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- layne-links.html accessdate "2007-08-21".
- layne-links.html accessdate "2011-11-21".
- layne-links.html authorlink "Charles R. Cross".
- layne-links.html date "1996-06-02".
- layne-links.html date "2002-06-01".
- layne-links.html date "2002-06-06".
- layne-links.html first "Charles R.".
- layne-links.html isCitedBy Above_(Mad_Season_album).
- layne-links.html isCitedBy Layne_Staley.
- layne-links.html isCitedBy Mad_Season_(band).
- layne-links.html last "Cross".
- layne-links.html number "897".
- layne-links.html page "21".
- layne-links.html publisher "Originally from a Rolling Stone Article".
- layne-links.html publisher "Rolling Stone".
- layne-links.html quote "In the summer of 1987, guitarist Jerry Cantrell walked in a raucous Seattle party and saw a man at the center of it all, with bright pink hair pilled atop his head by means of fire poker. "he had a big smile on his face, and he was sitting with two gorgeous woman," Cantrell recalls of the moment he met Layne Staley. Cantrell didn't have a place to live, so Staley took him back to what passed for his residence - a dumpy, piss-smelling rehearsal studio where both would live for the next year. And when Cantrell heard Staley sing, he was convinced their friendship would be a lasting one: "I knew that voice was the guy I wanted to be playing with. It sounded like it came out of a 350- pound biker rather than skinny little Layne. I considered his voice to be my voice." Sometime in the first week of April, that oversize voice - which fueled a half-dozen radio hits and helped sell millions of albums - died along with Staley.".
- layne-links.html title "The Last Days of Layne Staley".
- layne-links.html url layne-links.html.
- layne-links.html url "http://rollinpapers.blogspot.com/2006/01/layne-links.html".