Ukulele Songs

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Ukulele Songs album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 34:48

eMusic Review 0

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Amanda Petrusich

eMusic Contributor

05.17.11
Short and sweet love songs, earnestly sung and delicately strummed
2011 | Label: Universal Motown Records Group

The ukulele may have had a small pop renaissance in recent years thanks to high-profile champions like Stephin Merritt and Merrill Garbus of tUnE-yArDs, but it's still a much-maligned little noisemaker. Modest in size, meek in sound and inextricably linked to Polynesian pig roasts, it can feel like more of a gimmick than a proper instrument. But when wielded properly, the humble ukulele is a powerful tool — its high, muted strums can be as heartbreaking as they are giddy.

Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder — still best known for his growly vocals and penchant for scaling lighting rigs — is an unlikely ukulele ambassador, but as a longtime surfer and Maui resident, he's got a certain uke cred. (Vedder is also a staunch populist, and the ukulele, which is relatively easy to play and cheap to buy, is nothing if not the people's guitar). Ukulele Songs is a collection of short and sweet love songs, earnestly sung and delicately strummed. Vedder's voice is surprisingly tender, and his strums are rich and crammed with nuance: By a few tracks in, you'll forget the premise and submit to the rhythm.

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less is more

Eukatastrophy

this is a pretty relaxed album. Plus it has a Steve Martin cover

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Uhhhh...

music.tiny

This is a joke right? Listening to this must be like having your testicles repeatedly bashed with a meat tenderizer.

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Respect the 'ukulele!

kamaleialoha

Petrusich calls the 'ukulele "meek in sound and inextricably linked to Polynesian pig roasts". I guess if the only place you've heard 'ukulele is as a tourist at a luau at some hotel, that's your take on it. But for people who live in Hawai'i, it is an instrument that is highly respected as part of our musical culture and can be heard everywhere, from public schools, hula schools, family gatherings in backyards and at the beach, to the work of award-winning Hawaiian musicians. The 'ukulele is not some silly little novelty to us, so please try to expand your views on what music means to people. I think Eddie does a great job with it, by the way.

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Eddie's Robert Pollard release

RinjoNjori

The vocals are like Robert Pollard-esque, however the title does not lie-- it's all Eddie plus the Eukele.

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Love that voice

rickmann

If you like Eddie, you will like this, but make no mistake, this is not Pearl Jam. His voice and the sparse uke melodies go together well. I liked "Can't Keep" and "Satellite". Heavy songs, lighthearted melodies, that voice... Its like cooking - throw a bunch of unusual ingredients together and you get either a culinary delight or a disaster. I suppose the reviews will be divided, but I had a sumptuous meal.

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They Say All Music Guide

There is no irony in the title of Eddie Vedder’s first full-fledged solo album: these are indeed songs performed on a ukulele, an instrument uncommon but not unknown to rockers. George Harrison was a well-known advocate of the small four-string instrument, and Vedder’s hero Pete Townshend once cut a lovely little gem called “Blue Red and Grey” on ukulele, a song that could easily slide onto this gently ramshackle collection of covers, re-recordings, and new tunes. To say that this is a minor album is to dismiss its intimacy and miss its appeal: Vedder’s self-imposed curse is that he takes everything very seriously indeed, so to hear him without the weight of the world on his shoulders is disarmingly inviting. He has nothing more in mind on Ukulele Songs than singing, whether it’s with duet partners Glen Hansard and Cat Power or just on his own, tossing out love songs, something he generally has avoided with Pearl Jam. Vedder never has been ashamed of his bleeding heart — it’s something that grounds Pearl Jam even when they’re in full-blast bombast mode — yet it’s refreshing to have a record where that heart is pushed toward the center, beating fully and proudly on his lightest, sweetest album yet. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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