... Here is my review of the bands 1998 album Yield.
1.) Brain of J - this track has a live jamming session feel and Mike Mcready and Stone Gossard's guitar work blends together to make some great melodic Grunge Rock with Eddie Vedders notable vocals topping off the track.
2.) Faithfull ... Read review
Yield is the fifth studio album by the American alternative rockband Pearl Jam, released ... more
on February 3, 1998 through Epic Records.Following a short tour for its previous album, No Code (1996),Pearl Jam went into the studio in 1997 to record its follow-...
The Seattle band once notable for its arena rock anthems is now remarkable mostly for its ... more
hushed melodies. On Pearl Jam's fifth album, the rockers seem slapdash ("Do the Evolution", "Brain of J"), and the arty experiments sound self-conscious (especial...
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The Seattle band once notable for its arena rock anthems is now remarkable mostly for its ... more
hushed melodies. On Pearl Jam's fifth album, the rockers seem slapdash ("Do the Evolution", "Brain of J"), and the arty experiments sound self-conscious (especial...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
The Seattle band once notable for its arena rock anthems is now remarkable mostly for its ... more
hushed melodies. On Pearl Jam's fifth album, the rockers seem slapdash ("Do the Evolution", "Brain of J"), and the arty experiments sound self-conscious (especial...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours...
Advantages: Great music, Lyrics Disadvantages: None
...of my favourites songs from Yield and has a really interesting guitar intro which sounds like it is coming through a megaphone with effects. The drumming is a key part of the track and it meshes in with the bass and Vedder's vocals to create a very listenable track.
4.) Given to fly - This track opens with bass and guitar combinations and the shuffle of the drums comes in, One of the slower Pearl Jam openings but this track never really ... ...to the final track on Yield and it is one of the best on the album. A slower track with a great guitar melody that underpins the track and there are some great moments in the song. Some parts are like The Beatles if they were Pearl Jam. There is A really great guitar solo too.
There is a bonus track that comes in a couple of minutes after the end of All Those Yesterdays and has drumming that is remiscent of a cross betwen The Animals ... more
I have been a fan of the band Pearl Jam for a few years now and have 7 of their albums. This album is from 1998 one of their most well known albums. Pearl Jam hail from Seattle's grunge scene of the early 1990's which spawned bands such as Soundgarden and the legendary Nirvana. Here is my review of the bands 1998 album Yield.
1.) Brain of J - this track has a live jamming session feel and Mike Mcready and Stone Gossard's guitar work blends together to make some great melodic Grunge Rock with Eddie Vedders notable vocals topping off the track.
2.) Faithfull - No it's their spelling not my spelling mistake, This isnt one of the best tracks Pearl Jam have done but it still has the great sound of the band. For me it is slightly a little plodding for the track to get top marks. Good nonetheless.
3.) No Way - This is one of my favourites songs from Yield and has a really interesting guitar intro which sounds like it is coming through a megaphone with effects. The drumming is a key part of the track and it meshes in with the bass and Vedder's vocals to create a very listenable track.
4.) Given to fly - This track opens with bass and guitar combinations and the shuffle of the drums comes in, One of the slower Pearl Jam openings but this track never really develops into a great track but it is certainly still a very good track.
5.) Wishlist - This track starts with slow guitars and soft drums then Vedder's voice comes in, one of the best slower songs I have heard from Pearl Jam and it has a great live feel with some of the guitar licks. There's some great slide guitar in there too. Shows that Pearl Jam can do mellow aswell as the rocking out tracks.
6.) Pilate - This track is another slower song and features some very nice drum parts and soft guitars. Vedder's voice sounds particularly good in the more mellow moments of this track. This track shows the diversity in Pearl Jam's music.
7.) Do the evolution - This is a quicker track than Pilate and has a great guitar combo from Stone Gossard and Mike McCready, This is one of the best tracks on the album for a live show and there is some fine guitar work from Mike McCready.
