Guitarist Jerry Cantrell wrote ROOSTER about his father's experiences in Vietnam and when Jerry saw his dad in the audience at one of their shows when AIC opened for Iggy Pop, and Jerry asked Layne (and the guys) to play ROOSTER and they did. It was the first time Jerry's dad heard Jerry's music and knew that his son understood him through that song. It brought Jerry and his dad closer together. And Layne had a vital part in that reunion. (Meanwhile Layne's own biological father was an opportunist). Jerry's dad was nicknamed Rooster when he was a kid and his hairstyle resembled that of a rooster comb. Although, maybe he used rooster as a call sign during his military career. But he didn't earn the nickname in the military, he had the nickname back when he was a kid. Jerry Cantrell, Sr had multiple tours in Vietnam and like most Vietnam vets, he didn't talk about it. The most he ever said about it was at the beginning of the official video for ROOSTER which he agreed to be a part of after hearing the song. Like all kids who hate their parents, Jerry Cantrell was no different. He was staying in a small guest room in Chris Cornell's house (Cornell was married to AIC manager Susan Silver) and the guest room had a tiny window. He was staying there and thought about what his dad may have experienced and wrote the lyrics. They demoed ROOSTER and WOULD? when they spent two days working on the acoustic songs for the SAP EP. The songs on SAP and those two songs were demoed using the money Cameron Crowe gave them for recording WOULD? for the SINGLES movie. Layne sang the hell out of WOULD? and ROOSTER. The harmony in the beginning and end on the album is Ann Wilson of Heart, but Layne does the harmonies on the official video and live versions perfectly. The Unplugged show in 1996 is so heartbreaking to watch because he was deep in his heroin addiction (and yes, I know he was doing other drugs on top of Heroin). His liver was damaged from the years of drug use. He was just high enough to do the show so he didn't get dope sick and chase away withdrawal symptoms. He was such a ghost of himself during Unplugged. (Of course, Jerry had food poisoning) All Jerry saw when he looked over at Layne was his best friend was going to die soon due to the path Layne had taken with his life. That show was filmed in April, 1996, premiered in May 1996. They did four shows with KISS in June-July 1996, after which Layne survived an overdose and became a recluse. After that, it was a six-year-long slow suicide. With Unplugged... Sean Kinney (drummer) and Mike Inez (bass player) argued with Jerry about whether Layne could even pull off the high notes in some of the songs in his condition, which is why Jerry gave them that “I told you so” smirk after Layne hit that long, high note in DOWN IN A HOLE. He did the same thing again when Layne hit a high note in ROOSTER. Layne was one of the few singers who was always better live than studio version. The fact that Sean and Mike didn’t have any confidence that Layne could do the show and Jerry being the only one that knew deep in his heart that Layne could do it because Layne had done so many things against the odds over the years no matter how high he was at the time. When Jerry needed him to be there where it counted, Layne always pulled through. Knowing how he sang ROOSTER in Tilburg, The Netherlands, in 1993 when his “yeahs” and screams were so loud and high I’m surprised the rafters didn’t come crashing down around him and then watch him sing the same song so low-key on Unplugged knowing he could do to the song what he did in Tilburg is heartbreaking. Knowing he initially sang the hell out of WOULD? on the official video and album and seeing the end of WOULD? on Unplugged . . . and knowing how deep into his addiction he had gotten by that point is heartbreaking. The entire show was a success because Layne DID have a powerful performance despite his condition. He proved to his cynical bandmates that he could still sing the high notes and he pulled it all off beautifully while the same four guys (Metallica) who had mocked him for his addiction sidelining Alice In Chains from ever doing extended tours back in 1994 sat in the front row. The mistakes he made screwing up SLUDGE FACTORY (and I think he screwed up GOT ME WRONG once or twice, but Toby Wright didn’t keep that in editing) were endearing, at least to me. They didn’t take away from the performance, it added something to the performance that, had it been removed after everyone had seen it, wouldn’t have made the show what it was. That line "they spit on me in my homeland." TV News anchor Walter Kronkite basically told the American public that we lost the war and between that and the college kids (who went to college to escape being drafted into the military) would protest the soldiers coming home. They would do protest rallies at the airports and protest the returning soldiers by spitting at them, throwing urine and other stuff on them. An uncle of mine drove a supply truck in Vietnam (to this day he won't talk about his experience). A family friend of ours said that he and his buddies came home, saw the protesters at the airport, and re-enlisted because it was safer in Vietnam than in the US with the protesters. At least in Vietnam, they knew who the enemy was. I'm NOT saying Vietnam was anything the US should have ever been in. I'm just relating stories of people I know who served there. Layne's story is more tragic and haunting because you can actually watch and hear him deteriorate over the 12-year span: from the mild use of drugs in 1990 all the way through 1996 when he was deep into a heroin addiction to dropping to 90 pounds by 1998 to 86 pounds when he died in 2002. Layne kept his humor and wit even to the end of his life. Layne was so much more than his drug addiction. He stacked his own vocals with melodies and harmonies underneath. He was able to come up with lyrics and harmonies off the top of his head. He knew that Jerry Cantrell was playing with the wrong people and gave him contact info for Sean Kinney and found out Sean Kinney was dating original bass player Mike Starr's sister. He wrote the lyrics for the original songs he sang on Mad Season's Above album and drew the cover art for that album. Layne was a genius in his own right. He was able to figure things out in a snap off the top of his head. Layne just had his demons. At the age of 34, he looked more like an 80 year old man. He knew he screwed up, between the drugs and his own depression and then his former fiancee dying, Layne just couldn't find a way to dig himself out of his own mess and at the end with his teeth problems and organs failing on him, he gave up trying. He lost sight of who his true friends were and who was using him. He was never going to give up the drugs. Instead, he tried to attain the same high he felt the first time he did drugs and could never achieve it. Layne encouraged Jerry to sing more, after all, they were Jerry's lyrics he should sing them. Vice-versa, Jerry encouraged Layne to play the guitar which is how you get Layne playing guitar on HATE TO FEEL and ANGRY CHAIR as well as I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING on the Mad Season above album. Jerry encouraged him on the guitar and was proud that Layne grew as a guitarist. Though, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine taught Layne more chords than ANGRY CHAIR and HATE TO FEEL. The friendship between Jerry and Layne was unbreakable. Jerry NEVER once thought of replacing Layne as the singer while Layne was still alive. He always wanted Layne to sing whenever he had AIC do something. If there were ever cosmic soulmates ... Layne and Jerry would be it. (And by that I mean, they were Sympatico with each other. The way they sang together was a perfect pitch where two voices make one. What you hear and see between Jerry and Layne was a genuine friendship. They looked after each other. When one had problems with a song, the other picked up the slack. They were a team. Jerry was doing a solo concert in Charlotte, NC when he heard that Layne was found two weeks after he died and Jerry was trying to get through the concert and crying. He did shows between the time he found out about Layne until Layne's funeral because if he had taken a break then, he didn't think he'd want to continue anything later after the mourning period. Layne had done so much for Jerry, giving him a place to live, money, clothes, food, guitars and gear, a band. But getting a front-row seat to watch what had happened to Layne over the years, Jerry had to watch his best friend deteriorate in a span of 12 years (1990-2002), and Jerry couldn't do anything about it. Jerry had talked himself blue in the face but Layne didn't want help. Alice In Chains was a band, but they were also a family. They had internal issues just like any family. When Layne died, it was like losing a loved one, a family member, you don't think of the fights you had with the person who died. You defend their memory. There is a reason Jerry wrote NO EXCUSES about Layne and the line "You, my friend, I will defend / And if we change, well, I'll love you anyway." "My grandmother and mother were such huge losses, but I got Layne, the guys, and I got this.” - Jerry Cantrell, Kerrang! (December 1, 2018) “Jerry really loved Layne [Staley]. They had a bond I haven't seen before,” Jerry’s former manager Bill Siddons, April 19, 2002 (the day Layne was found two weeks after he died).
