
them in the first place, the band was reinvigorated by being underdogs who needed to come out fighting to prove
themselves.
“When we put the band back together, we needed to reintroduce Skid Row as relevant without relying too much on past
success,” explains bassist Rachel Bolan. “We wrote songs and hit the road. We sunk our heart and soul into it, letting people
know we weren't doing it for lack of anything better to do.”
Their rebellion continues. United World Rebellion starts now.
Songs: “Youth Gone Wild”, “I Remember You”, “18 and Life” , “We Are The Damned”, “Monkey Business”, and “Let’s Go”