- Can't Keep
- Save You
- Love Boat Captain
- Cropduster
- Ghost
- I Am Mine
- Thumbing My Way
- You Are
- Get Right
- Green Disease
- Help Help
- Bu$hleaguer
- 1/2 Full
- Arc
- All or None
×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
Overview
In some ways, Riot Act is the album that Pearl Jam has been wanting to make since Vitalogy -- a muscular art rock record, one that still hits hard but that is filled with ragged edges and odd detours. Vitalogy found the band sketching out their ideas for their brand of artsy rock, separating bracing hard rock and experimentalism throughout that fascinating album, and since then they bounced between those two extremes: indulging themselves on No Code, over-compensating with the streamlined Yield. Here, they manage to seamlessly blend the two impulses together in a restless, passionate record that delivers musically and emotionally. If it doesn't announce itself as a comeback or a great step forward, it's because the changes are subtle -- it's a process of their post-Vitalogy sound finally gelling, not making an artistic breakthrough. Given the appealing but haphazard nature of their late-'90s work, it's quite satisfying to have a Pearl Jam album play as strongly as Riot Act, and again some credit must be given to drummer Matt Cameron. He enlivened 2000's Binaural, but his forceful drumming gives the weirder songs and ambitions support and urgency. Also, the production is the best in nearly a decade -- a warm, burnished sound filled with details that enhance the basic song instead of overwhelming them (in other words, it's not No Code, nor is it the Spartan Yield). Again, these are subtle shifts in sound, but they are notable and, given several plays, this does indeed seem like the richest record Pearl Jam has made in a long time.
Product Details
Release Date: | 11/12/2002 |
---|---|
Label: | Sbme Special Mkts. |
UPC: | 0886977091520 |
catalogNumber: | 770915 |
Rank: | 19740 |
Tracks
Album Credits
Performance Credits
Pearl Jam Primary ArtistCustomer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Think of the one-shot Seattle supergroup Mad Season as the grunge version of sober living. ...
Think of the one-shot Seattle supergroup Mad Season as the grunge version of sober living.
Guitarist Mike McCready, best known as the main six-string slinger in Pearl Jam, met bassist John Baker Saunders while in rehab, and the two paired ...
San Diego's Switchfoot made a splash in the early and mid-2000s with such hit singles ...
San Diego's Switchfoot made a splash in the early and mid-2000s with such hit singles
as Dare You to Move and Stars. Those songs showcased Switchfoot's anthemic, passionate guitar-based rock sound and helped secure their position as one of the ...
Fire & Skill: Songs of the Jam accomplishes what few compilations manage to pull off ...
Fire & Skill: Songs of the Jam accomplishes what few compilations manage to pull off
-- capturing the spirit of the band that it pays tribute to. From the tender boyish vulnerability shown, ironically, by Everything but the Girl's Tracey ...
Creed weren't just one of many two-album wonders of the post-grunge late '90s, they were ...
Creed weren't just one of many two-album wonders of the post-grunge late '90s, they were
the biggest of the two-album wonders, selling more records and crashing harder than any other their peers. All the while they produced unflappably earnest heavy ...
With Alice in Chains on hiatus by the turn of the 21st century, Columbia Records
issued several stop-gap releases to fill up the space -- 1999's greatest-hits collection Nothing Safe and the box set Music Bank, and a year later, ...
On the heels of Soundgarden's 2010 reunion, which included a retrospective released in time for ...
On the heels of Soundgarden's 2010 reunion, which included a retrospective released in time for
that year's holidays, the group dug their scrapped 1996 live album out of the vault and prepped it for release as 2011's Live on I-5. ...
At the peak of alt-rock in the '90s, Pearl Jam were the biggest band in ...
At the peak of alt-rock in the '90s, Pearl Jam were the biggest band in
the world. Nirvana may have kick-started the alt-rock explosion, but not long after Nevermind knocked Michael Jackson's Dangerous off the top of the charts, Pearl ...
Nearly 15 years after Ten, Pearl Jam finally returned to the strengths of their debut ...
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 ...