This is a very good write-up! Thank you, I was at that solo concert in Charlotte, NC. I remember going through so many emotions during his set of all Alice songs. Just sitting back away from the stage looking up at the sky in my own world bouncing back and forth from sadness to happiness. I had seen Jerry perfom solo multiple times but never got a chance to see him and Layne sing live. I had tickets back for the 94 tour with Metallica and was so excited to finally see them but unfortunately it never came to pass.
Bro this was the most rewarding thing I have read in years. I even went back and watched every reference you referred to. You gotta make documentaries or something dude. Seriously. Thank you so much for this explanation. I was a kid during AIC heyday and never got into their stuff till now. Your explanation for the Jerry Cantrell glance made my night bro. That's one of my favorite parts from that performance. Cool to know the story behind it.
I read all of that. Crazy Story around this band. I feel really bad about the shit this war has caused. I‘d summarize all of this in my own way. Hendrix said „When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace“ ✌🏻
Mosquito death is talking about malaria. They gave chloroquine to soldiers to prevent it during the Vietnam war assuming that everyone would be exposed eventually.
He was still fairly healthy here. Demri was still alive but he was sinking fast. I think that "The Wall" cover he did with Class of 99 is more of what he sounded like at the end.
@@thefaceoffuzz Layne literally wasn’t healthy at all during his Unplugged performance. Layne was so messed up from all the drugs he did, during this performance he was technically still on drugs because if I recall, from someone from previous comments on different videos. He used a lil bit of heroin just to be energized enough to do the performance. Layne also died of an overdose so “healthy” is not the word to use here.
Great reaction. 'Rooster' is the nickname of Jerry's father, who was a Vietnam veteran. This song is incredibly powerful in electronic format, but to me it works just as well here. Thanks!
Layne is an unfortunate case in that, if he hadn't died in 2002, he'd still be dead today. Some people get too far gone to save. By '96, Layne had already been in & out of rehab more than a dozen times. By '93, he was too sick to tour. My biggest wish was that he need not have suffered as long as he did.
The crazy part about this is that at this point in his life Laynes voice was probably at it's weakest. This was unfortunately very deep into his herion addiction. Live at the Moore is prime Layne.
@@920WASHBURNi completely disagree, I think he sounds amazing in these. Even compared to the studio versions. I legitimately think he sounds better here.
This is such a good song, I love that Jerry wrote it so well, for his dad. It really captures the whole Viet Nam experience for those veterans. Bless them all. Alice In Chains are Grunge, a genre of metal.
Layne with a ton of missing teeth,drug sick,high off heroin,and a shell of what he used to be still showed up and showed off. Blows away today's singers by miles.
Alice in Chains has a video of a live performance of their song "Love Hate Love" that is fantastic. I think it would show you way more of the emotion and grunge style of their sound.
It's unique because Layne likes to bend his vowels, sometimes intentionally dragging and growling them out. So it's not just "The bullet screams to me from somewhere", but "The bullet screeeAAAAms". or "They've come to snuff the roost-urrrr" instead of rooster. You combine that with his particular voice, perfect breath control, and god given talent, you get something that you simply can't imitate.
All the songs I’m going to list are from the MTV Unplugged show: Sludge Factory Angry Chair Got Me Wrong (beautiful tune!) Brother Over Now (another beauty!) No Excuses The whole thing really is great
My favorite band of all time! Layne’s vocals were so unique, distinct and haunting! Rooster was a nickname given to Jerry’s (long-haired singer and writer of this song) father while he was a tunnel rat in the Vietnam War. If you really want to experience Layne’s amazing vocals and range whilst he was in his prime, check out Love Hate Love live at The Moore. Also, Bleed the Freak from that same show is awesome as well!
Describing Staley's voice as the sound of tumbleweeds is so beautifully spot-on. It's like a force of raw nature that just developed from a hard land and goes whever it goes, bringing a kind of harsh beauty behind it.
This is just an incredible performance of such a great song. Its laid back and so soulful and almost becomes country at points.... The song is about his dad, who was called 'Rooster' in the Vietnam war (they spit on me in my homeland). Soundgarden, Black Hole Sun is another one I think would really resonate.
This brings back soooo many memories from when I was in my early 20’s. I was in a band and we got quite a bit of radio play in Northwest Indiana. We did covers of Alice In Chains and whenever we did that I was the vocalist for those songs. Just hits hard. I miss Layne and Bradley( Sublime ). I always sang when we did their songs.
I totally appreciate it when someone gets how unique Layne’s voice was. People may like it or dislike it, but it was anything but generic. An intensely personal song for Jerry, written about his army veteran father’s wartime experiences. Jerry said the lyrics were him projecting onto what his father went through, because his dad would never speak about it.
You really need to check out "Love Hate Love" (Live at The Moore). It was when he was much physically healthier, and the extra power is stunning. If you love his sound here this is where you want to go next!
I saw Layne in a three piece suit at the start of their set on Lollapolooza in 93 and it was like 95 degrees that day! Needless to say he took the jacket tie vest and shirt off after playing Would the first song to start the show! Very charismatic singer and great stage presence! His voice very unique and an unbelievable range! RIP Layne!
