correctcutuphalfdead wrote:There's literally nothing wrong with Yield.
What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
- EJ
- Fake NYC Setlist Relayer
- Posts: 7053
- Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 3:15 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
- LoathedVermin72
- The Master
- Posts: 33836
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2014 9:32 pm
- Norah
- Poster of the Year
- Posts: 37327
- Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 2:04 pm
- Location: September 2020 Poster of the Month
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Low Light is wonderful.
- LoathedVermin72
- The Master
- Posts: 33836
- Joined: Sun May 25, 2014 9:32 pm
-
Let's all laugh at Rangers
- Broken Tamborine
- Posts: 375
- Joined: Thu January 31, 2013 7:26 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I love the start of red dot, but it loses its way. There are plenty of short tracks I like. Pry To sends out a powerful pro privacy message that just gets more and more relevant. Liked bugs at the time, not so much now. Aye Davinita is beautiful. Arc is good and obviously has its meaning as well which makes it even better. Life Wasted Reprise is great.
So basically, Johnson and May spent Trump's presidency fighting each other over how best to sell the NHS to Trump.
- Jorge
- NYUCK NYUCK NYUCK
- Posts: 36490
- Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 3:35 pm
- Location: Buenos Aires
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Red Dot has an important message about how we're all crazy at war (or something, I can't really tell)
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
-
chewm
- Rank This Poster
- Posts: 4401
- Joined: Fri July 26, 2013 12:34 am
- Location: chewm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
yeahEJ wrote:correctcutuphalfdead wrote:There's literally nothing wrong with Yield.
- PHATJ
- 10Club Complaint Department
- Posts: 15145
- Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:02 am
- Twitter: Tweet this *points to your cans*
- Location: Gigatown
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Seriously. Wtf, trag.cutuphalfdead wrote:I love Happy When I'm Crying but this is fucking madness.tragabigzanda wrote:The sequencing on side B is off. They should have lost In Hiding and included Happy When I'm Crying.
- PHATJ
- 10Club Complaint Department
- Posts: 15145
- Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:02 am
- Twitter: Tweet this *points to your cans*
- Location: Gigatown
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
VinylGuy wrote:Happy When Im Crying should have been a pretty cool B side.
Thats it.
- PHATJ
- 10Club Complaint Department
- Posts: 15145
- Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:02 am
- Twitter: Tweet this *points to your cans*
- Location: Gigatown
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
It may not be my favorite PJ album, but I agree that there is nothing wrong with it.EJ wrote:correctcutuphalfdead wrote:There's literally nothing wrong with Yield.
- stip
- The worst
- Posts: 42946
- Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I used to hate red dot, but I hear Tom Waits really digs it
I Am No Guide - Pearl Jam Song by Song - Out now!
He/Him/His
He/Him/His
-
Let's all laugh at Rangers
- Broken Tamborine
- Posts: 375
- Joined: Thu January 31, 2013 7:26 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Feel the same. Happy when I'm Crying=great. In Hiding=even better.
So basically, Johnson and May spent Trump's presidency fighting each other over how best to sell the NHS to Trump.
- bodysnatcher
- NEVER STOP JAMMING!
- Posts: 22220
- Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 11:15 pm
- Location: the bathroom
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Never been a big In Hiding fan, and generally skip it when it comes on
-
chewm
- Rank This Poster
- Posts: 4401
- Joined: Fri July 26, 2013 12:34 am
- Location: chewm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I think "In Hiding" might be my favorite Pearl Jam song.
- tragabigzanda
- Production Police
- Posts: 51634
- Joined: Tue September 24, 2013 5:56 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Fri January 02, 2026 6:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Leatherhead
- Rank This Poster
- Posts: 4280
- Joined: Fri August 09, 2013 4:38 am
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I disagree with most of this except the production.PryTo wrote:Yield is a good album, but not a great one. For most bands, this would be a high water mark, but for PJ it was a step backwards, their first. Whereas the previous three albums had, in some regards, topped each other (or at least spoke to one another), this was the first album where PJ seemed to be out of new ideas. In some ways it’s the more logical follow-up to Ten. But given that it was sandwiched between two of the group’s more experimental, boundary-pushing albums, it’s a head scratcher.
