I Really Wasn't Prepared For This.. | ALICE IN CHAINS - "Would?" (REACTION)

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 525

  • @nickface55
    @nickface55 Před 2 lety +650

    The best thing you said is "We need to bring this kind of music back!" Amen sister.

    • @wesbaumguardner8829
      @wesbaumguardner8829 Před 2 lety +2

      Fo shizzle!

    • @jared699
      @jared699 Před 2 lety +21

      It's impossible. Music is fluid. Just like we've never had another 60's, we'll never have another 90's. I believe there will come a time where there is great music again, but it will have its own unique sound.

    • @connor2294
      @connor2294 Před 2 lety +8

      @@jared699 There is so much great music coming out right now. The problem is it gets buried underneath all the shit and a lot of people don’t know how to find it. There will never be another Alice In Chains, Smashing Pumpkins, Soundgarden etc. but that doesn’t mean there isn’t great music. It’s just different.

    • @chaoticembrace6984
      @chaoticembrace6984 Před 2 lety +3

      check out The Post War - new album Anecdote.....and Ten Miles Wide - album The Gross .......there is important music still being made ....its just much harder to find.

    • @brentschmoeckel1420
      @brentschmoeckel1420 Před 2 lety

      I agree most of the music today is crap!

  • @rogeryoung9691
    @rogeryoung9691 Před 2 lety +208

    I've been listening to Alice in chains for 20 plus years and I still get chills when Layne sings

    • @SigmaTau6
      @SigmaTau6 Před rokem +8

      Me too. 61 years old and the tears flow.

    • @wedgemoose1
      @wedgemoose1 Před rokem +2

      Me three!!!! almost to he point of i can't take it. Loved them back then but now my love is ten fold. How good was he/they!!! We will never have another Layne Voice.

    • @motivationmike4722
      @motivationmike4722 Před rokem +4

      As a 23 year old who just got into aic I feel like I've been cheated by being born too late to appreciate Layne's vocals in person

    • @RiceKiller191
      @RiceKiller191 Před rokem +2

      @@motivationmike4722same. At 32 I feel like I missed the best generation. Missed Layne, and Cornell 😔

    • @dragonmyke
      @dragonmyke Před 3 měsíci

      Me too😊

  • @greenphoenix687
    @greenphoenix687 Před 2 lety +220

    The intro bass is what hooks you and then it all just comes together in mastery. What a band. 'Love Hate Love' live at The Moore is epic.

  • @145Slap789
    @145Slap789 Před 8 měsíci +41

    During the Grunge era not even Nirvana or Pearl Jam could hold a candle to them, they were second to none!

    • @zechmanyon6403
      @zechmanyon6403 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The lyrics on an Alice In Chains song are always deep. This song is probably my ATF from the grunge era. I just wish I realized how sock and rare of a voice lane had in the time. I just knew they rocked and the lyrics were important in every song. The duet style singing. Part of what made them so unique and you didn’t realize unless you watch the videos is that a lot of these words or verses are started by Jerry and then finished with Lane signature pitch. In between the two of them, it sounds like an almost impossible vocal spread. You don’t realize it’s two people singing it one way in one finishing a different way, but it blends perfectly in the middle.

    • @rayelee1301
      @rayelee1301 Před 2 měsíci +1

      probably because AIC wasnt/isnt grunge

    • @145Slap789
      @145Slap789 Před 2 měsíci

      @@rayelee1301 HAHA!!!

    • @Voffsing1
      @Voffsing1 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@rayelee1301 You have no clue lol

    • @rayelee1301
      @rayelee1301 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@Voffsing1 sound nothing like grunge...thats a pretty big clue

  • @cfpzona
    @cfpzona Před 2 lety +56

    This is where my Gen-Xer pride comes in. I grew up as a kid in my late teens and 20s with this era of music and saw a ton of great bands live in the 90s.

  • @66THEOSU
    @66THEOSU Před 2 lety +42

    I was 26 years old and living the wildest days of my life when Dirt was released. The entire album is a monster that leaves you bruised and battered in a good way. My father actually picked up Dirt for me because I played Facelift constantly, he passed 5 years later, thanks dad, miss you.

