I didn't mean to raise any eyebrows, but I ended up doing so anyway by accident when after hearing this song on this album it instantly inspired a lyric (I write lyrics to existing music for my cartoons) which I wrote down and used. I simply credited it as "written 2 the tune of the secret song on the Guns N Roses album 'The Spaghetti Incident?'." Those who DID know about the original song's background jumped all over me and told me I was supposedly sick in the head for using it as the inspiration for a lyric. I simply told them, "Look, I don't care about the jerk who wrote it, I could care less. The only thing that matters to me is that when I heard it it was a great piece of music that gave me an idea for a lyric I liked, and that's that. There's absolutely nothing wrong with that, and certainly there was absolutely nothing wrong with what I wrote to the tune of it."
No, this was a dumb idea and just a desperate attempt to remain "bad boys." Ooohhh!! Covering a Manson song! So dark! Fucking stupid. Doesnt have 5% of the soul Patience or One in a Million or Used to Lover Her has. Just for press. Pure stupidity.
I found this song through a Project Zomboid mod, and... man. To me, I feel like within the context of the game itself, this song just hits so much harder. Like somebody long after the collapse of society decided to grab a cassette and record themselves singing one last song, one that might never be heard by anyone else. The lyrics themselves could also be interpreted as somebody singing about the apocalypse -- or something along those lines. I guess with that in mind, I could justify that as a reason for why this song makes me want to cry, though I'm sure there is so much more at play.
@@arintherodeoclown6316 I think it was the "Music for the End of the World" mod; although, for some reason I got some extra tracks -- including this one -- which are a part of a separate mod, an extension of the former, called "Music for the End: Home Labelled." I'd link them but I think RU-vid flags my reply if I include hyperlinks.