Me meto un tiro,
¡Pum!
El eco suena,
¡Pum!
O quizás es el corazón,
¡Pum!
Que todavía sueña.

Etiqueta: Jerry Cantrell

Seattle Sound: Duff McKagan y Jerry Cantrell (NFL)

Seattle Sound: Duff McKagan y Jerry Cantrell (NFL)

Seattle Sound: Duff McKagan and Jerry Cantrell (NFL)

Las leyendas del Rock de Seattle, Duff McKagan y Jerry Cantrell, hablan sobre la magia de su ciudad y cómo el carácter único de sus gentes ha influenciado totalmente tanto en la música como en el fútbol local.

IN ENGLISH

Seattle rock legends Duff McKagan and Jerry Cantrell discuss the magic of their city and how that unique civic character has rubbed off on both Seattle’s music scene and football team.

Jerry Cantrell le encuentra utilidad a un premio MTV

Jerry Cantrell le encuentra utilidad a un premio MTV

Jerry Cantrell finds utility for a MTV award

Sacado de // From –> https://www.facebook.com/aliceinchains and http://portalternativo.com

Hubo un tiempo en el que la MTV era una referencia para ver vídeos musicales. Hoy en día es un contenedor de ‘realitys’ protagonizado por personajes con el cerebro cercanos al coma terminal y series sin relación alguna con la música.

Es por ello que tampoco parece que sea una gran afrenta ver para qué usa Jerry Cantrell (vía Facebook), guitarrista/vocalista de Alice In Chains, el premio MTV que ganó el grupo en 1992 por “Would?” como “Mejor vídeo en una película” por su aparición en “Singles”.

IN ENGLISH

There was a time when MTV was a reference to watch music videos. Today it is a container of ‘Reality’ starring characters witH series unrelated to music.

That is why it does not seem a great shame to see what used Jerry Cantrell (via Facebook), guitarist / vocalist of Alice In Chains, who won the MTV award in 1992 by «Would?» «to Best video in the film «Singles «.

Jerry Cantrell adora los cuernos y la música alta, Twitter no tanto

Jerry Cantrell adora los cuernos y la música alta, Twitter no tanto

Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains Loves Horns and High Volumes, Twitter Not So Much

Sacado de // From: http://portalternativo.com and http://noisey.vice.com/

Jerry Cantrell, guitarrista de Alice In Chains, ha conversado con la gente de Noisey sobre diversos temas relacionados con la banda, como por ejemplo la no inclusión de “Fear The Voices” en un álbum, tema que acabó apareciendo en la caja “Music Bank”.

Era un descarte. Esa canción era algo que monté… No llegó al nivel, eso es lo que pasó. Así que nunca se supuso que fuese a entrar en un álbum pero terminó en la caja. Supongo que es material de fondo interesante. Con la excepción de los dos últimos discos que hicimos (con Layne Staley), la mayoría de veces no había material extra.

Del título de su último disco, “The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here”:

Es un título en plan ‘qué-cojones’. Es único. Busqué por ahí, nadie había titulado un álbum así. Hay un par de otros títulos que consideramos pero ya se habían usado en varias formas. Algunas críticas decían que el disco es directamente “anti-políticos”, “religión esto”. ¡Es solo una canción! No es anti nada. Lo único “anti” que hay es supongo “anti-estupidez”. Anti-intolerancia. Anti forzarle las ideologías los unos a los otros. Hay temas con los que hemos estado luchando y matándonos y haciendo guerras durante cinco mil años. Y aún no nos hemos dado cuenta de que está bien que creas lo que quieras pero también todo el mundo tiene derecho de creer lo que quiera creer. Y porqué alguien no suscriba lo que quieres creer, no hace que esté equivocado, no te da ti más la razón. No les da el derecho a forzar las creencias en alguien, legislar en su contra, legislar lo que alguien puede hacer con su propio cuerpo. Como mujeres o el rol de la mujer en la iglesia. Que está bien forzarle a alguien la ignorancia y la intolerancia.

Preguntado si tiene algo que ver con la formación actual de la banda, siendo William DuVall afroamericano, afirma:

No se dirige a eso especialmente; no es específicamente sobre eso, no. Pero hemos tenido un puñado de gente, un puñado de desafortunados individuos amigos de la banda que han hecho comentarios en ese sentido. Pero somos una banda multiracial, ¿sabes? (Mike) Inez es filipino-americano, William es afroamericano, Sean (Kinney) y yo somos chuchos americanos. No estamos exentos del mundo en el que vivimos, y eso son algunas cosas con las que William y Mike han lidiado más que Sean y yo.