  • @tamibrandt
    @tamibrandt Před 2 lety +167

    The backstory with WOULD? ... guitarist Jerry Cantrell wrote the song for Andy Wood, singer of Mother Love Bone after Andy died of an overdose in 1990 just as Mother Love Bone was going to hit big. After Andy died, Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament dissolved Mother Love Bone and re-emerged as Pearl Jam. WOULD? as a title is a play on Andy Wood's name. Layne sang the hell out of WOULD? and ROOSTER on the album, official videos and concerts in 91-93.
    WOULD? appeared on the Singles soundtrack because Seattle, Washington as big as the town is, musically it's a small town. All the bands that came out of the Seattle scene knew each other and went to see each other play the club circuit. Cameron Crowe was married to Nancy Wilson of Heart and he wanted to make a movie about the Seattle music scene and made Singles where a fictional band, Citizen Dick opened for Alice In Chains. They used IT AIN'T LIKE THAT from the Facelift album and Cameron Crowe gave them money to demo songs... AIC took the money, they demoed the 6 acoustic songs that are on SAP EP and two songs ROOSTER and WOULD? that ended up on the Dirt album. Cameron Crowe picked through the songs and used WOULD? out of the bunch. Jerry thought the song was strong enough to be included on the Dirt album and that's how WOULD? ended up on the Singles soundtrack and the same version ended up on Dirt.
    Whenever you see Bad Animals Studios in the liner notes, at the time the album was recorded, Bad Animals Studios was owned by Ann and Nancy Wilson of Heart. Nancy Wilson was married to Cameron Crowe between 1986 and 2010.
    Jerry was fine doing backing vocals on the early songs like the ones they played in their clubbing days and on Facelift like the Call and Return of the chorus on MAN IN THE BOX until one day when he was trying to write songs for the SAP EP and the Dirt album, Layne looked at the lyrics and encouraged Jerry to sing more because after all, they were Jerry's lyrics. He should sing them. When Layne and Jerry sang together they achieved the perfect pitch of two voices making one voice.
    Layne Staley's vocal range can run rings around any other grunge singer in my opinion. Layne could sing the phone book and never hit a wrong note. Even at the end of his life, with no teeth and a lisp, his voice, wit and humor were all still there. Layne's voice and vocal range was so powerful he did NOT need auto tune or pro-tools until he lost his teeth and had a lisp around 1998, and even then he still killed the vocals.
    Barrett Martin (who played with Layne in Mad Season) said that when he stood to the side of the stage, he could hear the sound of Layne’s vocal resonance come out of Layne's body LOUDER than it did coming out of the speakers, Layne's voice was that powerful.
    The Unplugged show in 1996 is so heartbreaking to watch because he was deep in his heroin addiction (and yes, I know he was other drugs). 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 to 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 Layne's choices for his life. That show was filmed on April 10, 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 6-year-long slow suicide.
    Before the show, drummer Sean Kinney and bass player Mike Inez argued with guitarist Jerry Cantrell about whether Layne could even pull off the high notes in some of the songs, 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 he hit a high note in ROOSTER.
    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.
    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 sat in the front row. The mistakes he made screwing up SLUDGE FACTORY 8 times even though the dvd only shows 1 time (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.
    Knowing what Layne was capable of before, and what you see on Unplugged is the difference between night and day. Watch him sing DOWN IN A HOLE and knowing that this was the same guy who back in 1992 was hanging from the rafters of a low ceiling in a bar belting out LOVE HATE LOVE, that is what's heartbreaking. 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.
    No one noticed Layne had died on April 5, 2002, because he never answered the phone nor opened the door. It took inactivity over the span of two weeks for his ACCOUNTANT to notice something was wrong and called Alice In Chains manager Susan Silver who called Layne's mother to alert her to the situation who then called 911 on April 19, 2002.
    And to pour salt in the wound, MTV (and the music industry) has more or less blackballed Layne (and yet, they laud over Kurt Cobain every April 5th, because Kurt was the "face of grunge", meanwhile Layne gets a "by the way"). The Grammys went so far as to invite Jerry, Mike and Sean to the Grammy show in 2003 and then refused to put Layne's picture up in the memorial of the musicians who died in 2002. (Or they "forgot" to) which pissed Jerry, Mike and Sean off and they walked out on the show. Though I do applaud MoPOP including Layne Staley and Mike Starr when they inducted Alice In Chains in the MoPOP Museum of Pop Culture. It's more recognition of Layne (and Mike) than the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (thanks to Rolling Stone's criticisms of Layne and his addiction) and the Grammys (who FORGOT him when he died) have EVER done.
    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.
    All the information above has longer, deeper stories, and I could say so much more, but CZcams has a cap on comment length. In the end, it all boils down to: Layne Staley deserved better than what he received from the people around him who he thought mattered. He wrote songs about things with maturity and knowledge well beyond his years. He didn’t deserve to be turned into tabloid cannon fodder by the press.
    All of this has longer, more detailed stories but CZcams has a cap on comment length.

    • @robbob5302
      @robbob5302 Před 2 lety +6

      Nice post.

    • @nirajtrivedi3743
      @nirajtrivedi3743 Před 2 lety +3

      Well done

    • @Iron-Bridge
      @Iron-Bridge Před 2 lety +4

      Appreciate the backstory. 👍

    • @Spadez614
      @Spadez614 Před 2 lety +6

      I knew there would be one of you LOL

    • @hollyhayes9640
      @hollyhayes9640 Před 2 lety +4

      Thank you for writing this comment that was basically an entire novel about Alice in Chains. ☺️

  • @robliapes5220
    @robliapes5220 Před rokem +14

    It is normal. Shivers, goosebumps, chickenskin, whatever, the phantasmal, ethereal harmony between these two gives me the chills.

