SUPPORT ME ON PATREON\n\nWATCH MUSIC is not a GENRE VIDEOS and MORE\n\nOnce in a while I profile a band that is a perfect example of why genres & labels don\u2019t work. Alice in Chains is one of those. They\u2019ve always been lumped together with the other Seattle-slash-grunge-era bands \u2013 even though if you listened to Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, STP, Alice in Chains, Soundgarden, and whoever else back to back, you\u2019d be hard pressed to say any of them really sound like each other. Nirvana leans punk. Pearl Jam classic rock. Pumpkins emo. STP power pop. And while all of these bands also have some of their roots in hard rock/metal, only Soundgarden & Alice in Chains took metal to its next evolution \u2013 progressive rhythmic & harmonic elements with enough breath & quietude to allow softer emotions to poke through.\n\nOf those two bands, Alice in Chains hewed to the more traditional metal elements. Which makes sense because their origins were actual metal. Both Layne Staley and Jerry Cantrell started out in typical 1980s glam metal bands \u2013 playing forms of actual hair metal (seriously, just look up the photos). When they got together to form the new Alice in Chains \u2013 copped from Layne\u2019s old band name Alice N\u2019 Chains, they kept the melodic & hammering rhythm elements of hair metal, and made it darker.\n\nIt helped that both Staley & Cantrell were incredible vocalists whose voices meshed well together. They\u2019d often trade off lead vocals, but it\u2019s when they came together to do those near medieval organum parallel harmonies that Alice in Chains became who they were meant to be. They somehow managed to be dark & bright all at once. Rock hard and accessible \u2013 even vulnerable, often in one song. It was a hallmark of grunge that sensitivity & major keys mixed directly with aggression & minor keys. Of all the aforementioned bands, Alice in Chain\u2019s version was the most haunting & fully realized.\n\nWhich is what makes Layne Staley\u2019s death in 2002 so sick. Not because he OD\u2019ed on a speedball. Not because he suffered for years before trying to kick his addiction. Those are horrific facts that should be mourned and honored as Layne should be. No, it\u2019s because we immediately associate the dark, haunting music with drug addiction & tragic death. We forget all too easily that hundreds of other dark bands have existed without tragedy, that Layne\u2019s death is the exception rather than the rule. It diminishes the loss to say, \u201cOh of course he died that way. Just listen to the music.\u201d\n\nLike so many other bands who successfully merged disparate influences into something entirely new and endlessly captivating, Alice in Chains should not be defined by tragedy. They should be respected and enjoyed for the music they create, the new sounds & ideas they contribute, and the fact that they were and are musicians & artists just like any other artist from any other style you could possibly name.\n\nGrunge in general was a big influence on my music. It woke me up to the possibility that I could show my harder side while still keeping my usual sensitivity front & center. I evolved from that sound years ago, but you can still hear Alice in Chains in my work, especially in songs like these two:\n\nNICK \u2013 \u201cYour Sister\u201d (from the album Your EP)\nREC \u2013 \u201cThree More Minutes\u201d (from the album Synergy for the Weird)\xa0\n\nAND here's my acoustic grunge set, featuring most of the bands I mentioned above: \xa0\nNick DeMatteo - Live Acoustic Grunge\n\n\n--- \n\nThis episode is sponsored by \n\xb7 Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app\n\nSupport this podcast: https://anchor.fm/musicisnotagenre/support\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices