| | Pearl Jam CD Pearl Jam Discography of CDs
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Pearl Jam: Jeff Ament (bass guitar); Eddie Vedder, Matt Cameron, Mike McCready, Stone Gossard. Personnel: Eddie Vedder (vocals, guitar); Mike McCready, Stone Gossard (guitar); Matt Cameron (drums, percussion). Additional personnel: Boom Gaspar (piano, Hammond b-3 organ, pump organ); Gary Westlake. Audio Mixer: Adam Kasper. Recording information: Studio X, Seattle, WA. On its self-titled 2006 album, the band's first for J Records, Pearl Jam offers up a vital and assured set of songs that nods to the Seattle-based group's early-1990s heyday while revealing a slightly updated and streamlined approach. Whereas some previous releases were marked by experimental moments that employed Eastern instrumentation, programmed loops, and other adventurous flourishes, PEARL JAM finds the ensemble sticking to a no-frills, riff-centered sound that's bolstered by some of the quintet's most engaging melodies since TEN and VS. Though much of the record is comprised of propulsive rock tunes ("World Wide Suicide," "Comatose") that feature impassioned performances from frontman Eddie Vedder and blistering lead lines from guitarist Mike McCready, tracks such as the chiming, Beatlesque "Parachutes" and the melancholy "Gone" showcase Pearl Jam's range without resorting to unnecessary bells and whistles. Much in the way that U2 reignited its career with ALL THAT YOU CAN'T LEAVE BEHIND, this album finds Pearl Jam successfully going back to basics while still moving forward. Nearly 15 years after Ten, Pearl Jam finally returned to the strengths of their debut with 2006's Pearl Jam, a sharply focused set of impassioned hard rock. Gone are the arty detours (some call them affectations) that alternately cluttered and enhanced their albums from 1993's sophomore effort, Vs., all the way to 2002's Riot Act, and what's left behind is nothing but the basics: muscular, mildly meandering rock & roll, enlivened by Eddie Vedder's bracing sincerity. Pearl Jam has never sounded as hard or direct as they do here -- even on Ten there was an elasticity to the music, due in large part to Jeff Ament's winding fretless bass, that kept the record from sounding like a direct hit to the gut, which Pearl Jam certainly does. Nowhere does it sound more forceful than it does in its first half, when the tightly controlled rockers "Life Wasted," "World Wide Suicide," "Comatose," "Severed Hand," and "Marker in the Sand" pile up on top of each other, giving the record a genuine feeling of urgency. That insistent quality and sense of purpose doesn't let up even as they slide into the quite beautiful, lightly psychedelic acoustic pop of "Parachutes," which is when the album begins to open up slightly. If the second half of the record does have a greater variety of tempos than the first, it's still heavy on rockers, ranging from the ironic easy swagger of "Unemployable" to the furious "Big Wave," which helps set the stage for the twin closers of "Come Back" and "Inside Job." The former is a slow-burning cousin to "Black" that finds Pearl Jam seamlessly incorporating soul into their sound, while the latter is a deliberately escalating epic that gracefully closes the album on a hopeful note -- and coming after an album filled with righteous anger and frustration, it is indeed welcome. But Pearl Jam's anger on this eponymous album is not only largely invigorating, it is the opposite of the tortured introspection of their first records. Here, Vedder turns his attention to the world at large, and while he certainly rages against the state of W's union in 2006, he's hardly myopic or strident; he's alternately evocative and specific, giving this album a resonance that has been lacking in most protest rock of the 2000s. But what makes Pearl Jam such an effective record is that it can be easily enjoyed as sheer music without ever digging into Vedder's lyrics. Song for song, this is their best set since Vitalogy, and the band has never sounded so purposeful on record as they do heRolling Stone (p.55) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[A]s big and brash in fuzz and backbone as Led Zeppelin's PRESENCE....The