  • @chrisnelson3691
    @chrisnelson3691 Před 2 lety +41

    It’s tough not to get a little choked up listening to certain songs, just knowing how it ended for Layne, been such a huge fan of Alice In Chains for so long and unfortunately I know that pain all too well, I was lucky enough to get out alive after 14 years, I never thought I would make it to 37 let alone 27, I didn’t want to or think I could live without it, couldn’t function without it, I still remember the pain of kicking it for the last time, a year straight of never going without, my tolerance was incredibly high at that time and spending thousands every month, luckily I had a child and as cliché as it sounds, my kids saved my life, kicking it for the last time was incredibly painful, not only physically but psychologically, I had developed an emotional addiction as well as a mental and physical addiction, I legitimately loved it, never been so sick in my life, the awful tingling in my shoulders and arms, it’s something you don’t understand unless you have been through it, absolute torture, couldn’t sleep more than an hour or 2 from just being exhausted enough to fall asleep only to wake up an hour later literally pouring sweat, throwing up, just the flu times 10 but I let it get that bad, I had a pretty good handle on it for years; responsible, reliable, never went too long without taking a day off, kept it together for a long time.

    • @fullmetta2764
      @fullmetta2764 Před 2 lety +2

      Great for you, putting the kids first. Admirable to were able to leave it, sorry for people like Layne who never do.

    • @rtf8056
      @rtf8056 Před 2 lety +1

      wow
      much respect to you

    • @8kewlkewk1zzz
      @8kewlkewk1zzz Před 2 lety +2

      From 1 Layne fan & addict to another, I just wanna say I'm proud of u bro! Seems like our paths are pretty similar... my kids saved me as well & I agree 100% about Layne too. He's 1 of the all-time greats imo & his legacy will never die. I still listen to Mad Season & AiC frequently but it's tough sometimes. Thanks for telling ur story bro!

  • @riprex2072
    @riprex2072 Před 2 lety +18

    The riffs,The power in his voice,
    Their sound, Timeless. R.I.P LAYNE.

  • @robbob5302
    @robbob5302 Před 2 lety +26

    In the early 90s, four bands emerged from the Seattle underground, and changed rock music, forever.
    They were:
    Soundgarden
    Pearl Jam
    Nirvana
    Alice in Chains
    Be sure you check them all out!

    • @ctguitarguy8510
      @ctguitarguy8510 Před 2 lety +3

      Beyond that though you had the broader alt 90s rock sound with stone temple pilots, smashing pumpkins, etc

    • @robbob5302
      @robbob5302 Před 2 lety

      @@ctguitarguy8510
      Truth spoken.

    • @antonytheolddog8626
      @antonytheolddog8626 Před 2 lety

      the right one at the top i see..lol

    • @holocaust_2.0
      @holocaust_2.0 Před rokem +2

      You're missing some major groups from Seattle. Starting with Mother Love Bone, whose lead singer this song was a tribute to. The death of Andrew Wood caused Chris Cornell from Soundgarden and the remaining members of Mother Love Bone to form Temple of the Dog, which then lead to the creation of Pearl Jam after Eddie Vedder sang with Chris Cornell on the song Hunger Strike.

    • @robbob5302
      @robbob5302 Před rokem

      @@holocaust_2.0
      Am very much aware of these bands. Was just keeping it brief for starters.

  • @jdogdestroyall
    @jdogdestroyall Před 2 lety +16

    "We need to bring this kind of music back!" Ive been wishing for that for years

  • @jekku4688
    @jekku4688 Před 2 lety +16

    Edit: YES. YES IT IS NORMAL to have shivers from listening to that song! If "Would?" is your first foray into AIC, then girl, you better hold onto your butt, cos it's gonna be a bumpy (but beautiful) ride!! And if/when you start digging deeper into their history, and into Layne Staley in general, and really read/study their lyrics...well, just keep a box of tissue at the ready (and more bottled water). And don't forget to check out "Mad Season" too. 😉💔 As well as the book "Alice in Chains: The Untold Story" by David DeSola. 👍

  • @AL13NM
    @AL13NM Před 2 lety +31

    An amazing track from an amazing record! DIRT is a Must Hear MASTERPIECE!!!

  • @clintkaster6269
    @clintkaster6269 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I was a high school sophomore in 1982 in Seattle, hanging in wildly-unsafe basement clubs and dropping acid with a wildly-unsafe group of people. Growing up with that scene.....this is totally the soundtrack of my childhood. Walking around downtown, waiting for the first bus, drunks in doorways and wild staggering figures in light rain......I was 15 when I found all this and it still hits hard these days.

    • @DarlaKroupa
      @DarlaKroupa Před 7 měsíci +1

      I’m glad you made it thru all that….. great, visual story….you could be a song writer

  • @PatrioticTexan1776
    @PatrioticTexan1776 Před rokem +12

    Layne had such a unique voice there will never be another. RIP🙏🏻

  • @patches6309
    @patches6309 Před 2 měsíci +2

    This song is thee Pure definition of a "BANGER!" Rest In Power Layne Staley Forever.

