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No Code

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (289 ratings)
No Code album cover
01
Sometimes
2:41
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02
Hail, Hail
3:42
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03
Who You Are
3:49
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04
In My Tree
3:59
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05
Smile
3:52
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06
Off He Goes
5:59
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07
Habit
3:36
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08
Red Mosquito
4:03
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09
Lukin
1:02
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10
Present Tense
5:47
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11
Mankind
3:29
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12
I'm Open
2:54
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13
Around The Bend
4:35
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 49:28

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

09.19.11
Continuing to expand their sonic palette
Label: Epic

Coming after the surly, restless Vitalogy, No Code finds Pearl Jam continuing to expand their sonic palette. As its name implies, the band is operating without deference to any kind of sonic rulebook; thusly, the album veers from thrashing Husker Dü-isms to grizzled classic rock to lowing ballads laced up with Sufi chanting. But unlike its similarly adventurous predecessor, more of these forays pay off. “Smile” is a charred-around-the edges stomper worthy of PJ’s beloved Crazy Horse; “Off He Goes” inverts the gentle arpeggio from the Beatles’ “And I Love Her” and uses it as a backdrop for a tender tale of an old friend fallen on hard times. Eddie Vedder’s simmering discontent — which on Vitalogy gave birth to some particularly grievous fits of self-pity — no longer manifests itself in agonized contemplations of human powerlessness. Instead, Vedder seems more earnestly dedicated toward finding his way in a world that will never be fair. In the storm-the-gates “Hail, Hail” he sings, “I could be new — you underestimate me,” and later, over ominous fret buzz in “Present Tense,” he says, “You can’t spend your time alone/ redigesting past regrets/…makes much more sense to live in the present tense.” The… read more »

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Must underrated Pearl Jam album

rabidstitch

I love their first and also love Vs. - but No Code is my favorite Pearl Jam album. I've heard others criticize its sound and themes, but I think it's brilliant. "There He Goes" and "Present Tense" are two of my favorite PJ songs, plus Habit and Red Mosquito are just classic PJ rockers. This album is great- give it a chance!

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10 Underrated Pearl Jam Songs

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With more than 25 million copies of the first three Pearl Jam albums in circulation, it's safe to say that even the most casual fan had an in-depth knowledge of their discography up to that point. The fact that a Ten-era B-side ("Yellow Ledbetter") bubbled up to become one of the group's radio hits is proof of that. However, just because the band's popularity waned following the five-times-platinum Vitalogy doesn't mean the music did as… more »

They Say All Music Guide

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. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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