Dirt Alice in Chains

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/29/1992
  • Sales Rank: 15,294
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 074645247526
More FormatsOnline Price
CD$12.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Dirt

1LISTENThem Bones 2:30
2LISTENDam That River 3:09
3LISTENRain When I Die 6:01
4LISTENDown in a Hole 5:38
5LISTENSickman 5:29
6LISTENRooster 6:15
7LISTENJunkhead 5:09
8LISTENDirt 5:16
9LISTENGod Smack 3:50
10LISTENIron Gland 0:43
11LISTENHate to Feel 5:16
12LISTENAngry Chair 4:47
13LISTENWould? 3:27

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Dirt is Alice in Chains' major artistic statement and the closest they ever came to recording a flat-out masterpiece. It's a primal, sickening howl from the depths of Layne Staley's heroin addiction, and one of the most harrowing concept albums ever recorded. Not every song on Dirt is explicitly about heroin, but Jerry Cantrell's solo-written contributions (nearly half the album) effectively maintain the thematic coherence -- nearly every song is imbued with the morbidity, self-disgust, and/or resignation of a self-aware yet powerless addict. Cantrell's technically limited but inventive guitar work is by turns explosive, textured, and queasily disorienting, keeping the listener off balance with atonal riffs and off-kilter time signatures. Staley's stark confessional lyrics are similarly effective, and consistently miserable. Sometimes he's just numb and apathetic, totally desensitized to the outside world; sometimes his self-justifications betray a shockingly casual amorality; his moments of self-recognition are permeated by despair and suicidal self-loathing. Even given its subject matter, Dirt is monstrously bleak, closely resembling the cracked, haunted landscape of its cover art. The album holds out little hope for its protagonists (aside from the much-needed survival story of "Rooster," a tribute to Cantrell's Vietnam-vet father), but in the end, it's redeemed by the honesty of its self-revelation and the sharp focus of its music. [Some versions of Dirt feature "Down in a Hole" as the next-to-last track rather than the fourth.] Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

A Bleak, Beautiful Messageby Anonymous

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November 14, 2005: One of the most important, essential albums of all time, Alice in Chains' "Dirt" is a bleak, but beautiful album, making clear that drugs have been a terrible and painful experience. Starts out with a bang and ends with one, too. All the emotions never fail to get across. Anger, sadness, etc. All of it is amazingly clear. One of the most essential albums of the 90s, albeit all time, "Dirt" is an amazing album with a powerful message. If you can't spare 10 bucks for this album, then you need help.

Most Unique, Creative, and Hauntng Cd EVER!!!by Anonymous

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June 11, 2003: The Dirt albumn is like no other albumn ever realeased. There is not a single band that can release such a powerful line up kicking butt! Layne's voice along with the rest of the Chains group is a complete all star line up!!! Greatest Cd evven till this day. ROCK ON


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