![]() ![]() ![]() While the re-master does a good job of presenting the album in the best possible light, the Brendan O’ Brian version works hard to produce the album in a manner that the band, never truly happy with the original reverb laden mix, would be proud of. Surging out of the speakers with a vitality that veteran bands often fail to match, ‘Ten’ still sounds as vibrant and vital today as it did back then and the excellent mastering afforded the vinyl means that it isn’t overly quiet anymore either. What really hits home is the astonishing confidence of a band recording their debut album. Eddie Vedder’s voice, always a thing of power and beauty, is also clearer, standing out from the mix on anthemic tracks such as ‘Oceans’, ‘Jeremy’ and the evergreen ‘alive’. Derided in some sectors at the time for offering ‘too clean’ a sound, ‘Ten’ has aged surprisingly well, and the re-master has really bought out the glorious solos that allied the band more closely to classic rock than to the punk vein that fellow Seattleites mined. So much for the presentation, what you really need to know is that the audio is pristine. The discs themselves are of high quality, beautifully finished to minimise skipping and housed in paper sleeves to keep wear and tear to a minimum. As packaging goes it is well presented, with the new gold-inflected print looking pretty damn fine, but it’s a shame the band didn’t stretch to a booklet like Nirvana’s Bleach reissue offered, or some liner notes. Opting for the vinyl edition, you get a gatefold sleeve, two heavy-weight (180g) vinyl discs and what looks like a promotional card (a piece of circular card with the album artwork and details printed upon it). As a result the bare edition comes shorn of extras, but it does offer two versions of a classic album and it has never sounded better. Working on a similar principal to the masterful reissue of the Manic Street preachers’ ‘Holy Bible’, ‘Ten’ comes as standard spread over two discs, but the basic version eschews the usual array of b-sides and live tracks to offer a re-mastered version of the original mix and a ‘redux’ mix courtesy of long-time band producer Brendan O’Brian. For this review we will be looking at the vinyl edition. Pearl Jam’s ‘Ten’ album is the platter in question and it was recently re-released as a special edition (over a variety of formats detailed below), heavy enough on features to satisfy even the hardiest of fans. It is not a little terrifying when an album you identify so closely with your own musical development is re-issued as a ‘legacy’ edition some eighteen years after you first heard it. ![]()
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