8.) MFC - This track opens with a very different drum part which sounds very good, the drums slow down then speed up and then back down again. And this is the shortest track on the album.
9.) Low Light - This isnt one of my favourites on the album as it isnt as emotional as some of the other tracks but there is some very fine guitar work from Mike McCready again.
10.) In Hiding - This track starts with an acoustic guitar and is one of their best slow songs. A really beautiful song which shows of the tenderness that Eddie Vedder's voice is capable of. This is Pearl Jam at their best slower moment. A great guitar solo from McCready again.
11.) Push Me, Pull Me - This track's intro sounds a little like Stereophonics Pick a part that's new but then the melody changes and the drums come in more and what follows in a very good track with catchy guitar parts and the track is in between the best and worst moments on the album. There are no bad songs here but there are some great great ones and some good ones.
A very different track to the rest on the album and it is close to being Pearl Jam's take on Tool. A very fine track that is very different.
12.) All Those Yesterdays - Now we come to the final track on Yield and it is one of the best on the album. A slower track with a great guitar melody that underpins the track and there are some great moments in the song. Some parts are like The Beatles if they were Pearl Jam. There is A really great guitar solo too.
There is a bonus track that comes in a couple of minutes after the end of All Those Yesterdays and has drumming that is remiscent of a cross betwen The Animals and Fleetwood Mac's albatross. Some very catchy guitar work makes the bonus track a worthwile Addition.
Overall
This is one of Pearl Jam's finest albums and one of the best of 1998. There are some great moments on the album and there are no dud tracks, some many not be as good as others but they are still very good songs. And Mike McCready is one of the best rock guitarist there is.
If you like the sound of the album then check it out on the internet and you will be able to find it for around a fiver on sites like amazon or ebay. Get yourself a copy of Ten and Binaural aswell.
I also posted this review on Dooyoo under the name lakerfanster.
Advantages: A more all round band effort + this quality shows Disadvantages: The daft hidden track, nothing much else of course
...come to an end! Yield on this occasion sees the band coming together making a joint effort to produce together a stunning collection of songs. From start to finish the listener is met with energetic well-crafted songs from a classic rock band in incredible form.
Oh yeah, the hidden track at the end is …emm how shall I say it…um..innovative?! Spanish-tinged guitars with jangling bells, clapping hands and infrequent shouting play out for ...
hakkved 13.09.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Yield - Pearl Jam
...warm feeling inside.
So, Yield appeared at quite a difficult point in the bands history. It came after the album that people believed wasn’t up to the usual PJ standards, and so they seemed to have to prove a point again. But they come out of it on top. This is a fine album, with some fantastic tracks. It mixes the very raw-edged rock, and the slow-tempo ballads that Pearl Jam has become well known for. ...
damon1 22.05.2004
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Yield - Pearl Jam
Advantages: Some of the band's greatest songs Disadvantages: Wears thin if overplayed, possibly a little short
...a dozen) contains a hidden Yield sign. At least two are virtually impossible to find, but they are there! I recommened this album wholeheartedly. Don't over-listen to it. "Do the Evolution" and "Given To Fly" do become tired after a while, like any great songs, and they lose their edge. ...
5against1 18.05.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: very helpful Review of Yield - Pearl Jam
Advantages: Best PJ album for a while Disadvantages: Still not PJ of old
...the bush on this one. Yield is Pearl Jam as Pearl Jam should be. Gone are the flabby meanderings of No Code and the obtuse songs of Vitalogy to make way for high octane rockers like Brain Of J and the thoughtful balladry of Wishlist.
This time around Mike McCready's wah-drenched riffery and Stone Gossard's innovative rhythm playing underscores lyrics which are both less self-righteous and contentious than before. Eddie Vedder even admits, "I've ... ...make a difference, not way."
