"Man in the Box" | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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Single by Alice in Chains | |||||||||||||||||||||||
from the album Facelift | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Released | 1991 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Format | CD single, cassette, vinyl | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Recorded | December 1989 - April 1990 at London Bridge Studio, Seattle & Capitol Recording Studio, Hollywood | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Genre | Grunge, heavy metal, alternative metal | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Length | 4:46 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Label | Columbia | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Writer(s) | Lyrics: Layne Staley Music: Jerry Cantrell |
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Producer | Dave Jerden | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Alice in Chains singles chronology | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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"Man in the Box" is a single by the rock group Alice in Chains. It was released as a single in 1991 after being featured on the group's debut full-length album Facelift (1990). The song was included on the compilation albums Nothing Safe: Best of the Box (1999), Music Bank (1999), Greatest Hits (2001), and The Essential Alice in Chains (2006), and is a playable track in the video game Rock Band 2. The song is also played in the 2000 film The Perfect Storm.
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In the liner notes of 1999's Music Bank box set collection, guitarist Jerry Cantrell said of the song, "That whole beat and grind of that is when we started to find ourselves; it helped Alice become what it was."[1] The song makes use of a talk box to create the guitar effect. The original Facelift track listing credited only vocalist Layne Staley and Jerry Cantrell with writing the song. All post-Facelift compilations credited the entire band. It is unclear as to why the songwriter credits were changed.
"Man in the Box" is widely recognized for its distinctive "wordless opening melody, where Layne Staley's peculiar, tensed-throat vocals are matched in unison with an effects-laden guitar" followed by "portentous lines like: 'Feed my eyes/ Can you sew them shut?', 'Jesus Christ/Deny your maker' and 'He who tries/Will be wasted' with Cantrell's drier, less-urgent voice." along with harmonies provided by both Staley and Cantrell in the lines 'Won't you come and save me'.[2]
In a recorded interview with Fuse TV, Layne Staley stated that the lyrics are about censorship in the mass media, and "I was really stoned when I wrote it."[3] The lyrics appear censored in the official music video and the video game Rock Band 2, where the two instances of the word "shit" are replaced by similar-sounding words ("pit" in the first verse, and "spit" in the second).
"Man in the Box" was released as a single in 1991. "Man in the Box" is widely considered to be one of the band's signature songs, even though it only peaked at number 18 on the Billboard Album Rock Tracks chart at the time of its release. The song was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance in 1992.[4] The song was number 19 on VH1's VH1 40 Greatest Metal Songs and its solo was rated the 77th greatest guitar solo by Guitar World. It was number 50 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 90's in 2007.
Professional wrestler Tommy Dreamer used the song as his entrance music from 1995 to 2001 and later in 2010 when he left WWE for TNA Wrestling with a house made soundalike utilized in between. Steve Huey of Allmusic called the song "an often overlooked but important building block in grunge's ascent to dominance" and "a meeting of metal theatrics and introspective hopelessness."[2]
The MTV music video for the track was released in 1991 and was directed by Paul Rachman, who later directed the first version of the "Sea of Sorrow" music video for the band and the 2006 feature documentary American Hardcore. The music video was nominated for Best Heavy Metal/Hard Rock Video at the 1991 MTV Video Music Awards.[5] The video is available on the home video releases Live Facelift and Music Bank: The Videos. The video shows the band performing in what is supposedly a barn, where throughout the video, a mysterious man wearing a black hooded cloak is shown roaming around the barn. Then, after the unknown hooded figure is shown, he is shown again looking around inside a stable where many animals live where he suddenly discovers and shines his flashlight on a man (supposedly Layne Staley) that he finds sitting in the corner of the barnhouse. At the end of the video, the hooded man finally pulls his hood down off of his head, only to revealed that his eyelids were sewn together with stitches the whole time. This part of the video depicts on the line of the song, "Feed my eyes, now you've sewn them shut". The music video was shot on 16mm film and transferred to tape using a FDL 60 telecine. At the time this was the only device that could sync sound to picture at film rates as low as 6FPS. This is how the surreal motion was obtained. The sepia look was done by Claudius Neal using a daVinci color corrector.
At Alice in Chains' last concert with Staley on July 3, 1996, they closed with "Man in the Box". Live performances of "Man in the Box" can be found on the "Heaven Beside You" and "Get Born Again" singles and the live album Live. A performance of the song is also included on the home video release Live Facelift and is a staple of the band's live show due to the song's popularity.
Richard Cheese and Lounge Against the Machine turned this song into a Lounge style on their 2005 album Aperitif for Destruction. Platinum-selling recording artist David Cook also covered the song during his 2009 Declaration Tour.
Chart (1991) | Position |
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US Billboard Album Rock Tracks[6] | 18 |
Chart (2000) | Position |
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US Mainstream Rock Tracks[6] | 39 |
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