The production is pretty big and commercial. Not to the extremes of Ten, but a tasteful variation on that style. Lots of echo, big choruses, and songs that went down easy on the first listen. It’s a much more satisfying blueprint of the kind of records they make today. The two big rockers (Brain of J, DTE) were lesser versions of the type of thing the band did so easily on Vitalogy. The two chest-beating anthems (Faithfull, In Hiding) were lesser versions of the Ten era. The two quasi-experimental numbers (Pilate, Push Me, Pull Me) harkened to the weirder moments of No Code/Vitalogy, but should have been left on the cutting-room floor. Wishlist was a meandering track that collapsed under the weight of Vedder’s worst lyrics to date. Low Light was pleasant but forgettable. All Those Yesterdays and MFC are the two songs that sounded somewhat fresh but they weren’t centerpiece material. Which leaves us with the album’s fatal flaw: Given to Fly.
When your leadoff single is a blatant Zeppelin ripoff, folks, you’ve run out of ideas. I know people like this song, and it’s an okay live number (and better be because they play it at basically every show), but it’s the sound of a band that’s run out of creative gas. And ultimately that’s the fatal flaw of the album. There’s really nothing new here. It’s the sound of a band retreating. After three albums that doggedly pushed in new directions, even when that meant alienating fans, PJ blinked.
- igotworms
- likes rhythmic things that butt up against each other
- Posts: 592
- Joined: Wed September 11, 2013 3:36 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Yeah I agree with your disagreement. It's a horrible take IMO. Aside from possibly Vs, Yield is the only album that I struggle to find a major flaw.
-
Ms Harmless
- She / Her
- Posts: 13605
- Joined: Sun January 26, 2020 12:10 pm
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/
- Location: Warwickshire, UK
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
Wish List is fantastic lyrically and Push Me is maybe the most underrated song in the catalogue
-
Ms Harmless
- She / Her
- Posts: 13605
- Joined: Sun January 26, 2020 12:10 pm
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/
- Location: Warwickshire, UK
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I'm not wild about In Hiding or Red Dot, other than that I think Yield is perfect; also I'm pretty sure it has the best 1-2-3 punch of opening songs
-
liebzz
- I've been POOSSTTIiiEEnngeeaahh
- Posts: 10372
- Joined: Thu January 03, 2013 7:55 pm
Re: What is Each Album's Major Flaw?: Yield
I think the idea of Yield being an amalgamation of all their previous work has merit, but disagree that is somehow a muted version. There isn’t much new here, instead it’s a record where they perfectly executed all the ideas that the first four albums conveyed. As I often note, it is the most Pearl Jam album. To see an album where they tried to do that again, but with a touch less success would be the self-titled album, which I love, but is the same idea less perfectly executed.Leatherhead wrote:I disagree with most of this except the production.PryTo wrote:Yield is a good album, but not a great one. For most bands, this would be a high water mark, but for PJ it was a step backwards, their first. Whereas the previous three albums had, in some regards, topped each other (or at least spoke to one another), this was the first album where PJ seemed to be out of new ideas. In some ways it’s the more logical follow-up to Ten. But given that it was sandwiched between two of the group’s more experimental, boundary-pushing albums, it’s a head scratcher.
The production is pretty big and commercial. Not to the extremes of Ten, but a tasteful variation on that style. Lots of echo, big choruses, and songs that went down easy on the first listen. It’s a much more satisfying blueprint of the kind of records they make today. The two big rockers (Brain of J, DTE) were lesser versions of the type of thing the band did so easily on Vitalogy. The two chest-beating anthems (Faithfull, In Hiding) were lesser versions of the Ten era. The two quasi-experimental numbers (Pilate, Push Me, Pull Me) harkened to the weirder moments of No Code/Vitalogy, but should have been left on the cutting-room floor. Wishlist was a meandering track that collapsed under the weight of Vedder’s worst lyrics to date. Low Light was pleasant but forgettable. All Those Yesterdays and MFC are the two songs that sounded somewhat fresh but they weren’t centerpiece material. Which leaves us with the album’s fatal flaw: Given to Fly.
When your leadoff single is a blatant Zeppelin ripoff, folks, you’ve run out of ideas. I know people like this song, and it’s an okay live number (and better be because they play it at basically every show), but it’s the sound of a band that’s run out of creative gas. And ultimately that’s the fatal flaw of the album. There’s really nothing new here. It’s the sound of a band retreating. After three albums that doggedly pushed in new directions, even when that meant alienating fans, PJ blinked.