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Fear the Voices

"Fear the Voices"
Alice in chains fear the voices.png
Single by Alice in Chains
from the album Music Bank
Released 1999
Format CD, vinyl
Recorded March–May 1992 at Eldorado Recording Studios, Burbank, California; London Bridge Studio, Seattle, Washington; One on One Studios, Los Angeles, California
Genre Heavy metal, grunge, alternative metal
Length 4:58
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Mike Starr, Jerry Cantrell, Layne Staley
Producer(s) Dave Jerden, Alice in Chains
Alice in Chains singles chronology
"Get Born Again"
(1999)
"Fear the Voices"
(1999)
"A Looking in View"
(2009)
Music Bank track listing
"Rain When I Die"
(Track 1 of Disc 2)
"Fear the Voices"
(Track 2 of Disc 2)
"Them Bones"
(Track 3 of Disc 2)

"Fear the Voices" is the last single that Alice in Chains released with vocalist Layne Staley and the only single that was co-written by bassist Mike Starr. The song was included on the box set Music Bank (1999).

"Fear the Voices" is an outtake from the Dirt album, recorded in 1992. The song would remain unreleased until 1999, when it was released on the Music Bank box set and also issued as a promotional single.

According to Dirt producer Dave Jerden, the song was primarily written by then Alice In Chains bassist Mike Starr and, Mike himself claimed, Eddie Van Halen - while on the Facelift tour opening for Van Halen (although the Music Bank insert credits Starr, guitarist Jerry Cantrell and vocalist Layne Staley as all contributing to the song).

Starr provided further details:

In the liner notes of 1999's Music Bank box set collection, guitarist Jerry Cantrell said of the song:

Another cool song from that demo for the Crowe movie. Thinking about it now, that was a fruitful tape! We got "Would?" for the movie, part of Sap and we got started on the Dirt, so the tune itself was a good song, but we were just turning to the height of our blackness.

The song seems to be anti-censorship, making reference to then Washington state governor Booth Gardner's March 20, 1992 signing of a bill that would impose a jail term to anyone caught selling an album a judge would deem "erotic" to a minor. Prior to the signing, MTV had publicized Gardner's office phone number, bringing in over 4,000 faxed signatures (mostly against the bill). This incident is directly referenced in the song's lyric, "So they put your number on the television, Mr. Gardner/A messed up generation put the pressure on you/You're a coward," and, "Fear the voices you hear today/If you steal our choices, we'll blow you away."


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