“‘We Die Young’ was on that, ‘Man in the Box,’ like six songs that were fucking amazing,” Jerden said. “They were doing a bit of every style: punk, heavy metal, to try and get a sound. I understand Layne at one point had a Mohawk. The idea was to cut out everything that they weren’t.”
At the time, Jerden and Champagne were working on Social Distortion’s first album and putting finishing touches on Jane’s Addiction’s
Sean had broken his hand about a month before and couldn’t play drums. According to the
“The way Sean played, he had this heavy kick drum going, which was the basis of the sound, the bass and the kick drum, which coupled with the low chords that Jerry was playing … this guy just wasn’t hitting hard. I kept saying, ‘You’ve got to hit the kick drum harder. Please!’ He just could not give me that whack that I needed, that really solid backbeat,” Jerden explained. “And finally, after like three days of this, Sean says, ‘Fuck this!’ and he took off his bandages. He says, ‘I’m going to do this, broken arm or no broken arm.’ They changed then—all of the sudden, they sounded like Alice in Chains.” Champagne said after Sean removed his cast—about three weeks ahead of schedule—he winced every time he hit a snare drum.1
Aside from Sean’s mishap, Jerden said the recording process went very smoothly. “What we did was drums, bass, and basic guitars. I was up there for about a month. I had a great time. Jerry was a fisherman and I loved fishing, so we’d go salmon fishing in the mornings and then we’d go to the studio,” Jerden said. The songs were well developed by the time recording sessions began. “We did not stray from the basic tracks at all. We kept it pretty much the way the basic tracks were. I added some stuff to it, but I didn’t subtract anything.”
According to Jerden, his production process consisted of recording several takes of a song, maybe five to ten at most. He would sit with a pencil and notepad, making notes on every bar, whether he liked it or not. He listened to every take and would composite the song using the best takes based on his notes. “There was no click track,” Jerden said, referring to a signal routed into a musician’s headphones in the recording studio to serve as a metronome to keep time while recording. “So the timing would go up and down, but I’d pick the best overall take and then from other takes that were in the same time, I would edit those in.”
Dave Hillis, an assistant engineer at London Bridge at the time, credits Jerden for one element of the band’s sound. “If you hear the demos, the tempos are always faster. The thing that … Dave Jerden brought out [was to] slow the tempos down. Analyzing that now, it really helped develop the Alice sound, in that it became heavier with the tempo slowed down and more brooding.”
According to Jerden, “The midtempo, slow-tempo stuff just sounded heavier. If I sped it up, like ‘Man in the Box’ sped up, it wouldn’t have sounded right. I don’t remember from the demo what I did [in the recording], how much I slowed it down, but to me even a beat per minute slower or a beat per minute faster can make a big difference.” Champagne agreed, “It can’t be racing at you. It’s got to scare the fuck out of you before you even see it coming. That was the mentality.” According to Champagne, their message to the band as they were recording was “Play it like you mean it. Play it to us. Fuck everybody else. Make us impressed, because we’d seen it all already.”
Jerden was driving to the studio one day while they were working on “Man in the Box,” thinking they needed a hook sound for the song. At that point, Bon Jovi’s “Livin’ on a Prayer” started playing on the radio, which features a prominent use of a Voice Box. This gave Jerden the idea of adding a Voice Box to “Man in the Box.”