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I Was Once the Man Locked In the Box Tribute Given To Alice In Chains, Layne Stayley

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_in_the_Box

 

Man in the Box

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"Man in the Box"

Man in the Box by Alice in Chains US commercial cassette.jpg

US commercial cassette single

Single by Alice in Chains

from the album Facelift

Released        January 1991[1]

Recorded        December 1989 – April 1990

Studio        

London Bridge, Seattle

Capitol Recording, Hollywood

Genre        

Grunge[2][3]alternative metal[4]hard rock[5][6]alternative rock[7]

Length        4:46

Label        Columbia

Composer(s)        Jerry Cantrell

Lyricist(s)        Layne Staley

Producer(s)        Dave Jerden

Alice in Chains singles chronology

"We Die Young"

(1990)        "Man in the Box"

(1991)        "Bleed the Freak"

(1991)

Audio sample

MENU0:00

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Music video

"Man in the Box" on YouTube

"Man in the Box" is a song by the American rock band Alice in Chains. It was released as a single in January 1991 after being featured on the group's debut studio album Facelift (1990). It peaked at No. 18 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart and was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1992. The song was included on the compilation albums Nothing Safe: Best of the Box (1999), Music Bank (1999), Greatest Hits (2001), and The Essential Alice in Chains (2006). "Man in the Box" was the second most-played song of the decade on mainstream rock radio between 2010 and 2019.

 

 

Contents

1        Origin and recording

2        Composition

3        Lyrics

4        Release and reception

5        Music video

6        Live performances

7        Personnel

8        Chart positions

8.1        Weekly charts

8.2        Decade-end charts

9        Cover versions

10        In popular culture

11        References

12        External links

Origin and recording

In the liner notes of 1999's Music Bank box set collection, guitarist Jerry Cantrell said of the song; "That whole beat and grind of that is when we started to find ourselves; it helped Alice become what it was."[8]

 

The song makes use of a talk box to create the guitar effect. The idea of using a talk box came from producer Dave Jerden, who was driving to the studio one day when Bon Jovi's "Livin' on a Prayer" started playing on the radio.[9]

 

The original Facelift track listing credited only vocalist Layne Staley and Jerry Cantrell with writing the song.[10] All post-Facelift compilations credited the entire band. It is unclear as to why the songwriter credits were changed.

 

Composition

"Man in the Box" is widely recognized for its distinctive "wordless opening melody, where Layne Staley's peculiar, tensed-throat vocals are matched in unison with an effects-laden guitar" followed by "portentous lines like: 'Feed my eyes, can you sew them shut?', 'Jesus Christ, deny your maker' and 'He who tries, will be wasted' with Cantrell's drier, less-urgent voice," along with harmonies provided by both Staley and Cantrell in the lines 'Won't you come and save me'.[11]

 

Lyrics

In a 1992 interview with Rolling Stone, Layne Staley explained the origins of the song's lyrics:

 

I started writing about censorship. Around the same time, we went out for dinner with some Columbia Records people who were vegetarians. They told me how veal was made from calves raised in these small boxes, and that image stuck in my head. So I went home and wrote about government censorship and eating meat as seen through the eyes of a doomed calf.[12]

 

Jerry Cantrell said of the song:

 

But what it's basically about is, is how government and media control the public's perception of events in the world or whatever, and they build you into a box by feeding it to you in your home, ya know. And it's just about breaking out of that box and looking outside of that box that has been built for you.[13]

 

In a recorded interview with MuchMusic in 1991, Staley stated that the lyrics are loosely based on media censorship, and "I was really really stoned when I wrote it, so it meant something different then", he said laughing.[14]

 

Release and reception

"Man in the Box" was released as a single in 1991. "Man in the Box" is widely considered to be one of the band's signature songs, reaching number 18 on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart at the time of its release. According to Nielsen Music's year-end report for 2019, "Man in the Box" was the second most-played song of the decade on mainstream rock radio with 142,000 spins.[15]

 

The song was number 19 on VH1's "40 Greatest Metal Songs", and its solo was rated the 77th greatest guitar solo by Guitar World in 2008.[16] It was number 50 on VH1's "100 Greatest Songs of the 90s" in 2007.[17] The song was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1992.[5]

