Showing posts with label Pearl Jam. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearl Jam. Show all posts

Thursday, December 10, 2009

The Final Countdown

If you've been following this sporadic blog since its inception, you've surely come to realize that I am a fiend for countdown lists. Although I've been mastering the art of the hiatus as of late, you had to have KNOWN I'd be back for my end of the year picks. Considering how I randomly decided to cover my "best-of-decade" picks in mid 2008, I am going to stick with my gut, and not torture you with yet another best of 2000-2009 mess. You can chalk this post up as either an isolated entry or an addendum to all that was great from 2000 - August 2008. It's your call.

Without any further adieu, here it goes -- The 10 Best Albums of 2009:

Honorable Mention I. Rodrigo Y Gabriela - 11:11

The highly anticipated followup to their breakout 2006 self-titled record, this one is an homage to the duo's forbears. Each track pays tribute to the respective artists that has helped paved the way for these former metalheads. Have no fear -- the blazingly fast rhythmic guitar from their "reptile" album is reprised on 11:11, which makes this arguably the best instrumental album of the year.

Honorable Mention II. Pearl Jam - Backspacer

As I detailed in one of my few posts this year, this is THE definitive Pearl Jam comeback album. Ditching the major record labels, Pearl Jam opted to self-release this bad boy and sell exclusively through Target stores. With label chains now broken, it appears a new creative spark has been restored for Eddie and the boys. Leadoff single, "The Fixer" is the most infectious tune the band has released in fifteen years. The rest of the record -- the band's shortest -- ain't half bad either.

10) Them Crooked Vultures (Self-Titled)

A project that had supposedly been in the works for years finally blitzed us earlier this fall. First there was the shady online viral campaign. Next, there were tour date announcements and sold out shows before any material was even leaked. Finally, we got an album out of nowhere in mid-November. I remember thinking this would be an utter failure or a resounding success. This just goes to show that when you place three proven musical geniuses in a room together, you sometimes get the results you expect. Put quite simply, Them Crooked Vultures is the musical melting pot of Led Zeppelin, Foo Fighters, and Queens of The Stone Age. You literally hear elements of each legendary band in each one of this album's blistering tunes. Here's to hoping this is not just a one-off gig.

9) Jay-Z - The Blueprint III

Yeah, yeah. I know. For hardcore Jay-Z fans, this album doesn't hold a candle to some of his earlier work (The Blueprint, Reasonable Doubt, The Black Album, etc.). Yes, my music integrity is questioned for even ranking this album based on the almost universal poor reviews. Sadly, this was the year I finally discovered Jay-Z, and although I will agree that I have no right to critique hip-hip, I enjoyed the hell out of this record. Before becoming the official Yankee World Series anthem, "Empire State of Mind" was the most-played song of the year on my iPod.

8) Wilco - Wilco (The Album)

I consider Wilco to be the modern day classic-rock band. Aside from having legions of fans who happen to be in that traditional classic rock band-loving demographic, Jeff Tweedy's vintage leathery vocals paired with the band's easy-going vibe make these guys seem from an era they're not from. Hell, they even had the audacity to name their 7th album eponymously. If that's not good enough for you, they took it to another level here by, yes (you guessed it), naming a song "Wilco". That's right -- now you can have three consecutive lines on your iPod that bear the name Wilco. The last time I saw this was with Bad Company.

7) The Avett Brothers - I and Love and You

I think this is the first time a (mostly) bluegrass album is making its debut on OTM. After releasing the 2nd part of their two-part Gleam series of EP's last year, the Avett Brothers impacted more than just the indie-folk comfort zone. This 7-song set turned the heads of the heavyweights -- most notably Rick Rubin. The rock producer was so impressed by their offering, that he signed up to produce their major-label debut. Preserving the formula that carefully blends painfully heartfelt lyrics with organic folky music, this record is the perfect follow-up to the Gleam set. The band has gained so big so fast that they've already graduated on to the larger venues that usually pass on the bluegrass/folk scene.

