Reacting to Alice In Chains - Rooster | Iconic Grunge Anthem!

Ойын-сауық

Reacting to Alice In Chains - Rooster | Iconic Grunge Anthem!
Original Video:
We appreciate all the love & support!!!
Road to 50,000 Subscribers
Subscribe HERE: bit.ly/35XDj9a​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
Don't forget to hit that notification bell, so YOU don't miss an upload!
Join the channel to get access to perks:
kzread.info...
GET YOUR NEVER SIMPLE & SIMPLYTWODUDES MERCH NOW!!!
/ @simplytwodudes
Follow SimplyTwoDudes:
INSTAGRAM | / simplytwodu. .
(Leo) : / itslokymusic
(Andy) : / __andyyyyy__
TWITTER | / simplytwodudes
(Leo) : / itslokymusic
(Andy) : / killinit_ttv
FACEBOOK | / simplytwodudes
TikTok: @SimplyTwoDudes
Business Inquiry: Simplytwodudes@gmail.com
Reacting to Alice In Chains - Rooster | Iconic Grunge Anthem!
#Simplytwodudes
#twodudes
#Reaction

Пікірлер: 16

  • @ronsuper100
    @ronsuper10011 ай бұрын

    Alice in Chains are a deep soulful and versatile hard rock band. Rooster is about the bands guitarist (Jerry Cantrell) father in the Vietnam war. This song was released in 1992 and spent 20 weeks on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and peaked at No. 7.

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks for all the information Ron! We greatly appreciate it.

  • @jayman9910
    @jayman991011 ай бұрын

    The song is about the Guitarist Jerry Cantrell's dad who was in Vietnam. The 2 talking in the begging is Jerry and his dad. His dad was nicknamed Rooster in the army. For more Alice check out Man in the Box or Them Bones

