"Get Born Again" | ||||||||
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Single by Alice in Chains | ||||||||
from the album Nothing Safe: Best of the Box | ||||||||
Released | 13 July 1999 | |||||||
Format | CD | |||||||
Recorded | September 1998 | |||||||
Length | 5:28 | |||||||
Label | Columbia | |||||||
Writer(s) | Layne Staley, Jerry Cantrell | |||||||
Producer(s) | Toby Wright, Alice in Chains, Dave Jerden | |||||||
Alice in Chains singles chronology | ||||||||
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"Get Born Again" is a song by Alice in Chains and one of the last two songs recorded with vocalist Layne Staley before his death in 2002, the other song being "Died". The song was included on the compilation albums Nothing Safe: Best of the Box (1999), Music Bank (1999), and The Essential Alice in Chains (2006).
The music was written by guitarist Jerry Cantrell for what would eventually become his second solo album, Degradation Trip. However, after he showed the song to Alice in Chains vocalist Layne Staley, Staley decided to write lyrics to the song, and it was eventually recorded with Alice in Chains in 1998. Staley stated that the song is based around "religious hypocrisy". In the liner notes of 1999's Music Bank box set collection, Jerry Cantrell said of the song:
We tried to work with Dave Jerden again and that didn't work out for various uncomfortable reasons. We had tracked with him in L.A., and then we went up to Seattle with Toby Wright. So considering it was done in different states with different producers, I think it turned out to be pretty classic Alice.
− − Also of note was Staley's condition while recording the song which was made known by Dirt producer Dave Jerden—who was originally chosen by the band for the production—who said "Staley weighed eighty pounds...and was white as a ghost." Cantrell refused to comment on the singer's appearance, simply replying "I'd rather not comment on that…", and band manager Susan Silver said she hadn't seen the singer since "last year".
"Get Born Again" was released as a single in 1999. "Get Born Again" peaked at number four on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart and at number 12 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. The song was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance in 2000. The song is sometimes credited with being one of the band's most bleak singles. James Hunter of Rolling Stone described the song as "a drone lifted by ominous chorales, hardened by slashing guitars and set off with Layne Staley intoning, 'Just repeat a couple lies.'"