  • @garylagstrom3864
    @garylagstrom3864 Před rokem +3

    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!

  • @patton303
    @patton303 Před rokem +2

    Nothing beats that key change going into the bridge and it’s nearly the end of the song. Gives me chills every time.

  • @kdub7195
    @kdub7195 Před 2 lety +12

    That's how you're supposed to feel when you first truly experience Layne and Jerry. Nothing will ever top Love, Hate, Love live at the Moore.

    • @orlandoescobar5174
      @orlandoescobar5174 Před 2 lety

      I never understood why people like that version of Love, Hate, Love so much
      The best vocal version of that song is from the 'Live' album

  • @garyjordan2019
    @garyjordan2019 Před 2 lety +4

    Goosebumps! And i have heard this songs hundreds of times! What a voice , what a band!

  • @raulnovoa6098
    @raulnovoa6098 Před rokem +4

    His voice. Is. Unmatched. To this. Day. What. A legacy.

  • @katiegwynn4495
    @katiegwynn4495 Před 2 lety +4

    I've been loving this song for many years and I get full-body shivers every time I hear it

  • @moleman1976
    @moleman1976 Před 2 lety +6

    I still think this is the most bad-ass song in history. I lures you in, and then punches you in the face with the chorus. AIC will always be one of my favorite bands, and this is one of my top-5 songs by them! Love it!

  • @ChicagoScorpion411
    @ChicagoScorpion411 Před rokem +3

    OMG the second you stopped it to mentions your "shivers", I was sitting here watching and listening to it with chills throughout my body as well. WTF is that? Never mind the fact that I've heard this song thousands of times. Still gets me. I saw them back in August and man, even thought Layne wasn't there, it still was beyond amazing.

  • @randomhockeyguy9149
    @randomhockeyguy9149 Před 2 lety +14

    To check out Lane Staley's best vocal performance, you gotta react to Love, Hate, Love Live at The Moore. His vocals on that are just top notch, powerful, and beautiful. RIP Layne!

  • @ScotsGal
    @ScotsGal Před 4 měsíci +2

    This is music from a better time where musicians wrote their own songs , played their own instruments ,paid their dues , you cared who was number 1 in the charts and it actually meant something

  • @ethandavis8090
    @ethandavis8090 Před 2 lety +29

    I am the only Alice in chains fan in my school. I have no friends who like Alice in chains. My friends all make fun of me for liking them. So delusional. They are clearly the greatest band of all time. Keep on listening to them 🤘

  • @robbob5302
    @robbob5302 Před 2 lety +16

    "We need to bring this kind of music back!"
    Well, I have good news for ya. Alice in Chains is still going.
    And still just as strong as ever!!

    • @drewzable
      @drewzable Před 2 lety

      Foreal?

    • @beauxr.benoit1374
      @beauxr.benoit1374 Před 2 lety +1

      @@drewzable The main problem and what needs to disappear is the crap that is more popular that rules the airways now and that is included with what she says. Even the radio stations that do play classic rock still half if not 2/3s of the time still plays popular (When it was on at the time it was released.) shit that should be retired.

    • @luckylarry88
      @luckylarry88 Před 2 lety +7

      Alice in chains died with Layne

    • @ThatGuyX2
      @ThatGuyX2 Před 2 lety

      Strong as ever? Lets not get carried away friend

    • @siftingz
      @siftingz Před 2 lety

      @@luckylarry88 facts... the new music isnt the same

  • @Chris_Restall
    @Chris_Restall Před 2 měsíci

    I was in High School through this whole era in Music… It’s been a part of me ever since. Late 80’s-90’s… What a time to be Alive… No Internet 🛜, Record Shops, word of mouth when it came to Bands… More people in the Moment sort of speak… You didn’t need a selfie 🤳 to prove you were there! ✌️

  • @559Pablito
    @559Pablito Před 2 lety +7

    As a huge fan of this band for many years, love seeing reactions like this one!

  • @mumbles1015
    @mumbles1015 Před 2 lety +9

    I think Would? Is my favorite Alice In Chains song, next for me is Dam That River.

    • @andrewdods2236
      @andrewdods2236 Před rokem

      Would. Then Rooster. Angry chair. Them bones. In no particular order .....

  • @bigdaddypiggy
    @bigdaddypiggy Před 2 lety +1

    All that music of the 90’s is so good because at its core it’s soul music

  • @DarthRaider520
    @DarthRaider520 Před 2 dny

    Alice In Chains was a band that many other bands that toured with them envied. Such a perfect unit of sound.

  • @DarlaKroupa
    @DarlaKroupa Před 7 měsíci +1

    You said it…that is a great statement about it…they are still the same person inside, however addiction takes over and it is so hard for them to come back from it….I feel so bad for people who suffer from this…their friends and family suffer with them

  • @matthewgoodA1206
    @matthewgoodA1206 Před 2 lety +2

    This is essentially my favorite song of all time. I first watched this music video when it had just been released, and I had no idea what I was in for. I came away wanting to look like those guys, have their rock musician style, and further explore dark music that dealt with such heavy themes.

