Episode #168 | 03.28.24
Alice in Chains’ Layne Staley (All Access): The Rooster, the Jungle, and Dying Young
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In this episode
Though they were one of the first so-called “grunge” bands to sign to a major label, Alice in Chains were something of an outlier in the late ‘80s/early ‘90s Seattle scene. They didn’t fall directly into the punk camp, or the hair metal camp, and even the true metalheads thought they weren’t hardcore enough. This became painfully evident when the band opened a tour for Megadeth, Slayer, and Anthrax, and were hazed, spat on, and booed. Alice’s lead singer, Layne Staley, could take the criticism. He had a prankster’s spirit, not to mention a rock ‘n roll attitude that paired well with his killer rock ‘n roll voice. But newfound fame was overwhelming. As was the destructive addiction to heroin Layne developed to deal with it all. Soon Layne Staley found himself lost in a jungle of his own making, not unlike the jungle that he sang so convincingly about in one of Alice in Chains’ most endearing songs.
Sources
Alice in Chains: The Untold Story, by David De Sola
Sing Backwards and Weep, by Mark Lanegan
The Time Alice in Chains' Layne Staley Stood Up to Rowdy Slayer Fans (Consequence)
Why Alice in Chains Initially Bombed Opening for Van Halen (Ultimate Classic Rock)
The Tragic Story of a Grunge Masterpiece (Loudwire)
Misery Loves Company (SPIN)
Alice in Chains: To Hell and Back (Rolling Stone)
Alice in Chains: Dirt Album Review (Pitchfork)
Credits
Hosted by Jake Brennan.
Written by Zeth Lundy.
Copy edited by James Sullivan.
Scored and mixed by Sean Cahalin.
Additional music and score elements by Ryan Spraker.
DISGRACELAND theme song, “Crenshaw Space Boogie,” written and produced by Jake Brennan. Performed by Jake Brennan, Bryce Kanzer, Jay Cannava, and Evan Kenney. Mixed and engineered by Adam Taylor.
*illustrations by Avi Spivak @avispivak