6) Yeah Yeah Yeahs - It's Blitz!

When it comes to album cover of the year, there is no contest. The artwork for It's Blitz! beautifully summarizes the band's explosive energy in all its breakfast mutilation glory. Shedding the guitar aggressiveness from their previous efforts, the YYY's third full-length album is a tribute, nay love-fest, to the electronic music the band has flirted with throughout its career. It appears Nick Zinner has traded in his Fender for some pretty sweet synth gear. Indie-dance being all the rage these days, you can certainly count on Karen O. being ahead of the curve and taking it to the next level. The band is able to claim its stake on a new musical realm, while holding onto the elements that make them the best garage punk band in the world.

5) Sonic Youth - The Eternal

Maybe it's pure coincidence that Sonic Youth's first indie album in twenty years just happens to be arguably the best (the band signed with Matador after being on Geffen since 1989). Or it could just be that this band gets better with age and experience. Sonic Youth released their first album before I existed, and for nearly thirty continuous years have been writing (and rewriting) the indie rock textbook for the poseurs they will surely outlive. The Eternal expands on the mature sound of 2006's Rather Ripped, yet still continues to unleash the signature tricked-out-tune fury of the band's literal arsenal of guitars. Kim Gordon, now in her mid-fifties, has adopted a growl that perfectly complements the beautiful noise this band masterfully creates.

4) Passion Pit - Manners

Passion Pit started the year as nobodies, and are now playing three sold out nights at Terminal 5 next month. That's the kind of year it's been for these Boston locals -- another trendy outfit that has opted to shun the guitar for layered synth. More importantly, Passion Pit makes it okay for suburban white kids to dance. Manners is chock full of hooky anthems that will creep up your iPod's play count. Frontman Michael Angelakos' distinctively soprano vocals had me convinced for several months that there had to have been at least one female in this band.

3) Neko Case - Middle Cyclone



Known mostly for her efforts as one of the many members of indie-rock supergroup The New Pornographers, it's pretty apparent that Neko is doing just damn fine on her own, thank you very much. Who needs to share the spotlight with seven other band mates when you can create your best work on your own. Well, that's not entirely true. Ms. Case has help from everyone from Garth Hudson to M. Ware on her fifth and, hands down, best solo disc. Withdrawing some of the experimentalism of the Pornographers, Neko backs this smattering of poppy mainstream gems with her unmistakably soaring voice. First single "People Got A Lot of Nerve" is quite possibly the single of the year.

2) Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavillion

Before 2009 even dawned, insiders were suggesting that Animal Collective's Merriweather Post Pavilion would be the album of the year -- possibly decade. When this monster was finally released on vinyl the first week in January and two weeks later on traditional formats, it's almost as if the party was over before it started. Critics far and wide declared this the winner. It seems silly to consider MPP the album of the year because it feels like this one came out over a year ago -- that's how long it's been on our radar. This album is an "ear orgasm" -- the kind of record people will be using to test the quality of their sound systems for years to come. Resonating everything from Kid A to Pet Sounds (most of the time simultaneously), you don't have to be a skinny jean-wearning Brookynite to pretend to like this.

Yes. This one also takes home the illustrious prize of "album cover of the year that gives me a headache". Last year's winner was Death Cab for Cutie's Narrow Stairs.

1) Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix


An universal best album of the year pick, this French quartet solidified their fate at this year's SXSW festival. When everyone returned from Austin this past March, all the buzz was surrounding these guys -- as if they were new to town. Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix is actually the band's fourth LP, which proves that a little perseverence can pave the way to success. Soon enough, the band played SNL and even managed to score a gig on every major late night show. The album, which combines 2001-era Strokes with today's Passion Pit-esque synth trends, is the perfect amalgamut of the decade -- combining the stripped down elements of the early decade with the decadent computer-assisted production of today's up-and-coming bands.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Right On Target!

