![]() “We’re kinda just hitting on feelings that are found in a lot of people. “We deal with a lot of painful issues, without getting too specific,” explained the frontman. ![]() But as is often the case with truly iconic singers, it was Layne’s inner torment that enabled the music to touch so many people, the knowledge that although you may be alone, someone else was in that dark place with you. Sadly, he was wrong about being at death’s bed, it just took a long time for him to sleep: drummer Sean Kinney later commented that the singer’s death was like “one of the world’s longest suicides”. The guy who was supposed to fall down and be at death’s bed or whatever people wanted to think I was doing… That guy was making records and getting his artwork into gallery shows.” “I don’t feel like I’m the type of guy who should be in front of a camera.” In another interview he added, “The same people who put you on the pedestal are just dying to fucking tear you down and write about it. “I hate it,” he says in a soundbite found on YouTube. He didn’t like doing press, and interviews with him became increasingly rare. He never gave anything less than everything emotions laid bare.ĭespite interviewing the band several times, I never met Layne. Layne was never anything less than brilliant. I saw Alice In Chains for the first time at London’s Marquee club on March 8, 1991, opening for Megadeth and blowing them off stage, and was fortunate enough to see them maybe a dozen times after that. First and foremost, he was an incredible singer, utterly mesmerising even when he barely moved. Wading through endless video clips on YouTube, it’s difficult to reconcile the goofy, happy young man with what he became, but Layne should be remembered for more than his addictions.
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