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Alice in Chains releases first CD since tragedy:

The examples of rock bands who succeed in a second wind without their original lead singers are few and far between. Alice in Chains is hoping they’ll beat the odds.

The Seattle-based rockers this week release the 11-song “Black Gives Way to Blue,” their first CD since the 2002 drug overdose death of their lead singer, Layne Staley.

“The loss of Layne is an unfillable hole. We’re not trying to fill that space. There’s a space that remains empty and we take it with us — that’s his, always,” says co-guitarist and co-vocalist Jerry Cantrell. “We’re creating new space around it, that’s all.”

The quartet includes Mike Inez on bass, Sean Kinney on drums and new guy William DuVall, who takes on co-guitar and co-vocalist duties.

The album cover shows an unsentimental, almost medical drawing of a human heart, and it doesn’t take the band long to acknowledge their personal pain.

“Time to start living, like just before we died,” go the lyrics to “All Secrets Known,” the opening song. “There’s no going back to the place we started from.”

In an interview in a swanky, marble-heavy midtown hotel lobby, Kinney and Cantrell — both decked out in T-shirts, jeans and long, cascading hair — say they felt they had to address their loss early on the album.

“You figure you get that out of the way,” says Kinney.

“Lay it out there, man,” agrees Cantrell. “We haven’t pulled any punches before.”

The rest of the album explores the themes of persistence and mourning, with the poignant title song coming at the very end, featuring an appearance by Elton John.

While that pairing might seem odd, the band explains that the first concert Staley ever attended — at age 7 — was by John and he remained a huge fan. The Rocket Man graciously offered to lend singing and piano duties in tribute.

“That was the cherry on top of everything,” says Kinney.

The new music has already made a splash. The first single, “Check My Brain,” has hit No. 1 on Billboard’s rock songs chart and won a slot on the much-desired Hot 100 list. Playboy magazine gave the disc four stars, while Revolver cheered its “dense tapestry of heavy guitars and soaring melodies.”

Hard-core Alice fans are wary — but hopeful. One of them, Linda Trojan, a 21-year-old college student in Magdeburg, Germany, who runs a fan site called “Still in Chains,” says she and fellow devotees are trying hard to embrace the new music.

“A new leaf is being turned over, to which I want to be open-minded,” she writes in an e-mail interview. “Nevertheless, I have to admit to being another Staley fan who finds it difficult to adjust.”

The decision to reform as Alice in Chains with a new member was not something bandmembers say they did lightly, knowing cynics would say they were just hoping to cash in on a proven brand or reclaim their glory days.

“We worked our butts off and dug really deep as musicians to see if we could answer questions for ourselves before anybody else: Was this something that felt right? Can we do this? Should we do this?” says Cantrell. “It’s all answered on that record. That’s the answer to almost anything you can throw at us. Listen to that record. If you have anything else after that, then it’s a personal issue — it has nothing to do with merit or effort or honesty.”

The reemergence of the band began as a series of appearances and limited tours in 2006, all with the blessing of Staley’s family. DuVall, a friend and collaborator of Cantrell’s for almost 10 years, was invited to jam and eventually the experiment stuck.

“They lost a brother, but they gained a brother — literally, you know what I mean? And I gained a new family,” DuVall says by phone. “I think when people see it and they see the truth in it, it presents a profound metaphor for how all of us can rise above tragedy if we choose to.”

The veterans say their new bandmate fits right in: “He’s got a different sound, he draws from different experiences, he has a different language lyrically,” says Cantrell. “It’s enough different and so much the same — that’s why it works.”

The original Alice in Chains — mixing blues-based rock, sludgy guitars and haunting vocals — were lumped into the big four of the grunge movement, alongside Pearl Jam, Nirvana and Soundgarden. Their hits included “Would?,” “Man in the Box,” “Rooster,” “No Excuses” and “Angry Chair.”

Those songs will remain a part of the band’s live shows and Kinney says they take on a new meaning now when he plays them: celebrating Staley’s life.

“To bring that thing we all created together and still see people reacting to it is great,” he says. “It would be sort of a disservice to not do that.”

Still, the band knows there will be critics unhappy that they’re playing under their old name. Kinney and Cantrell considered pre-empting such talk by toying with an alternative, very heavy metal name: Leather Snake.

They nixed it, though.

“It doesn’t matter what we called it. People would go, ‘The guys from Alice are playing down the street and they’re playing their songs,’” says Kinney.

DJ AM’s death ruled as accidental drug overdose:

The New York City medical examiner’s office says DJ AM’s death was accidental. It blames a lethal cocktail of prescription drugs and cocaine.

The toxicology report released Tuesday shows the 36-year-old had cocaine, OxyContin, Benadryl and another drug used to cut cocaine in his system.

The medical examiner says the death was acute intoxication.