politics on PEARL JAM are not those or left but of engagement and responsibility." Rolling Stone (p.103) - Ranked #13 in Rolling Stone's "The Top 50 Albums Of 2006" -- "These are songs about universal accountability and the still-revolutionary power of individual dissent." Entertainment Weekly (p.136) - "[T]hey stand and deliver on this belatedly eponymous barnstormer, the seriously hopped-up effort fans have been pining for since VITALOGY." -- Grade: B+ Kerrang (Magazine) (pp.46-47) - "Gossard and McCready's molten guitars mesh electrifyingly for an opening brace of rockers shot-through with air-punch hooks and Eddie Vedder's valiant howling-into-a-hurricane croon..." Mojo (Publisher) (p.112) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[S]elf-titled with good reason: Pearl Jam sound reborn, vital. The first three tracks are full-tilt rockers..." Pearl Jam Music | Category | Rock/Pop Albums, Rock CDs, Alternative, Hard Rock, Grunge | | Label | J-Records | | Orig Year | 2006 | | All Time Sales Rank | 3971  | | CD Universe Part number | 7058176 | | Catalog number | 71467 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | May 02, 2006 | | Studio/Live | Studio | | Mono/Stereo | Stereo | | Producer | Adam Kasper; Adam Kasper; Pearl Jam | | Engineer | Adam Kasper; John Burton; Sam Hofstedt | | Personnel | Eddie Vedder - vocals Mike McCready Matt Cameron - drums, percussion Jeff Ament - bass guitar Stone Gossard - guitar
Also: Seattle, Adam Kasper, band's first for J Records, Boom Gaspar, WA. On its self-titled 2006 album |
Purchase Pearl Jam CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Pearl Jam Lost Dogs CDs (2003)
Pearl Jam
$15.95 Contains a hidden track within the last track, "Bee Girl" on Disc 2. Personnel: Eddie Vedder (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano); Stone Gossard, Mike McCready (guitar, piano); Matt Cameron (guitar, drums); Mitchell Froom (keyboards); Jeff Ament (bass); Jack Irons, Dave Krusen, Dave Abbruzzese (drums). Additional personnel: Tchad Blake (Wurlitzer piano). Includes liner notes by Stone Gossard, Mike McCready, Jeff Ament, Eddie Vedder. At the peak of alt-rock in the '90s, Pearl Jam were the biggest band in the world. Nirvana may have kick-started the alt-rock explosion, but not long after Nevermind knocked Michael Jackson's Dangerous off the top of the charts, Pearl Jam overtook their fellow Seattleites, selling many more copies of Ten than Nevermind, as the album achieved saturation play on radio and MTV, thereby setting off a wave of imitators, ranging from Stone Temple Pilots to Seven Mary Three and scores of bands that have been lost to time. They defined the sound of the decade, at least in terms of mainstream alt-rock. But, like all their fellow grunge rockers (though not like Smashing Pumpkins), they bristled at the notion of stardom, and ducked the spotlight. After following Ten with the effectively scattershot Vs. in 1993, ...
| | Green Day American Idiot CD (2004)
Pearl Jam
$11.39 This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Green Day: Billie Joe Armstrong (vocals, guitar); Mike Dirnt (vocals, bass instrument); Tre Cool (drums). It's a bit tempting to peg Green Day's sprawling, ambitious, brilliant seventh album, American Idiot, as their version of a Who album, the next logical step forward from the Kinks-inspired popcraft of their underrated 2000 effort, Warning, but things aren't quite that simple. American Idiot is an unapologetic, unabashed rock opera, a form that Pete Townshend pioneered with Tommy, but Green Day doesn't use that for a blueprint as much as they use the Who's mini-opera "A Quick One, While He's Away," whose whirlwind succession of 90-second songs isn't only emulated on two song suites here, but provides the template for the larger 13-song cycle. But the Who are only one of many inspirations on this audacious, immensely entertaining album. The story of St. Jimmy has an arc similar to Hüsker Dü's landmark punk-opera Zen Arcade, while the music has grandiose flourishes straight out of both Queen and Rocky Horror Picture Show (the '50s pastiche "Rock and Roll Girlfriend" is punk rock Meat Loaf), all tied together with a nervy urgency and a political ...
