Click if you missed my review of the new Alice in Chains album, The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here!
ALICE IN CHAINS – Jar of Flies / Sap (1994 double Columbia EP edition, originally 1992 and 1994)
For a little while, Alice In Chains were in the habit of releasing an EP before each studio album (We Die Young preceded the Facelift album albeit it was a promo). This ended after Layne’s death, but these two EPs — 1992’s Sap and 1994’s Jar of Flies — represent some of the best work of this pioneering band. Acoustic in nature, these two recordings are crucial to rock fans who need to know more about one of the most interesting bands of the 1990’s.
I snagged a European import of this set many years ago, for less than the price of either of the two EP’s separately. Great score, and it was in great condition. It even contains all the artwork from the original releases. Although Jar of Flies is the first disc in the set, I will review Sap first since that’s how they came out.
Sap is very low key. I remember reading an interview in RIP Magazine with drummer Sean Kinney. He stated that they were writing songs for the next album (Dirt), but all this acoustic music started pouring out instead. He had a dream about it one night, and told the band, “Guys, we have to release these songs as an EP, and we have to call it Sap.”
The opening track, “Brother” is sung by Jerry Cantrell with Ann Wilson of Heart on the choruses. Very powerful understated song. Both “Brother” and the next song, “Got Me Wrong” (another standout) were released live on the band’s Unplugged CD. These songs are followed by “Right Turn” by Alice Mudgarden: essentially Alice In Chains with Chris Cornell of Soundgarden and Mark Arm of Mudhoney on guest vocals! It is a great contrast: Cornell screaming at the top of his lungs, and Arm down low. Great song. I remember Jerry Cantrell once said that Mark Arm’s vocal on it “scares the shit” out of him every time he hears it.
Layne Staley’s “Am I Inside” follows, another understated and mellow slow-burner. Everything goes to hell though with the final track, the unlisted “Love Song”. The band switched instruments for this chaotic joke song, with Sean Kinney on megaphone/vocals. Hilarious track, but it must have taken people by surprise. “Rae Dawn Chong…Rae Dawn Chong…”
Jar of Flies was written and recorded rather spontaneously in just a week. When I first heard it, I felt like some of these songs were under-written, that they could have used more work. As you listen to it more, that feeling disappears. It feels more complete. Just about every song on Flies is a total winner, but the best thing about it is that it grows on you. As a result, it has a longevity that similar EPs sometimes lack. Here I am, still playing it 19 years later and loving it just as much.
“Rotten Apple”, which is one of the best tunes anyway, kicks off the CD. It’s hypnotic, even though the lyrics really feel unfinished. Who knows what Layne was trying to express at the time, perhaps it’s with intent. It just feels like the fragment of a lyric. Perhaps that’s what makes it so hypnotic to me. None of this changes the fact that this slow one is both warm and forboding at the same time; a cool thing.
The opener is followed by “Nutshell”, which I like even better. It’s my personal favourite tune on Jar of Flies. It always takes me right back to summer 1994. The single “I Stay Away” features strings to emphasize the powerful chorus. It’s a cool tune because it has sections that sound like they don’t go together, yet they make it work. Alice seem to ignore songwriting convention most on songs like “I Stay Away”.
“No Excuses” was another single (the first one, actually). It’s an almost-happy sounding song with some sweet rolling basslines from Mike Inez. The instrumental “Whale and Wasp” is up next, so named because Jerry felt it sounded like whales and wasps talking to each other. That should put you in the ballpark. Jerry wrote it when he was in highschool, finally recording it on Jar of Flies.
“Don’t Follow” is probably the least experimental of the songs. It is a straight acoustic ballad with some nice harmonica. After five tracks of music that doesn’t always follow the beaten path, “Don’t Follow” feels like a reprieve. The final song is the pretty wild “Swing On This”. It’s the only song that tends to lose me, but some people I knew held it as their favourite. From the most conventional song to the least conventional; such is a journey on planet Alice.
Commenting specifically on the version I own, the dual EP, I bought this at my own store used several years after initially owning both releases. My logic at the time was that T-Rev and I were usually always trying to own the “coolest” or “most complete” or “rarest” version of things. When I traded up the two separate EPs, I broke even, plus I made space for one for more disc on my shelves!! Space is always a rare commodity to a collector.
Together, these two EPs together create a fantastic listening experience. The cool thing is that although both are acoustic, they are really nothing alike. Listen and you will see.
5/5 stars
I have the same edition of this one. Was Jar of Flies not the first EP to get to No. 1 in the US or something like that?
Jar of Flies was my gateway to Alice in Chains. I saw the videos for I Stay Away and No Excuses played together on TV and loved them both. Great songs and great videos.
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That rings a bell — I think you might be right. It wouldn’t surprise me if this was the first EP to go to #1 in the US. After all the US didn’t get all those old classic Beatles EPs…
“Would?” was my gateway, but this EP sealed the deal. There’s a real sense of quality and diversity and that made me want to keep up with the band.
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Love those No Excuses harmonies!
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I’ll have to keep a lookout for this set. I already have all their albums, but this might be a cool addition.
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I think this is ok, but that’s it. I love the two albums AIC has released after their reuinion, but I’m not that big on their older stuff, never really got it. Would, Them Bones and Man In The Box are all great songs but most of their earlier stuff, just like all the other “grunge” bands, doesn’t really do it for me. I wouldn’t say they were bad, though.
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I owned both, back in the day. Both were victims of selling offs due to moves or what have you.
But it’s too weird. I just bought Jar Of Flies for $5 recently, which I wouldn’t have done if I hadn’t your review of the new record in the back of my mind making me think “yeah, it’s worth it.” It totally was worth it.
Now I need Sap. And Dirt. Dammit Mike, cut it out! ;)
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Sap and Dirt are great! Although interestingly at in an informal Sausagefest survey, it was the three-legged dog that was the most popular album.
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