Alice in Chains was inactive from 1996 onwards due to Layne Staley's drug issues, which resulted in his death in April 2002. In 2005, Kinney came up with the idea of reuniting with the other two surviving members of Alice in Chains, Jerry Cantrell and Mike Inez, to perform at a benefit concert for the victims of the
tsunami disaster that struck South Asia in 2004. Kinney made calls to his former bandmates, as well as friends in the music community, such as former Alice in Chains manager Susan Silver. Kinney was surprised by the enthusiastic response to his idea, and the band performed for the first time in 10 years at the
K-Rock Tsunami Continued Care Relief Concert in Seattle on February 18, 2006, featuring guest vocalists singing Staley's parts. On March 6, 2006, the band performed together again at
VH1's
Decades Rock Live! concert, honoring fellow Seattle musicians
Ann Wilson and
Nancy Wilson of
Heart. That night they played "
Rooster" with
Comes with the Fall vocalist
William DuVall and Ann Wilson. The album
Black Gives Way to Blue, the first without Staley, was released on September 29, 2009, featuring DuVall as the new vocalist. The album was totally funded by Kinney and Cantrell, as the band did not have a record label at the time. In 2013, Kinney added the initials "LSMS" on his drum kit, a tribute to Alice in Chains' late members Layne Staley and Mike Starr. Alice in Chains' sixth studio album (and the third with DuVall),
Rainier Fog, was released on August 24, 2018. In May 2025, Kinney suffered a "non-life-threatening medical emergency" prior to Alice in Chains' concert in Uncasville, Connecticut. As a result, the band canceled the remainder of its planned U.S. spring tour. == Artwork ==