Jerry Cantrell (guitar & vocals) wrote 'Rooster' about his dad, Jerry Cantrell Sr. who was nicknamed 'Rooster' in the US Army and was a Vietnam war veteran... He returned home w/ PTSD and his family split up as a result; Cantrell's mom died and he settled in Seattle to become a musician... Jerry Cantrell said that his dad never talked about the war, so he based the lyrics on the experiences of combat vets in Vietnam... his dad told him after hearing the song that it was "too close" to his experiences. The music video for 'Rooster' was shot by Mark Pellington, who did an amazing job w/ Pearl Jam's 'Jeremy' music video... They interviewed Jerry Sr. for the video and filmed sequences of him hunting at home ... alternating w/ scenes of a soldier fighting in the war.
Alice In Chains, with its brooding melody and introspective lyrics, captured the discontent and quest for authenticity of the grunge generation. Layne Staley's distinctive voice, combined with Jerry Cantrell's dense guitars, created a unique atmosphere that deeply resonated with the youth. Their themes of alienation, addiction, and introspection gave voice to the often unspoken feelings of the generation, becoming a hallmark of '90s rock.
Over the course of my life I have found that I listen to different collections of music to fit my life at the time. As my life has changed so too have my tastes. AIC is the one exception. Their album Dirt released while I was in college and was my go to at the time. I still listen to it regularly today along with Jar of Flies. One of my favorites from the Unplugged performance is Frogs. If you want to hear Layne in his prime you can check out their Live at the Moore set or their Off Ramp Cafe, Seattle, WA, Aug 21. 1990 concert here on youtube.
Listen to a side project that Layne did with one of the guitar players for Pearl Jam and the bass player and drummer for The Screaming Trees called Mad Season album ABOVE and the song called: THE RIVER OF DECEIT. Layne sings about Heroin the drug that took him from us.
When I was growing up in the 90s Alice In Chains was my least favorite "grudge/alternative" band. I lived for the harder/faster. Now as I've gotten older, worn down by life just a bit more, things seem to hurt for no reason as I start to lose focus on the plot; Alice In Chains has become so much more soul crushingly relevant to this living experience.
It was written by Alice in Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell for his father Jerry Cantrell Sr., who went by the nickname “Rooster” while serving with the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. Jerry Cantrell has stated that his father had the family nickname “Rooster” since childhood due to the way his hair stood up on end as a youth. Some have stated that the song name refers to the 101st airborne and its patch which is the “screaming eagle” and that the Vietnamese, not familiar with a bald eagle, called all members of the 101st ‘roosters’ or ‘chickens’, but Cantrell has never confirmed this.
That guitar says “Friends don’t let friends get friends haircuts.” That was a jab at Metallica. Layne had recently cut his hair short. After which, the band Metallica did the same. So, before the show started, the band heard Metallica would be sitting in the front row. To which Layne said “Somebody give me a Sharpie!“
Layne is struggling with his addiction in this performance, you can tell. 😢 He's also so skinny Especially when Jerry takes over the vocal parts 😢 and Layne "nods off", during the performance....😢
As far as I know, the story goes Jerry Cantrell (the lead guitarist) and his father weren’t very close when he was growing up. They had sort of a strained relationship. Jerry wrote this song about his father’s experiences during the Vietnam war. (His dads nickname was rooster and he was a machine gunner) Jerry’s parents came to an AIC Show and they played this song and Jerry’s dad got emotional. He realized that his son understood him more than he thought and this song was key in bringing them closer together. If I’m incorrect please correct me but I’m almost positive this is the story with this song.
This show is one of the best acoustic sets I’ve ever seen. But you should check out some of their live ‘plugged in’ performances also. I recommend ‘Man in the Box,’ live at the Moore 1990. You will see a different but equally brilliant type of performance from this band, as well as a fuller range of Layne’s vocals before his demons got really advanced
you should listed to some of their songs from earlier concers, such as Live at the Moore , and the video of Would? You get a much different view of Alice in Chains, same for Pearl Jam, Video of Even Flow is phenomenal.
If you like the unique voices of that era, one that definitely flies under the radar is Shannon Hoon from the band Blind Melon! Another one who passed very early and are mostly only known for the song No Rain but you definitely should check out songs like "mouthful of cavities", "change" and "soul one"!
You really need to dive into the ‘Live from the Moore’ concert album… ‘Love Hate Love’… ‘Bleed the Freak’…. are just a couple of the gems you’ll find on there… all at the peak of their development, Layne’s power on it is incredible and impossible to recreate… if you can’t react to them, definitely check it out for yourself, you’ll be floored..:)
Greetings mame. I grew up listening to these guys and this was probably my favorite song by them if not ever. This particular song was written from his father's point of view as a grunt fighting in Vietnam and he was called Rooster by his platoon
If have to read one more comment about Layne “singing at his own funeral” and how out of it he was here I’m gonna scream. If anyone saw the outtakes of him speaking before the first song and between ones, he was completely coherent and functional. Dude didn’t even pass away until 6 years after this. Stop already!
Helooo! I really appreciate your live reaction and insights! AIC songs with Layne leading the line that I would deffo recommend are, "Them Bones", "Love Hate Love", "Would", "Man in the Box" AIC really do put it all there in terms of emotions, more so in their 2009 album "Black Gives Way to Blue". Jerry, Sean, Mike Inez, and leadman William show their love for Layne with a meaningful homage. I would deffo recommend the track "Black Gives Way to Blue". The song epitomises the theme of solace through closure that AIC finds after Layne's passing.
Basically, Jerry Cantrell (guitarist) was the powerhouse behind this band. He did I believe the majority of the writing (as others have said here, he wrote this song based on his father's experience in the Vietnam War) and Layne brought it all to life with his unique vocals. Layne did some writing as well of course, and the combo of Layne and Jerry together is probably the most powerful combo in all of rock. With Jerry's writing skills as well as his riffs, and Layne's voice, they were unmatched.
