Pearl Jam
Pearl Jam Twenty
(Monkeywrench)
[Rating: 4 stars]
Pearl Jam are the reigning kings of nineties rock, an unlikely gang of elder statesmen dressed up in flannel shirts and worn-out jeans. Twenty years since their debut album helped establish grunge as a radio format, fashion choice and buzzword for an entire generation, the guys have thrown themselves a long-deserved congratulatory party, hiring honorary Seattle-ite Cameron Crowe to direct a documentary chronicling the bandโs history. Accompanying the movie are a hardback book and this double-disc soundtrack, which essentially does the same thing Croweโs film sets out to accomplish: trace Pearl Jamโs career arc by shining a light on the rare stuff.
In this case, the rarities includes early concert recordings, a cover of Mother Love Boneโs โCrown of Thorns,โ Mike McCreadyโs instrumental version of โGiven to Flyโ and two Temple of the Dog demos. Songs from MTV Unplugged and Saturday Night Live are scattered throughout, and there are enough softballs in the mix to please the casual fan, too, meaning those looking for little more than a solid live performance of โBetter Manโ or โBlackโ will walk away happy. But Pearl Jam Twenty is aimed at the sort of die-hard PJ fanatic who can tell you the difference between various bootlegs from the 2000 Binaural tour bootlegs, patiently pointing out the dissimilarities between, say, the October 7th gig in Michigan and the November 6th show in Seattle. Accordingly, the real highlights here are previously unearthed tracks like โAcoustic #1โ and the demo version of โNothing As It Seemsโ with Jeff Ament singing lead. If thereโs more of this stuff in Pearl Jamโs vault, hereโs to hoping the guys sticks around long enough for Pearl Jam Thirty.