The celebrity, whose real name was Adam Goldstein, was found Aug. 28 in his apartment in New York City’s trendy SoHo neighborhood after a friend called 911. Paramedics had to break down the door before they found him, shirtless and wearing sweat pants, in his bed around 5:20 p.m.

A crack pipe and prescription pill bottles were discovered scattered around the apartment.

Charity Auction nets over 1 Million for AIDS:

Crystal-studded boots that Michael Jackson intended to wear on his planned comeback tour fetched $14,650 at a celebrity fundraiser chaired by his sister, Janet.

The charity event, held on the sidelines of Milan Fashion Week, attracted such fashion luminaries as Donatella Versace and model Linda Evangelista, as well as rapper and producer Kanye West.

Organizers say the event late Monday netted a total of $1.1 million for the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR), a nonprofit organization that supports HIV/AIDS research.

The event included a charity dinner in a central Milan palace and continued into the early hours of Tuesday with French DJ Bob Sinclar serving his famous mixes on an upstairs dance floor.

“I’d just like to thank everyone here in the global fashion community who’ve done so much to help amfAR and to support HIV/AIDS research,” Ms. Jackson told celebrity diners, who paid anywhere from $2,200 to $11,500 apiece to attend the dinner. “When this terrible pandemic began everyone … who was infected died of AIDS. Today with your help millions of people are living with HIV.”

She remembered the 5,000 who die of the disease every day.

Evangelista recalled the death of her first booking agent due to AIDS in the early days of the epidemic. “Those were desperate times for so many of us. I watched him die and helped bury him, not understanding any of it,” Evangelista said. “The fashion industry was especially hard hit by AIDS.”

But amfAR CEO Kevin Robert Frost celebrated the first “flicker of hope” that the AIDS epidemic may one day be contained, the news last week that a two-vaccine combination tested in Thailand had cut the risk of being infected with HIV by one-third. Researchers say the results are not good enough for immediate use, but the results were widely viewed in the AIDS prevention and research camps as a hopeful sign.

“That, my friends, is the power of research,” Frost said. “So believe me when I tell you, there is a way out. We believe with the right investment, we can bring this epidemic to an end in our lifetime.”

During the auction, Sudanese model Alex Wek helped stir interest in the Giuseppe Zanotti-designed boots that featured 3,000 multicolored Swarovski beads, which Jackson planned to wear on the opening night of his comeback.

“Growing up in southern Sudan, I did not know a lot of pop stars. But Michael did touch a lot of people,” she said in tribute to the singer, who died in June before his much-anticipated comeback could begin.

A custom black leather jacket designed by the Canadian twin designers Dean and Dan Caten of the DSquared2 label set off a bidding war between rapper West and Diesel designer Renzo Rosso. Rosso prevailed with a bid of $52,740, the highest price paid for any of the auctioned items.

Model Noemie Lenoir, who flew in from New York for the event, was supposed to auction off a chance to sail aboard the yacht “Born for Sports” as it attempts to break the trans-Mediterranean record from Marseilles to Carthage in Tunisia. Instead, she improvised an auction of an evening out in her company.

“Come on, cheap people, more money,” she urged, as the bidding reached the winning level of $16,115.

The yacht-racing experience later went for $26,370. The auction — which among the other items included a Fendi bicycle with GPS and a leather-encased bike chain that earned $23,440 and a private DJ lesson with Bob Sinclar that brought in $41,000 — netted a total of $228,000.

Top 10 Singles on iTunes:

iTunes‘ top 10 selling singles and albums of the week ending Sept. 21, 2009:

Singles:

1. “Party In the U.S.A.,” Miley Cyrus

2. “Whatcha Say,” Jason DeRulo

3. “I Gotta Feeling,” Black Eyed Peas

4. “Paparazzi,” Lady GaGa

5. “Down,” Jay Sean

6. “Empire State of Mind“,  Jay-Z (feat. Alicia Keys)

7. “Run This Town,” Jay-Z (feat. RihannaKanye West)

8. “Cowboy Casanova,” Carrie Underwood

9. “Forever,” Drake, Lil Wayne, Eminem, Kanye West

10. “Use Somebody,” Kings of Leon

Lucy of ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’ passes away:

The real life Lucy from the Beatles’ songLucy in the Sky with Diamonds” has died after a long fight against lupus.

The death of Lucy Vodden at age 46 has been announced by St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, where she was treated.

The hospital said Monday she died after battling the disease for years.

Vodden came to the attention of John Lennon when the Beatles’ young son Julian came home from school one day with a drawing that he said was “Lucy in the sky with diamonds.”

The elder Lennon turned it into a psychedelic masterpiece long associated with LSD use.

Julian Lennon reached out to Vodden in recent years as she suffered from the disease.


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