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Sean Kinney
Sean Kinney
American musician
1
Alice in Chains
Alice in Chains
American grunge band
2
Jerry Cantrell
Jerry Cantrell
American rock musician and singer-songwriter
3
Susan Silver
Susan Silver
American music manager
4
Alice N' Chains
Alice N' Chains
American glam metal band
5
Mike Inez
Mike Inez
American musician
6
Sleze
Sleze
American glam metal band
7
Mad Season
Mad Season
American rock supergroup
8
Comes with the Fall
Comes with the Fall
American rock band from Atlanta
9
Second Coming
Second Coming
American rock band
10
Chris Cornell
Chris Cornell
American singer, songwriter and musician
11
My Sister's Machine
My Sister's Machine
American rock band from Seattle, Washington, United States
12
Patrick Lachman
Patrick Lachman
American musician
13
Andrew Wood
Andrew Wood
American musician and singer
14
Scott Olson
Scott Olson
American musician
15
Eddie Vedder
Eddie Vedder
American singer and musician
16
Ann Wilson
Ann Wilson
American rock musician, member of Heart
17
Mark Lanegan
Mark Lanegan
American recording artist; singer
18
Damageplan
Damageplan
American metal band
19
Barrett Martin
Barrett Martin
American musician
Layne Staley
American rock singer

Layne Staley

Intro
American rock singer
Genres
Record Labels
Music
Member of, past and present

Layne Thomas Staley (born Layne Rutherford Staley; August 22, 1967 – April 5, 2002) was an American musician best known as the original lead singer of the rock band Alice in Chains, which rose to international fame in the early 1990s as part of Seattle's grunge movement. Staley was known for his distinctive vocal style and tenor voice, as well as his harmonizing with guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell. Staley was also a member of the glam metal bands Sleze and Alice N' Chains, and the supergroups Mad Season and Class of '99.

"Man in the Box", the second single from Alice in Chains' debut album, Facelift (1990), garnered Staley critical recognition for his vocal style. Alice in Chains' EP Jar of Flies (1994), debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, making it Alice in Chains' first record—and the first-ever EP—to top the chart. However, Staley's deteriorating condition due to heroin abuse led him to enter a rehabilitation clinic. He began to work on a side project with several Seattle musicians, Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, Barrett Martin of Screaming Trees and John Baker Saunders of The Walkabouts, which came to be Mad Season, while Alice in Chains went into hiatus.

During Alice in Chains' hiatus, reports of Staley's drug addiction began to gain widespread circulation in fan and media communities, in part due to changes in his physical condition brought on by prolonged heroin abuse. On April 10, 1996, the band returned with a performance on MTV Unplugged performance in New York; it was their first concert in two-and-a-half years.

From mid-1996 onwards, Staley was out of the public spotlight, never to perform live again. Staley struggled with depression and addiction for much of his adult life and later died from a speedball overdose on April 5, 2002, at the age of 34. Staley was ranked at No. 27 on Hit Parader's list of "Heavy Metal's All-Time Top 100 Vocalists" in 2006, and at No. 42 on Complex's magazine list of "The 50 Best Lead Singers of All Time" in 2012. Seattle officially declared August 22, 2019 as "Layne Staley Day".