  • @doctorteethomega
    @doctorteethomega Před rokem +1

    If you wear a flannel shirt and listen to this song you are instantly hypnotized. That's just basic science. 😂

  • @paullebel7268
    @paullebel7268 Před 2 lety +5

    Lane is a legend

  • @rodneymcdermott5303
    @rodneymcdermott5303 Před 2 lety +3

    Is full body shivers normal? With this band, yes. They’re a level of their own 🤘🤘🤘

  • @jasonlorance1918
    @jasonlorance1918 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Hands down my favorite AIC song! The buildup at 4:01 before the "into the flood again" lyrics always gets me. Such a powerful song and each member shines on this one. So sad Layne's gone! Also, not sure it's possible to look cooler in the 90's than Layne with the slicked back hair, goatee, and shades! :)

  • @lakeit
    @lakeit Před 2 lety +1

    It was fun seeing them live in like 92-93 for Free. Perks of a job

  • @patrickwade757
    @patrickwade757 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Layne was an angel. thank you for this reaction. It made me feel very happy

  • @CBolt17
    @CBolt17 Před 2 lety +2

    1 of my favourites if theirs. And no matter how many times I hear it, I still get goosebumps.

  • @ronsuper100
    @ronsuper100 Před rokem +1

    I've been a big fan of Alice in Chains since 1990. I was 20 years old and I will always love AIC!

  • @ericjeffery7054
    @ericjeffery7054 Před rokem +1

    80s and 90s music, just hits different. Especially if you lived it :D

  • @dandaris2153
    @dandaris2153 Před 2 lety

    This song came out in 92 and it's really cool that you enjoy it that much because; you happen to have the same early 90's style (clothes/makeup/hair style) AND YOU LOOK SO GORGEOUS!!!. I was 10-11 years old and, when I think about that era, sometimes it makes me cry.

  • @seancromwell327
    @seancromwell327 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Yea you!!!
    Keen observation of this ode to the blissful suffering of addiction written by one friend to another

  • @don2006ka
    @don2006ka Před 3 měsíci +1

    Rock is dead it will never be back. The peak of rock started in late 80s with hard rock and metal and it went off after the grunge rock period ended in mid to late 90s.
    The rock stars and their performances will forever stay in our memories.
    It will never ever come back be happy with your Taylor swifts and Miley cyruses. 😂😂

  • @Joe-Flow
    @Joe-Flow Před 2 lety +7

    Thanks so much for this reaction I LOVE THIS SONG. My favorite Alice in Chain song is always changing, but for now I will say "I Stay Away." If you react to it please watch the music video, IT'S ICONIC.
    If you would like to hear other great 90's grunge/alt. rock/metal bands, I would suggest Soundgarden, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Corrosion of Conformity, Rage Against the Machine. Candlebox and White Zombie. And of course you know my hidden gem..."Paw."

  • @kerrijohnson2303
    @kerrijohnson2303 Před 2 lety +3

    God it’s so hard to believe Layne has been gone 20 years now! It seems like it happened yesterday! Where does the time go?! Song still kills today though!

  • @alungcugil
    @alungcugil Před 2 lety

    Would? is my first AIC song and suddenly loves it, I don't know how many times I've heard this song..

  • @lancerx1759
    @lancerx1759 Před 2 lety +1

    Layne Staley with Mad Season doing River of Deceit is freaking beautiful & haunting especially Live

  • @obitronshinobi8163
    @obitronshinobi8163 Před 2 lety +1

    "What the hell have I?"
    Alice in Chains

  • @davecassady7468
    @davecassady7468 Před 2 lety +2

    Anyone who wants to hear & feel the power of Layne's true voice needs to watch the Unplugged session.

  • @tbnobs
    @tbnobs Před 4 měsíci

    Imm 66 and have loved all forms of rock these guys are so awesome

  • @BenWillyums
    @BenWillyums Před 2 lety +2

    Criminal that this only has 218 views! That's lower than one of my songs lol. Great reaction

  • @ballistaproductions
    @ballistaproductions Před rokem

    1:22 that is normal. It's called frisson which is the phenomenon of chills or goosebumps that come from a piece of music (or from any other aesthetic experience)

  • @davidcox4981
    @davidcox4981 Před 2 lety +1

    This song is dedicated to Andy Wood. He was this lead singer of the band mother Love Bone. Check it out it's amazing. He had a huge impact on a lot of people before his time expired and created a lot of bands such as Pearl jam Soundgarden and Alice in chains

  • @JDoe-hb7pc
    @JDoe-hb7pc Před 8 měsíci +1

    There were no computers back then, no AI, no gaming, no computer mixing, when you messed up you started singing again. lol

  • @JV-mw7gv
    @JV-mw7gv Před 10 měsíci

    Yes shivers are normal. It’s been over three decades, I still get shivers.