Congrats to Eddie and the boys! Pearl Jam notched up their first Billboard number one album since 1996's long-forgotten No Code. Nearly 190,000 units flew off of the shelves this past week (exclusively at Target stores) ending Jay-Z's reign as king of the hill. Despite selling a very respectable 190K, Backspacer sold nearly 100,000 less copies than 2006's self-titled record -- an evident sign of the changing times.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Getting It Back Again...

Giving this another stab, folks.

I've been waiting for the right moment/album release to jump start this thing. Never pictured a Grizzly Bear album review warranting the big comeback, so I think I've been holding off for an album review of a band that will (presumably) go down in the annals as a more legendary act. Before I get started with the fuss, let me get caught up with a few things since I'd up and left this thing back in January:

1) Animal Collective is good, not great.

2) If the year ended tomorrow, my top five records of the year would be, in no particular order:

Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeaus Phoenix
Yeah Yeah Yeahs - Its Blitz!
Sonic Youth - The Eternal
Wilco - Wilco (The Album)
Muse - The Uprising

3) I've jumped on the Jay-Z bandwagon 13 years after the fact. I've been to so many shows this year, it makes me want to puke. But the one show that stands out among all others is Mr. Z's 9/11 show at the Garden. Mind-blowing.

...and The Blueprint 3 is not as bad as people want you to think it is.

4) That being said, my most listened to song of the year (so far) according to the iPod is Jay-Z's "Empire State of Mind". Yes, I know.

5) The new Rodrigo y Gabriela album snuck up on me, which scares me. I literally had no idea this duo was working on new material much less releasing new material until the day the record came out. As you can see, I'm slipping.

6) Pete Yorn makes Scarlett Johannson listenable.

7) The Beatles remasters are fun, but they really aren't worth the hype OR the money.

8) Good riddance to Oasis. Since this recent Noel Gallagher bullshit, I've officially given up on listening to this band. They have been banished from the iPod(s).

9) I've got nothing else to say about Kanye West until his next record, which will inevitably be fantastic.

10) Weezer might be onto something. Not only am I the only person on the planet that thinks "Raditude" an ingenious name for an album, but the new single is the catchiest song they've released since their Pinkerton days. Weezer is supposed to be catchy, haters.

There's more I'm sure, but at least you now know where my head's at. On to the review:



What better way to reboot a blog than to start with a band that has rebooted itself on it's most recent offering....

Although there's no doubting that Pearl Jam is a band of it's word, perhaps the one thing that has managed to slip thorough the cracks over the years is the sound that Eddie and boys help to revolutionize. Pure at heart, Pearl Jam is band borne from guitars. Loud, crunchy, messy guitars. The holy triumvirate of songs from this band's growing oeuvre that you will be telling your kids about will be "Alive," "Even Flow," and "Jeremy". There's no doubting this. Sure, tunes like "Better Man" and "Daughter" struck mid-90's alt-rock gold, but did these songs ever 100% seem right for a band that penned about teen suicide and told us "[they'd] rather be with an animal"? The sensitive stuff is fit for Eddie's solo material which is, in itself, fantastic. For a band that has perfected three-guitar wizardry, not so much.

