For the next installment of our series looking back at the Diamond selling albums of the 1990s, we're revisiting the 1991 debut album Ten by Pearl Jam. Though it wasn't an immediate smash upon release, Ten built success on the back of singles like "Alive," "Evenflow," and "Jeremy" with heavy support from radio and MTV. Though the band pulled the plug on videos from then until their 1998 album Yield, demand for the band didn't diminish, as the follow-up Vs. became one of the bestselling debut weeks in music history. But Pearl Jam was not without their detractors, criticizing everything from Eddie Vedder's singing style to album production choices, lyrical content, their credibility as "Seattle band," dismissed as nothing more than classic rock, and more. Much has been said and written over the two-plus decades since its release, so is there really much more to explore? Yes, there is. Like, was Jeff Ament's bass playing the secret sauce that drove the Pearl Jam engine? Is the derided reverb-tinged production actually what makes the album special? And in the world of Gen Z and Alpha sporting Nirvana t-shirts, is Pearl Jam relevant to anyone under forty? Or have they become the new Grateful Dead?
Songs In This Episode
Intro - Evenflow
28:49 - Once
38:35 - Yellow Ledbetter
45:07 - Footsteps
45:47 - Times of Trouble (Temple Of The Dog)
55:18 - Alive
1:14:59 - Black (Live, Dissident Single)
Outro - Release
Support the podcast, join the DMO UNION at Patreon.
Wicker Man - Wicker Man | Album Review
Rusty - Fluke | Album Review
Collective Soul - Disciplined Breakdown | Album Review
Double Albums of the 90s | Roundtable
Widespread Panic - Bombs and Butterflies | Album Review
Swell - Too Many Days Without Thinking | Album Review
#547: Hash by Hash
#546: Make A Pest A Pet by The Age of Electric
#545: Lollapalooza in the 90s
#544: Throwing Copper by Live
#543:Golden Duck by Moler
#542: Maximum Sincere by Big Heavy Stuff
#541: Soundgarden in the 80s
#540: Spilt Milk by Jellyfish
#539: Killjoy by Shihad
#538: Abort by Tribe
#537: Are You With Me? by Cowboy Mouth
#536: Lo-Fi in the 90s
#535: Rotting Piñata by Sponge
#534: Pushing the Salmanilla Envelope by Jimmie's Chicken Shack
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Superfancast
Derringer Discoveries - A Music Adventure Podcast
R&B Money
One Song
Bandsplain