  • @alex1520
    @alex1520 Před rokem +1

    For me, music died after the 1990's were over. The 1990's were a magic era for this sort of music. Alice in chains, Stone temple pilots, Soundgarden, Tool etc. I always find myself coming back to this sort of music :) To me this music is timeless - Hear something like AIC, Tool etc played today, I crank the volume and i am like "f*** yessssssssssss!!!!" :D

  • @litawells8803
    @litawells8803 Před 2 lety +5

    I Love Me Some AIC, I live in Seattle and they are still huge in this city.Please react to Alice in Chains live at The Moore Theatre. I would check out (Man in the box) first, talk about mind being blown. YOUR WELCOME.

    • @greenphoenix687
      @greenphoenix687 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes.... the whole Moore gig is outstanding.... 'Love, Hate, Love' is something to watch here too.

    • @regina1779
      @regina1779 Před 2 lety +3

      It ain’t like that is also a masterpiece from the life at the Moore tho

  • @brandonsmith6056
    @brandonsmith6056 Před 29 dny

    Alice In Chains are the best band from the 90s hands all the way down. My dad played Metallica megadeth pantera and Alice In Chains. Layne will always be my favorite vocalist. His grit, the tone how he can shape it all in different tones it’s just all him and his emotions and I love every song and god rest his soul I hope he’s finally at peace. Best grunge band ever. The unplugged version that they went on when Layne wasn’t good at all as absolutely horrible as it was to see him so skinny and just hollow he absolutely KILLED that whole set.

  • @jamesbedford3774
    @jamesbedford3774 Před 14 dny

    One of the greatest bands of all time, one of the greatest songs of all time and my absolute favourite drummer of all time. Superb choice. It might be worth considering some of the more recent stuff. They're still great, as they always have been.

  • @joao-barata
    @joao-barata Před 2 lety

    Whenever i listen Alice In Chains it's like they punch me in the stomach and say, be strong, get your head up and move on.

  • @davidl7605
    @davidl7605 Před 5 měsíci

    The album DIRT and JAR OF FLIES are 2 perfect alblums. As well as S.A.P. and The self titled alblum everyone calls Tripod because it has a 3 legged dog on the cover.

  • @boneheded2819
    @boneheded2819 Před 2 lety +1

    The beginning of this song is pretty good. For me it's at 4:22 . That is such a brilliant chord transition that at the time I had never heard anyone do and it just blew me away. It still does.

  • @greysea4841
    @greysea4841 Před 2 lety

    This song is was written as a tribute to Andy Wood, the singer of Mother love Bone who died during a heroin relapse just as the band was breaking out. The surviving members would eventually get a new singer and rename the band Pearl Jam.

  • @johncampbell756
    @johncampbell756 Před 2 lety

    One of many songs written about Andrew Wood, former singer of fellow Seattle grunge band Mother Love Bone. He ODed days before the scheduled release of their debut full length album Apple. Andrew's former roommate Chris Cornell (RIP) of Soundgarden formed a one off bad called Temple of the Dog to record a tribute album for him. He brought in his drummer Matt Cameron and Mother Love Bone bassist Jeff Ament ad guitarist Stone Gossard. They were forming a new bad and brought in new lead guitarist Mike McCready and vocalist Eddie Vedder sang on tw songs while in town to audition for their bad, eventually named Pearl Jam. Ironically several Pearl Jam albums later after Soundgarden broke up, Matt joined on drums, making this an early version of the complete current line up.

  • @6intheFix
    @6intheFix Před 5 měsíci +1

    These musicians deserve goose bumps.

  • @joshuawiedenbeck6944
    @joshuawiedenbeck6944 Před 2 lety +1

    A lot of music has the instruments creating the sound with vocals added in. For some reason, with Alice In Chains, it always feels like the singing is the music, not added to it.

  • @HelioSkeptic
    @HelioSkeptic Před 2 lety +1

    That whole album is amazing. Dirt, Sickman, Rooster.

  • @litawells4264
    @litawells4264 Před 2 lety +5

    This song is amazing and, will stand the test of time, check out (Man in The Box) live at The Moore Theater. I challenge you to not headbang to this one 😎. RIP Layne we miss you.

  • @tedpetry2028
    @tedpetry2028 Před rokem

    AIC.....Nutshell, I stay away, rooster, down in a hole, Love hate love............Saw them in concert after Laine passed, Laine was so good. Love them.

  • @DeusEx1977
    @DeusEx1977 Před rokem

    The interplay between Layne Staley and Jerry Cantell's vocals in always hauntingly beautiful.

  • @tristantknight
    @tristantknight Před 2 lety +1

    I agree with you, this music should be brought back. 90s were the peak of many genres, since then it seems like it's been in a decline.

    • @connor2294
      @connor2294 Před 2 lety

      It’s because rock had 50 or so years in the spotlight. It couldn’t go on forever. It got pushed underground which isn’t a bad thing. There’s still amazing music being made today but the rock stuff isn’t getting the attention it used to. Older people don’t seem to want to try to find the newer rock bands and younger people have their own music now that is just as important to them. That being said, grunge is actually still really popular with people around my age (23) because most of our parents listened to it.

