Rock Stories - Gun Favourite Pleasures track by track

Gun – Favourite Pleasures Track-by-Track with Dante Gizzi

Favourite Pleasures didn’t just confirm Gun’s comeback — it gave the reunion era its defining statement.

Heavy, hook-packed and full of conviction, it was the record that proved this version of the band could stand on its own merits.

We sat down with frontman Dante Gizzi so he could walk you through all ten songs and explain where they came from — the memories, the frustrations, the accidents, and the moments of inspiration that shaped one of Gun’s strongest records.

What follows is Favourite Pleasures track by track, in Dante’s own words.

Gun Favourite Pleasures album

She Knows

If Favourite Pleasures opens with such force, it’s because She Knows is rooted in something real.

Dante traces the song back to an evening in North Carolina, when a cancelled show, a broken PA, and a chance encounter in a bar took a sharp turn into something far uglier. What began as the kind of romantic road-story musicians collect by the dozen instead became a moment of disbelief — and later, a lyric.

The disappointment of the cancelled gig appeared all but forgotten.

However, notihng could’ve prepared Dante for what happened next.

It’s a jarring way to open the album, but also a revealing one: beneath the huge riff and the swagger, She Knows is really a song about ugliness hiding in plain sight.

Here’s Where I Am

Where the opening track lashes outward, Here’s Where I Am turns inward.

Dante describes it as one of the most personal songs on the album — less a dramatic statement than an attempt to work through emotions he’d struggled to express in real life. In that sense, the song feels less like performance and more like release.

That restraint is what gives Here’s Where I Am its weight. It lyrics land hard and heavy because they’re seeped in the mess of a real-world break-up.

Favourite Pleasures

It may be one of the most dynamic tracks on the record, but the title track proved a challenge from start to finish.

The band had completed the backing track within the first couple of days, but Dante struggled to write a vocal melody to match it — and the longer it went, the more paralising it became.

Finally, a breakthrough arrived.

Gun_Favourite_Pleasures

Take Me Down

If Favourite Pleasures was born from exhaustion, Take Me Down came from instinct.

Dante says the song began from scratch in the studio with Dave McCracken, the writer behind one of his and Giuliano’s favourite tracks, F.E.A.R. by Ian Brown. The appeal of that kind of session is obvious: no blueprint, no safety net, just following the song wherever it wants to go.

The session became even more productive when Dante picked up his phone.

That story gives Take Me Down a darker weight than most of the album’s rockers. Beneath the huge riff and the swagger, it’s really a song about consequences — and the lives that get wrecked in the heat of one irreversible moment.

Silent Lovers

Silent Lovers is noticeably different from the rest of the record.

Dante traces its origins back the death of David Bowie. When revisiting his catalogue, he was reminded of the legendary performer’s skill for shifting between genres while making sure the material still retained that famous Bowie stamp.

That kind of elasticity is rare — and it’s something that Gun have long aspired to do in their own way.

The sessions proved to be a stumbling block.

Black Heart

Black Heart sees Gun return to their trademark early-’90s rock format.

Dante describes it as one of those songs that bottles the spirit of Gun, and the story behind the recording only reinforces that. Rather than relying on studio shortcuts, the band wanted the drums to sound huge in a natural, physical way — which led to an icy warehouse and a freezing Paul McManus

However, unmanned warehouses get a lot colder than you might think.

You can hear all of this effort in the finished track — Black Heart doesn’t just sound big, it sounds live.

It’s the product of a band chasing after a real feeling as opposed to using computerised convenience, which is probably why it comes across as one of the most authentically Gun moments on the whole album.

Dante Gizzi interview

Without You In My Life

Dante explains that this song is an ode to his eldest daughter, Olivia.

The lyrics are rooted in a feeling many parents recognise too late; the shock of realising how quickly time has passed. What begins as a reflection of fatherhood builds into something far broader — a song about ageing, memories, and the heartache of watching somebody you love grow beyond the stage where they need you in quite the same way.

He recalls the moment he played the song to its most important listener.

Tragic Heroes

Favourite Pleasures’ eighth track arrived by way of instinct and accident.

Dante says it emerged during the aforementioned collaboration with Dave McCracken — but unlike the impromptu Take Me Down session, this track only came to life after they admitted they were stuck.

Time was short, ideas had seemingly dried up, and the only sensible move was to stop forcing things.

McCracken then worked through the night on an ambitious idea.

That song’s patchwork nature makes for one of Favourite Pleasures’ most interesting pieces of work. Gizzi’s towering U2-style guitar riff acts as the glue that holds all of McCracken’s moving pieces together, and it serves as a reminder that, sometimes, the best ideas take an unnatural route.

Go To Hell

The fuzzy Go To Hell has a long history.

The track dates all the way back to mid-1992, making it one of the oldest ideas the band have ever returned to. Dante explains they returned to this guitar riff on several albums, but could never figure out a way to make it work until now.

This time would be different, though.

Finding the audio settings of the original demo proved to be the turning point.

That long gestation gives Go To Hell an extra layer of satisfaction.

It began life way back when Gun were fronted by Mark Rankin and about to support Def Leppard on their 1992 Adrenalize tour. Finally, all these years later — after a world-beating record, a massive misstep, a break-up, a ten year hiatus, a change of frontman and a successful comeback — it makes its way into the real world.

GUN Favourite Pleasures

The Boy Who Fooled The World

The album closer reaches even further back in time, recounting Dante’s childhood memories.

He says the song was originally a bigger, more full-bodied track, inspired in part by the widescreen repetition of Rise by Public Image Ltd. But as the layers built up, the melody started to disappear beneath the weight of the arrangement — so the band stripped it back and found the heart of the song sitting quietly underneath.

Dante’s childhood routine makes up the core of the song.

Many of our readers will have enjoyed the exact same routine, and Gizzi revelled in the role of “new music aficionado” within his small social circle.

At around the halfway mark, the song morphs into something altogether more serious.

Dante alters the lyrics from “He’s the boy who fooled the world” to “I’m now the man who fooled the world”. This subtle change is a beautiful moment that shifts the whole narrative, making the song’s lasting impact one of conquering self-doubt, believing in your dreams, and achieving the most unlikely of goals.

That memory gives Favourite Pleasures a lovely sense of closure.

For an album full of riffs, scale, and swagger, it ends on something more intimate: the reminder that before all the touring and studio time, there was just a kid with a cassette recorder, with his fingers pressed keenly on play and record.

Gun Favourite Pleasures

The Final Word

This track-by-track discussion reveals Favourite Pleasures to be much more than just a strong comeback album.

Through Dante Gizzi’s reflections, you can hear how the record took shape from real-life experiences, odd accidents, private wounds, half-forgotten ideas, and the kind of instinctive studio moments that can’t be manufactured. Some of its tracks came from anger, some from grief, some from memory, and some simply from the thrill of seeing what would happen if the band trusted the moment.

That’s why Favourite Pleasures still feels so alive. Beneath the towering riffs and huge choruses, it’s a record full of human stories — and hearing Dante explain each one only deepens the sense that this was the album where Gun’s second act truly found its voice.

>> Favourite Pleasures: Track-by-Track arrives via Planet Rock. It is part of our extensive Gun series.

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One response to “Gun – Favourite Pleasures Track-by-Track with Dante Gizzi”

  1. […] skills are front and centre on tracks like the aforementioned She Knows, where Gizzi recalls a story from his younger years when he tried to seduce a beautiful American lady and recoiled in shock upon […]

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