On the opposite end of the album, it begins with “Them Bones”, in an instant, explosive beginning. The song was written in memory of Andrew Wood, the lead singer of Seattle band Mother Love Bone who died of a heroin overdose in 1990. Starting with an excellent bass by Mike Starr (who left the band after the album’s release) “Would?” works its way through fine verses and choruses before it ends abruptly following a climatic bridge. Recorded: Various Locations, March-May 1992ĭirt balances heavy rock sounds with textured acoustic numbers and the album spawned five singles “Them Bones”, “Down in a Hole”, “Rooster”, “Angry Chair”, and “Would?”, the album’s closer which was actually the lead single. Produced by: Dave Jerden & Alice in Chains This strategy worked because the band was hard enough for metal fans, yet dark and punk-influenced enough to join the ranks of the grunge bands. As a result, Alice In Chains were suddenly marketed as an “alternative” band, instead of their traditional heavy metal billing in order to help build anticipation for the new album. In between the band’s debut in 1990 and Dirt in 1992, Seattle suddenly became an international “scene” with the phenomenal success of bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam.
The band’s roots date back to 1987 in Seattle when Staley first met Cantrell in 1987. “I was going through a tough time, everyone was, but that’s what made the album stronger and more intense, I look back on that period of time as the longest four years of sex, drugs and alcohol we all went through…” The other band members were also struggling with various chemical dependency and depression ailments and were not shy about laying their soul bare on this album. Lead singer Layne Staley was in the middle of his constant struggle with substance abuse (which he would ultimately lose at the age of 34) and he had recently quit a stunt in rehab. Themes such as depression, war, death, nihilism, and especially drug abuse are explored thoroughly in the morbid lyrics and suitably complemented by the slow, methodical, bleak and doomy music and melody.
There is no doubt that the material on this album has a very dark feel throughout. Guitarist Jerry Cantrell has stated that Dirt was the band’s best work. Like their 1990 debut album Facelift, this album was produced by Dave Jerden, with songs primarily written on the road prior to entering the studio. The album was very well received by music critics and sold well commercially, having been certified platinum four times over. With their second album, Dirt the band really came of age. The band which practically invented the genre of dark alternative metal, Alice In Chains bridged the gap between the “traditional” heavy metal and the new, alternative inspired “fusion” metals which began to proliferate in the 1990s.