Читаем Alice in Chains: The Untold Story полностью

IN THE FALL OF 1991, the band booked recording time at London Bridge Studios, where they would be working with Rick Parashar as producer. Sap emerged from the demo commissioned by Cameron Crowe for Singles. Although “Would?” was already booked for the movie, what to do with the rest of the material was in question. “We had all this acoustic stuff, and we’re thinking, ‘What the fuck can we do with this? We’re a hard rock/metal band.’ We figured people might not dig it, also,” Jerry recalled.1 According to the Music Bank liner notes, the title came to Sean during a dream in which the EP’s title was announced at a press conference. “In deference to déjà vu, the name stuck.”2

Assistant engineers Dave Hillis and Jonathan Plum both credited Rick Parashar for helping Layne and Jerry develop their vocal harmonies, possibly as far back as the original 1988 demo that helped get the band signed. “Doing so many records on the other side of the glass with Rick, part of his whole production style and technique is to sit down with the singers at the piano and help write harmonies. I think he did some of that with Temple of the Dog as well. That’s just part of almost any record that he works on. That’s definitely one of his strong points, one of the main aspects of hiring him as a producer that he’s known for,” Hillis said, who also worked with Parashar on Pearl Jam’s Ten album. “There wasn’t a time that I worked with him that he didn’t do that. It was always part of his production style to really work the vocals, comp vocal-track takes together, then build on them from that, come up with harmony ideas, sit at the piano, do harmony parts, or sing them over the top back to him.”

According to Hillis, Parashar ran a tight ship at the studio. “When Rick was there, it was all business. There were a couple of parties we had at London Bridge with the Alice guys involved, but it was not during a recording session. If there was any type of drug use during some of the other, like the Dirt demos and whatnot, that was Layne sneaking off in the bathroom or something like that. When we were working on the record, there was no partying.”

Jonathan Plum was a twenty-year-old student at Central Washington University who had been working as an engineer with other bands when, through mutual connections, he found out that Rick Parashar was looking for an assistant engineer. He applied and was accepted for the position, which started as a three-month unpaid internship. “It was like sixteen hours a day, every day, and then the salary was terrible, but I was working with Alice in Chains,” he said.

Within his first two weeks on the job, Plum noticed that a week and a half of studio time had been blocked out on the calendar for Alice in Chains. By his own admission, Plum was “superexcited,” having been a fan since he saw them perform at Bumbershoot in 1990. Layne was friendly and polite with the studio staff. “He seemed very down-to-earth of all those guys, the most down-to-earth, the most humble,” Plum recalled. “He would always show up sort of late because it was always like the Jerry show. Jerry seemed to be doing everything, and Layne would come in later. But Layne was superfriendly to me, and he’d ask about my background, how I got a job there, and how my day was. I always thought that was really cool.”

Plum added, “Jerry was very focused; he was the creative force of the band from what I could tell, and he’s just very intense. He wasn’t the kind of guy to stop and say, ‘Hi, how are you doing?’ or get to know me at all, so I was sort of in awe of him a little bit. But I also sort of stayed away from him a little because I knew he just wasn’t interested in my existence at all unless he needed coffee or needed me to help set something up or if I happened to run the tape deck, he’d have to deal with me.”

Though Layne was probably already using heroin by this point, Plum never saw any evidence of drugs during the making of Sap. The only drug anecdote he had direct knowledge of was when he first met Mike, who told him he was high on Ecstasy from the night before.

Hillis noticed that Layne was different. “He wasn’t like the Layne I knew from the Music Bank days; he wasn’t, like, totally in the mix. Now, in hindsight, he’s probably definitely dealing with drugs. But he wasn’t as involved—he’s more quiet, out of the way. I don’t remember seeing him a lot. I think there [were] some issues of him being in the bathroom way too long. I think Jerry and them were trying to keep it on the down low because they didn’t want Rick to know. Rick totally frowned on anything like that, especially in the studio, and in general. Really, really antidrug, in general.” Multiple sources who worked with Alice in Chains on later releases consistently describe Layne’s habit of locking himself in the bathroom for long periods of time.

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