VinylGuy wrote:bodysnatcher wrote:Birds in Hell wrote:Wendy Carlos's Twin wrote:I loved it the first time I heard it - I couldn't believe Pearl Jam made an album that good.
Me either, I loved it from first listen.
Funnily enough, it was Yield that turned me off the band for a while - especially Given to Fly. I thought they were regressing. I didn't really listen to the band from around then til 2004 or so.
man... i remember getting a tape of the Oakland shows when they opened for the Stones, and they debuted some Yield material, and was totally blown off my rocker. I'll never forget hearing DTE for the first time on that tape.... My jaw must have dropped like Wile E Coyote, and tongue rolled across the floor.
Yield was a difficult one for me too, but not as difficult as No Code or Binaural. The difference is that i loved all of them, even if some songs were strange at the time, i just knew they were awesome. I loved them so much that i hated ten for a long time.
Yield got me back into them.
I don't really remember what happened...I bought Vitalogy the day it came out, I really liked it, but then I put it up, and pretty much didn't listen to Pearl Jam for 4 years. Then a buddy of mine played Yield, and I was blown away. "Brain of J" and "Given To Fly" really took ahold of me, and during the summer of 1998 Yield and Hello Nasty were pretty much all I listened to.
Yield didn't sound strange to me at all though...If anything, I thought THIS is what I had been hoping the band would sound like. I don't know how to really explain it, but the album really scratched me where I itched.
Around 1999 is when No Code finally clicked with me. Since then, it's been my favorite. But really, the Vitalogy > NC > Yield > Binaural stretch will always be my favorite. To me, it's Pearl Jam's 'Beggars Banquent' > 'Let It Bleed' > 'Sticky Fingers' > 'Exile on Main St.' run. It's b/c of those 4 albums why I'm such a big fan of this band.