 

Steve Huey of AllMusic called the song "an often overlooked but important building block in grunge's ascent to dominance" and "a meeting of metal theatrics and introspective hopelessness."[11]

 

Music video

The MTV music video for the track was released in 1991 and was directed by Paul Rachman, who later directed the first version of the "Sea of Sorrow" music video for the band and the 2006 feature documentary American Hardcore. The music video was nominated for Best Heavy Metal/Hard Rock Video at the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards.[18] The video is available on the home video releases Live Facelift and Music Bank: The Videos. The video shows the band performing in what is supposedly a barn, where throughout the video, a mysterious man wearing a black hooded cloak is shown roaming around the barn. Then, after the unknown hooded figure is shown, he is shown again looking around inside a stable where many animals live where he suddenly discovers and shines his flashlight on a man (Layne Staley) that he finds sitting in the corner of the barnhouse. At the end of the video, the hooded man finally pulls his hood down off of his head, only to reveal that his eyelids were sewn together with stitches the whole time. This part of the video depicts on the line of the song, "Feed my eyes, now you've sewn them shut". The man with his eyes sewn shut was played by a friend of director Paul Rachman, Rezin,[19] who worked in a bar parking lot in Los Angeles called Small's.[20

Poem from my new blog I Was Once The Man Locked In The Box (Tribute Given To Alice In Chains, and Layne Stayley) I was, once a man locked in a box Begging for a savior smart as a fox Even better, should my hero be a she For it was Love that imprisoned me I need a hero to gift my heart to A warm loving angel to start life anew A rare soul to bring out the best in me For only by true love can I be free. Pray I, now within these cold metal walls For sweet forgiveness with my sincere calls I a prisoner without any chains Condemned to live heart-broke with my pains In this mind-made steel cavern all alone With this empty chill shattering my bones Need I, a rare beauty to rescue me For only by true love can I be free. I was, once a man locked in a box Begging for a savior smart as a fox Even better, should my hero be a she For it was Love that imprisoned me. Beg I, an angel to come rescue me For only by true love can I be free. R.J. Lindley, August 2nd 1993, Presented. 1-24-2021 Rhyme, ( When so lost, the mind becomes chained in a dark abyss ) Tribute given to the band - Alice In Chains, the song Titled-- " Man In The Box", singer Layne Stayley 1st Note: 1993 Once the darkness held me in iron chains So fiercely that I felt not the Spring rains I was blinded and sealed in my own tomb Prisoner in a soul breaking black room My cries came back as waves on poison seas Useless were my first angry cursing pleas Only when heart and soul found the true light Could I start to begin my freedom fight Beg I, an angel to come rescue me For only with true love can I be free. 2nd Note: 1-24-2021 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_in_the_Box

Copyright © | Year Posted 2021




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Date: 2/8/2021 7:40:00 PM
I can see you have spent a deep dive into Alice in Chains, remarkable. The amount of effort you put into your work Lindley. Amazing. 1993, I wouldn't go back to that year for quids. Fabulous music and lyrics though. I think I may have inserted it in one of my tropes. Your poem is relative and deep. Boxes are made to be broken and some boxes only retain bones, the essence of a person escapes. Where they escape to depends on the roll call, I guess.
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Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 2/8/2021 8:13:00 PM
Thank you my dear friend. That song- had so much in it that I recognized. So much that I had decades before dealt with myself it seems. And the genius of Layne Stayley coupled with his tragic ending. Yet again represented a dark and sad fate that I managed to avoid in my wild young life. A blessing given but not earned. A treasure prayed for but shocked to actually receive. God bless...
Labyrinth Avatar
Lady Labyrinth
Date: 2/8/2021 7:48:00 PM
https://youtu.be/wGiTPgvKktM
Date: 1/24/2021 9:44:00 AM
The mind can do many things both good and bad. It was good to see you writing. Today, I send you blessings..............
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Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 1/24/2021 10:23:00 AM
Thank you my friend. This poem was from 1993, I edited only one verse before presenting it here today. Almost didnt edit that verse as I wanted it as original as possible-but the verse was not just-right-- so I had to edit it. I did write a new poem last night but its not edited yet-maybe even not finished yet.. God bless..

Book: Shattered Sighs