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Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press

Posted By: Designol
Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press

Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 345 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 144 Mb | Scans included
Genre: Alternative Rock | Label: Sony Music | # SRCS-8138 | Time: 00:49:38

A strange phenomenon with anthemic hard rock bands is that when they begin to mature and branch out into new musical genres, they nearly always choose to embrace both the music and spirituality of the East and India, and Pearl Jam is no exception. Throughout No Code, Eddie Vedder expounds on his moral and spiritual dilemmas; where on previous albums his rage was virtually all-consuming, it is clear on No Code that he has embraced an unspecified religion as a way to ease his troubles. Fortunately, that has coincided with an expansion of the group's musical palette. From the subtle, winding opener, "Sometimes," and the near-prayer of the single, "Who You Are," the band reaches into new territory, working with droning, mantra-like riffs and vocals, layered exotic percussion, and a newfound subtlety. Of course, they haven't left behind hard rock, but like any Pearl Jam record, the heart of No Code doesn't lie in the harder songs, it lies in the slower numbers and the ballads, which give Vedder the best platform for his soul-searching: "Present Tense," "Off He Goes," "In My Tree," and "Around the Bend" equal the group's earlier masterpieces. While a bit too incoherent, No Code is Pearl Jam's richest and most rewarding album to date, as well as their most human. They might be maturing in a fairly conventional method, but they still find new ways to state old truths.

Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Allmusic.com

They don't call it the gilded cage for nothing. The idea of rock gods bitching about all the dumb, demeaning baggage that comes with megastardom might seem lame, even insulting, to anyone who's never tasted any kind of big time. But the invasive, suffocating quality of blind idolatry; the hard slap of snide, contemptuous backlash; the surreal expectations of a business culture grown fat and smug on someone else's desperate, poetic labors — that shit is all very real. Besides, heated, bitter, even irrational complaint is one thing. Self-pity is quite another, and Pearl Jam — for better or worse, the poster boys of postmodern grousing — have never stooped that low.

If anything, Pearl Jam are vigilant and hopeful — if sometimes inconsistent — pragmatists. They're empowered by platinum and unembarrassed by their sense of mission, willing to risk tripping over their own hard line to make a vital point. And they're not so self-righteous as to deny that, yes, success has its privileges. For example, if you can't put out a glorious, guiltless, mad-blend mess of tunes and weird tangents like No Code when you're at the top, what's the point of swimming through all the sewage to get there?

Actually, No Code — Pearl Jam's fourth album, not counting Mirror Ball, last year's collaboration with Neil Young — is abrupt in its mood swings almost to the point of vertigo. In the first song, "Sometimes," Eddie Vedder sings as if he's locked in a confessional, talking to God and wrestling with his own bruised, confused, irritated ego ("See my part/Devote myself/My small self/Like a book amongst the many on a shelf") in the pregnant atmosphere of Jeff Ament's gently zooming bass and drummer Jack Irons' lightly hissing cymbals. Later, Vedder rips into the 62-second blitz "Lukin" (a nod to Mudhoney bassist Matt Lukin?) with such blurred agitation that the words just come out like bloody spittle. The Indo-Bo Diddley glow of "Who You Are," a buoyant electric variation on Vedder's recent collaborations with Pakistani vocal god Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, melts into the black, choleric-guitar clamor of "In My Tree." To get to the sweet, protective ardor of Vedder's closing carol, "Around the Bend," you've got to downshift from guitarist Stone Gossard's punk-pop romp "Mankind" and soak in the echo pool of the narration-with-chant piece "I'm Open."

The cumulative impact of all this twist and shout doesn't hit you straightaway. No Code doesn't quite have the concentrated, brawling force of Vs. or the focused sweep of Vitalogy. The album is certainly a big, awkward leap from the burnished, arena-ripe sheen of Ten. But in its own brash, off-center way, No Code is a real gas — charged with pungent declaration and heaving guitars; warm and even a little wry in low throttle; and elastic in its attack and intimate in its tension. It is the kind of impulsive, quixotic, provocative ruckus that has become rare in a modern-rock mainstream largely distinguished by weary fatalism and anxiety over quick career burnout. As a record, as a declaration of honor, No Code basically means no rule books, no limits and, above all, no fear.