Looks like Pearl Jam got the message on it's ninth studio album, Backspacer, released earlier this week. Already stirring up some controversy from it's big record label abandonment and exclusive physical distribution at Target stores, this one's been making waves since it's incendiary first single "The Fixer" hit radio earlier this summer. We haven't heard band cohesion this tight and Eddie's voice so growled since PJ's Vs. days. Eddie preaches about "fighting to get it back again" throughout this pop-rock hybrid. It doesn't take much convincing to realize that they're succeeding in doing so. Quite simply, if you do not appreciate this song, you clearly don't enjoy listening to good music. The band doesn't hesistate to kick this record into first gear. The rockers begin where the others ephemerally leave off. Clocking in just under 40-minutes, this record defines short but sweet. "Gonna See My Friend" and "Got Some" precede the afforementioned single, and could have very well competed for first single status. "Johnny Guitar" is a noteworthy combatant that, aside from lacking some lyrical depth, resides amonst the 1-2-3 guitar-infused euphoria of the standout tracks. "Just Breathe" is a reflectively beautiful song about humility, which is more or less a b-side from the "Into The Wild" soundtrack. All Eddie fingerplucking here with a pretty string section thrown in as an added bonus. This ballad concludes the first rock act pretty well, which unfortunately segues into some old habits. "Amongst The Waves" falls into the same breath as uninspired early-millenium failed singles "Light Years" and "I Am Mine". Whether intentional or not, this tune is luckily an aberration, as we pretty much go full steam ahead throughout the rest of Backspacer. No, "Supersonic," and "Force of Nature" are not covers by a famous Brit-pop band. Rather, they are small slices of heaven that perfectly blend the Pearl Jam we all knew and love with fresh fast-paced tempos and experimental guitar solos that prove that old is new again.

The record concludes with another ballad, "The End," which unfittingly finishes upwith the famous last words: "Give me something to echo in my unknown future, you see, my dear, the end, comes near, I’m here, but not much longer." After listening to this revived stellar effort, I couldn't think of a Pearl Jam lyric further from the truth.

My Rating. 7.8/10

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

The List (Part 1)

Everybody's got one of these, so why not give it a shot? Friends tell me that I have an unhealthy obsession with mid-90's indie-alt. rock (which may or may not be true), but I like to think I'm more than a one trick pony here. Besides, who doesn't love lists?!? In what will be the first of a (weekly) ten part segment, I give you my top 100 records since 2000. First, a few disclaimers:

1. Yes, I have a soft spot in my heart for emo.
2. I encourage you to disagree with me.
3. If you're nice enough, I might illegally send you copies of the following material upon request.

100) Pearl Jam - Pearl Jam (2006)
Let's kick things off some legends. After giving us a helping of forgettable albums (beginning with 1996's No Code and finally ending with 2002's Riot Act) the boys return to glory on their 8th studio effort (the one with the avocado on it). Spawning several modern radio hits, including the #1 charting first single "World Wide Suicide," Eddie and gang prove why they are the only mainstream Seattle grunge band to survive the '90's.


99) Queens of the Stone Age - Era Vulgaris (2007)
Who cares if Josh Homme may or may not be a homophobe? And please disregard fact that (with the exception of Homme), every other slot in this band has been a virtual revolving door. When these guys get together to make a record, they don't fuck around. And I hereby challenge you to beat 3's and 7's in Guitar Hero on expert -- if you can, you're a better man than me.


98) The Strokes - Room On Fire (2003)
Few bands that receive such critical acclaim on their debut disc can rarely keep the momentum moving. Back in 2001, The Strokes were the toast of the town. Everybody (and I mean everybody) thought these guys were the best thing since sliced bread. Hell, they made it cool again to add "The" before your band title. So the pressure was definitely on in 2003 to repeat the success of Is This It. Although Room On Fire was initially considered a disappointment, this one has evolved into a cult favorite along the lines of Weezer's Pinkerton. Just don't get your hopes up for First Impressions of Earth.


97) Regina Spektor - Begin To Hope (2006)
The Russian-born starlet's follow-up to 2004's Soviet Kitsch, this is the one that broke this lady into the mainstream. If you think you haven't heard any of these songs, you've probably heard a handful in commercials and TV shows. This peppy anti-folk singer-songwriter has been selling out shows left and right and will only get bigger on her future releases. She also does a killer version of John Lennon's "Real Love," if you want a starting point.


