Core

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Core album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Stone Temple Pilots (See All Albums by Stone Temple Pilots)
  • Date Released: Sep 25, 1992

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Rhino

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 53:31

eMusic Review 0

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Maura Johnston

eMusic Contributor

09.24.10
The self-loathing template for modern rock's theatre of pain
1992 | Label: Rhino

Many people blame the influence of Eddie Vedder and Pearl Jam when running down their lists of complaints regarding post-grunge. But the debut effort by the San Diego outfit Stone Temple Pilots is the real touchstone for so many of the tortured yarls and mournful-yet-pummeling guitars that held an iron grip over most mainstream rock radio stations until very recently. At the time of its release, Core was written off as yet another entry in the post-Seattle land rush; more cynical observers sneered that the pink-haired man contorting his facial muscles and raising his voice into a yelp in the video for the power-murder-ballad "Plush" actually looked kind of like Vedder in a Technicolor wig. Nearly two decades later, though, it's obvious that Core owes far more of a debt to the bleak, sprawling nihilism of Alice In Chains than it does to Pearl Jam's relative optimism.

Whatever its origins, the album spawned five songs that remain in heavy rotation. "Plush" was the band's breakthrough song, its dead-girl-as-breakup-metaphor outlined with abstract lyrics over a chugging beat; "Creep" is a quiet suicide lament. But the album's opener "Dead & Bloated," a five-minute stomp in which Weiland grunts about being beaten up… read more »

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SNL should really apologise...

BillyShaneGuy

...for furthering the "Pearl Jam ripoff" label that still follows the band. Sneering hipsters should take note that they do not sound at all like Pearl Jam in their debut but sound much more like, as the official reviews state, Alice In Chains. That said, Dean DeLeo's solos are ignored in those reviews. He mixes scales and modes with the best of them to give the songs much more colour than his stated contemporaries, throwing in some lovely jazz chords as well. He only improves in later albums.

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They Say All Music Guide

Stone Temple Pilots were positively vilified once their 1992 debut, Core, started scaling the charts in 1993, pegged as fifth-rate Pearl Jam copyists. It is true that the worst moments of Core play like a parody of the Seattle scene — titles like “Dead and Bloated” and “Crackerman” tell you that much, playing like really bad Alice in Chains parodies, and the entire record tends to sink into gormless post-grunge sludge. Furthermore, even if it rocks pretty hard, it’s usually without much character, sounding like cut-rate grunge. To be fair, it’s more that they share the same influences as their peers than being overt copycats, but it’s still a little disheartening all the same. If that’s all that Core was, it’d be as forgettable as Seven Mary Three, but there are the hits that propelled it up the charts, songs that have remarkably stood the test of time to be highlights of their era. “Sex Type Thing” may have a clumsy anti-rape lyric that comes across as misogynist, but it survives on its terrifically lunk-headed riff, while “Wicked Garden” is a surprisingly effective piece of revivalist acid rock. Then, there’s the slow acoustic crawl of “Creep” that works as well as anything on AIC’s Sap and, finally, “Plush,” a majestic album rock revival more melodic and stylish than anything grunge produced outside of Nirvana itself. These four songs aren’t enough to salvage a fairly pedestrian debut, but they do find STP to be nimble rock craftsmen when inspiration hits. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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