- Facelift · 1990
- Jar of Flies - EP · 1994
- Dirt (Remastered) · 1992
- Dirt (Remastered) · 1992
- Dirt (Remastered) · 1992
- Dirt (Remastered) · 1992
- Alice In Chains · 1995
- Jar of Flies - EP · 1994
- Jar of Flies - EP · 1994
- Jar of Flies - EP · 1994
- Black Gives Way To Blue · 2009
- Alice In Chains · 1995
- Dirt (Remastered) · 1992
Essential Albums
- Alice In Chains’ Dirt casts an unnerving spell unlike anything else from the grunge explosion. Driven by relentlessly aggressive but rhythmically slippery riffs, “Would?” and “God Smack” give Layne Staley a chance to explore a vocal arsenal that encompasses bluesy wails, unholy screams, and guttural growls. While “Dirt” and “Hate to Feel” are some of the darkest dirges since Black Sabbath’s prime, the album peaks with “Down in a Hole” and “Rooster,” a pair of spooky, majestic ballads that alter the idea of what a slow-burning hard rock song can sound like.
Artist Playlists
- Part metal, part sludge, all intensity. Alice In Chains.
- Moments of beauty hide in their desolate grunge.
- Their rabid fanbase includes some of the biggest and heaviest groups on the planet.
- These are the bands whose stickers decorate Alice In Chains' amps and flight cases.
Singles & EPs
Live Albums
More To Hear
- The Alice in Chains frontman talks about his latest solo album.
- The Alice In Chains guitarist discusses his life and career.
- Elton John plays Tom Grennan, Travis Scott, and Alice in Chains.
About Alice In Chains
Alice In Chains’ heavy, harrowing rock pushed grunge deep into the dark side, and it remains some of the bleakest and rawest music ever to come out of the ‘90s alt-rock boom. Spawned in Seattle in 1987—after guitarist/songwriter Jerry Cantrell, bassist Mike Starr, and drummer Sean Kinney convinced singer Layne Staley to quit his funk band—the group began throwing down menacing, metal-infused tracks for their 1990 debut album Facelift. Songs like “Man in the Box” came drenched in Cantrell’s sludgy riffs and Staley’s booming, tortured howls. They were quickly thrust under the grunge umbrella alongside fellow Seattle bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam, but Alice In Chains’ morbid ruminations on depression, addiction, oppression, and death were far more entrenched in heavy metal than punk. This distinction became even clearer on the band’s second album, 1992’s multi-platinum-selling Dirt, a brooding mix mired in soul-crushing nihilism, hauntingly realized on the numbing ballad “Down In a Hole” and wailing dirges “Rooster” and “Them Bones.” Still, even when they stripped out the Sabbath-style sludge for their many acoustic forays—on 1992’s SAP EP, 1994’s Jar of Flies EP, and 1996’s MTV Unplugged performance—the band sounded just as intense. Unfortunately, in the thick of their success, Staley battled with a debilitating drug addiction, which he eventually succumbed to in 2002. Alice In Chains’ remaining members went their separate ways before reviving the band in 2006 with William DuVall taking over lead vocals and carrying their dark, visceral rock into a whole new era. “The thing that I think that this band has always been—for better or worse—is completely honest, completely gut-wrenching, punch-to-the-nuts, to-the-point type stuff,” Cantrell told Apple Music. “That can be really raw, and it hits really raw in the music.”
- ORIGIN
- Seattle, WA, United States
- FORMED
- 1987
- GENRE
- Hard Rock