Again (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley Am I Inside Angry Chair B Bite the Bullet (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley Brush Away C Chemical Addiction (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley Confusion (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley D Died (song) Dirt (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley F Fairytale Love Story Fear the Voices Frogs (song) G Get Born Again God Am God Smack (song)lyrics by Layne Staley H Hate to Feel Head Creeps I I Can't Remember (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley I Don't Know Anything I Stay Away J Junkhead (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley K Killing Yourself (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley L A Little Bitter Long Gone Day Love, Hate, Love Lying Season M Man in the Box N Nothin' Song Nutshell (song) Q Queen of the Rodeo R Rain When I Die Real Thing (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley River of Deceit Rotten Apple (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley S Shame in You Sickman (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley Sludge Factory So Close (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley Swing on This (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley W Whatcha Gonna Do (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley This is just a SMALL LIST THERE ARE OVER 50 MORE JUST IN AIC ALONE 👍🏻 EVERY SINGLE SONG ABOVE 👆 Listed ABOVE in Alphabetical order LAYNE STALEY WROTE. Even the ones WITHOUT the line credit …LYRICS BY LAYNE STALEY …. EVERY SINGLE SONG ✅✌🏻
Laynes performance was hauntingly beautiful..some say he was singing at his own funeral. Depression and addiction is a hellva thing especially when there's a combination of the two. Knowing he lived in isolation after the death of demri(his fiancee at the time)which was shortly after the unplugged concert, you can understand the helplessness and isolation he endured. He was one one of a kind and a true legend and powerful vocalist. As a 25 year old guy this music touches my soul in a lot of ways. Its makes me feel like im not alone in some ways with struggles specific to depression. I wish he was still here. Anyways I'd like to recommend Sea of Sorrow and Get Born Again. Especially considering Get Born Again was one of his last songs before he died. Loved the Reaction btw 👍
If i remember correctly Jerry’s mom made his dad go to a concert to listen to them play this and after that his dad finally accepted his son’s profession and music because of how hard the song hit him.
You need to watch this band in their earlier performances to really feel how powerful and unique lane’s voice really is! This is toward the end when he is a shadow of what he once was. The world lost a great singer when he passed, I absolutely love this band with Lane as the frontman. LOVE HATE LOVE live at the Moore, is a must watch. even if you don't stream it, you owe it to yourself to watch it.
This was a barely present Lane Staley at 20% high as a kite, and the fact he was still able to sing this well while being so high is a marvel in of itself. If you want to have your mind blown check out 'Love Hate Love' live at The Moore when he was in much better shape....absolutely incredible singing there where he does a couple things that shouldn't be possible! One of the greatest rock singers of all time, arguably the greatest. RIP Layne 💔
Layne was already dying during this concert. He even looks back at Jerry for recognition he's doing a good job I believe during the song Would and Jerry just smiles back at him. Its heartbreaking.
Layne was absolutely baked off his mind for this performance. Right as it was starting he had to "Take a break" for about 30 minutes in a bathroom then came out and started performing. He couldn't even function during most of it. In every song he missed lines, forgot lines, sang the wrong lines, or just was off key/off tempo which required them to have to stop playing the song and see if they could get him singing again. The MTV editors basically chopped and cut and pasted many takes of every song together to create the feature for the network.
This song is about the guitar player Jerry Cantrell's father who was a machine gunner in Viet Nam. His call sign was Rooster and he survived but some of his buddies didn't. Jerry wrote this song about/for his father.
If I recall, guitarist Jerry Cantrell wrote this song about his father's experience serving in the Vietnam War. One of my favourite songs of all time.
You are absolutely right
To elaborate a bit further... Jerry's dad was a "tunnel rat" and they nicknamed him the "Rooster."
I do beleive his father was a " machine gun man" a m60 A gunner
Yeah he's in the actual clip for this. They look very alike
Machine gunners were called roosters by the enemy. Due to the sound
Love Hate Love live at the Moore shows Laynes raw power for vocals don’t think that one will disappoint
+1 for this. It'll get ya.
Yeah, this is a must for sure! @Rayactions
listen to love hate love live in Glasgow Scotland. it's awesome and different yet same
The best he ever was without a doubt!!
Guitarist Jerry Cantrell wrote ROOSTER about his father's experiences in Vietnam and when Jerry saw his dad in the audience at one of their shows when AIC opened for Iggy Pop, and Jerry asked Layne (and the guys) to play ROOSTER and they did. It was the first time Jerry's dad heard Jerry's music and knew that his son understood him through that song. It brought Jerry and his dad closer together. And Layne had a vital part in that reunion. (Meanwhile Layne's own biological father was an opportunist).
Jerry's dad was nicknamed Rooster when he was a kid and his hairstyle resembled that of a rooster comb. Although, maybe he used rooster as a call sign during his military career. But he didn't earn the nickname in the military, he had the nickname back when he was a kid.
Jerry Cantrell, Sr had multiple tours in Vietnam and like most Vietnam vets, he didn't talk about it. The most he ever said about it was at the beginning of the official video for ROOSTER which he agreed to be a part of after hearing the song. Like all kids who hate their parents, Jerry Cantrell was no different. He was staying in a small guest room in Chris Cornell's house (Cornell was married to AIC manager Susan Silver) and the guest room had a tiny window. He was staying there and thought about what his dad may have experienced and wrote the lyrics.
They demoed ROOSTER and WOULD? when they spent two days working on the acoustic songs for the SAP EP. The songs on SAP and those two songs were demoed using the money Cameron Crowe gave them for recording WOULD? for the SINGLES movie. Layne sang the hell out of WOULD? and ROOSTER.
The harmony in the beginning and end on the album is Ann Wilson of Heart, but Layne does the harmonies on the official video and live versions perfectly.
The Unplugged show in 1996 is so heartbreaking to watch because he was deep in his heroin addiction (and yes, I know he was doing other drugs on top of Heroin). His liver was damaged from the years of drug use. He was just high enough to do the show so he didn't get dope sick and chase away withdrawal symptoms. He was such a ghost of himself during Unplugged. (Of course, Jerry had food poisoning) All Jerry saw when he looked over at Layne was his best friend was going to die soon due to the path Layne had taken with his life. That show was filmed in April, 1996, premiered in May 1996. They did four shows with KISS in June-July 1996, after which Layne survived an overdose and became a recluse. After that, it was a six-year-long slow suicide.
With Unplugged... Sean Kinney (drummer) and Mike Inez (bass player) argued with Jerry about whether Layne could even pull off the high notes in some of the songs in his condition, which is why Jerry gave them that “I told you so” smirk after Layne hit that long, high note in DOWN IN A HOLE. He did the same thing again when Layne hit a high note in ROOSTER.
Layne was one of the few singers who was always better live than studio version. The fact that Sean and Mike didn’t have any confidence that Layne could do the show and Jerry being the only one that knew deep in his heart that Layne could do it because Layne had done so many things against the odds over the years no matter how high he was at the time. When Jerry needed him to be there where it counted, Layne always pulled through.
