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 here, nor have they ever delivered a record as
consistent as this. And the thing that makes the record work
exceptionally well is that Pearl Jam has embraced everything they do
well, whether it's their classicist hard rock or heart-on-sleeve
humanitarianism. In doing so, they seem kind of old fashioned,
reaffirming that they are now thoroughly outside of the mainstream --
spending well over a decade galloping away from any trace of popularity
will inevitably make you an outsider -- but on their own terms, Pearl
Jam hasn't sounded as alive or engaging as they do here since at least
Vitalogy, if not longer.
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