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Ten

Ten
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Ten  (Audio CD) 
by Pearl Jam

 
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  • Track: 10: Deep,
  • Track: 11: Release,
  • Track: 1: Once,
  • Track: 2: Evenflow,
  • Track: 3: Alive,
  • Track: 4: Why Go,
  • Track: 5: Black,
  • Track: 6: Jeremy,
  • Track: 7: Oceans,
  • Track: 8: Porch,
  • Track: 9: Garden
    Media Type: CD
    Artist: PEARL JAM
    Title: TEN
    Street Release Date: 08/27/1991
    Domestic
    Genre: ROCK/POP
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    Our Price: $8.98
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    Product Details
    Audio CD Release Date:August 27, 1991
    Studio:Sony
    Number Of Discs:1
    Average Customer Rating: based on 740 reviews

    Track Listing
    1. Once - Pearl Jam, Gossard, Stone
    2. Even Flow - Pearl Jam, Gossard, Stone
    3. Alive - Pearl Jam, Gossard, Stone
    4. Why Go - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff
    5. Black - Pearl Jam, Gossard, Stone
    6. Jeremy - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff
    7. Oceans - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff
    8. Porch - Pearl Jam, Vedder, Eddie
    9. Garden - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff
    10. Deep - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff
    11. Release - Pearl Jam, Ament, Jeff

    Customer Reviews
    Average Customer Review:4.5
    Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

    5one of the best records of all time  Jul 30, 2010
    awesome... Microjoy from richmond va check em out on myspace
    rick rubin please produce our next record we're to poor to tour to great to wait

    4Classic 90's Grunge album. Production style is a bit muddy  May 14, 2010
    This is a terrific album with hits that I'm sure if you were alive in the 90s and not living in a cave you've heard. The production style is kind of rough and gives it a little bit of a live feel, which some people will undoubtedly like. I personally prefer a crisper, studio sound, and thus I can only give it 4/5 stars. Still a great album, and because it was to popular, dirt cheap to pick up used. Well worth it in my opinion.

    5Vedder's Vocals Shine, Making the Album Great  Apr 19, 2010
    Coming out around the same time Nirvana exploded "Ten" established Pearl Jam as one of the most popular Northwest (Seattle) "grunge" bands. Many put them in that music category, even though, in my opinion, there isn't much "grunge" about them. Singer Eddie Vedder has impassioned vocals and excellent songwriting abilities.

    It did take sometime for the album to take off, but it ended up becoming one of the '90's best. "Even Flow" is arguably the band's most arena radio hit with it's singable chorus, while "Alive" contains ever-so-depressing lyrics on top of up-lifting music ending with a blistering Mike McCready guitar solo.

    "Black" is more on the dark side in the form of a moody ballad. Vedder's vocals shine throughout the whole album and make each song great. The album is named after the number of the band's favorite basketball player Mookie Blaylock and I believe they played at small clubs before their big success under that name. This is my favorite Pearl Jam album.

    0 of 3 found the following review helpful:

    2Not as horrible as Nirvana, but that doesn't mean it's impressive  Apr 04, 2010
    At the beginning of the 1990s, the very time I was moving from childhood to adolescence, there was supposedly a huge makeover of the popular rock scene by which the glam metal that had previously dominated the charts was replaced by a much harder and starker sound that became known as "grunge".

    In reality, however, the "grunge" of the 1990s actually had all the worst aspects of the hair metal of the 1980s, only turned into a new form. Instead of simply overproducing the rhythm section to create an artificially dense drum sound as was typical of such 1980s bands as Whitesnake, grunge turned this overblown sound into harder guitar that people thought was far more emotional and passionate. In fact, when listened to carefully, grunge has as little emotional depth as most hair metal, even though the singers generally sing with a rougher voice.

    In contrast to the totally noisy - and for me completely unlistenable - sound of Nirvana, Pearl Jam did at times emphasise melody rather than overblowing their sound, at least in their earliest days before the band began to try to hide from the commercial acclaim it had won. This is seen to some affect on "Alive", which even if it does not do anything that previous pop songs did not, still sounds quite heartfelt and energetic. However, the band fails by and large to build on this level of power in the rest of "Ten", wiht the result that on the whole it cannot be called a serious success.

    4"Ten by Pearl Jam" 3.5 out of 5 stars  Mar 30, 2010
    I have to admit I hated this when it first came out but it did grow on me over time. I prefer their second release Vs. to this myself and also prefer bands like STP and Alice in Chains over Pearl Jam. This is a good to great album but I do think it is somewhat overrated. I think the song writing is fine, its the vocals that bug me. I seen another review where the reviewer talks about the garbled vocals, I have to agree.

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
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