Pearl Jam Yield CD
Item Location
This item is available for Delivery Only from:
Cash Generator Great Yarmouth, 5 Regent Street, Great Yarmouth, NR30 1RN
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: 01493 851 850
Item Condition
Condition: Pre-Owned: Grade A
All in excellent condition
Item Description
Nay-sayers and trends be damned. Pearl Jam's follow-up to 1996's NO CODE continues down the path of aggressive rock and roll, existential musings and musical experimentation. This isn't your older brother's grunge. Opening with the hard-driving "Brain Of J", YIELD goes from a punky swagger representing man's arrogance in asserting his lofty place on the food chain ("Do The Evolution") to a free jazz approach and a disembodied Vedder vocal questioning the meaning of life ("Push Me, Pull Me"). Most of YIELD continues to ply the standard Pearl Jam sound: Vedder's pained emoting, the interesting use of dynamics between McCready and Gossard's guitars and solid rhythm-work from the Ament/Irons rhythm section. Rather than falling into the creative rut many huge bands succumb to, Pearl Jam's music has instead developed its own identity while still walking the fringes of the unorthodox. Hence the inclusion of a weird, untitled percussive instrumental cut in Jack Irons' home studio and an Eastern-flavoured hidden track pointing towards the influence of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
- CD
- Rock
- Pop
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns

Pearl Jam Yield CD
Pearl Jam Yield CD
Item Location
This item is available for Delivery Only from:
Cash Generator Great Yarmouth, 5 Regent Street, Great Yarmouth, NR30 1RN
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: 01493 851 850
Item Condition
Condition: Pre-Owned: Grade A
All in excellent condition
Item Description
Nay-sayers and trends be damned. Pearl Jam's follow-up to 1996's NO CODE continues down the path of aggressive rock and roll, existential musings and musical experimentation. This isn't your older brother's grunge. Opening with the hard-driving "Brain Of J", YIELD goes from a punky swagger representing man's arrogance in asserting his lofty place on the food chain ("Do The Evolution") to a free jazz approach and a disembodied Vedder vocal questioning the meaning of life ("Push Me, Pull Me"). Most of YIELD continues to ply the standard Pearl Jam sound: Vedder's pained emoting, the interesting use of dynamics between McCready and Gossard's guitars and solid rhythm-work from the Ament/Irons rhythm section. Rather than falling into the creative rut many huge bands succumb to, Pearl Jam's music has instead developed its own identity while still walking the fringes of the unorthodox. Hence the inclusion of a weird, untitled percussive instrumental cut in Jack Irons' home studio and an Eastern-flavoured hidden track pointing towards the influence of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
- CD
- Rock
- Pop
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Item Location
This item is available for Delivery Only from:
Cash Generator Great Yarmouth, 5 Regent Street, Great Yarmouth, NR30 1RN
Email: [email protected]
Telephone: 01493 851 850
Item Condition
Condition: Pre-Owned: Grade A
All in excellent condition
Item Description
Nay-sayers and trends be damned. Pearl Jam's follow-up to 1996's NO CODE continues down the path of aggressive rock and roll, existential musings and musical experimentation. This isn't your older brother's grunge. Opening with the hard-driving "Brain Of J", YIELD goes from a punky swagger representing man's arrogance in asserting his lofty place on the food chain ("Do The Evolution") to a free jazz approach and a disembodied Vedder vocal questioning the meaning of life ("Push Me, Pull Me"). Most of YIELD continues to ply the standard Pearl Jam sound: Vedder's pained emoting, the interesting use of dynamics between McCready and Gossard's guitars and solid rhythm-work from the Ament/Irons rhythm section. Rather than falling into the creative rut many huge bands succumb to, Pearl Jam's music has instead developed its own identity while still walking the fringes of the unorthodox. Hence the inclusion of a weird, untitled percussive instrumental cut in Jack Irons' home studio and an Eastern-flavoured hidden track pointing towards the influence of the late Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan.
- CD
- Rock
- Pop





















