Yield – Pearl JamJanuary 29th, 1998 or iTunes Price: $9.99 Genre: Pop Released: Jan 29, 1998 Customer Ratings (173 Ratings)
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Yield – Pearl JamView More By Pearl Jam Our ReviewThough one of the ‘90’s most successful hard rock bands, Pearl Jam has never completely embraced hard rock. The group certainly play it, but never let it dominate its approach. Singer Eddie Vedder has always sounded just as at home with an intimate ballad and his tendency to slow the group down has made the band’s sound more brooding and ominous as a result. “Given to Fly,” its fifth album and Yield’s first single, openly courted Led Zeppelin’s “Going to California” for its moody hook, while other low-wattage burners such as “Low Light” and “In Hiding” further dug a deep, committed groove from a band accustomed to serving the arena masses. “Wishlist” turns on the powerpop inspiration. “Brain of J.” and “Do the Evolution” fulfill the band’s bluster potential with a raw, unvarnished charm. But, in the end, it’s the emotional struggles behind “Faithful” and the yearn behind “All Those Yesterdays” that makes Pearl Jam a band able to sustain a career at a time when so many others return to anonymity after a few loud shouts to the world at large.. Customer ReviewsPJ's best work to date... (5 stars)Casual fans never got this album...I have no idea why. Yield flew under the radar as a great rock album and I think when it's all said and done this will be revered as one of the best rock albums of the decade. Yield works primarily because it balances both the energy and emotion of the band perfectly. It also helps that Ed has arguably written some of his most poignant lyrics to date...(see Wishlist, Given to Fly, and Do the Evolution). yield to the feel of this album (5 stars) this is the best pearl jam ALBUM. Ten and Vs. had the best songs and biggest hits but no pearl jam album flows like this one. The album starts off aggresively with brain of J but then after that tracks 2 through 13 seem like one long song. this album has a flow like no other. gotta love it Why don't people like this album? (4 stars) Okay, Pearl Jam strayed from the norm on No Code and Yield, but who cares? I know I don't. They were still Pearl Jam. Nobody else was, and is, like them. Brain of J and Do the Evolution just burst with energy. While the rest of the album is generally mellow, it's still a grungy mellow, remescent of Black and Yellow Ledbetter. Come on people. Yield rocks. BiographyFormed: 1990 in Seattle, WAGenre: Rock Years Active: '90s, '00s, '10s Pearl Jam rose from the ashes of Mother Love Bone to become the most popular American rock & roll band of the '90s. After Mother Love Bone's vocalist, Andrew Wood, overdosed on heroin in 1990, guitarist Stone Gossard and bassist Jeff Ament assembled a new band, bringing in Mike McCready on lead guitar and recording a demo with Soundgarden's Matt Cameron on drums. Thanks to future Pearl Jam drummer Jack Irons, the demo found its way to a 25-year-old San Diego surfer named Eddie Vedder, who overdubbed...
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