Guns N’ Roses was there, still climbing toward the massive fame that would define the next decade. The event was meant to be simple, perform, shake hands, leave. Nobody expected what happened in that green room. Ace Frehley sat on the couch, his Gibson Les Paul resting against his leg. He wasn’t performing that night. Hadn’t been asked to.
He’d shown up because someone had called, said it would mean something to be there. And Ace had a way of showing up when it mattered without making noise about it. He’d been sitting there for maybe 20 minutes, alone, quiet. His hands occasionally moving over the guitar strings without plugging in, without amplification, just the soft acoustic sound of fingers on metal.
He wasn’t practicing. He was just present. The door opened. Gene Simmons walked in first. Tall, commanding, that energy he carried everywhere like a suit of armor. Behind him, moving with the loose confidence of someone who’d already tasted success but hadn’t been crushed by it yet, was Slash. Gene saw Ace and stopped.
For just a fraction of a second, something passed across his face. Not quite surprise. Not quite discomfort. Something older and more complicated. Ace. Gene said, his voice carrying that familiar weight of authority. Gene. Ace replied, not standing, not moving. Just acknowledging. Slash looked between them, sensing history he didn’t fully understand.
He’d heard stories, of course. Everyone had. The original Kiss lineup. The breakup. The things said and unsaid. But stories aren’t the same as standing in a room watching two men navigate years of complexity in a single exchanged word. Gene moved to the far side of the room, near the door, leaning against the wall with his arms crossed.
Creating distance. Slash stepped further in, his eyes settling on the guitar in Ace’s hands. That’s a beautiful guitar. Slash said. Ace looked down at it. Does the job. There was silence. Not awkward silence. Just space. Slash was still young enough to feel like silence needed to be filled. He shifted his weight, pushed his hair back, looked at the guitar again.
I learned your solos. Slash said suddenly. The words came out fast, unplanned. When I was a kid. Before I even had a decent guitar. I learned every note of Shock Me on a piece of harmony that could barely stay in tune. Ace didn’t respond. Just looked at Slash with those eyes that never gave much away. Gene shifted against the wall.
Watching. Ace didn’t defend himself. He never did. Slash kept talking, the words coming easier now. My mom took me to see Kiss at the Forum. 1977. I was maybe 12. She didn’t want to go. Said it was too loud, too crazy. But I begged her. Saved up money from mowing lawns to buy the ticket. He paused, remembering. Ace waited.
You came out in that space suit. Silver. That guitar solo during Rocket Ride. You were on a platform that lifted you above the stage. I’d never seen anything like it. I didn’t even know you could do that with a guitar. Make it sound like it was screaming and singing at the same time. Ace’s fingers moved slightly on the guitar neck.
Still no sound. Just motion. When I got home that night, Slash continued, I told my mom I knew what I was going to do with my life. She asked, “What?” I said, “That. Whatever Ace Frehley does. That.” The overhead light buzzed. The room held its breath. Slash looked directly at Ace now. You’re the reason I play guitar.
Not one of the reasons. The reason. Gene Simmons pushed off from the wall. His face was unreadable. That careful blank expression he perfected over decades of interviews and negotiations and maintaining control. He walked toward the door, his hand reaching for the handle. “I need some air.
” Gene said to no one in particular. The door opened. Closed. He was gone. Slash stood there, suddenly aware he’d said something that shifted the entire atmosphere of the room. He looked at where Gene had been, then back at Ace. Ace hadn’t moved. Hadn’t reacted to Gene leaving. He sat on that torn leather couch, guitar still against his leg, expression unchanged.
“Did I?” Slash started, then stopped. “Should I not have?” You said what you said. Ace replied quietly. Not accusatory. Not dismissive. Just factual. Yeah, but Gene. Gene heard what he heard. Slash didn’t know what to do with that. With the silence that followed. With this man who just been told he was someone’s entire reason for existing in music and responded like it was weather.
Something that happened, either good nor bad, just true. Away from the spotlight, Ace made a choice no one expected. Ace stood up. Slowly. He picked up the Les Paul by the neck, held it loosely in one hand. He looked at Slash. Really looked at him. Not through him or past him, but directly at him. You got your guitar? Ace asked.
Slash nodded, gesturing to the case in the corner. Yeah, I was going to. Get it. It wasn’t a command. It wasn’t even really a request. It was just direction. Slash moved to his case, pulled out his Les Paul, the guitar that would become iconic, that would be photographed 10,000 times, that would define a generation of rock sound.
Right now, it was just a guitar in a green room between two players. Ace plugged his Les Paul into a small practice amp in the corner. The kind of amp that’s always in green rooms, dented and taped together and somehow still working. He turned it on. A soft hum filled the space. He didn’t say anything. Just started playing.
Not a song. Not a solo. Just notes. A blues progression in E. Simple. Clean. The kind of thing you play when you’re not showing off, when you’re just feeling where the music lives. His fingers moved with that relaxed precision that comes from 40,000 hours of doing something until it’s not technique anymore, just breathing.
Slash stood there, guitar in hand, unplugged, listening. After maybe 30 seconds, Ace stopped. Looked at Slash. Gestured with his head toward another amp on the other side of the room. Slash plugged in. His hands were shaking slightly, not from nerves exactly, but from the weight of the moment. This was Ace Frehley.
The reason he played. And they were about to play together in a backstage room that smelled like old beer and cigarette smoke. Ace started the progression again. Same key blues. Same relaxed tempo. Slash came in on the second round. His tone was different, more aggressive, more modern distortion. But he matched the feel.
They traded phrases. Nothing fancy. Nothing for show. Just two guitar players speaking the only language that mattered. Three minutes passed. Maybe four. Time moved differently when sound filled it. When they stopped, the silence felt different. Warmer. Like something had been said without words. “You play good.” Ace said.