Knowing how he sang ROOSTER in Tilburg, The Netherlands, in 1993 when his “yeahs” and screams were so loud and high I’m surprised the rafters didn’t come crashing down around him and then watch him sing the same song so low-key on Unplugged knowing he could do to the song what he did in Tilburg is heartbreaking. Knowing he initially sang the hell out of WOULD? on the official video and album and seeing the end of WOULD? on Unplugged . . . and knowing how deep into his addiction he had gotten by that point is heartbreaking.
The entire show was a success because Layne DID have a powerful performance despite his condition. He proved to his cynical bandmates that he could still sing the high notes and he pulled it all off beautifully while the same four guys (Metallica) who had mocked him for his addiction sidelining Alice In Chains from ever doing extended tours back in 1994 sat in the front row. The mistakes he made screwing up SLUDGE FACTORY (and I think he screwed up GOT ME WRONG once or twice, but Toby Wright didn’t keep that in editing) were endearing, at least to me. They didn’t take away from the performance, it added something to the performance that, had it been removed after everyone had seen it, wouldn’t have made the show what it was.
That line "they spit on me in my homeland." TV News anchor Walter Kronkite basically told the American public that we lost the war and between that and the college kids (who went to college to escape being drafted into the military) would protest the soldiers coming home. They would do protest rallies at the airports and protest the returning soldiers by spitting at them, throwing urine and other stuff on them. An uncle of mine drove a supply truck in Vietnam (to this day he won't talk about his experience). A family friend of ours said that he and his buddies came home, saw the protesters at the airport, and re-enlisted because it was safer in Vietnam than in the US with the protesters. At least in Vietnam, they knew who the enemy was. I'm NOT saying Vietnam was anything the US should have ever been in. I'm just relating stories of people I know who served there.
Layne's story is more tragic and haunting because you can actually watch and hear him deteriorate over the 12-year span: from the mild use of drugs in 1990 all the way through 1996 when he was deep into a heroin addiction to dropping to 90 pounds by 1998 to 86 pounds when he died in 2002. Layne kept his humor and wit even to the end of his life.
Layne was so much more than his drug addiction. He stacked his own vocals with melodies and harmonies underneath. He was able to come up with lyrics and harmonies off the top of his head. He knew that Jerry Cantrell was playing with the wrong people and gave him contact info for Sean Kinney and found out Sean Kinney was dating original bass player Mike Starr's sister. He wrote the lyrics for the original songs he sang on Mad Season's Above album and drew the cover art for that album. Layne was a genius in his own right. He was able to figure things out in a snap off the top of his head. Layne just had his demons. At the age of 34, he looked more like an 80 year old man. He knew he screwed up, between the drugs and his own depression and then his former fiancee dying, Layne just couldn't find a way to dig himself out of his own mess and at the end with his teeth problems and organs failing on him, he gave up trying. He lost sight of who his true friends were and who was using him. He was never going to give up the drugs. Instead, he tried to attain the same high he felt the first time he did drugs and could never achieve it.
Layne encouraged Jerry to sing more, after all, they were Jerry's lyrics he should sing them. Vice-versa, Jerry encouraged Layne to play the guitar which is how you get Layne playing guitar on HATE TO FEEL and ANGRY CHAIR as well as I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING on the Mad Season above album. Jerry encouraged him on the guitar and was proud that Layne grew as a guitarist. Though, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine taught Layne more chords than ANGRY CHAIR and HATE TO FEEL.
The friendship between Jerry and Layne was unbreakable. Jerry NEVER once thought of replacing Layne as the singer while Layne was still alive. He always wanted Layne to sing whenever he had AIC do something. If there were ever cosmic soulmates ... Layne and Jerry would be it. (And by that I mean, they were Sympatico with each other. The way they sang together was a perfect pitch where two voices make one. What you hear and see between Jerry and Layne was a genuine friendship. They looked after each other. When one had problems with a song, the other picked up the slack. They were a team.
Jerry was doing a solo concert in Charlotte, NC when he heard that Layne was found two weeks after he died and Jerry was trying to get through the concert and crying. He did shows between the time he found out about Layne until Layne's funeral because if he had taken a break then, he didn't think he'd want to continue anything later after the mourning period.
Layne had done so much for Jerry, giving him a place to live, money, clothes, food, guitars and gear, a band. But getting a front-row seat to watch what had happened to Layne over the years, Jerry had to watch his best friend deteriorate in a span of 12 years (1990-2002), and Jerry couldn't do anything about it. Jerry had talked himself blue in the face but Layne didn't want help. Alice In Chains was a band, but they were also a family. They had internal issues just like any family. When Layne died, it was like losing a loved one, a family member, you don't think of the fights you had with the person who died. You defend their memory. There is a reason Jerry wrote NO EXCUSES about Layne and the line "You, my friend, I will defend / And if we change, well, I'll love you anyway."
"My grandmother and mother were such huge losses, but I got Layne, the guys, and I got this.” - Jerry Cantrell, Kerrang! (December 1, 2018)
“Jerry really loved Layne [Staley]. They had a bond I haven't seen before,” Jerry’s former manager Bill Siddons, April 19, 2002 (the day Layne was found two weeks after he died).
This is a very good write-up! Thank you, I was at that solo concert in Charlotte, NC. I remember going through so many emotions during his set of all Alice songs. Just sitting back away from the stage looking up at the sky in my own world bouncing back and forth from sadness to happiness. I had seen Jerry perfom solo multiple times but never got a chance to see him and Layne sing live. I had tickets back for the 94 tour with Metallica and was so excited to finally see them but unfortunately it never came to pass.
i am NOT reading allat
Bro this was the most rewarding thing I have read in years. I even went back and watched every reference you referred to. You gotta make documentaries or something dude. Seriously. Thank you so much for this explanation. I was a kid during AIC heyday and never got into their stuff till now.
Your explanation for the Jerry Cantrell glance made my night bro. That's one of my favorite parts from that performance. Cool to know the story behind it.
I read all of that. Crazy Story around this band. I feel really bad about the shit this war has caused. I‘d summarize all of this in my own way. Hendrix said „When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace“ ✌🏻
@russelsprout2155worth the read
Mosquito death is talking about malaria. They gave chloroquine to soldiers to prevent it during the Vietnam war assuming that everyone would be exposed eventually.
The grunge era had some incredible vocalists
Too bad four of the Big Five are already gone. 😢
RIP Kurt Cobain
Chris Cornell
Layne Staley
Scott Weiland
And Layne was the very best of em
@@fonkyjunkiechris cornell was the best for me
@@Dapipocapopai_Cornell had the best voice especially in his later years but Laynes is is what I like best.
