Alice in Chains - Black Gives Way to Blue

4/5 stars
Seattle survivors make good with their first studio album in 14 years
Album review by Dave Kerr.
Published 25 August 2009

They said a tribute tour would be the extent of their reunion under the Alice in Chains banner, yet these seminal grunge-metallers have found a road back to the studio without the late Layne Staley. Whereas Staley and Jerry Cantrell often dealt in spine-chilling harmonies that placed a candid lens on the brutal truths of a man coming undone, the vocal alliance between Cantrell and the gently-introduced William DuVall is comparably understated. But there's an overriding sense of survival in their couplets, where bluesy shards of metal like Last of My Kind etch a picture of a battle-hardened band plunging their tattered flag deeper into the dirt. From a punishing lead riff that rips like a hornet's nest being poked with a chainsaw on Check My Brain to the all-too-brief eponymous piano-led eulogy featuring Elton John on the ivories, AIC go vintage as often as they surprise with this fourth LP. Against some odds, it's a compelling start to a second act.

Comments (3)

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  • Saw Cantrell with the new singer (I think it's the same dude?) years back, never thought I'd have a chance to see AIC in any form though.

    Great to see this new record scoring a decent review, can't wait to hear it!

    Posted by Marco | Friday August 2009 @ 13:34

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  • Comes out this month! I'm hoping for the best. It would have been cool to have had a contstructive critique on A Looking In View in this review though.

    Posted by Strummer52 | Saturday September 2009 @ 09:11

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  • I saw Jerry Cantrell at the Mean Fiddler in October 2003 I think, and DuVall was singing Staley's parts then, it was a phenomenal gig and this album is pleasantly surprising in how good it is!

    Posted by Aneurysm | Friday September 2009 @ 12:05

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