| | Audioslave Out Of Exile CD (2005)
Pearl Jam
$12.39 Audioslave: Tim Commerford (bass guitar); Chris Cornell, Tom Morello, Brad Wilk. Personnel: Chris Cornell (vocals); Tom Morello (guitar); Brad Wilk (drums). Audio Mixer: Brendan O'Brien. Photographer: Ethan Russell. Given that most supergroups last little longer than a single album, it was easy to assume that Audioslave -- the pairing of Soundgarden vocalist Chris Cornell and the instrumental trio at the core of Rage Against the Machine -- was a one-off venture. That suspicion was given weight by their eponymous 2002 debut, which sounded as if Cornell wrote melodies and lyrics to tracks RATM wrote after the departure of Zack de la Rocha, but any lingering doubts about Audioslave being a genuine rock band are vanished by their 2005 second album, Out of Exile. Unlike the first record, Out of Exile sounds like the product of a genuine band, where all four members of the band contribute equally to achieve a distinctive, unified personality. It's still possible to hear elements of both Rage and Soundgarden here, but the two parts fuse relatively seamlessly, and there's a confidence to the band that stands in direct contrast to the halting, clumsy attack on the debut. A large part of the success of Out of Exile is due to the songs, which may be credited ...
| | Red Hot Chili Peppers Stadium Arcadium CDs (2006)
Pearl Jam
$16.99 Red Hot Chili Peppers: Flea , John Frusciante, Anthony Kiedis, Chad Smith . Personnel: Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (guitar); Richard Dodd (cello); Brad Warnaar (French horn); Michael Bolger (trombone); Billy Preston (tambourine); Paulinho DeCosta, Lenny Castro (percussion). Audio Mixers: Andrew Scheps; Ryan Hewitt. Recording information: Akademie Mathematique Of Philosophical Research; Little Kicker Sound; The Center For The Cultivation Of The Invisible; The Mansion Of Laurel Canyon. Photographers: Michael Muller; Gus Van Sant. An ambitious double album, STADIUM ARCADIUM finds the Red Hot Chili Peppers building on their more mature, latter-day approach, while also acknowledging their lighthearted, youthful sound. The Los Angeles-based funk-rock quartet's third studio outing since John Frusciante returned to the fold, this 2006 release once again reinforces how crucial the guitarist is to the Peppers' aesthetic, with his mix of swirling, psychedelic leads and heavy riffs providing the perfect foil to Flea's bold bass heroics. (Instrumentally, the ...
| | Tool 10,000 Days CD (2006)
Pearl Jam
$11.75 Tool: Danny Carey, Adam Jones , Justin Chancellor, Maynard James Keenan. Audio Mixer: Joe Barresi. Recording information: Grandmaster, Hollywood, CA; O'Henry, Burbank, CA; The Loft, Hollywood, CA. Animation: Ray Zone. Illustrator: Alex Grey. Photographer: Travis Shin. To its legion of fans, everything the band Tool does is an event, but the elaborate plan behind their sporadic release schedule--roughly five years, on average, between albums--is due primarily to the time and effort the band packs into each successive effort. To title their fourth album 10,000 DAYS, then, isn't as much an exaggeration as it would seem. Tool are America's most consummate mainstream perfectionists, revitalizing progressive rock to the grandeur of its '70s heyday, but updated with technocratic tension and existential dread not known to previous generations. Perhaps it's the development of more musical genres at the turn of the millennium, but it's also Tool's ability to take what is needed from each and leave the florid excesses behind, forming a seething gray core of angst and release across epic-length songs that are as accessible as they are complex. The material on ...
| | Neil Young Living With War CD (2006)
Pearl Jam
$9.95 Personnel: Neil Young (vocals); Neil Young; Darrell Brown (vocals); Rick Rosas (bass instrument); Tommy Bray (trumpet); Chad Cromwell (drums). Arranger: Neil Young. Neil Young has never been one to avoid political commentary. Ever since "Ohio," his classic anthem of moral outrage about the Kent State student massacre in 1970, Young's music has pulled no punches about the injustices of American policy both foreign and domestic. 2006's LIVING WITH WAR continues that trend; in fact, the album is the most overtly political of Young's long, dazzling career. A collection of protest songs that takes the Bush administration directly to task ...