It's too bad music and rock has never really ever been as good since. Music today is like ehh...
Even on his death bed Layne's voice was magical , This whole Mtv live album is fire
He was still fairly healthy here. Demri was still alive but he was sinking fast. I think that "The Wall" cover he did with Class of 99 is more of what he sounded like at the end.
@@thefaceoffuzz Layne literally wasn’t healthy at all during his Unplugged performance. Layne was so messed up from all the drugs he did, during this performance he was technically still on drugs because if I recall, from someone from previous comments on different videos. He used a lil bit of heroin just to be energized enough to do the performance.
Layne also died of an overdose so “healthy” is not the word to use here.
@@BxCat524I know he wasnt healthy. But he wasnt "on his death bed" considering he lived for several years after this performance.
i know. i never said he was "on his death bed" lol @@thefaceoffuzz
@@BxCat524 look at the original comment I was replying to
Around 2:40 that smile on Jerry's face. It's like he knew they were capturing lighting in a bottle one last time.
The beautiful thing about Layne's voice is that it's so visceral and cutting. A raw and emotional tractor beam. He was truly a gift to the world.
Great reaction. 'Rooster' is the nickname of Jerry's father, who was a Vietnam veteran. This song is incredibly powerful in electronic format, but to me it works just as well here. Thanks!
If ever there was one voice to bring back to life, it would be his, Layne Staley
Deal.
But if there’s two, we’re getting back Elvis!
😛
tough call between him and Chris Cornell
Layne is an unfortunate case in that, if he hadn't died in 2002, he'd still be dead today. Some people get too far gone to save. By '96, Layne had already been in & out of rehab more than a dozen times. By '93, he was too sick to tour. My biggest wish was that he need not have suffered as long as he did.
@@Cereal_Killa_za and Chester Bennington
The crazy part about this is that at this point in his life Laynes voice was probably at it's weakest. This was unfortunately very deep into his herion addiction. Live at the Moore is prime Layne.
People always say how good he sounds and I'm thinking "what? He sounds terrible". But I know why they do it so I don't say anything
yeah, he had to wear gloves because his veins were taped up or something like that. so sad.
@@ZombieJesus1987 plus by this time him and Jerry really didn't like each other. That relationship was through.
And yet, every time I revisit this performance I'm struck by how much he accomplished in his diminished state.
@@920WASHBURNi completely disagree, I think he sounds amazing in these. Even compared to the studio versions. I legitimately think he sounds better here.
This is such a good song, I love that Jerry wrote it so well, for his dad. It really captures the whole Viet Nam experience for those veterans. Bless them all.
Alice In Chains are Grunge, a genre of metal.
Layne with a ton of missing teeth,drug sick,high off heroin,and a shell of what he used to be still showed up and showed off. Blows away today's singers by miles.
Alice in Chains has a video of a live performance of their song "Love Hate Love" that is fantastic. I think it would show you way more of the emotion and grunge style of their sound.
This.
Live at the Moore
I was born in 1982 and this was the first band thar captivated me along with NIRVANA. I appreciate this review greatly
As beautiful as these unplugged versions are, you really can't beat the energy and dynamic range of the studio versions.
It's unique because Layne likes to bend his vowels, sometimes intentionally dragging and growling them out. So it's not just "The bullet screams to me from somewhere", but "The bullet screeeAAAAms". or "They've come to snuff the roost-urrrr" instead of rooster. You combine that with his particular voice, perfect breath control, and god given talent, you get something that you simply can't imitate.
I love this live version, but you must hear the original studio version. ^^
All the songs I’m going to list are from the MTV Unplugged show:
Sludge Factory
Angry Chair
Got Me Wrong (beautiful tune!)
Brother
Over Now (another beauty!)
No Excuses
The whole thing really is great
My favorite band of all time! Layne’s vocals were so unique, distinct and haunting!
Rooster was a nickname given to Jerry’s (long-haired singer and writer of this song) father while he was a tunnel rat in the Vietnam War.
If you really want to experience Layne’s amazing vocals and range whilst he was in his prime, check out Love Hate Love live at The Moore. Also, Bleed the Freak from that same show is awesome as well!
Totally agree!!😊
Love Hate Love, Live at The Moore is peak Layne. Best live performance I’ve ever seen from Alice In Chains
That is necessary because then you can see Layne in his prime.
Describing Staley's voice as the sound of tumbleweeds is so beautifully spot-on. It's like a force of raw nature that just developed from a hard land and goes whever it goes, bringing a kind of harsh beauty behind it.
This is just an incredible performance of such a great song. Its laid back and so soulful and almost becomes country at points.... The song is about his dad, who was called 'Rooster' in the Vietnam war (they spit on me in my homeland). Soundgarden, Black Hole Sun is another one I think would really resonate.
This brings back soooo many memories from when I was in my early 20’s. I was in a band and we got quite a bit of radio play in Northwest Indiana.
We did covers of Alice In Chains and whenever we did that I was the vocalist for those songs.
Just hits hard. I miss Layne and Bradley( Sublime ). I always sang when we did their songs.
Layne Staley was one of the best singers and lyricists ever. Rip brother.
great reaction, i recommend the unplugged live performance of "no excuses"
please more Alice In Chains reactions 🦇
This song is about Vietnam, soldiers took pills for mosquitos, got spit on by their own people when they returned back to the US.
I totally appreciate it when someone gets how unique Layne’s voice was. People may like it or dislike it, but it was anything but generic. An intensely personal song for Jerry, written about his army veteran father’s wartime experiences. Jerry said the lyrics were him projecting onto what his father went through, because his dad would never speak about it.
You really need to check out "Love Hate Love" (Live at The Moore). It was when he was much physically healthier, and the extra power is stunning. If you love his sound here this is where you want to go next!
How about Layne's side gig with Mad Season? 'Wake up' or 'Artificial Red' both show off his tumbleweeds :)
These guys were so good. Im glad I was a part of this era!
I saw Layne in a three piece suit at the start of their set on Lollapolooza in 93 and it was like 95 degrees that day! Needless to say he took the jacket tie vest and shirt off after playing Would the first song to start the show! Very charismatic singer and great stage presence! His voice very unique and an unbelievable range! RIP Layne!
The unplugged version is good but the studio version is where it's at, should even check out the official video.
The song is about Jerry Cantrells father's experience of fighting in the Vietnam war....
