While detractors busily attempt to hammer the final nail into the
coffin that is Alice in Chains, the band's devoted following still hold out
hope that their almost five year absence from the music scene will result in
a reformation, and ultimately a new studio album. Though the band will
neither confirm or deny their complete dissolution, their recent actions seem
to hint in that direction.
Alice in Chains haven't released a studio record since their
self-titled release debuted at #1 in 1995, followed by their MTV live/acoustic
set, Unplugged (1996). Since then, the band has released a "best-of"
album, Nothing Safe: Best Of the Box and a career retrospective boxed set,
Music Bank -- not exactly the actions of a band alive and kicking. In
addition, guitarist Jerry Cantrell released a solo album, Boggy Depot (1998),
bassist Mike Inez jumped back on the Ozzy Osbourne float and vocalist Layne
Staley's whereabouts are as mysterious as that of D.B. Cooper.
In all fairness, the release of their latest disc, Alice in Chains
- Live, has more to do with fan demand than it does swirling speculation
that the band is history. Over the past decade, no less than 50 live bootleg
recordings have circulated, leading to this, their first legitimate
live collection.
Alice in Chains - Live is indeed a superb collection that spans
the band's career, beginning with a rare 1990 club performance from their
first national tour and culminating with tracks recorded at their last shows
in 1996, as an opening act for the mammoth KISS tour. Remarkably, the
performances are seamless, as if they were recorded in one
sweat-drenching evening. The disc is stacked with plenty of their powerful grunge/metal
classics from haunting numbers like "Love, Hate, Love", "Junkhead",
"Dirt", "Would?" and "Rooster" to heart pounding, bone-jarring tunes such as
"Them Bones", "Man in the Box", "Dam the River" "Again" and "Bleed the
Freak".
There is a downside, however. Alice in Chains - Live should have
been a double disc set. There were far too many great songs sacrificed in
narrowing it down to just one disc. Great performance numbers like "Got Me
Wrong", "Down in a Hole" and "Rain When I Die" should have been included.
Regardless, this collection is more than strong enough to lure Alice in Chains
devotees into their local record stores. However, it won't keep fans from
casting lots for more exhaustive bootlegs.