Jerry Cantrell - The Lost Interview Uncut Part 3 of 3
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- Опубликовано: 25 янв 2011
- Found this old VHS tape in my closet and converted it digital. Turns out this interview is a rare uncut piece of footage from a show (that shall remain nameless) that aired in 1998. Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains shares his insights on Metallica and the current state of rock and roll
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Jerry is very articulate. He's a smart guy.
Jerry didn't want to do solo work. If he had it his way, he would have been making a new AIC record. I think he was starting to realize around this time that AIC was probably never going to make music with Layne Staley ever again and that was really hard on him.
Yeah lose and Lane was like losing a brother to Jerry been very hard on him and it still is I guess it always will be that was just a Harmony partner
You hit the nail on the head. I just wrote a lengthy comment on Part 2 about this very thing. AIC is ALL that Jerry wanted: be a rockstar in a great, successful band, keep perfecting their sound, and ride off into the sunset with all of them, like his rock heroes. He was literally forced to test the waters solo out of necessity. Whereas Layne needed more variety and creative stimulation: other musical projects, artwork, photography, writing. Both creative guys, but they were like oil & water: it would all end in tears eventually no matter what.
Love him, such a sweet soul.
Creative people are sensitive and sometimes clairvoyant as wild horses.
the mayority of Boggie Depot was intended to be part of the next AIC album, at least we can enjoy those two amazing tracks Get Born Again and Died
Unless we have sat down with Jerry please don't make assumptions about how he is or what he feels because we don't know him
Very cool interview. thanks for uploading
Awesome interview, thanks for uploading it!
Jerry is Hott
oooo a great interview...thax a lot 4 uploading!!!
He's an amazing guitar player!
Thank you. I understand almost everything but not every word. Thanks a lot.
that room looks sick
JERRY CANTRELL
18 DE MARZO DE 1966
56 AÑOS (57)
Yes
@laurapac I believe its late 1997 or 1998, the year Behind the Music - Metallica was aired on VH1.
I had heard that he got pissed/jealous about the mad season ordeal n I totally understand. I would b too. But this actually proves it. Thought it was someone falsely quoting him. Glad he forgave his bud. Btw, how the fuck can this guy still find ways to write such awesome songs n the music after all he's already done?!!! I can't even finish a sentence. Fuckin genius...
I mean he was kind of jealous because he’d rather have Layne working with AIC so it kind of felt like cheating but it was never some big deal, Jerry still enjoyed mad season and even went and saw them live. He was just bummed thay was happening instead of AIC, especially by the time of this interview he probably already knew Layne era AIC was pretty much done and one of the last albums Layne worked on was mad season instead of doing more AIC which Jerry/Sean/mike had been trying to do.
@@puppetmaster8551 Well described. Thanks. Always good hearing from another fan knowing their stuff.
Both Layne & Jerry were blessed with putting their feelings & emotions into words, but if you really study his lyrics on Boggy Depot, Degradation Trip (heck just the very _name_ of the album tells you almost everything), and even AIC's post-Layne stuff, you can see/hear Jerry talking to, even yelling at, Layne, spilling his guts over what he put them all through. Very bitter & angry lyrics about feeling betrayed, being left behind, and Layne being not only unable to conquer his demons, but welcoming them into his life like family...and how he allowed those demons to replace his _real_ band family that loved him. "One request...choose to live, so I don't die." _Crushing._ Truly a rock tragedy almost on a par with classic Greek tragedies. 💔🎸😫
Right on man pretty killa. I actually searched Kirk Hammett haha
".... Someone as intelligent as Lars" lmao greatest giveaway that Lars wrote those questions himself smh
I know you're saying that in jest, but just sit back and think about where Metallica would be without Lars. Technically they wouldn't exist, obviously - but the creativity and business decisions speak for themselves. James has said in interviews if there's a business decision/contract to be signed they all look at Lars. And his musical arrangements and intuition are on another level.
Lars is a smart dude tho lol, not the greatest drummer at all but he’s a big part in Metallica being the biggest metal band ever.
Why would Lars have anything to do with writing interview questions? Wtf?
Do you know the exact year of this interview?
1998, it says in the description, i just found that out rn
4U4S...IgUaaaaaaL