  • @timorean320
    @timorean320 Před 2 měsíci

    "Frission" (getting goosebumps when listening to Music) is found in about 86% of people, so yes, normal.

  • @bethanythatsme
    @bethanythatsme Před 2 lety

    Welcome to my teens in the PNW.
    I'm a grungy lil garden gnome and this makes me so happy 🌲🌊🖤

  • @jphillipsjwp
    @jphillipsjwp Před 2 lety +4

    YAY got it to go through.
    Always liked AIC.
    A shivering body is normal.
    Lush has been your word.
    -YourBiggestFan

  • @mikelee8569
    @mikelee8569 Před 2 lety

    Yes it's normal to get the shivers that's the effect Layne Staley's voice has on people

  • @MrMagic1515
    @MrMagic1515 Před rokem

    The song is about their friend Andy Wood ....Jerry Cantrell wrote it

  • @petschmann
    @petschmann Před 2 lety

    Love that speaking voice! And " Chains " for more than 30 years!

  • @williammatthews693
    @williammatthews693 Před 2 lety +2

    "We need to bring this kind of music back!" Rarely have truer words been spoken, but does today's current crop of musicians have the talent, drive and lyrical philosophy to pull it off?

    • @Iron-Bridge
      @Iron-Bridge Před 2 lety +1

      Too many manufactured artistes who don't put in the discipline to master their craft, which includes acknowledging and managing their pain. When the expression 'suffer for their art' is used, I think this is what is meant.

    • @connor2294
      @connor2294 Před 2 lety

      This is such a cyclical argument. Musicians have just as much talent as they ever did. The medium has changed. You’re not going to get another Alice in Chains or Pink Floyd. The bands that try to recreate certain time periods in music don’t usually catch on for a reason. They sound like they’re trying to be their influences. Music has to evolve and change and if you can’t adapt you get left behind; posting comments about “bring REAL music back”. It never left, most people just stopped looking for it and chose to listen to the same music for the rest of their lives, which would be fine if they didn’t dismiss “new” artists at every chance even though they know nothing outside of the current top 40. I’m not saying this is you but I see this stuff all the time and it’s frustrating to know that people shit on a whole generation of artists when they barely know anything about them.

  • @ronsuper100
    @ronsuper100 Před rokem +1

    Alice in chains is real music!!! Keep on rocking!!!

  • @Alfaqwad
    @Alfaqwad Před 2 lety +1

    This and Deftones' Change (in the House of Flies) are in my opinion 2 of the greatest songs ever

  • @Britton_Thompson
    @Britton_Thompson Před 2 lety +3

    As much as it pains me to say this, I think it's important everyone realize we're not bringing this music back, sadly enough. Not because it isn't better than what's popular today- because it certainly is -but because it's just too damn difficult to resurrect at this point.
    The reality is that it's so much easier to become a pop star or a rapper nowadays because you alone determine your destiny. You don't have to spend years learning an instrument first. You don't have to follow that up with finding the right combination of bandmates with equal talent and passion in the same music for everyone to be on the same page. If you don't make it as a rapper, it's because you didn't try hard enough. If you don't become a rock star, it could just as easily be because you didn't find a lead singer with a good enough voice or a instrumentalist with the necessary skill and knowledge. Or maybe you do find them, but you may be at odds on the type of music you want to create. In rock bands, you only have a 20-25% stake in your future. It's so much harder to make it in rock.
    Lastly, the industry itself needs to be totally remade if it's going to survive. Music labels got lazy because the mindset was, "If they're good enough, or if they want it bad enough, they'll come here to us in Los Angeles, New York, London, etc."
    That was the turning point in rap's favor historically in my opinion because it's culture was based on competitive alliances so that you didn't need to move to New York or LA first. You didn't have to move to these places first and just hope like hell the local club owners would let you on their stages, or that some A&R talent scout would drop by one night and like what he hears. Hip hop is different because it had regional movements spring up. Things like the Lean Scene in Texas; the Down South movement in Memphis and New Orleans; the Dirty Dirty scene in Atlanta, etc. Rock never had that. It got too complacent in the 1960s-90s, and was very wasteful in it's spending.
    Fast forward to the mid 2000s when record labels started being bought up by mass-multimedia giants like Sony, Time Warner, and Disney, where they were then combined into massive entertainment conglomerates. The first thing the labels were made to do was eliminate wasteful spending. Now that the labels had their own corporate overlords to answer to, they realized there was more profit in hip hop and pop because their artists were easier to find, and cheaper to fund.
    Believe me, I've spent many years trying to solve this problem in order for rock n roll to make a comeback, but it just isn't happening. Too much has changed at all levels to resuscitate it. Too much has changed technologically, culturally, and most importantly- in the boardroom, to truly salvage rock music.
    The *ONLY WAY* I can see rock music making a comeback would be in a very, very bastardized and diluted form in which technology becomes advanced and affordable enough for one person to use apps and software to artificially reproduce the sounds of guitars, bass, and drums synthetically. Some way in which it's easier than tracking down 3 or 4 other guys everyone in the band is on the same page with musically for a vocalist to sing over.
    If that happens, would that even still be rock n roll? One person with a singing voice manufacturing the background instruments? Me, personally, I say no. That isn't true rock n roll, but I genuinely believe that's the only future it has left anymore because kids today are not devoting years of their lives to learning an instrument the way they would in the past. Yes, it totally sucks, that's probably the only avenue it has left open to it at this point if it ever wants to be competitive with the other genres again.