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    10 ай бұрын

    Hey Jayman, thanks so much for clarifying everything for us

  • @tamibrandt
    @tamibrandt11 ай бұрын

    Guitarist Jerry Cantrell wrote ROOSTER about his father's experiences in Vietnam and when Jerry saw his dad in the audience at one of their shows when AIC opened for Iggy Pop, and Jerry asked Layne (and the guys) to play ROOSTER and they did. It was the first time Jerry's dad heard Jerry's music and knew that his son understood him through that song. It brought Jerry and his dad closer together. And Layne had a vital part in that reunion. (Meanwhile Layne's own biological father was an opportunist). Jerry's dad was nicknamed Rooster when he was a kid and his hairstyle resembled that of a rooster comb. Although, maybe he used rooster as a call sign during his military career. But he didn't earn the nickname in the military, he had the nickname back when he was a kid. Jerry Cantrell, Sr had multiple tours in Vietnam and like most Vietnam vets, he didn't talk about it. The most he ever said about it was at the beginning of the official video for ROOSTER which he agreed to be a part of after hearing the song. Like all kids who hate their parents, Jerry Cantrell was no different. He was staying in a small guest room in Chris Cornell's house (Cornell was married to AIC manager Susan Silver) and the guest room had a tiny window. He was staying there and thought about what his dad may have experienced and wrote the lyrics. They demoed ROOSTER and WOULD? when they spent two days working on the acoustic songs for the SAP EP. The songs on SAP and those two songs were demoed using the money Cameron Crowe gave them for recording WOULD? for the SINGLES movie. Layne sang the hell out of WOULD? and ROOSTER. The harmony in the beginning and end on the album is Ann Wilson of Heart, but Layne does the harmonies on the official video and live versions perfectly. The Unplugged show in 1996 is so heartbreaking to watch because he was deep in his heroin addiction (and yes, I know he was doing other drugs on top of Heroin). His liver was damaged from the years of drug use. He was just high enough to do the show so he didn't get dope sick and chase away withdrawal symptoms. He was such a ghost of himself during Unplugged. (Of course, Jerry had food poisoning) All Jerry saw when he looked over at Layne was his best friend was going to die soon due to the path Layne had taken with his life. That show was filmed in April, 1996, premiered in May 1996. They did four shows with KISS in June-July 1996, after which Layne survived an overdose and became a recluse. After that, it was a six-year-long slow suicide. With Unplugged... Sean Kinney (drummer) and Mike Inez (bass player) argued with Jerry about whether Layne could even pull off the high notes in some of the songs in his condition, which is why Jerry gave them that “I told you so” smirk after Layne hit that long, high note in DOWN IN A HOLE. He did the same thing again when Layne hit a high note in ROOSTER. Layne was one of the few singers who was always better live than studio version. The fact that Sean and Mike didn’t have any confidence that Layne could do the show and Jerry being the only one that knew deep in his heart that Layne could do it because Layne had done so many things against the odds over the years no matter how high he was at the time. When Jerry needed him to be there where it counted, Layne always pulled through. Knowing how he sang ROOSTER in Tilburg, The Netherlands, in 1993 when his “yeahs” and screams were so loud and high I’m surprised the rafters didn’t come crashing down around him and then watch him sing the same song so low-key on Unplugged knowing he could do to the song what he did in Tilburg is heartbreaking. Knowing he initially sang the hell out of WOULD? on the official video and album and seeing the end of WOULD? on Unplugged . . . and knowing how deep into his addiction he had gotten by that point is heartbreaking. The entire show was a success because Layne DID have a powerful performance despite his condition. He proved to his cynical bandmates that he could still sing the high notes and he pulled it all off beautifully while the same four guys (Metallica) who had mocked him for his addiction sidelining Alice In Chains from ever doing extended tours back in 1994 sat in the front row. The mistakes he made screwing up SLUDGE FACTORY (and I think he screwed up GOT ME WRONG once or twice, but Toby Wright didn’t keep that in editing) were endearing, at least to me. They didn’t take away from the performance, it added something to the performance that, had it been removed after everyone had seen it, wouldn’t have made the show what it was. That line "they spit on me in my homeland." TV News anchor Walter Kronkite basically told the American public that we lost the war and between that and the college kids (who went to college to escape being drafted into the military) would protest the soldiers coming home. They would do protest rallies at the airports and protest the returning soldiers by spitting at them, throwing urine and other stuff on them. An uncle of mine drove a supply truck in Vietnam (to this day he won't talk about his experience). A family friend of ours said that he and his buddies came home, saw the protesters at the airport, and re-enlisted because it was safer in Vietnam than in the US with the protesters. At least in Vietnam, they knew who the enemy was. I'm NOT saying Vietnam was anything the US should have ever been in. I'm just relating stories of people I know who served there. Layne's story is more tragic and haunting because you can actually watch and hear him deteriorate over the 12-year span: from the mild use of drugs in 1990 all the way through 1996 when he was deep into a heroin addiction to dropping to 90 pounds by 1998 to 86 pounds when he died in 2002. Layne kept his humor and wit even to the end of his life. Layne was so much more than his drug addiction. He stacked his own vocals with melodies and harmonies underneath. He was able to come up with lyrics and harmonies off the top of his head. He knew that Jerry Cantrell was playing with the wrong people and gave him contact info for Sean Kinney and found out Sean Kinney was dating original bass player Mike Starr's sister. He wrote the lyrics for the original songs he sang on Mad Season's Above album and drew the cover art for that album. Layne was a genius in his own right. He was able to figure things out in a snap off the top of his head. Layne just had his demons. At the age of 34, he looked more like an 80 year old man. He knew he screwed up, between the drugs and his own depression and then his former fiancee dying, Layne just couldn't find a way to dig himself out of his own mess and at the end with his teeth problems and organs failing on him, he gave up trying. He lost sight of who his true friends were and who was using him. He was never going to give up the drugs. Instead, he tried to attain the same high he felt the first time he did drugs and could never achieve it. Layne encouraged Jerry to sing more, after all, they were Jerry's lyrics he should sing them. Vice-versa, Jerry encouraged Layne to play the guitar which is how you get Layne playing guitar on HATE TO FEEL and ANGRY CHAIR as well as I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING on the Mad Season above album. Jerry encouraged him on the guitar and was proud that Layne grew as a guitarist. Though, Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine taught Layne more chords than ANGRY CHAIR and HATE TO FEEL. The friendship between Jerry and Layne was unbreakable. Jerry NEVER once thought of replacing Layne as the singer while Layne was still alive. He always wanted Layne to sing whenever he had AIC do something. If there were ever cosmic soulmates ... Layne and Jerry would be it. (And by that I mean, they were Sympatico with each other. The way they sang together was a perfect pitch where two voices make one. What you hear and see between Jerry and Layne was a genuine friendship. They looked after each other. When one had problems with a song, the other picked up the slack. They were a team. Jerry was doing a solo concert in Charlotte, NC when he heard that Layne was found two weeks after he died and Jerry was trying to get through the concert and crying. He did shows between the time he found out about Layne until Layne's funeral because if he had taken a break then, he didn't think he'd want to continue anything later after the mourning period. Layne had done so much for Jerry, giving him a place to live, money, clothes, food, guitars and gear, a band. But getting a front-row seat to watch what had happened to Layne over the years, Jerry had to watch his best friend deteriorate in a span of 12 years (1990-2002), and Jerry couldn't do anything about it. Jerry had talked himself blue in the face but Layne didn't want help. Alice In Chains was a band, but they were also a family. They had internal issues just like any family. When Layne died, it was like losing a loved one, a family member, you don't think of the fights you had with the person who died. You defend their memory. There is a reason Jerry wrote NO EXCUSES about Layne and the line "You, my friend, I will defend / And if we change, well, I'll love you anyway." "My grandmother and mother were such huge losses, but I got Layne, the guys, and I got this.” - Jerry Cantrell, Kerrang! (December 1, 2018) “Jerry really loved Layne [Staley]. They had a bond I haven't seen before,” Jerry’s former manager Bill Siddons, April 19, 2002 (the day Layne was found two weeks after he died).