Y preguntado por si tienen intención de hacer un EP al estilo “Sap” o “Jar Of Flies”, asegura:

Es algo que hemos hecho en el pasado y, por supuesto, ¿quien sabe lo que haremos en el futuro? Los últimos años creo que hemos llegado todos a la conclusión de que la mejor receta es la del momento y lidiar con lo que estás lidiando en el momento. No diré que nunca hagamos uno pero creo que en los últimos dos discos hemos metido elementos de esos dos EPs, con guitarras acústicas que se mezclan con los elementos más heavys. Quizá este más que el anterior pero hay algunos momentos realmente bonitos en “Black Gives Way To Blue”, “When the Sun Rose Again”, “Your Decision”, en el último disco. Este disco quizá tiene un par de canciones en ese rollo de la banda. Este es más una mezcla equilibrada entre esa cara de la banda, los EPS y el Unplugged, pero también el material más heavy.

Cantrell se reconoce ajeno al movimiento de las redes sociales:

Me la suda (risas) No quier ser parte de ello. Creo que a todos nos va mejor sabiendo que nadie va a meter el genio de vuelta a la botella así que me mantendré alejado de ello. No tengo cuenta en Facebook, no twitteo. A mi no me va. No diré que no le vaya a otra gente… Obviamente, mucha gente en el planeta está muy metida en ello así que eso solo es mi visión del tema. Pero creo que nos iría mucho mejor si se dejara algo de misterio de magia. Todo es tan instantáneo, no tienes que pagar por ello, no tienes que esperar o invertir nada para tenerlo… No es como hago yo las cosas así que supongo que es algo de lo que me mantengo alejado. Eso si, cada vez que haces un comentario al respecto acabas pareciendo un capullo.

IN ENGLISH

Noisey: Hey Jerry, nice to meet you.
Jerry Cantrell: What’s up dude?

Before I start asking you questions, I just wanted to let you know this story: when I was a kid I was in a CD store that had those stations where you could listen before you buy, and I picked up Dirt. I didn’t realize the player was on all the way at top volume…
[laughs]

So the first thing I ever heard from the band was like, “Them Bones” just being blasted
“Them Bones” at stun volume. [laughs] That’s how it should be heard for the first time.

It was an ideal first time. I almost fell out of the chair.
Oh, cool.

That pretty much sealed Alice in Chains being one of my favorite bands. You have a unique playing style and—I’m probably going to ask some nerdy musical questions—
Go ahead!

You have a unique playing style, and some of the stuff you’ve done like “Fear the Voices” and [Cantrell’s solo single] “Cut You In,” the guitar sounds like horns. It’s hard to tell if there’s actual horns on the song; I think there are, but even the guitar sounds like that.
Yeah, actually on those two songs you mentioned, I think there are horns on those songs. Had a lot of players on that solo album [Boggy Depot] Les Claypool plays on a couple tracks, Mike Inez. It’s cool that you mentioned that, and there are some horns in there. But a lot of the guitar lines I write I’ll hear, ‘that’s like a sax playing,’ or I’ll hear like a horn section or something like that. I’ve heard a lot of guitar players talk about guitar lines and melody lines in that way. It’s not something I do intentionally, but I definitely notice after the fact that it’s very conducive to a horn playing those lines.

Stuff like that really stands out to me about the band; people harp on how many bands copied the vocal style of Alice in Chains, but there are so many elements that no one’s even trying to copy about you guys.
Hahaha, yeah. there’s a whole lot left there to rip off.

By the way, why was “Fear the Voices” (circa-1992 unreleased track until the Music Bank box set) never released on an album?
OK, I know what song you’re talking about now, I was answering about “Cut You In” on my solo record, but “Voices” was an outtake. That particular song—there isn’t any horns on that by the way—was something I put together…it didn’t make the grade, that’s just what it was. So it was never really intended to make an album, but it ended up on the box set. Some interesting background material I guess. With the exception of the last two records that we made [with Layne Staley, “Get Born Again” and “Died”], most of the time there wasn’t any extra material.