That doesn't mean no fun — "Smile" sounds so much like a Neil Young With Crazy Horse outtake that you'll initially think someone goofed at the pressing plant — or no questions. "Is there room enough for both of us?/ Both of us apart?" Vedder queries with rubbed-raw enunciation in "Hail, Hail," measuring the strength and resilience of good, honest affection against the staccato punch of Gossard's and Mike McCready's guitars and Irons' urgent, emphatic drumming. Originally, in the Ten days, I thought Vedder rendered too much of his disquiet in mumbled, indistinct angst, more implied than indicting argument. I was wrong. He may sound like he's just had his tonsils torn out in "Habit," but it suits the dirty, breathless crush of the music and the schizo vigor — part outraged disbelief, part acidic wit — of Vedder's crusted pleading: "Another habit like an unwanted friend/I'm so happy with my righteous self."

Contrary to his reputation, Vedder isn't a complainer, certainly not on record. When he declares, "All hail the lucky ones/I refer to those in love," in "Hail, Hail," he's not being a wretched smartass — he means it. If Vedder can't help but strive for things that seem to be just outside his reach, well, that's hardly a character flaw. It's a sign of life.

So is pain. At first, "Off He Goes" sounds like another page torn from the Neil Young hymnal. Its elegant, acoustic simplicity is deceiving, though. With a humor and confidence that he rarely gets credit for, Vedder describes a man not unlike himself — at least, his public image — but from the point of view of an old, puzzled friend: "Know a man/His face seems pulled and tense…. So I approach with tact/Suggest that he should relax." In the guy's "perfectly unkempt clothes … his perfectly unkempt hope," Vedder tartly nails the narcissism that is definitely part of making theater out of hurt. He also points out with quiet insistence that in misery, as in much of life, context is everything: "For he still smiles/And he's still strong/Nothing much has changed except the surrounding bullshit/That has grown."

No Code sticks out of the surrounding bullshit — major-label rock albums that are really just two-year marketing exercises in disguise; the ideological bickering in the indie sector that makes a day in the Russian Parliament seem like a love feast — with roughhouse aplomb. It may or may not end up on Top 100 lists in 20 years' time, but it sounds right for now, a midterm report from a band in fine, reckless fettle. "Are we getting something out of this/All-encompassing trip?" Vedder wonders in "Present Tense" as the band summons up the grace and force of Jimi Hendrix's freak-flag anthem "If 6 Was 9." That depends on what you're willing to put into it.

Review by David Fricke, RollingStone

Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press



Tracklist:

01. Sometimes (2:41)
02. Hail, Hail (3:42)
03. Who You Are (3:50)
04. In My Tree (4:00)
05. Smile (3:52)
06. Off He Goes (6:03)
07. Habit (3:36)
08. Red Mosquito (4:03)
09. Lukin (1:02)
10. Present Tense (5:47)
11. Mankind (3:29)
12. I'm Open (2:58)
13. Around The Bend (4:36)


Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 19. March 2010, 12:01

Pearl Jam / No Code

Used drive : HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-H42N Adapter: 0 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 667
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000
Gap handling : Appended to previous track

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 128 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exe
Additional command line options : -8 -V -T "ARTIST=%a" -T "TITLE=%t" -T "ALBUM=%g" -T "DATE=%y" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%n" -T "GENRE=%m" -T "COMMENT=EAC FLAC -8" %s