Jerry Cantrell (guitar & vocals) wrote 'Rooster' about his dad, Jerry Cantrell Sr. who was nicknamed 'Rooster' in the US Army and was a Vietnam war veteran... He returned home w/ PTSD and his family split up as a result; Cantrell's mom died and he settled in Seattle to become a musician... Jerry Cantrell said that his dad never talked about the war, so he based the lyrics on the experiences of combat vets in Vietnam... his dad told him after hearing the song that it was "too close" to his experiences.
The music video for 'Rooster' was shot by Mark Pellington, who did an amazing job w/ Pearl Jam's 'Jeremy' music video... They interviewed Jerry Sr. for the video and filmed sequences of him hunting at home ... alternating w/ scenes of a soldier fighting in the war.
houston.... we've a new Alice fan! i can see it in ur face! welcome to the club
Jerry wrote all the music for the band. Jerry and Layne wrote the lyrics.
When you can just close your eyes and aimlessly sway to a song... man, such a vibe.
This song is one of my favorite songs. Glad you reacted to this ❤
Alice In Chains, with its brooding melody and introspective lyrics, captured the discontent and quest for authenticity of the grunge generation. Layne Staley's distinctive voice, combined with Jerry Cantrell's dense guitars, created a unique atmosphere that deeply resonated with the youth. Their themes of alienation, addiction, and introspection gave voice to the often unspoken feelings of the generation, becoming a hallmark of '90s rock.
Over the course of my life I have found that I listen to different collections of music to fit my life at the time. As my life has changed so too have my tastes. AIC is the one exception. Their album Dirt released while I was in college and was my go to at the time. I still listen to it regularly today along with Jar of Flies.
One of my favorites from the Unplugged performance is Frogs. If you want to hear Layne in his prime you can check out their Live at the Moore set or their Off Ramp Cafe, Seattle, WA, Aug 21. 1990 concert here on youtube.
Listen to a side project that Layne did with one of the guitar players for Pearl Jam and the bass player and drummer for The Screaming Trees called Mad Season album ABOVE and the song called: THE RIVER OF DECEIT. Layne sings about Heroin the drug that took him from us.
When I was growing up in the 90s Alice In Chains was my least favorite "grudge/alternative" band. I lived for the harder/faster. Now as I've gotten older, worn down by life just a bit more, things seem to hurt for no reason as I start to lose focus on the plot; Alice In Chains has become so much more soul crushingly relevant to this living experience.
He honestly looks so broken here. It’s really sad knowing what happened. Rest in piece to a true vocal legend
If you ever want to hear the versatility Layne Staley truly had, listen to Bleed the Freak. It shows the range and power he carried. You'll enjoy.
Totally Agree!!
It was written by Alice in Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell for his father Jerry Cantrell Sr., who went by the nickname “Rooster” while serving with the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. Jerry Cantrell has stated that his father had the family nickname “Rooster” since childhood due to the way his hair stood up on end as a youth. Some have stated that the song name refers to the 101st airborne and its patch which is the “screaming eagle” and that the Vietnamese, not familiar with a bald eagle, called all members of the 101st ‘roosters’ or ‘chickens’, but Cantrell has never confirmed this.
That guitar says “Friends don’t let friends get friends haircuts.”
That was a jab at Metallica. Layne had recently cut his hair short. After which, the band Metallica did the same.
So, before the show started, the band heard Metallica would be sitting in the front row. To which Layne said “Somebody give me a Sharpie!“
AIC and nirvana had the greatest performances in MTV unplugged..Layne Staley has one of the most unique vocals ever
Alice is amazing jerry and layne were gold together do more please!
Roosters. First up. First out. And you can never come back to the life you once knew.
Alice in chains 🔥🔥🔥
Hello from Kazakhstan 🇰🇿🎸🔥
No war❤❤
You being amazed at his voice at the beginning of the song is so cute. You had no idea how the rest of it would play out. I love it!
Best way to describe Laynes voice: Powerful!
My dad was a Vietnam Vet and Army Green was indeed no safe bet! RIP DAD ❤
Layne is struggling with his addiction in this performance, you can tell. 😢 He's also so skinny Especially when Jerry takes over the vocal parts 😢 and Layne "nods off", during the performance....😢
As far as I know, the story goes Jerry Cantrell (the lead guitarist) and his father weren’t very close when he was growing up. They had sort of a strained relationship. Jerry wrote this song about his father’s experiences during the Vietnam war. (His dads nickname was rooster and he was a machine gunner) Jerry’s parents came to an AIC Show and they played this song and Jerry’s dad got emotional. He realized that his son understood him more than he thought and this song was key in bringing them closer together. If I’m incorrect please correct me but I’m almost positive this is the story with this song.
More alice! Facelift is incredible and so is everything else
Man in the box do a video on that one!!! OMG that’s a killer song!!! I love you appreciation for his voice. It’s just so beautiful and mesmerizing
This show is one of the best acoustic sets I’ve ever seen. But you should check out some of their live ‘plugged in’ performances also. I recommend ‘Man in the Box,’ live at the Moore 1990. You will see a different but equally brilliant type of performance from this band, as well as a fuller range of Layne’s vocals before his demons got really advanced
you should listed to some of their songs from earlier concers, such as Live at the Moore , and the video of Would? You get a much different view of Alice in Chains, same for Pearl Jam, Video of Even Flow is phenomenal.
If you like the unique voices of that era, one that definitely flies under the radar is Shannon Hoon from the band Blind Melon! Another one who passed very early and are mostly only known for the song No Rain but you definitely should check out songs like "mouthful of cavities", "change" and "soul one"!
I think the word you’re looking for to describe his voice is, heavenly!
You really need to dive into the ‘Live from the Moore’ concert album… ‘Love Hate Love’… ‘Bleed the Freak’…. are just a couple of the gems you’ll find on there… all at the peak of their development, Layne’s power on it is incredible and impossible to recreate… if you can’t react to them, definitely check it out for yourself, you’ll be floored..:)
Greetings mame. I grew up listening to these guys and this was probably my favorite song by them if not ever. This particular song was written from his father's point of view as a grunt fighting in Vietnam and he was called Rooster by his platoon
Never heard a voice like his before. Filled with pain and empathy. Wow!
LIVE AT THE MOORE! You need to listen to them at the Moore. NOT THE STUDIO VERSIONS.
Closest you'll ever see to a man singing at his own funeral. RIP Lane
If have to read one more comment about Layne “singing at his own funeral” and how out of it he was here I’m gonna scream. If anyone saw the outtakes of him speaking before the first song and between ones, he was completely coherent and functional. Dude didn’t even pass away until 6 years after this. Stop already!
