Dirt (album)
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| Studio album by Alice in Chains | |||||
| Released | September 29, 1992 | ||||
| Recorded | March–May 1992 at One on One and Eldorado in Los Angeles, California | ||||
| Genre | Grunge, heavy metal | ||||
| Length | 57:35 | ||||
| Label | Columbia | ||||
| Producer | Alice in Chains, Dave Jerden | ||||
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| Singles from Dirt | |||||
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Dirt is an album by Seattle grunge band Alice in Chains, released on September 29, 1992.
The band's breakthrough album, Dirt is regarded by many as Alice in Chains' best album, and a classic from the golden age of grunge. Recorded while lead singer Layne Staley was suffering through a heroin addiction, the album's gloomy, tortured music helped turn it into a hit, reaching #6 on the Billboard charts, and over the years climbing up to 4x platinum.
The songs "Sickman", "Junkhead", "Dirt", "God Smack", "Hate to Feel" and "Angry Chair" are based on Staley's experiences with heroin. The song "Rooster" is based on the experiences of Jerry Cantrell's father, who fought in the Vietnam war. Cantrell's father was a member of the 101st Airborne, who wore patches on their arms featuring a bald eagle. There are no bald eagles in Vietnam, so the Vietnamese referred to them as roosters.
"Iron Gland", the untitled track before "Hate to Feel", is a parody of the Black Sabbath song "Iron Man" and features vocals by Tom Araya of Slayer, whom the band brought in so he could provide an Angel of Death-style scream.
Dirt was released on the same day as the Stone Temple Pilots album Core, another very important and successful album of the grunge era.
Contents |
All songs written by Cantrell and Staley unless noted otherwise.
- "Them Bones" – 2:30
- "Dam That River" – 3:09
- "Rain When I Die" – 6:01 (Cantrell, Staley, Kinney, Starr)
- "Down in a Hole" – 5:38
- "Sickman" – 5:29
- "Rooster" – 6:15
- "Junkhead" – 5:09
- "Dirt" – 5:16
- "God Smack" – 3:50
- "Iron Gland" (unlisted) – 0:43
- "Hate to Feel" – 5:16
- "Angry Chair" – 4:47
- "Would?" – 3:28
- "Them Bones" (Cantrell) – 2:30
- "Dam That River" (Cantrell) – 3:09
- "Rain When I Die" (Cantrell, Staley, Kinney, Starr) – 6:01
- "Sickman" (Cantrell, Staley) – 5:29
- "Rooster" (Cantrell) – 6:15
- "Junkhead" (Cantrell, Staley) – 5:09
- "Dirt" (Cantrell, Staley) – 5:16
- "God Smack" (Cantrell, Staley) – 3:50
- "Iron Gland" (unlisted) (Cantrell) – 0:43
- "Hate to Feel" (Staley) – 5:16
- "Angry Chair" (Staley) – 4:47
- "Down in a Hole" (Cantrell) – 5:38
- "Would?" (Cantrell) – 3:28
"Iron Gland" is a brief cover/parody of the classic "Iron Man" by Black Sabbath. It is not mentioned in the tracklisting printed on the album sleeve, but was later given its name in the Music Bank box set released in 1999. On the album, the track number is listed, but no song title is printed. There may also be some alternate (incorrect) titles to the song: the iTunes store lists the song as "Iron Man" while cdscan lists it as "Intro (Dream Sequence)".
Some early CD versions, including the Canadian and European releases, feature "Down in a Hole" as the penultimate track instead of the fourth one. This was due to an early error[citation needed], where putting "Down in a Hole" as the second to last track disrupts the storyline of this semi-concept album about addiction.[citation needed] On this version, the track number of "Iron Gland" is not present anywhere on the album, making it appear that there are only 12 songs on the record. Oddly enough, the Australian CD version was never amended and even later pressings (although now include "Iron Gland" on the disc but not the track listing) have this track sequence, although the cassette version has the correct sequence. The UK versions were never amended either, and still bear the mistake.
- Alice In Chains – producers
- Layne Staley – guitar, vocals
- Jerry Cantrell – guitar, vocals
- Mike Starr – bass
- Sean Kinney – drums
- Tom Araya – vocals on "Iron Gland"
- Bryan Carlstrom – engineer
- Annette Cisneros – assistant engineer, mixing assistant
- Kelly Curtis – management
- Doug Erb – design
- Peter Fletcher – product manager
- Steve Hall – mastering
- Dave Jerden – producer, mixing
- Mary Maurer – art direction/fx
- Rocky Schenck – photography
- Eddy Schreyer – mastering
- Susan Silver – management
- Nick Terzo – A&R
- Ulrich Wild – assistant engineer
| Year | Chart | Position |
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| 1992 | Billboard Top 200 | 6 |
| Year | Single | Chart | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1992 | "Would?" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 5 |
| 1992 | "Would?" | Modern Rock Tracks | 11 |
| 1992 | "Them Bones" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 24 |
| 1992 | "Them Bones" | Modern Rock Tracks | 30 |
| 1993 | "Rooster" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 7 |
| 1993 | "Angry Chair" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 34 |
| 1993 | "Angry Chair" | Modern Rock Tracks | 27 |
| 1993 | "Down in a Hole" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 10 |
| 1993 | "Down in a Hole" | Modern Rock Tracks | 10 |
| 1994 | "Down in a Hole" | Mainstream Rock Tracks | 11 |
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| Jerry Cantrell · William DuVall · Mike Inez · Sean Kinney Layne Staley · Mike Starr |
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| Studio albums | Facelift · Dirt · Alice in Chains · Untitled upcoming album |
| Extended plays | We Die Young · Sap · Jar of Flies |
| Live albums | MTV Unplugged · Live |
| Compilations | Nothing Safe: Best of the Box · Music Bank · Greatest Hits · The Essential Alice in Chains |
| Videos | Live Facelift · The Nona Tapes · MTV Unplugged · Music Bank: The Videos |
| Singles | "We Die Young" · "Bleed the Freak" · "Man in the Box" · "Sea of Sorrow" · "Would?" · "Them Bones" · "Angry Chair" · "Rooster" · "Down in a Hole" · "What the Hell Have I" · "Got Me Wrong" · "No Excuses" · "I Stay Away" · "Don't Follow" · "Grind" · "Heaven Beside You" · "Again" · "Fear the Voices" · "Get Born Again" |
| Related articles | Discography · Alice in Chains demos · Mad Season · Grunge music · MTV Unplugged · Singles |
| Categories | Alice in Chains · Members · Albums · Songs |
