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No Code - Pearl Jam (CD 1996)

Track Listing
1. Sometimes - (live)
2. Hail, Hail
3. Who You Are - (live)
4. In My Tree - (live)
5. Smile
6. Off He Goes - (live)
7. Habit
8. Red Mosquito - (live)
9. Lukin
10. Present Tense
11. Mankind
12. I'm Open
13. Around the Bend - (live)

Details
Producer:Brendan O'Brien, Pearl Jam
Distributor:Sony Music Distribution (
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:n/a

Album Notes
Pearl Jam: Eddie Vedder, Stone Gossard (vocals, guitar); Mike McCready (guitar); Jeff Ament (bass); Jack Irons (drums).
Recorded at Studio Litho, Seattle, Washington; Chicago, Illinois; Atlanta, Georgia.
Understated, often folksy 1996 album returned the Seattle grunge pioneers to prominence.
Pearl Jam's ambitious and mystical NO CODE is no more a grunge album than Nirvana's MTV UNPLUGGED was a punk album, which shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody who's been listening all along. Even while helping to codify the droning heavy-metal blare of grunge, Pearl Jam has fought that code, breaking the rules of the music as defiantly as the band's business practices defy the rules of the music industry. By now, Pearl Jam can, and does, employ Indian drones, psychedelic rock, punk and folk without reaching.
NO CODE, the band's fourth album, opens with "Sometimes," a prayer that slowly rises toward an anthemic chorus. But the song pulls back before it gets there, as if the band's goal is to embody the smallness of all of us. Pearl Jam still, clearly, believes in the awesome power of rock: In "Habit," Eddie Vedder nearly goes hoarse ranting at a friend who's picked up a dangerous one, and in "Red Mosquito," the band works up from a folk-rocky waltz into a '60s acid-rock whirl. But much of NO CODE finds Pearl Jam pulling away from such large notions. "Who You Are," one of a few songs that seem directly inspired by Vedder's recent collaboration with Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (on the DEAD MAN WALKING soundtrack), features droning guitars, tribal drumming and a Buddhist lyric. Even within the Pete Townshend-like electric-guitar strum and vocal wailing of "In My Tree," Vedder seems to be searching not for rock and roll experience, but for spiritual innocence.

Editorial Reviews
4 Stars (out of the 5) - ...NO CODE...is abrubt in its mood swings almost to the point of vertigo....It is the kind of impulsive, quixotic, provocative ruckus that has become rare in a modern-rock mainstream largely distinquished by weary fatalism and anxiety over quick career burnout...
Rolling Stone (09/05/1996)

...The main feeling a listener gets from this...disc is warmth, and an empathic sense that Vedder is really a lot like you--he just worries more, is all....he's most intriguing when he's staring hard in the mirror...
Musician (11/01/1996)

4 Stars (out of 5) - ...NO CODE works on big moodswings....it constantly adds unexpected and facinating details....A solid attraction amid intriguing oddities is the powerful array of guitar sounds...
Q (10/01/1996)

7 (out of 10) - ...they are the hippies in big shorts, and they are very busy finding themselves....Vedder is still preoccupied with his own mortality, but now he appears more quasi-mystical than miserable....for all its relative placidity, NO CODE is still a difficult beast...
NME (08/24/1996)

3 (out of five) - ...Instead of sinking into a rut of arena-rock boredom, they improve. They grow...
Alternative Press (12/01/1996)

...It's unlikely, given its varied and reasonably ambitious nature, that NO CODE will replicate the monstrous success of its predecessors. Due to Vedder's discovery that you don't always have to scream to be heard, however, it's a real surprise and a welcome change...
Melody Maker (08/24/1996)

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      The lads in Pearl Jam start to settle into maturity
    Review created: 01/19/03
    by: HawgWyld -- a member of Epinions

    Pros:
    Solid stuff all the way through; classic rock with a more current twist

    Cons:
    Too many Stone Gossard lead vocals; might confuse fans of <i>Ten</i>

    Forget most of what you've heard about this disc and simply run out and buy it. If you read typical music reviews about 1996's No Code, you'll wind up thinking this album is a waste of time. The majority of reviews by music critics I've seen on this thing suggest it's full of off-kilter instrumentation, "world beat" influences, confusing symbolism and vague references to religion. Also, I've read how the disc is difficult, self-indulgent to a fault and too complex to figure out without listening to it time and time again.

    Sound like an album you'd want to buy? No? Imagine that!

    In truth, No Code is a very enjoyable disc which stands as evidence that the members of Pearl Jam were maturing. That's an important thing to keep in mind because the ability the band members had to change and mature have, in my opinion, allowed Pearl Jam to keep going when a lot of other "grunge" bands died years ago.

    Think about the short-lived popularity of grunge (a genre which I still believe was ill-defined, at best). Pearl Jam was on top of the world after the release of 1991's Ten, but Pearl Jam and other bands slapped with the generic "grunge" label were starting to lose the public's interest by the time No Code was issued. Looking back now, a lot of grunge bands started sounding the same, what with "mouth full of marbles" vocals, guitars which sounded tuned-down a step or two, warm distortion and etc.

    Pearl Jam, however, broke away from the pack on No Code in the only way the band could -- through recording classic rock-based tunes and putting a more current "spin" on them. Pearl Jam always did sound like a band that would have been comfortable in the 1975 (or thereabouts) hard rock scene, but lacked the swagger and knot-headed lyrics of many of the bands from that time.

    On No Code, we find the band sticking with classic rock again, but throwing the listener a few curve balls. Take "Who You Are," for example. That track was the "big single" from the disc, but lacked the fury and fire of the big singles off of Ten (such as "Jeremy" and "Alive") which folks just expected from Pearl Jam. "Who You Are" is a very laid-back, easy-going and rambling track with stripped-down instrumentation, a simple, catchy guitar track and even some strings thrown in for good measure. The lyrics are typical Pearl Jam -- wandering, cryptic words which don't make a hell of a lot of sense on paper, but sound perfect when matched with the music. And the music on that one? Very serene which sounds like the product of someone at peace with the world. See? It's not exactly what you'd expect in a Pearl Jam single if you were a fan of Ten.

    Now, that's not to say the disc is all mellow. You've got some blistering tracks, to be sure, and that group of songs is best represented by "Hail, Hail," a rather angry track all about troubled relationships. The buzzsaw guitars, tons of distorted slide guitar and fast pace of the track is one of those "fist-pumping, let's all drive our cars fast" types of things that is just a good ol' rocker. Hell, there's nothing wrong with that.

    I have only two real complaints about this disc. First, the opening track, "Sometimes," rather stinks in that you've got some guitar noodling and vocals from Eddie Vedder which sound like the noise a cat makes when stepped on in the middle of the night. The song starts out as a quiet affair, but builds up to the point where Vedder starts belting out his "stomped cat" lyrics. It's just downright terrible.

    Also, Stone Gossard gets the lead vocals on a few tracks here. While there's nothing wrong with Gossard's voice, I can't help but think he ought to stick to playing guitar and letting Vedder handle the vocals. A Pearl Jam song without Vedder's lead vocals sounds quite out of place, after all.

    All in all, this is a fine disc which reveals a maturing, reflective side of Pearl Jam. The slower numbers are all about introspection and play very well late at night when folks are prone to consider such things. People expecting another Ten out of Pearl Jam were likely disappointed by No Code as the album is very different. While Ten (still Pearl Jam's finest disc, in my estimation) was all about anger and isolation, No Code is much more serene and reflective. Still, I count this as one of the true gems in the catalog of a fantastic band.


    Review ID: 10000000000248694
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