Jerry
Cantrell Missing Lost Friend, Moving On With Trip
from MTV.com
Although
"It's something I'm still
dealing with, and I still think like he's here," Cantrell whispered, his
eyes lowered. "I miss him tremendously. I love him and have to move on.
I'll remember him and respect the memories of what we did together and just
enjoy life ... and that's all I'll say about it."
Most memories the former bandmates and songwriting collaborators shared date back
much further than that April evening when Staley was found dead of an overdose
in his home (see "Layne Staley, Alice In Chains Singer, Dead At 34"). As
with most of the late singer's friends and acquaintances, as well as those
prolific among the closely knit
"It's been a long
time," Cantrell quipped when asked about the last time the two hung out.
He looked annoyed at the question outright, as if somehow Staley's untimely
demise could have been averted if only Cantrell had asked him out for coffee
the week before.
Though Cantrell's latest
album, Degradation Trip, released June 18, was completed long before
Staley's death, several songs seem eerily prophetic in retrospect — as if
Staley had already vacated Cantrell's life long ago, just as he did the lives
of many of his other former friends. "Locked On" includes the lines
"Faded rock star, push and needle ... / You do your thing, I'll live my
life," while "Gone" conjures images of separation. "I
caught a flash of your smile, though the fog of a dream ... / I can't be by
your side, I'll see you when I sleep/ Now you're
gone," Cantrell sings, backed by a backwoods waltz.
Like the disturbed
confessionals that were Cantrell's contributions to
"I've always been drawn
to music that tells the sadder tale and tells the deeper, truer tale, which at
times can be very dark," Cantrell explained. "I've always been a fan
of that type of material, before I even became a writer. When I'm happy and
feeling good, I go out and ride [roller] coasters and jet bikes and stuff. I go
out and have fun. When I've got an issue or something is bugging me, I
generally write a song about it. ... I draw from what I see and what I
experience, and I only really know how to do it one way."
On the heels of a tour with labelmates Nickelback, which
concludes Sunday in Omaha, Nebraska (see "Jerry Cantrell Delivers
Bittersweet, AIC-Heavy Set At Seattle Nickelback
Gig"), Cantrell will have a week to himself before
resuming the road work with Creed (see "Creed's Scott Stapp Given Go-Ahead To Tour, New Dates Announced").
While he agrees that it's somewhat ironic for him to be opening for bands that
"I'm just really glad I'm
out playing," he explained. "In
—Joe D'Angelo