Riot Act

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
It's strange to think Pearl Jam was once herded under the grunge umbrella alongside pathos-spewing acts like Nirvana and Alice in Chains. The Seattle group's eighth album (give or take the 72 bootleg-style double CDs they released in 2001) has more in common with classic rock institutions like Crazy Horse and the Band than the snarling forces that were trying to tear away at their legacies. Appropriately, Riot Act is built on thematic pillars--love, death, politics--and fueled by dense, uncompromising power chords. It takes yet another step away from the courteous tones of the band's cornerstone LPs, Ten and Vs, and proudly flaunts egotism ("I know I was born and I know that I'll die/ The in-between is mine," Eddie Vedder sings on "I Am Mine") and a dark underbelly ("Green Disease"). But it's far from insufferable: If any band can make self-obsession sound hospitable, it's Pearl Jam. And when Vedder sneaks in the line "All you need is love" on the rollicking "Love Boat Captain," he proves that despite his furrowed-brow demeanor, he's a born entertainer. --Aidin Vaziri

Music Review:

  1. Rock Spectacle [Live]
  2. Screamadelica
  3. She Like Electric
  4. Sing Sing Death House
  5. Speak & Spell
  6. Squeeze - Greatest Hits
  7. Static & Silence
  8. Stereo Type A
  9. stereopathetic soulmanure
  10. Still Feel Gone [Extra tracks] [Original recording remastered]

Music Review

music review

Music Review

G.B.O.H.

Crossing a Brige of Dreams: Chamber Music

Christ & The Pharisee

Music: Afro Barakus [Import]

Extreme Ways, Pt. 2 [CD-single] [Import]

Disco 3 [EP]

Die Großen Erfolge Von Gestern

Everything Is Everything [Explicit Lyrics]

Ella & Louis [Original recording remastered]

Cherubini: Requiem in do minore

Carnegie Hall Concert [Live]

Compositions (4) [Import]

Dance Mix USA, Vol. 2 [Box set]

Egon Wellesz: Die Bakchantinnen

Quiet Romance