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 2:41.07 | 0 | 12081
2 | 2:41.07 | 3:41.53 | 12082 | 28709
3 | 6:22.60 | 3:50.17 | 28710 | 45976
4 | 10:13.02 | 3:59.48 | 45977 | 63949
5 | 14:12.50 | 3:52.12 | 63950 | 81361
6 | 18:04.62 | 6:02.48 | 81362 | 108559
7 | 24:07.35 | 3:36.17 | 108560 | 124776
8 | 27:43.52 | 4:03.35 | 124777 | 143036
9 | 31:47.12 | 1:02.35 | 143037 | 147721
10 | 32:49.47 | 5:46.38 | 147722 | 173709
11 | 38:36.10 | 3:28.70 | 173710 | 189379
12 | 42:05.05 | 2:57.40 | 189380 | 202694
13 | 45:02.45 | 4:35.60 | 202695 | 223379


Track 1

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\01 - Sometimes.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:02.00

Peak level 97.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 76E5AFFC
Copy CRC 76E5AFFC
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5196DBC3]
Copy OK

Track 2

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\02 - Hail, Hail.wav

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 3D3802FC
Copy CRC 3D3802FC
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D1D2C003]
Copy OK

Track 3

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\03 - Who You Are.wav

Peak level 99.4 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC AD368E0A
Copy CRC AD368E0A
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [9AB16251]
Copy OK

Track 4

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\04 - In My Tree.wav

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 4D82B51C
Copy CRC 4D82B51C
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2EE7D922]
Copy OK

Track 5

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\05 - Smile.wav

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 977179F1
Copy CRC 977179F1
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2DAF8C43]
Copy OK

Track 6

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\06 - Off He Goes.wav

Peak level 99.4 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 07108FCE
Copy CRC 07108FCE
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2A07C886]
Copy OK

Track 7

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\07 - Habit.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.33

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC AE10357B
Copy CRC AE10357B
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [1A3E8A42]
Copy OK

Track 8

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\08 - Red Mosquito.wav

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 032A3C91
Copy CRC 032A3C91
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [48E8E024]
Copy OK

Track 9

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\09 - Lukin.wav

Peak level 99.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC D08969E6
Copy CRC D08969E6
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D3A748FD]
Copy OK

Track 10

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\10 - Present Tense.wav

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 02C7D620
Copy CRC 02C7D620
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [0DE28CF5]
Copy OK

Track 11

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\11 - Mankind.wav

Peak level 99.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 5FC5229B
Copy CRC 5FC5229B
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [AA59D9B9]
Copy OK

Track 12

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\12 - I'm Open.wav

Peak level 99.4 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 37DFE4AD
Copy CRC 37DFE4AD
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [12B70C6D]
Copy OK

Track 13

Filename E:\Pearl Jam\[studio]\Pearl Jam - 1996 - No Code [Japan, Sony, SRCS 8138]\13 - Around The Bend.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.53

Peak level 99.4 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC F6C8995C
Copy CRC F6C8995C
Accurately ripped (confidence 1) [E3DB896C]
Copy OK


All tracks accurately ripped

No errors occurred

End of status report

foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2017-03-13 19:56:26

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Pearl Jam / No Code (SRCS-8138)
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR9 -0.18 dB -12.42 dB 2:41 01-Sometimes
DR5 -0.17 dB -6.61 dB 3:42 02-Hail, Hail
DR7 -0.05 dB -9.01 dB 3:50 03-Who You Are
DR7 -0.18 dB -8.81 dB 4:00 04-In My Tree
DR7 -0.18 dB -8.81 dB 3:52 05-Smile
DR10 -0.05 dB -12.48 dB 6:03 06-Off He Goes
DR5 -0.17 dB -6.53 dB 3:36 07-Habit
DR6 -0.18 dB -7.65 dB 4:03 08-Red Mosquito
DR7 0.00 dB -9.21 dB 1:02 09-Lukin
DR9 -0.18 dB -13.72 dB 5:47 10-Present Tense
DR7 -0.01 dB -8.33 dB 3:29 11-Mankind
DR8 -0.05 dB -10.68 dB 2:58 12-I'm Open
DR8 -0.05 dB -10.27 dB 4:36 13-Around The Bend
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 13
Official DR value: DR7

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 814 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================

Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press

Pearl Jam - No Code (1996) Japanese Press

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