So the new album (The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here), in a weird way, seems like the most positive, optimistic album you’ve ever made.
It’s funny, I’ve heard people take it both ways. There’s a camp that sees it as a very dark record, and there’s a camp that sees it as a very “up” record. I guess sonically it reaches a little further back to classic rock and there’s some pop elements, and metal as well. All those elements reach a little further back in time. Lyrically…[laughs] it’s as harsh as any record we’ve done. Lyrically it’s pretty dark. Sonically it could be taken to be a more “up” record. But I think that’s always been the trick with this band, even if the music is kind of soothing or sparse, the lyrics always bring things back to reality. I’ve said this a few times about our music, but it’s like saying something horrible in the most beautiful way.

I think that’s a lot of music! But also, most past Alice has been referred to as very “personal,” while songs like “Voices” and “The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here” seem like you’re more overtly talking to an audience.
You know, we were aware we were gonna have this conversation a lot by calling the record that, but it certainly wasn’t our intention to start a dialogue about it. It’s just comments…we just wanted to go in about a subject that no one’s really written about before. I always write from a very personal point of view. Layne always did that too, but being an individual you’re a part of society. Maybe you’re writing from your viewpoint or somebody else’s viewpoint, but it’s a personal thing. But that song to me is more of a reflection, a mirror reflecting back what I see in that arena. We didn’t call our album that to have some big political, anti-religion manifesto. It’s just a take on a subject, reflecting it back, you know, some of the uglier elements of both of those arenas. When people say to me that we’ve started making social commentary, well, every song is a commentary. [laughs] There’s nothing different…our first big hit “Man in the Box” dealt with issues…

Oh yeah.
And got picketed for that “Jesus Christ, deny your maker” line. There’s also a song called “God Am” on the dog record, which deals with the subject matter too. “Voices,” in terms of songwriting, is very internal, it’s not external. It comes from a very personal place, but of course it can be applied to anything, from any place in society.

I figured you just picked “Devil” as the title tune so you could go “Yeah! We can put some dinosaurs on the cover now!”
It’s just a what-the-fuck title. It’s unique. I did some research on it, nobody had called an album that. There’s a couple other titles that were under consideration, but they’d already been used in various forms. But some of the reviews just said the record is flat-out “anti-politics,” “religion this.” It’s just one song! It’s not anti-anything. The only thing “anti-” it is is I guess anti-stupidity. Anti-bigotry. Anti-forcing ideologies on each other. These are subjects we’ve been battling and killing each other and fighting wars over with each other for fucking five thousand years now. And we haven’t figured it out yet, that it’s okay to believe what you want to believe, but everybody else has the right to believe what they want to believe too. And because someone else doesn’t subscribe to what you want to believe, doesn’t make them wrong, doesn’t make you any more right. It doesn’t give them the right to enforce a belief on somebody, legislate against them, legislate what someone can do what their own body. Like women, or women’s role in the church. That it’s okay to enforce ignorance and bigotry on somebody.

If I can jump out on a limb with it, I wanted to know if it was partly inspired by this lineup of the band, if anyone has made any racist comments or anything like that, which is a totally new thing that the band would be experiencing.
It didn’t specifically address it; it’s not specifically about that, no. But we’ve had a handful of people, a handful of unfortunate individuals who are friends of the band, who’ve made comments in that area. But we’re a multiracial band, you know? [Mike] Inez is Filipino-American, William is African-American, Sean and I are like American mutts. We’re not exempt from the world we live in, and those are some  things that William and Mike have probably dealt with more than Sean and I.

Getting back to preaching, how do you feel about so many bands expressing themselves on Twitter and social media, which isn’t your style at all?
Yeah, I don’t give a fuck. [laughs] I don’t want any part of it. I think we all do a lot better to know there’s no putting the genie back in the bottle so I’ll just stay out of it. I don’t have a Facebook account, I don’t Tweet.

There’s something to be said for a band that solely wants to express themselves through the songs, because it’s just rarer and rarer for people to do that now.
It doesn’t work for me. I’m not gonna say it doesn’t work for someone else…obviously a lot of people on the planet are fucking involved with it so that’s just my particular take on it. But I think we’d be a lot better if there was a little bit of mystery and magic left in it. Everything’s so instant, you don’t have to pay for it, you don’t have to wait for it or invest anything in having it…it’s not the way I go about things I guess so it’s just something I stay out of. Every time you make a comment about it you end up looking like a prick though.