Helooo!
I really appreciate your live reaction and insights! AIC songs with Layne leading the line that I would deffo recommend are, "Them Bones", "Love Hate Love", "Would", "Man in the Box"
AIC really do put it all there in terms of emotions, more so in their 2009 album "Black Gives Way to Blue". Jerry, Sean, Mike Inez, and leadman William show their love for Layne with a meaningful homage. I would deffo recommend the track "Black Gives Way to Blue". The song epitomises the theme of solace through closure that AIC finds after Layne's passing.
Layne Staley was, and will always be, one of a kind. He is sorely, sorely missed-absolutely heartbreaking!
💔😭🤘🏻❤️♾️
Basically, Jerry Cantrell (guitarist) was the powerhouse behind this band. He did I believe the majority of the writing (as others have said here, he wrote this song based on his father's experience in the Vietnam War) and Layne brought it all to life with his unique vocals. Layne did some writing as well of course, and the combo of Layne and Jerry together is probably the most powerful combo in all of rock. With Jerry's writing skills as well as his riffs, and Layne's voice, they were unmatched.
Again (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
Am I Inside
Angry Chair
B
Bite the Bullet (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
Brush Away
C
Chemical Addiction (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
Confusion (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
D
Died (song)
Dirt (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
F
Fairytale Love Story
Fear the Voices
Frogs (song)
G
Get Born Again
God Am
God Smack (song)lyrics by Layne Staley
H
Hate to Feel
Head Creeps
I
I Can't Remember (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
I Don't Know Anything
I Stay Away
J
Junkhead (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
K
Killing Yourself (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
L
A Little Bitter
Long Gone Day
Love, Hate, Love
Lying Season
M
Man in the Box
N
Nothin' Song
Nutshell (song)
Q
Queen of the Rodeo
R
Rain When I Die
Real Thing (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
River of Deceit
Rotten Apple (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
S
Shame in You
Sickman (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
Sludge Factory
So Close (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
Swing on This (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
W
Whatcha Gonna Do (Alice in Chains song)lyrics by Layne Staley
This is just a SMALL LIST THERE ARE OVER 50 MORE JUST IN AIC ALONE 👍🏻 EVERY SINGLE SONG ABOVE 👆 Listed ABOVE in Alphabetical order LAYNE STALEY WROTE. Even the ones WITHOUT the line credit …LYRICS BY LAYNE STALEY …. EVERY SINGLE SONG ✅✌🏻
The song is about Jerry Cantrells father (the Rooster) and it is about is experience in the Vietnam war.
Listen to Got me wrong!
Yup. My colleagues, friends, and family all wondered why I was so obsessed with this band in the 90's. THIS is why!
Lanes voice reaches beyond the grave
Love this live version. It is worth watching the video but beware of some graphic violence in Vietnam images. Be well.
Laynes performance was hauntingly beautiful..some say he was singing at his own funeral. Depression and addiction is a hellva thing especially when there's a combination of the two. Knowing he lived in isolation after the death of demri(his fiancee at the time)which was shortly after the unplugged concert, you can understand the helplessness and isolation he endured. He was one one of a kind and a true legend and powerful vocalist. As a 25 year old guy this music touches my soul in a lot of ways. Its makes me feel like im not alone in some ways with struggles specific to depression. I wish he was still here. Anyways I'd like to recommend Sea of Sorrow and Get Born Again. Especially considering Get Born Again was one of his last songs before he died. Loved the Reaction btw 👍
They way Jerry picks at the guitar almost blugrassy throughout the entire show is beautiful
I know otherpeople are saying this but he wasyoung and great . Love hate love at the moore.
Greatest love letter ever written from a son to his father.
Great reaction! I think it's time you see them in a different environment. It's time for "Love Hate Love", Live at the Moore.
For me, Lane's voice is haunting and beautiful. Just that touch of fry or grit on certain words is impressive.
The original studio Rooster, and Would are both awesome. Check em out if you like
Their choice of harmonies and phrasing are unpredictable at times, which is what I think you were sharing.
The fact that he had taken substance before performing, and still performed like that, just blows my mind.
The Alice In Chains Unplugged ‘Sludge Factory’ was pretty amazing too!!
He was so unwell here yet still belts that voice..damn 😢
One of the greatest song to come out of grunge was Love Hate Love
If i remember correctly Jerry’s mom made his dad go to a concert to listen to them play this and after that his dad finally accepted his son’s profession and music because of how hard the song hit him.
Nope, unfortunately she passed away before Jerry and Layne even met. But his dad did go see the band and when he heard that song he was tears.
@@dreamxclown damn internet lying to me
I think you could give DuVall a chance with one of the best Alice in Chains songs and one of my favs in music: Check my brain. Soooooo cool.
You need to watch this band in their earlier performances to really feel how powerful and unique lane’s voice really is! This is toward the end when he is a shadow of what he once was. The world lost a great singer when he passed, I absolutely love this band with Lane as the frontman. LOVE HATE LOVE live at the Moore, is a must watch. even if you don't stream it, you owe it to yourself to watch it.
This was a barely present Lane Staley at 20% high as a kite, and the fact he was still able to sing this well while being so high is a marvel in of itself. If you want to have your mind blown check out 'Love Hate Love' live at The Moore when he was in much better shape....absolutely incredible singing there where he does a couple things that shouldn't be possible! One of the greatest rock singers of all time, arguably the greatest. RIP Layne 💔
Layne was already dying during this concert. He even looks back at Jerry for recognition he's doing a good job I believe during the song Would and Jerry just smiles back at him. Its heartbreaking.
The contrast between jar of flies and dirt is pretty drastic. Both incredible in different ways. Layne is a rare 1 of 1.
with this song the music video version is a must in order to get the full story.
My fave song by them. Just love the grit in this one and the transitions. Amazing.
Layne was absolutely baked off his mind for this performance. Right as it was starting he had to "Take a break" for about 30 minutes in a bathroom then came out and started performing. He couldn't even function during most of it. In every song he missed lines, forgot lines, sang the wrong lines, or just was off key/off tempo which required them to have to stop playing the song and see if they could get him singing again. The MTV editors basically chopped and cut and pasted many takes of every song together to create the feature for the network.
You absolutely need to check out Love Hate Love Live at the Moore. One of Layne's most brilliant performances, so much power.
This song is about the guitar player Jerry Cantrell's father who was a machine gunner in Viet Nam. His call sign was Rooster and he survived but some of his buddies didn't. Jerry wrote this song about/for his father.
Breathtakingly beautiful.. there will never be another Layne