SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-No Code (1996).
I’d always sort of liked this disc because of its principles–I believed that the title came about because there is no barcode on the disc. Pearl Jam is always tilting at some windmill or another, and I can support that.
I’ve also learned that this is PJ’s least popular and lowest selling album.
And I can see why. Although there are a number of great songs on the disc, the overall tempo is somewhat flat. The disc is also quite varied, without any of the really typical Pearl Jam songs on it. None of this is necessarily a bad thing, but it adds up to a Pearl Jam disc that doesn’t rock as hard as the others, and sounds rather unfamiliar.
“Sometimes” starts off the disc very slowly. Something of an anomaly in itself for PJ. The song is strong but it doesn’t really build. This is a stronger track live, where the atmospherics kick in better.
“Hail Hail” is a typical Pearl Jam number, perhaps the only one on the disc. It’s pretty fast and furious and features some great bass work. “Who You Are” was the first single, a slow Middle-Eastern tinged song. The drums are also quite different on this track, as they are more tribal than rocking. It’s a really enjoyable song but it’s not the kind to attract the masses.
“In My Tree” and “Smile” form the middle/mellow sound of this album. Neither one has very loud guitars, although the chorus of “Smile” allows Eddie to give a good yell “I miss you already.” (It also features a Neil Youngesque harmonica). “In My Tree” features what sounds like a zither(!), and comes with more tribal drumming.
“Off He Goes” is one of the mellowest songs PJ have done. The live song tends towards more emotion. Its a great song, but it loses a bit in this studio recording.
On what would be the second side, Pearl Jam flexes its punk muscle: “Habit” and “Lukin” are some of the heaviest/hardest songs they’ve done. And live, they are even faster. The songs themselves are great, yet they really stick out on this mellow disc.
“Red Mosquito” is another midtempo rocker, although the guitar solo is pretty scorching. “Present Tense” begins very slowly and sparsely. It takes a long time to build although the conclusion is satisfying.
Another anomaly for this disc is the new vocalist: Stone Gossard sings “Mankind,” a pretty straight ahead rocker, that only stands out because of Gossard’s unusual voice. It’s always funny to hear them play it live as it’s something of a unique treat, even if the song itself isn’t amazing.
I guess really the problem comes at the end…the disc just sort of fades away. Neither of the last two songs is bad, but neither is really memorable.
I hate to dismiss the album as I do because the good songs are very good, it just feels kind of hodgepodgey. There is talk of a lot of dissent within the band at the time of this recording and maybe that has something to do with it.
[READ: April 24, 2009] “The Intruder”
This story started out a little slow, progressed into an adrenaline rush, twisted into something potentially comic and then inverted itself in the last sentence. (more…)

SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Vitalogy (1994).
I always think of this as the “weird” Pearl Jam disc. Mostly that’s because the contents are certainly weird (in that it’s made up like an old book, including excerpts from the book in the liner notes). But also because it has some of Pearl Jam’s strangest songs on it, especially “Hey Foxymophandlemama, That’s Me,” easily one of the weirdest songs in their canon, and possibly the weirdest song on a major label. It’s 7 minutes of samples and scratchy guitars. And it’s more than a little creepy. The disc also contains “Bugs” an accordion-based rant about, well, bugs. and “Aye Davanita” a sort of Eastern chanting type piece.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Vs. (1993).
Ten was a solid record, and although it had diversity within it, overall the sound was pretty consistent. On Vs., Pearl Jam mixed it up sonically and otherwise.
Zadie Smith is the editor and she wrote the introduction. I like to cover all of the written pieces in the book, but there’s not much to say about the introduction except that it fills you in on the details of the collection. She thanks Sarah Vowell for the idea but I gather that the rest of the work was done by her.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Ten [remixed] (2009).
Pearl Jam reissued Ten this year with a new mix by Brendan O’Brien, the producer who has mixed the bulk of their catalog. So, this gives everyone a chance to hear what it would have sounded like if it were released after Vs., or something like that.
SOUNDTRACK: PEARL JAM-Ten (1991).
For me, Nirvana was the band that brought the 1990’s into alternative-rock-land. But, it was Pearl Jam that brought hard rocking music back to the masses. Like everyone I know, I loved Ten. But I gradually lost excitement about Pearl Jam over their next couple of records.
I don’t recall why I started getting
SOUNDTRACK: DEPECHE MODE-Black Celebration (1986).
Since the previous entry was all about The Smiths, I include Depeche Mode in this entry as the other big album that influenced my appreciation for college rock (or just British music, apparently).
SOUNDTRACK: THE SMITHS-The Queen Is Dead (1986).
Years ago, when I was a young metal head, my friend Garry expanded my musical palette by introducing me to a lot of college rock (or whatever it was called back then). The album that had the most impact on me back then was this one, The Queen Is Dead.
SOUNDTRACK: THE FLAMING LIPS-UFOs At the Zoo [DVD] (2007).
I’m not going to review the musical portion of the DVD per se…you can download the MP3s with the DVD, and I intend to give the music a good listen once I get it converted to CD. So, this is a review of the movie itself (with comments about the music too, of course).
SOUNDTRACK: THE FLAMING LIPS-The Fearless Freaks 1986-2006 (2006).
This is an assemblage of ten recordings from twenty years of The Flaming Lips. It’s something of a soundtrack to the movie of the same name, but it’s more of a collection of rare and unavailable tracks. Most of the tracks are live, and, since I’m not a big collector of unreleased works, they were all new to me.