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    10 ай бұрын

    We appreciate all the information.

  • @rebeccarockchik6704
    @rebeccarockchik670410 ай бұрын

    Check out one of their first songs, Man in the Box. Or you might like Would or Them Bones, but the best live performance to me is Love Hate Love, live at the Moore.

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    10 ай бұрын

    Thanks Rebecca! 😊🙌❤

  • @aimeebouffard909
    @aimeebouffard9096 ай бұрын

    I like their unplugged version of Down in A Hole as well as their songs No Excuses and Heaven Beside You.

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    5 ай бұрын

    Alice in Chains' unplugged version of "Down in a Hole" is indeed powerful and showcases the depth of emotion in their music. "No Excuses" and "Heaven Beside You" are also fantastic songs that highlight the band's versatility and songwriting prowess. They're all timeless classics that continue to resonate with fans. It's great to hear that you appreciate their music! 🎶🤘

  • @hazelsegnitz3254
    @hazelsegnitz325410 ай бұрын

    Love AIC but never payed attention to Rooster ‘s lyrics , now I know ! Great reaction ! Check out,Them bones 👍

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    9 ай бұрын

    Glad you liked it !

  • @melissavukelic4138
    @melissavukelic413810 ай бұрын

    I heard the guy on the right say that he couldn’t here the dialogue at the beginning of the video (sorry, I don’t know your names yet). If you have that problem in the future, you can try turning on subtitles. If that doesn’t work, it’s perfectly fine to to stop the song, adjust the volume and start from the beginning again. It drove me nuts when blue shirt guy was saying how he was confused and couldn’t really hear what they were saying, because he was trying to tell black shirt guy who I’m assuming couldn’t hear him, and so the song just played through with one person not really getting the full experience. It looks like you guys are still new to this, so your subscribers will be sure to help you and give you tips along the way. I look forward to seeing more from you guys. Keep at it! 😁🎧🎸

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much !

  • @maisarahmaisarah2277
    @maisarahmaisarah227711 ай бұрын

    Please reaction Reza Darmawangsa part 16 🇲🇨

  • @SimplyTwoDudes

    @SimplyTwoDudes

    10 ай бұрын

    Soon ❤

Келесі