A definite highlight is Do The Evolution complete with Vedder's Mudhoney-esque vocals, backing vox that simulate a church choir and the inclusion of a riff which at times sound vaguely like Michael Jackson's Beat It. It's said that grunge is dead... Probably, but music of this calibre certainly isn't. ...
badcrumble 22.08.2001
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Ciao members have rated this review on average: helpful Review of Yield - Pearl Jam
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Pearljam belive it or not sold more albums than Nirvana, and they are still around . So how come kids of a certain age go aroun in Nirvana T's, but havent heard of Pearljam. Anyway im not here to discuss that.
Eddie and the gang are now on there 7th studio album, how does the new one comare to the back catallogue? Well suffice to say its diffrent . Deffinatly a break away from 'Binaurals' stark sound , not to say its as raw as 'Ten' though.
The sound they have achived throught is a country/rock/folk mix which makes it a great varied listen. The songs range from the very edgy and fast paced, pure rock of 'Save You' to the far more melow 'Thumbing my way' With a pleasant mix of everything else between. Also worth noting is that all the members seem to have had a hand in writing the albums music and lyrics, nice to see. As seems ...
YIELD contains a hidden track. Pearl Jam: Eddie Vedder (vocals, guitar); Stone Gossard, Mike McCready (guitar); Jeff Ament (bass); Jack Irons (drums). Recorded at Studio Litho and Bad Animals, Seattle, Washington; Southern Tracks Recording and Doppler, Atlanta, Georgia. "Do The Evolution" was nominated for the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock Performance and Best Short Form Music Video. YIELD was nominated for the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Recording Package. Nay-sayers and trends be damned. Pearl Jam's follow-up to 1996's NO CODE continues down the path of aggressive rock and roll, existential musings and musical experimentation. This isn't your older brother's grunge. Opening with the hard-driving "Brain Of J," YIELD goes from a punky swagger representing man's arrogance in asserting his lofty place on the food chain ("Do The Evolution") to a free jazz approach and a disembodied Vedder vocal questioning the meaning of life ("Push Me, Pull Me"). Most of YIELD continues to ply the standard Pearl Jam sound: Vedder's pained emoting, the interesting use of dynamics between McCready and Gossard's guitars and solid rhythm-work from the Ament/Irons rhythm section. Rather than falling into the creative rut many huge bands succumb to, Pearl Jam's music has instead developed its own identity while still walking the fringes of the unorthodox. Hence the inclusion of a weird, untitled percussive instrumental cut in Jack Irons' home studio and an Eastern-flavored hidden track pointing towards the influence of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
Album Reviews
Rolling Stone (2/19/98, pp.55-56) - 4 Stars (out of 5) - "...even the rockers have an uncommonly easy touch that's new to Pearl Jam....Vedder is singing more frankly about his life as an adult....shows that Pearl Jam have made the most out of growing up in public..." Spin (3/98, p.129) - 8 (out of 10) - "...Part touchstone, part pariah, Pearl Jam have tried arty gestures; they've ostentatiously declined to rock; and now they've come back with an album full of gracefully ambivalent anthems. All commodities should be this unstable, and have this much blood pumping through them." NME (1/31/98, p.44) - 7 (out of 10) - "...Here's where Pearl Jam put on their diverse boots and stomp across their bluesy roots, careering through various styles and pop-mongous strops..." Entertainment Weekly (2/6/98, pp.58-59) - "...an intermittently affecting album that veers between fiery garage rock and rootsy, acoustic-based ruminations. Perhaps mindful of their position as the last alt-rock ambassadors with any degree of clout, they've come up with their most cohesive album since their 1991 debut, TEN..." - Rating: B
Titles on disc 1
1.
Brain Of J
2.
Faithful
3.
No Way
4.
Given To Fly
5.
Wishlist
6.
Pilate
7.
Do The Evolution
8.
Untitled Song
9.
MFC
10.
Low Light
11.
In Hiding
12.
Push Me Pull Me
13.
All Those Yesterdays
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18/05/2001
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