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I believe Alice In Chains was the best band out of the grunge era. And the current singer Duvall isn't a drug addict like Staley and has breathed new life into them. They're awesome live.

"Rooster" is effectively about Alice in Chains guitarist-songwriter Jerry Cantrell's father. "Rooster" was his nickname in Vietnam, where he fought in the war. The elder Cantrell wouldn't talk about the war, so Jerry crafted the lyrics based on what he thought where his father's feelings and experiences, told from his perspective.

Jerry said: "He's only seen us play once, and I played this song for him when we were in this club opening for Iggy Pop. I'll never forget it. He was standing in the back and he heard all the words and stuff. Of course, I was never in Vietnam and he won't talk about it, but when I wrote this it felt right... like these were things he might have felt or thought. And I remember when we played it he was back by the soundboard and I could see him. He was back there with his big gray Stetson and his cowboy boots - he's a total Oklahoma man - and at the end, he took his hat off and just held it in the air. And he was crying the whole time. This song means a lot to me."

They deserve every penny.

1 posted on 02/20/2022 5:40:45 AM PST by DoodleBob
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To: DoodleBob

I believe Rooster is a sniper.

I have the Greatest Hits album, very solid.


2 posted on 02/20/2022 5:43:31 AM PST by EEGator
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To: DoodleBob

Music rights for the beatles went for only triple that amount inflation adjusted. The other numbers thrown around for the 1970s artists are pathetic or desperation attempts to keep a lifestyle for another 10 years.

The 1980s were full of bands who signed their rights away early for what at the time was good money. Most also broke up and reformed into other groups many times to remove themselves from contracts. The bands of the 1970s dominated the media but the money went to record companies that were becomeing the name on the building of wide media companies.

The 1990s it was a fad to open your own studio and record label, along the apple records model, and the tax code supported it, all that shit is a business expense for a musician. MTV was a useful tool to 2nd teir bands to sell records to markets they never knew about. It was possible to earn a even income releasing records every 2 years and touring only 30-60 nights a year. Most of the bands that hit, their members are rich because they worked a band, a record company and a solo career on many media platforms.
The record companies of old made money and gave a fraction to artists as we replaced vinyl and cassette with CDs.

The late 90s to 2008 was a golden era, recording was cheap, touring was immensely profitable, expenses of the business were low because the cost to press a CD dropped to near nothing. Some profits escaped to cheap copies but with every artist editing their own stuff on computer song production prices were part of being a musician. The old music was suddenly “remastered”... aka not compressed and notched filtered for quick vinal and tape production.

Once 2008 came around and streaming became a thing a lot of the draw of producing more than top streamer became suspect. Overall quality of albums has been in the toliet for past 14 years.

In 2020 when Taylor Swift started rerecording her discography with specific goal of gaining her rights and establisihing her own label the value of older bands with dead members shot up and the value of current band rights dropped. Her enterprise cracked the record deal boilerplate that had been around for 60 years.

The 250+ million dollar rights artist and bands are now bands with a dead members and their last hit produced. A good number of those are in the hands of the traditional labels. The only billion dollar catalog is the rolling stones held by BMG.

As we have seen with the last 2 years, twitter is death of good will and old artists.

“It was sound financial advice that McCartney may have come to regret giving on August 14, 1985, when Michael Jackson purchased the publishing rights to the vast majority of the Beatles’ catalog for $47 million, outbidding McCartney himself. “


4 posted on 02/20/2022 6:16:58 AM PST by protoconservative (Been Conservative Before You Were Born )
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To: DoodleBob

Bfl


5 posted on 02/20/2022 6:21:44 AM PST by ClearCase_guy ("If you see something, say something"? I see people dying from vaccines.)
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To: DoodleBob

What is going on now that so many bands are selling their catalogues? Changes in taxes or royalties or copyright law?


10 posted on 02/20/2022 7:11:48 AM PST by PghBaldy (12/14 - 930am -rampage begins... 12/15 - 1030am - Obama's advance team sco uts photo-op locations.)
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To: DoodleBob

Love me some AIC. Their weird yet beautiful harmonies are brilliant.


12 posted on 02/20/2022 7:27:12 AM PST by BozoTexino (RIP GOP)
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To: DoodleBob

Out of the Suckiness that was Grunge AiC was one of the better ones.

I Hate grunge..


14 posted on 02/20/2022 7:55:17 AM PST by mowowie
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