For decades, Axl Rose has delivered some of rock music’s most electrifying live performances. As the frontman of Guns N’ Roses, he has performed hundreds of songs across countless tours. Yet one track from the band’s catalog carries a particularly heavy emotional weight—so much so that it has rarely appeared in live setlists over the years.
That song is Yesterdays, a reflective rock ballad that appeared on the band’s ambitious double album Use Your Illusion II. On the surface, the track is about moving forward while acknowledging the past. Its lyrics speak about leaving old struggles behind while accepting that yesterday’s experiences shape who we become.
Behind the scenes, however, the song is closely connected to one of the band’s most important but lesser-known collaborators: West Arkeen. Arkeen was never officially listed as a member of the group, yet his influence on their music was undeniable. A talented songwriter and acoustic guitarist, he co-wrote several songs with the band during their formative years, including “Yesterdays” and “The Garden.”
More than just a collaborator, Arkeen was also a close friend to the band members during their earliest struggles in Los Angeles. In the days before fame and sold-out arenas, he reportedly provided them with a place to stay and a sense of stability when they were still fighting to break into the music industry. For many within the group, he was part of the extended family that helped shape the band’s identity.
Tragedy struck in 1997 when Arkeen died from a drug overdose at the age of 36. The loss sent shockwaves through the circle of musicians who had shared those early years with him. For Axl Rose and others connected to the band’s history, the news transformed the meaning of songs tied to Arkeen’s creative contributions.
“Yesterdays,” in particular, became emotionally difficult. What once felt like a nostalgic reflection on the past suddenly carried the weight of real grief. Lines about leaving yesterday behind no longer sounded like a philosophical statement; they felt like a painful reminder of a friend whose life had ended too soon.
Because of that connection, the band performed the song far less frequently during later tours. While Guns N’ Roses continued to fill stadiums with classics like “Sweet Child O’ Mine” and “Welcome to the Jungle,” “Yesterdays” often remained absent from the setlist for long stretches of time.
Fans who understood the backstory recognized that the absence was not about the song’s popularity. Instead, it reflected how deeply music can be tied to personal memories for the people who create it. For artists, certain songs are not simply pieces of entertainment—they are emotional records of specific relationships and moments in time.
West Arkeen’s contributions to the band remain part of the legacy that shaped Guns N’ Roses during their rise to global fame. Even though he never stood on stage as an official member, his songwriting helped define some of the band’s most reflective material.
For Axl Rose, performing “Yesterdays” means revisiting a chapter of his life filled with both triumph and loss. The song continues to exist as a reminder of friendship, creativity, and the fragile nature of the past—proof that sometimes the hardest lyrics to sing are the ones closest to the heart.