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Pearl Jam

Binaural

  • AMG Review of Binaural

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    If anything, Pearl Jam was even more in the wilderness -- at least as far as the mainstream was concerned -- at the beginning of 2000 than they were in the second half of the '90s. Even with "Last Kiss," their first big hit single since Ten, under their belts, they were an anomaly on the pop and rock scenes. They were the only one of their old grunge colleagues still standing intact, and they were genuinely alone. No peers, and too sincere to even consider fitting into a pop scene dominated by 'N Sync on one side and Limp Bizkit on the other. Not surprisingly, they chose to persevere, ignoring trends, completely in favor of being a classicist rock band. This should come as no surprise, since that's what they've done since No Code and, perhaps, Vitalogy, but the real surprise about their sixth studio album Binaural is that it finds the group roaring back to life without dramatically changing the direction they followed on No Code and Yield. Maybe the addition of a new drummer, former Soundgarden member Matt Cameron, has kicked the band to life, but that unfairly dismisses Jack Irons' worthy contributions. Instead, the difference is focus -- though Pearl Jam is trying a lot of different styles, certainly more so than on Yield, they pull it all off better. The songs are sharper, the production is layered, and the performances are as compassionate as ever, resulting in their finest album since Vitalogy.

Rock N Roll Wisdom....take 6
over 2 years ago

"If you're losing your soul and you know it, then you've still got a soul left to lose" - Charles BukowskiMy brother has moved back from Atlanta and is living with me. He is going to keep my place when I move out West. He threw a fit yesterday because my dog ate his $300 headphones. First of all...why do you need $300 headphones! Music is the most important thing in my world, and my cheap pair wor

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Pearl Jam Live Part 2
about 1 year ago

This is the original song Eddie Vedder wrote for Bill Gates and Paul Allen, and all rich ruthless people, played on the ukelele...and once again, if you can hang out for a minute, Eddie goes on to talk about the charity of the concert and other stuff...

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