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Layne Staley

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File:LayneS.jpg
Layne Staley's Rolling Stone cover circa 1996

Layne Thomas Staley, (August 22, 1967April 5, 2002), born in Kirkland, Washington, USA, was the lead singer of the Seattle-based grunge band Alice in Chains and the grunge supergroup Mad Season.

At the age of 12, Staley began playing drums and played in several glam bands in his early teens, but aspired to be a singer. He later traded in his drum set for a microphone. He met up with Jerry Cantrell in 1987, and formed Alice in Chains with him. Originally a glam band, Alice in Chains was one of the first bands of the grunge movement, and had marked metal influences.

Like several other musicians in the Seattle grunge scene, Staley experimented with heroin. By the 1990s, Staley was battling an addiction. The darker side of addiction had its influence on Staley's lyrics. The Alice in Chains album Dirt showed this preoccupation in songs like "Sickman" and "Dirt," while Cantrell's lyrics focused mainly on the thoughts of death. "Would?" in particular addresses the death of Andrew Wood, singer of Mother Love Bone, who had died of a heroin overdose.

Staley's vocal range was that of a Baritone and as is usual amongst rock singers it was much extended at the top. Staley could hit a G#4, and he can be heard doing this on the song We Die Young on the last line of the lyrics (the "And" of the final "And we die young"). Staley would often belt or loudly scream these top notes using a lot of vibrato, and he was well known for this trait as a constituent part of his vocal style. It was also much copied by others in the Grunge scene, it is not known whether Kurt Cobain directly lifted Staley's style for the closing line of Smells Like Teen Spirit, but Cobain used screaming and belting of the note in an identical way to finish the aforementioned song.

Alice in Chains did not tour in support of their album Jar of Flies, and rumors of Staley's addiction began spreading. Alice in Chains went into hiatus, regrouping to record a self-titled album which was released in 1995. To accompany the album, the band released a home video, The Nona Tapes, in which they poke fun at the rumours of Staley's addiction – several sources had announced his death during the hiatus, Charles Cross would later say that they had Staley's obituary on stand-by at The Rocket – but the band lapsed again, failing to complete tours planned in support of the album. After the death of his girlfriend, Demri Parrott in 1996 from bacterial endocarditis caused by drug use, Staley became more and more reclusive. Fans got to see firsthand the effects of Staley's drug abuse during the band's Unplugged appearance. Staley was visibly weak and emaciated and had problems singing at times. His last performance was on 3 July 1996 in Kansas City, Missouri, while they were touring with KISS after their Unplugged appearance.

Staley appeared briefly from his low-key lifestyle to do a radio interview and made two new tracks (Get Born Again, Died) with Alice in Chains for the Music Bank Box set in 1999. That was the last time he would work with Alice in Chains.

On April 20, 2002, Staley was found dead in his home two weeks post mortem after injecting a mixture of heroin and cocaine known as a "speedball". He was 34 years old. His body was also surrounded by various drug possessions and equipment. He was readily identified by his mother and attending personnel. Interestingly, the coroner determined he died on April 5th, the same date that fellow Seattle Grunge rocker, Kurt Cobain had died eight years earlier.

Friend and bandmate Jerry Cantrell, who had tried to stay in touch with Staley and maintain their friendship, released the solo album Degradation Trip in June 2002 and dedicated the album to Staley's memory.

Aaron Lewis, lead singer of post-grunge/nu-metal band Staind, penned a tribute to Staley titled "Layne" for Staind's 2003 album 14 Shades of Grey.

Eddie Vedder, lead singer of Pearl Jam, also recorded a song eulogizing Staley. Entitled "4/20/02" (the day Vedder heard the news and subsequently wrote the song). The song has only Vedder singing and playing the guitar in a ukulele-inspired tuning. It can be found as a hidden track on Pearl Jam's 2003 B-sides album Lost Dogs. Zakk Wylde also wrote a song about Layne Staley called "Layne" on the Black Label Society album, Hangover Music Vol. VI[1]

Discography

Release Date Title Band Label Other information
1989 Sweet Alice Alice in Chains Self-released Demos of the Facelift album
July, 1990 We Die Young Alice in Chains Columbia EP
August 20, 1990 Facelift Alice in Chains Columbia US #42, 2xPlatinum
March 21, 1992 Sap Alice in Chains Columbia EP, Gold
September 29, 1992 Dirt Alice in Chains Columbia US #6, 4xPlatinum
January 25, 1994 Jar of Flies Alice in Chains Columbia EP, US #1, 2xPlatinum
March 15, 1995 Above (album) Mad Season Columbia Charting Position Unknown
November 7, 1995 Alice in Chains Alice in Chains Columbia US #1,UK #37, 2xPlatinum
July 30, 1996 Unplugged Alice in Chains Columbia live, US #3,UK #20, Platinum
June 29, 1999 Nothing Safe: Best of the Box Alice in Chains Columbia US #20, Gold
October 26, 1999 Music Bank Alice in Chains Columbia 4 CD box set, US #123
December 5, 2000 Live Alice in Chains Columbia US #142
August 28, 2001 Greatest Hits Alice in Chains Columbia US #112, Gold
TBA The Essential Alice in Chains Alice in Chains Columbia

Other bands Staley was in

Diamond Lie
Gypsy Rose[1]
Mad Season Class of '99

Layne Staley Fund

In 2003, Layne's mother Nancy McCallum and Jamie Richards, a drug and alcohol counselor, formed the Layne Staley Fund, a non-profit organization that raises money for drug treatment and works with the Seattle music community. A yearly tribute is held in August, on or around Layne's birthday, to celebrate his music and to spread a message of hope to prevent further tragedy.

References

  1. ^ allmusic.com Review Link to the allmusic.com page of the BLS album and its review.