No, no, I know where you’re coming from. Do you think you’ll ever do another EP like Sap or Jar of Flies again that’s a departure from the harder-rocking albums?
It’s something that we’ve done in the past, and of course, who knows what we’re gonna do in the future? Over the last couple years I think we’ve all come to the conclusion that the best recipe is in the moment and to deal with what you’re dealing with now. I’d never say we’d never do one but I think the last two records we’ve put out have elements of both those EPs, with acoustic guitar kind of blended in with the heavier elements. Maybe this one more than the last one, but there’s some really nice moments on Black Gives Way to Blue…”When the Sun Rose Again,” “Your Decision,” on the last record. This record has maybe a couple more songs geared toward that vibe of the band. This one’s pretty much an equal mix toward that side of the band, the EPs and the Unplugged, but also the heavier stuff.

What aspect of the band do you think doesn’t get enough credit?
I don’t know! As time goes by, the story seems to kind of change a little bit. We’ve been around for a long time, and we were part of a very significant moment in music, not just in our hometown, but around the world in the late 80s and 90s when music took a turn. And it meant a lot to us even just to do it. As for where we didn’t get credit, I mean, we get a lot of credit. Some camps like to rewrite our history as if we didn’t exist, or that we didn’t come from the town that we came from somehow. I’ve seen a few things happen that way, that somehow we get bumped out of the story. At the end of the day, we’re not doing this for someone else’s interpretation of what our life was. I know how it went, I’m still living it, I’m still doing it, and I’m still adding to it. I’ll think about that shit when I’m sitting on the porch unable to do anything else. Maybe I’ll have had a little time to look back at it then But like I was saying earlier, it’s good to stay in the moment, think about the next few steps in front of you. I’ve been doing it more or less with my friends for the last 26 years and we’re still on the journey, still in the process.

Cantrell dice que los nuevos Alice in Chains venden bien, pero no como en los 90s

Cantrell dice que los nuevos Alice in Chains venden bien, pero no como en los 90s

Cantrell says new Alice in Chains selling well, but not like the ’90s

http://www1.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Jerry+Cantrell+Arrivals+Rock+Roll+Hall+Fame+F_pYDcIBbxgl.jpg

Sacado de // From: http://medicinehatnews.com

«Triunfar en el mercado de hoy es muy diferente a hacerlo bien en el mercado de los 90 en cuanto los discos salen, sabes lo que te digo ¿no?» Dijo el guitarrista / compositor y fundador Jerry Cantrell en una reciente entrevista telefónica.

«No puedes comparar realmente los dos.»

Es cierto. Las alturas donde llegó la banda de Grunge de Seattle son imposibles de alcanzar para ellos hoy en día – después de todo, «Dirt» de 1992 y «Jar of Flies» de 1994 fueron discos de platino siete veces en los EE.UU. y tres veces en Canadá.

Pero nos dice que no sólo son las ventas lo que antes iba mejor.

«El hecho es que siento que no valoramos los esfuerzos y los compromisos e inversiones (ya no), en la música de la gente sobre todo», «Creo que, en general, hemos llegado a esperar menos y a pagar lo mismo o más por ello. Y realmente ahora eso se ve bien «.

Con la esperanza de ser la excepción a la regla, Cantrell dice que la banda se esfuerza duro para hacer de este, su segundo disco con una formación cambiada, un éxito.

Si queréis leer la entrevista al completo, pasaros por:

 

http://medicinehatnews.com/2013/06/entertainment/entertainment-news/cantrell-says-new-alice-in-chains-selling-well-but-not-like-the-90s/

 

IN ENGLISH

“Doing well in today’s market is a lot different than doing well in the ’90s market as far as records go, you know what I mean?” said founding guitarist/songwriter Jerry Cantrell in a recent telephone interview with a rueful laugh.

“You can’t even really compare the two.”

True enough. So the lofty heights the Seattle band reached in the early-90s heyday of its muck-encrusted hard rock are largely unreachable nowadays – after all, 1992′s “Dirt” and 1994′s “Jar of Flies” EP went platinum a combined seven times in the U.S. and thrice in Canada.

But he says it wasn’t just sales that were better then.

“The fact is, I don’t feel that we value people’s efforts and commitments and investments (anymore), in music particularly,” said the 47-year-old. “I think in general, we’ve grown to expect less and pay the same or more for it. And actually be OK with that.”

Hoping to be the exception to the rule, Cantrell says the band pushed themselves hard in making this, their second record with a revised lineup that features vocalist William DuVall in place of founding singer Layne Staley, who died of a drug overdose in 2002.

For the full interview:

http://medicinehatnews.com/2013/06/entertainment/entertainment-news/cantrell-says-new-alice-in-chains-selling-well-but-not-like-the-90s/