96) Josh Rouse - Under Cold Blue Stars (2002)
This guy has been around for over a decade now, and I am still shocked he hasn't hit it bigtime like his singer-songwriter contemporaries Pete Yorn and Ryan Adams. Although he's experienced moderate soundtrack success, he's not quite a household name just yet. I'm really a fan of most of his catalog (see also 1972, Subtítulo), but Under Cold Blue Stars is really where it's at. Just listen to brilliantly poppy "Nothing Gives Me Pleasure" and "Miracle" and you'll see what I mean.


95) New Pornographers - Twin Cinema (2005)
Who doesn't like Canadian indie rock?! Before Tokyo Police Club busted on to the scene, these guys made one hell of a record three years ago. Nevermind those incessant University of Phoenix spots featuring "The Bleeding Heart Show" -- the Pornographers are the real deal. Featuring poppy harmonizing and fast riffs, this record occupied prime real estate in my stereo for a very long time back in '05. If you like what you hear, check out the solo work of bandmembers A.C. Newman and Neko Case.


94) Arctic Monkeys - Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not (2006)
Fun fact: The Arctic Monkeys set a record for having the fastest selling debut album in British history (which was recently broken by Leona Lewis). After listening to a couple tunes from this record, it's pretty easy to see why. Their attitude and witty lyrical style flex this band's brawn and brain -- making them the poster children for a new musical genre: English post-punk. Their follow-up ain't have bad either.


93) The Futureheads - The Futureheads (2004)
The Futureheads are the poor man's Arctic Monkeys, and for this reason I have chosen to rank their debut slightly ahead. These guys are all the rage in England and have barely made a splash in the States. They just released their third album last month that has already been getting pretty decent reviews. Show them some support.


92) The Shins - Wincing The Night Away (2007)
This band obviously got a huge sales boost thanks to Zach Braff's soundtrack skills. Wincing was The Shins' first effort since achieving their Garden State glory. I remember this being the first big release of '07, and these guys didn't disappoint. Although some songs are a little bland for my liking, they really hit the nail on the head with tunes like "Australia" and "Girl Sailor." Just be wary; if you're going to see this band live, what you see is really all you get.


91) Jimmy Eat World - Bleed American (2001)
Hooray emo! And hooray god-awful band names. Jimmy Eat World is indeed guilty of both. But you know what, Bleed American is one hell of a catchy album. This record was huge when I was a freshman in college and admitedly gets some sentimentality points. Irrespectively, how can you not enjoy "A Praise Chorus," "Sweetness," and yes, even "The Middle". Supposedly, lead singer Jim Adkins (no relation to band name) is the most down to Earth man in rock and roll. And you gotta appreciate modestly in this industry.

Monday, June 16, 2008

Better Men

Surprise, surprise. Pearl Jam tore the house down over at Bonnaroo this past weekend. I swear this band gets better with age. I remember when I first saw them in Pittsburgh in 2003, Eddie jested that his voice was made of "galvanized steel". It looks like he wasn't joking. Pearl Jam played an incendiary three hour, 25-song set during their headlining stint at the Tennessee festival that included the usual hits, a helping of rarities, and some covers. Why I didn't make the 13-hour drive, God only knows. I've been complaining as of late about the band's absurdly high MSG ticket prices. But if they're gonna whip out a setlist like this, maybe it's well worth it:

1. "Hard To Imagine"
2. "Corduroy"
3. "All Night"
4. "Why Go"
5. "Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town"
6. "Down"
7. "Who You Are"
8. "Severed Hand"
9. "1/2 Full"
10. "Animal"
11. "Even Flow"
12. "Daughter"
13. "Gone"
14. "Love Reign O'er Me" (The Who)
15. "Do The Evolution"
16. "Rearviewmirror"
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17. "W.M.A."
18. "Better Man" -->"Save It For Later"-->"Better Man"
19. "Black"
20. "Crazy Mary"
21. "Porch"
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22. "No More"
23. "Release"
24. "Alive"
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25. "All Along The Watchtower" (Dylan)