That’s something that has figured prominently in Chino’s life lately. Over the years, he’s spoken of the various ways in which he has changed his lifestyle. In 2010, he said his time with drugs was over, acknowledging that he had previously used them as a crutch for creativity. In 2020, he explained how he had embraced therapy. And now? Well, if you’ve noticed Chino moving around onstage with the energy he did as a frosted-tipped blur of energy circa Around The Fur, it’s no coincidence. He’s nearly three years sober.
“A lot of times before I play, I still get nervous,” he says, explaining his journey towards that decision. “My way of dealing with that anxiety would be to have a couple beers before I go onstage. And yes, it does help ease that anxiety, but at the same time, it also makes you too loose sometimes, where you’re not really in control of your voice. You can get sloppy really easily.”
Chino recalls occasionally watching live footage back and not always loving what he saw and heard.
“I’d get offstage and what I remembered of the show would be like, ‘Oh, yeah, it was cool,’” he begins. “But then I’d hear back takes sometimes like, ‘Oh, that wasn’t as good as I remembered it…’”
Kicking alcohol, especially as a member of a touring band, is not the easiest process. Mastodon’s Bill Kelliher once told your correspondent about how their tour with Deftones and Alice In Chains helped him in his endeavour.
“What’s very crazy that you said Alice In Chains is that Mike Inez – and I’m sure he won’t mind me telling you this – was a big part in my decision to try to not drink,” Chino explains. “He’s been sober for years. Jerry Cantrell as well, but Mike was the first person I reached out to and he helped me kick it. It’s been steady in my life since I was a teenager, but you see people around you whose lives get better [without alcohol] and you’re like, ‘Why haven’t I tried this and see if I feel better?’ After a month of not drinking, I was like, ‘Wow, this feels pretty good, why don’t you keep going?’ That’s what I’ve done since and now it’s almost three years. It feels great to get to the end of a set now and not feel like I’m gonna fall over.”
Abe has noticed the difference in his friend.
“Chino’s extremely focused right now – the most he’s been, ever,” he says. “He’s in great shape. He’s very cat-like onstage, and he absolutely killed it on this record.”
Speaking to this focus, Abe points to one of his “favourite jams” on Private Music, the tranquilised, graceful strains of I Think About You All The Time. “It’s the ultimate love song,” Abe proclaims of the track Chino plucked from the waves during a swim near Rick Ruben’s Shangri-La studio in Malibu. “It’s like you’re at a look-out point, making out.”
“During recording, I would wake up super-early every morning, get a coffee and then walk down to the beach,” Chino recalls. “I jumped in the water, walked barefoot back to the house and picked up my guitar and started playing. I wrote it from the start to the end, every little part. I pictured early Jane’s Addiction stuff, where Perry [Farrell] would write about how powerful the ocean is. I’ve been up in Oregon for 12 years so I really was having this California, West Coast moment. It’s not like I wrote a surf song, but I just felt very invigorated. Some days you’re just sitting there tinkering forever, but sometimes songs just pour out. That was that moment.”