Rearviewmirror: Greatest Hits 1991-2003
- List Price:
$9.99
- Buy New: $6.90 (On sale from $6.94)
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as of 2/13/2012 05:04 EST details
- You Save: $0.04 (1%)
- Seller:-importcds
- Sales Rank:864
- Media:Audio CD
- Discs:2
- Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
- Dimensions (in):5.5 x 4.8 x 0.4
- Release Date:November 16, 2004
- MPN:827969353523
- UPC:827969353523
- EAN:0827969353523
- ASIN:B000669GAI
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Disc 1 Tracks
- Once (Brendan O'Brien Remix)
- Alive (Brendan O'Brien Remix)
- Even Flow
- Jeremy
- State of Love and Trust
- Animal
- Go
- Dissident
- Rearviewmirror
- Spin the Black Circle
- Corduroy
- Not for You
- I Got Id
- Hail Hail
- Do the Evolution
- Save You
Disc 2 Tracks
- Black (Brendan O'Brien Remix)
- Breath
- Daughter
- Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town
- Immortality
- Betterman
- Nothingman
- Who You Are
- Off He Goes
- Given to Fly
- Wishlist
- Last Kiss
- Nothing as it Seems
- Light Years
- I am Mine
- Man of the Hour
- Yellow Ledbetter
Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com
In an era when pop nihilism fulfilled its dark promise all too regularly, Pearl Jam not only survived, but thrived to become one of rock's greatest bands. This 33-track double-disc career retrospective documents the arc of a career that went from arena and radio triumphs in the early 90's (while Nirvana's promise imploded in the wake of hype, Pearl Jam's crowd-pleasing fame only burgeoned) to the uncompromising, core audience-focused tack that carried the band into the 21st century. Shrewdly compiled by the band into an "Up" disc that chronicles the band's driving, Stone Gossard-Mike McCready fueled hard rock dramatics (including such early career landmarks as "Jeremy," "Alive" and "Even Flow" alongside more aggressive fare like "Go" and "Spin the Black Circle") and a "Down" side that focuses more on Eddie Vedder's brooding, often dark ballads ("Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town," "Yellow Ledbetter," their unlikely hit cover of the oldie "Last Kiss"), it's a collection that underscores both the band's range and musical integrity. Though centered largely on the band's pre-Vitalogy studio era and containing no new material, longtime producer/collaborator Brendan O'Brien contributes remixes of "Once," "Alive" and "Black" that offer new insights on the familiar, while non-album tracks like "Man of the Hour" and "State of Love and Trust" considerably enhance the overall listening perspective here. --Jerry McCulley
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