Nothing Safe Alice in Chains

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CD

  • Release Date: 06/29/1999
  • Sales Rank: 11,146
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 074646364925
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CD - Bonus Tracks$45.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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Track List
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Nothing Safe

1LISTENGet Born Again previously unreleased 5:26
2LISTENWe Die Young previously unreleased / Demo Version 2:28
3LISTENMan In The Box 4:46
4LISTENThem Bones 2:30
5LISTENIron Gland 0:43
6LISTENAngry Chair 4:46
7LISTENDown In A Hole 5:37
8LISTENRooster Live 6:46
9LISTENGot Me Wrong 4:59
10LISTENNo Excuses 4:15
11LISTENI Stay Away 4:14
12LISTENWhat The Hell Have I 3:57
13LISTENGrind 4:44
14LISTENAgain 4:04
15LISTENWould? 3:28

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Of all the so-called "grunge" bands to emerge from Seattle in the late '80s, Alice in Chains was the one most influenced by heavy-metal acts like Black Sabbath and Mötley Crüe. When metal's razor edge was combined with AIC's penchant for soaring harmonies and murky, minor-key melodies, the music captured a malevolent, yet tuneful, sense of power. Add to that vocalist Layne Staley's lyrics about drug abuse, mortality, and betrayal, and AIC was far bleaker sounding than neighbors Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and Soundgarden. Packaged as a 15-track, single-disc teaser for the three-CD Alice in Chains box set, NOTHING SAFE: THE BEST OF THE BOX also includes the newly recorded "Get Born Again," an eerie track built on the group's trademark foundation of dynamic guitar bluster, nasal vocal harmonies, and emotive, psychedelic solos. In addition, the disc features a 1989 demo of "We Die Young"; "What the Hell Have I," recorded for the soundtrack of "The Last Action Hero"; and the band's biggest hit, "Man in the Box." A representative collection for newcomers but also a sign that Alice in Chains may indeed get born again sometime soon. Jon Wiederhorn, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

Nothing Safeby Anonymous

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February 09, 2006: Dude I'm a very huge supporter of Grunge bands, I like Nirvana, Alice In Chains, Soundgarden, Pearl Jam, and Stone Temple Pilots. To be honest I have most of the AIC CD'S, and this CD "Nothing Safe" is a must-add to your grunge collection... It's a combination of their greatest hits with a couple of new songs and their unknown songs from current EP's, Track 5: IRON GLAND which was a hidden track in DIRT is on this album... Get Born Again is also new, and if you sorta want a speeded up version of the song "We Die Young" from AIC'S first album "Facelift" then your in luck, becuase this album has the speeded up version which is known as their demo of that song. Not only that you get the song "Rooster" Live! You also get "Got Me Wrong" from AIC'S MTV UNPLUGGED album... Now don't get confused with the actual AIC Greatest Hits CD(The green one that show's a boxer getting punced in the face) and the AIC Nothing Safe CD (The black one with an orange case. Shows a human in a tank) The actual Greatest Hits is great but it only has the good songs from all AIC CD's whereas the "Nothing Safe" CD has that plus a demo, a new song, a hidden song from DIRT, and a song from their MTV album... The only thing dissapointing from tjis CD is that it doesn't come with a bonus DVD... But other than that ADD IT TO YOUR COLLECTION!!!

Nothing Safeby Anonymous

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December 29, 2005: Alice in Chains was one of the better bands to emerge from the post Nirvana Seattle/new-grunge scene, incorporating a grunge feel into a Black Sabbath induced metal trip. What set them apart was their attention to melody that was rivaled only by contemporaries Stone Temple Pilots, and which set them apart from pretenders at the time, and bands like Nirvana and Pearl Jam that were already past their prime. And, just like the afore mentioned Stone Temple Pilots, AIC were a singles band without question. Their strongest tracks are collected here on Nothing Safe, making this disc the perfect buy for seasoned fans and newcomers alike. Purists beware however: one of the tracks is a demo, and two of them are live. The live "Rooster" is unreleased and worth investigating, but the stand out is the intensely popular unplugged version of "Got Me Wrong", which captures the raw side of AIC more effectively than the album version.


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