Diamond Lie’s short biography in the ad, which misspells Jerry’s name, reads: “Diamond Lie is an exciting rock and roll dynamo with fiery licks and catchy melodies. On stage they generate a tight show that is topped off by lead vocalist Scott Damon’s power vocals and fluid presentation. Terry Contrell (guitar), Matt Mustapha (bass), and Randy Nesbitt (drum) complete the band. The group’s four song EP has generated strong interest from Atlantic and CBS. ‘Chain Love,’ a blistering example of their song writing, is reminiscent of early Dokken, and ‘Get It Straight’ is a grinding tune that’s sure to get bodies moving. Watch out for these guys … they’re out for a good time and nothing’s going to stop them.”17
According to Nesbitt, Slaughter Haus 5 were the favorites to win. He didn’t think that was Diamond Lie’s best performance, noting he had made a few mistakes. Diamond Lie pulled off the upset and won it. They received a cash prize and a few hours of free recording time at a local studio, but it was a moot point because the band was falling apart. On top of the issues with Jerry, right before they took the stage, Muasau told them a band he was friends with was moving to the area and they wanted to hire him for studio work. Nesbitt and Nutter weren’t happy about it, but they didn’t get upset. This wound up being Diamond Lie’s final performance. They broke up a few days later. At some point after moving to Seattle, Jerry tried to get Diamond Lie back together for a show. According to Nutter, “We just said no. We were kind of done with it, because at that time we wanted to have a little more involvement with the songs. We wanted to be part of the writing process, instead of just, ‘Here’s the next song; here’s the next song.’ So he said, ‘Okay.’ Bam, hit Alice in Chains and made it superhuge, and we never did. So it’s kind of like that fork in the road where he took a right and we took a left.”
Jerry offered the following account of the events leading to the formation of Alice in Chains:
I met Layne when he played the Tacoma Little Theatre in Tacoma. So I met him first, but I actually played with Mike Starr first in a really crappy band called Gypsy Rose in Burien. My mother had just passed away, and I didn’t really have anyplace to stay, and I kind of was done with Tacoma anyway, so I met this guy Tim Branom. He invited me to come up and hang with him, and I stayed in his basement for about a week, and Mike Starr came over and we were jamming, and then we both got kicked out after a week.18
Jerry and Mike’s tenure in Gypsy Rose is a bit more nuanced than this account. In the summer of 1987, Gypsy Rose singer Tim Branom and drummer Mike Gersema were looking for a bass player, and Mike Starr happened to be nearby and available. Their guitarist, Brock Graue, knew Mike from high school and had been in a band with him.
Michael Christopher Starr was born April 4, 1966, in Honolulu, Hawaii—the first child of John and Gayle Starr—and his sister, Melinda, was born three years to the day later. After his parents split up, Mike lived with his father before moving to the Seattle area when he was around nine years old. His father bought him his first bass guitar. He formed his first band with his best friend Paul Parkinson and named it Cyprus. Jim Hacker, another childhood friend with whom he would listen to Jimi Hendrix and Van Halen, would later recall Mike telling him, “‘When I grow up, I’m going to be a rock star just like them!’ It was never a pilot, astronaut, doctor. Mike knew what he wanted to be. There was never a doubt in his mind.”19
“All I wanted to do twenty-four hours a day was play music,” Mike told Mark Yarm.20 According to Mike’s friend Aaron Woodruff, Van Halen was probably a big inspiration in Mike’s decision to become a musician. Woodruff, who met Mike when they both attended Highline High School, described him as “bigger than life.” Mike was a sophomore or junior, but he was something of a celebrity on campus because he was the bass player in SATO. Even in this early stage of his career, Mike already had a reputation for being a ladies’ man. His drug use at the time was limited to marijuana and alcohol, Woodruff said, although some time later, Mike took some pills and then walked into Woodruff’s house and took his guitar. After he sobered up and realized what happened, he returned the guitar to Woodruff.
According to Ken Kramer, SATO’s guitarist, “We were jamming in Danny and Dave [Jensen’s] mom’s garage, a couple of blocks away from where Gayle lived, and this kid would constantly come down the road and hang out and sit outside: ‘I play bass. I can play. I’m gonna be a rock star someday.’ After two or three months of that, I actually bought into it.”