| | Chill Pill CD (2002) Import
Pearl Jam
$10.65
| | Not Long After Tomorrow Come Save Us CD (2004)
Pearl Jam
$6.59
| | Bob James Two CD (1975) (Import) Bonus Track; Japan
Pearl Jam
$25.65 All tracks have been digitally remastered. Japanese pressing includes one bonus track ("Here Let My Life"). Bob James largely defined pop/jazz crossover in the '70s. Two, reissued by Koch, is typical of his output. Mixing together aspects of pop, R&B and classical with just a touch of jazz, James (heard throughout on electric keyboards) put the emphasis on catchy melodies and lightly funky rhythms. The results range from insipid to pleasant, with a brass section, a string section, and vocalists (including Patti Austin) utilized to create what is essentially background music. ~ Scott Yanow Recorded during a period when Bob James did some of ...
| | Gerry Rafferty Days Gone By: The Anthology 1968-1980 CD (2006) (Import) Reissue; Australia
Pearl Jam
$19.99 This retrospective of the early career of the Scottish singer-songwriter Gerry Rafferty collects material from his late-1960s days with the Humblebums, as well as the charming, country-flavored "Can I Have My Money Back?" from his eponymously titled solo debut. There's also the chugging "Stuck in the Middle With You," later given an air of menace by its inclusion in Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs," and Rafferty's biggest hit, "Baker Street," with its unforgettable saxophone hook framing a tale of big-city loneliness. Raven Records, those specializers in career-spanning compilations that license from multiple sources, do a typically fine job with this Gerry Rafferty anthology. The 21 tracks include cuts by the Humblebums, the folk duo in which (with comedian Billy Connolly) he recorded in his early career; four songs from his obscure, self-titled 1971 debut solo album; five from his mid-'70s group Stealers Wheel, all but one written or co-written by Rafferty; and nine from his solo albums of the late '70s and early '80s, when he briefly attained international stardom. In so doing, this CD illustrates his journey from folk and folk-rock to album-oriented singer/songwriter rock, one of which listeners only familiar with the hits "Baker Street" or (from his Stealers Wheel days) "Stuck in the Middle with You" might not be wholly aware. True, "Baker Street" and "Stuck in the Middle with You" still stick out as his most memorable tunes by far, and the final selections, from the early '80s, are the worst and blandest on the disc. Most of the tracks, however, testify to his modest but notable talents as an affecting, likably sincere singer/songwriter, with more gifts for pop melody than most of his not-quite-top-of-the-line peers in the genre. The liner notes give a good overview of his fitful and varied recording career. ~ Richie Unterberger
Raven presents the 21 essential moments from Gerry Raffert's first 13 years of recording. "Days Gone Down: The Anthology 1970-1982" is the most comprehensive, multi-label Rafferty collection on the market, incorporating every hit single the master singer/songwriter scored. Throughout the 1970s ...
| | Blue Sage What Makes The World Go Round CD (2002)
Pearl Jam
$12.65 Continuing from the first cd, "lifeforce:" After we decided not to release it, we just kept recording and filing them away. then in the year 2000 ,I wrote a song called, "the man who would be king" about the presidential election. It was a song about the whole recount process. At that time, I also had a really bad week and I wrote a song called, "I've got the fire," which is about no matter how hard the world pounds on you there's still something inside each one of us that can pull us through. But when the election ended in December, I decided not to release them. Then came 9/11, 2002 which changed everything. I really had to start questioning where we as a society were going. Then one day, I just started thinking how hard it must be for the firemen to do their job since they lost so many of there comrades and I felt like writing a tribute song to them and this just came out one day. I named it, "the firemen," and after letting a firemen listen to it and giving me such a great response, which was really humbling, I was really ...
| | Tactical Sekt Syncope CD (2006)
Pearl Jam
$14.69
| | Prototypes CD (2007) (Import) Bonus Tracks; Japan
Pearl Jam
$32.85
| | Baumigaudi Party-Hits CD (2008) (Import)
Pearl Jam
$36.79
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