    • @TheZeroAssassin
      @TheZeroAssassin Před 2 lety

      Annoying, but sadly , true

    • @Britton_Thompson
      @Britton_Thompson Před 2 lety

      @@TheZeroAssassin Yep. Labels want nothing to do with rock bands anymore. You have to bankroll 3-5 different people while your album is being recorded. It takes more studio time to record a rock album, which also means more money because studios charge by the hour.
      Labels also started having their big guns misfire on them in the 80s and 90s too. The public doesn't realize it but very few acts make one label profitable. They needed that next big rock album to come out on time and do big numbers just so everyone in the company keeps their jobs.
      Instead of things going to plan, what actually started to happen instead in the 80s and 90s? Jon Bonham drinks himself to death and Led Zeppelin retires. Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, and Van Halen break up. Guns N Roses fall apart, and Axl spends 11 years finishing Chinese Democracy with nameless, faceless replacements. Kurt Cobain dies (somehow). Layne Staley can't leave his apartment because of his heroin addiction. Tool says they'll go to work at their own pace, and don't even think about making their music available for digital purchase.
      Just from a pure capitalism perspective, I can't blame the record labels for washing their hands of rock n roll. Even from the beginning, rock always had this weird sorta quasi-Marxist, anti-business undercurrent to it whereas hip hop has always taken pride in it's work ethic and sales figures. I mean, it's just night and day the differences between the business rock n roll versus the business of hip hop.
      I fucking hate that this is the new reality we're living in now, but at the same time.... I totally understand it. There were too many flaws in rock n roll's DNA from the very beginning to one day make it obsolete that nobody was paying attention to.

  • @jamiemacdonald436
    @jamiemacdonald436 Před 2 měsíci

    This song was featured in the 1992 movie Singles. Check out the whole soundtrack sometime, it's a great snapshot of the early nineties Seattle music scene as well as a couple other great songs.

  • @Snakebite_33
    @Snakebite_33 Před 4 měsíci

    Would? is my favorite alice in chains song

  • @cakegrrrl7976
    @cakegrrrl7976 Před 2 lety +1

    Shivers are quite normal with Layne's voice...

  • @adamharper9672
    @adamharper9672 Před měsícem

    A band that got lost in the shuffle of 90's Grunge that you need to check out is Candlebox...they were one of the best that got eclipsed by SO much good music in the early-mid 90's.

  • @MakingItHappenMWC
    @MakingItHappenMWC Před 3 měsíci

    The 1st song on my playlist when i go riding.

  • @johnblaze5252
    @johnblaze5252 Před rokem

    Your arm hair is standing up because this song summons Andrew Wood. It’s about his overdosing experience & his soul realizes his body is in the death process . It’s the apology Andy was never able to give. It’s not about his addiction it’s about what ran through Andy’s mind when he was dying.

  • @googogler
    @googogler Před 2 lety +2

    this was posted a day ago? no notifications? only 32 views? what's happening?......🕊

  • @tbnobs
    @tbnobs Před 4 měsíci

    Laynes voice is so unique you know right away who's singing

  • @psychorabbitstudios616

    The Dirt album came out in 92 I bought it on CD and I jammed it all the time and it still holds up, the whole album is a ride that just makes you know it’s real RIP Layne and Mike

  • @eagleal3
    @eagleal3 Před 2 lety

    I was born in 1970 and grew up on hard Rock and metal and when the '90s had and grunge and new metal hit the scene I was listening to all the stuff that people are now calling iconic and I was listening to it the moment it came out you name the group I was hearing it. The vibes that you give off on the channel awesome and cool personality and great reaction and you recognize good music it seems like

  • @benkacanowski5605
    @benkacanowski5605 Před rokem

    @ 1:23, that's called an "EARGASM"

  • @fullmetta2764
    @fullmetta2764 Před 2 lety +1

    I only discovered AIC this year...late to the party. The unplugged performance kicked it off, have been on a weeks long binge.

  • @srhatfield
    @srhatfield Před rokem

    1:21 it is normal for those of us who can experience it, yes. There are a whole lot of people who do not experience "tingles" from sound. If you haven't tried it yet, look into ASMR. It's amazing!

  • @nolesfan8900
    @nolesfan8900 Před rokem

    I’m a 59 year old banger and, YES, it’s completely normal to have chills and physical reactions to AIC. Accept it as proof that the therapy is working.