Despite by no means formally disbanding, Alice in Chains had grow to be primarily inactive by the tip of the ’90s, due largely to Layne Staley’s debilitating heroin dependancy. Still, the grunge titans’ specter loomed over guitarist Jerry Cantrell when he launched “Cut You In,” the lead single from his debut solo album, Boggy Depot, in January 1998.
After filming an MTV Unplugged particular and opening a handful of dates on Kiss’ reunion tour in 1996, Alice in Chains went on an indefinite hiatus as Staley disappeared from the general public eye, struggling a gradual, agonizing demise that culminated in his dying in April 2002. With his band caught in limbo, Cantrell started engaged on materials for his first album in 1996. He made his debut solo tour that very same yr with the only “Leave Me Alone,” which appeared on the soundtrack to the Ben Stiller-directed black comedy The Cable Guy, starring Jim Carrey and Matthew Broderick.
Whereas “Leave Me Alone” featured the identical grinding guitars and sinister vocal melodies that made Alice in Chains grunge kingpins, Boggy Depot integrated piano-driven dirges and country-tinged laments into Cantrell’s alt-metal arsenal. “Cut You In” deviated from the AIC template with its lurching, samba-like groove and outstanding horn association, courtesy of Fishbone saxophonist Angelo Moore. “I was pretty hammered when I wrote that tune,” Cantrell informed Guitar World in 1998.
“I just started humming this thing I had in my head, and I grabbed this guitar I made in high school — it’s a white Strat that I call EMBO, which stands for ‘Eat My Butt Out.’ Anyway, I grabbed the guitar and wrote it in about 20 to 30 minutes.”
Watch the Video for Jerry Cantrell’s ‘Cut You In’
With lyrics like “I lose myself, hide from the sun / I make a trip when I’m out of fun” and “I call you up whenever I’m stoned / We chew the skin, choke on the bones,” “Cut You In” appears like a hedonistic drug-buddy anthem on the floor. But as Cantrell defined to Billboard just a few months after the music’s launch, it is a rebuke of these fickle relationships, “directed at the type of folk who ride with you when shit is good. But when your situation turns south, they’re the first to bail — unlike true friends.”
Cantrell recorded the monitor with assist from a pair of true pals: Alice in Chains bassist Mike Inez and drummer Sean Kinney. (The latter additionally seems within the music’s music video as a automotive thief who jacks Cantrell’s experience, which Cantrell first stole from a middle-aged man.) At the time, the singer and guitarist wasn’t positive if the band associations would assist or hinder his solo enterprise. “It could be that programmers know my work and will be more likely to pick up the advance and throw the cut on. Or they may hate it on sight,” he mused. “Either way, Alice is a big legacy to live up to. Hopefully, the fans like it. They’re the real bosses.”
The actual bosses expressed their approval by sending “Cut You In” to No. 5 on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock Airplay chart and No. 15 on the Alternative Airplay (previously Modern Rock Tracks) chart, the very best placements of Cantrell’s solo profession. It validated the guitarist’s extracurricular endeavor, which he nonetheless discovered unfamiliar and just a little nerve-racking.
“Everyone knows I had plenty of time to waste for a while. The question was, do I want to sit on my couch, or do I want to make music?” Cantrell requested Billboard. “I decided to explore my solo side. It’s weird to wear all the hats. In a band, you have more shoulders to carry the load and more brains to bounce ideas around. I’m still adjusting to going it alone.”
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