Alice in Chains
LIVE
(Columbia)
The Alice in Chains legend has
only grown since the grunge relics placed themselves on the inactive list some
five years back, and their label has been frantically emptying the vaults ever
since. First there was an MTV Unplugged set, then the rarities-laced
Music Bank box. And now there's this, the group's first full-on electric
live album. Of the three, Live may actually be AIC's greatest gift to
their fans, since the reclusive rock-radio gods never once launched a
full-scale headlining arena tour.
Arranged in rough chronological order, the disc ignores the band's folksy side
in favor of steamy club jams and a couple of larger-venue performances that are
as menacing as they are rare. For a shut-in, singer Layne Staley takes
surprisingly well to his role as master of ceremonies -- he gleefully baits the
crowd on the early thrash comedy "Queen of the Rodeo" and giggles his way
through a drunken monologue that precedes "Dirt." His sickening wail stretches
a lot farther here than it does on the group's acoustic hits, just as guitarist
Jerry Cantrell's old-school metal influences are easier to spot in concert than
on record. The playlist is impeccable, reaching back to the Sab-simple "Man in
the Box" and forward to the doomy "God Am" and covering most of the band's
landmark `92 disc, Dirt. AIC may or may not ever mount an arena comeback
tour, but this is the next best thing.
|