Miami Herald

Pearl Jam comes roaring back with superb new album

- BY MARK KENNEDY Associated Press

Trust Pearl Jam to still surprise us in 2020. The Seattle rock gods have made an album we didn’t know we needed.

“Gigaton” is a fascinatin­g and ambitious 12-track collection with a cleaner, crisper sound that is studded with interestin­g textures, topped by Eddie Vedder’s still-indignant voice.

Many songs switch gears and morph into something else before they’re done, as if the group was restless to try something else. Bandmates have also switched instrument­s on this, their 11th studio album and their first in seven years.

“Gigaton” marks the band’s first co-production with Josh Evans, who previously worked with Soundgarde­n and Chris Cornell. He’s helped pull out more experiment­ation, certainly from the messy last studio offering, “Lightning Bolt.”

The first single, “Dance of the Clairvoyan­ts,” is one of the most exciting Pearl Jam songs in decades, with guitarist Stone Gossard playing chunky bass lines, bassist Jeff Ament offering splinterin­g, chopping guitar riffs and Vedder’s voice at its most mercurial, bursting out of the song’s outline.

“Alright” is a nifty, spacey, Peter Gabriel-ish tune and “Comes Then Goes” is an acoustic ballad for a lost friend. Gossard sings lead on the terrifical­ly unsettling lullaby “Buckle Up” and drummer Matt Cameron shines on the excellent “Take the Long Way,” attacking his kit like a thrash act.

Environmen­tal fears are a frequent motif, with Vedder often singing about oceans rising and an uneasy Earth. “You can’t hide the lies/In the rings of a tree,” he sings on “Alright.” The album’s cover captures a Norwegian ice cap gushing and the title “Gigaton” is often used to measure human carbon dioxide emissions.

The band’s distaste for current politics is also easily apparent: Vedder sings in one song that the “government thrives on discontent” and on “Never Destinatio­n” he mentions “collusion hiding in plain sight.”

Donald Trump is directly mentioned once, in “Quick Escape,” a rocking ditty about looking for a place, anyplace – Morocco, Zanzibar, Mars even – that the president hasn’t destroyed yet. He later calls the sitting president an expletive on another track.

But despite the gloom, there’s great hope on “Gigaton,” too, with Vedder cheerleadi­ng the resistance.

“Swim sideways from this undertow and do not be deterred,” he counsels on “Seven O’Clock” and adds, “This is no time for depression.” And on the straightfo­rward rocker “Superblood Wolfmoon,” he says: “Don’t allow for hopelessne­ss/ Focus on your focusness/ I’ve been hoping that our hope dies last.”

The album ends with the mournful “River Cross,” with the side that is right in a chokehold and outnumbere­d. Yet they will win: “Share the light/Won’t hold us down,” Vedder sings, virtually sobbing, like a prayer. As for us, we can thank God they’re back.

 ??  ?? ‘Gigaton’ by Pearl Jam.
Monkeywren­ch Records/Republic Records via AP
‘Gigaton’ by Pearl Jam. Monkeywren­ch Records/Republic Records via AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States