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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great Intro To Seattle Scene,
By eRgO (Washington, DC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dry As a Bone / Rehab Doll (Audio CD)
This CD captures the early days of the Seattle "grunge" scene, which to me was just a hybird of metal and punk, infused with a 70s rock ideal (see classic Van Halen or The Stooges). Needless to say, in the late 80s and early 90s, this was refreshing stuff. Green River features members of Muhdhoney and Pearl Jam, but the music definitely sounds more like what Mudhoney would later produce. If you're a fan of later Pearl Jam recordings, don't purchase this on the grounds that PJ members were in it. But if you like sloppy, rocking, and heavy guitar rock, this is definitely for you.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I don't who invented "grunge", but this is still great stuff,
By
This review is from: Dry As a Bone / Rehab Doll (Audio CD)
Green River ... just the band's name alone conjures up fond memories for those who were there and for those of us who wish we had been there.Except possibly for the (early) Melvins, Green River was the most inventive hybrid hard rock band on certainly the Seattle scene, if not on the national scene. These two recordings, especially taken together, are sopping wet with ominous, threatening, in-your-face aggression and doom and gloom. Rife with both filthy punk vitriol and over the top 70's heavy metal pomposity, both mini-albums assualt the listener mercilessly, from one second to the next, literally. Steeped in what sound like Hells' Angels-esque Black Sabbath and Motorhead tributory (and celebratory) riffs, and with enough pent-up and pumped-up blues angst to make John Lee Hooker's head spin, you might wonder what twisted, demented roadhouse these boys crawled out of. There is so much darkness and mayhem within each song, it is almost overwhelming. After all, what could you expect from a group named after the fog-shrouded spawning ground of America's most prolific serial killer? "This Town" is almost amazing in itself. It should be Green River's aural manifesto, had it not been for the preceding EP "Come on Down". As such, it is full of what made this band so great - the unrelenting, complex (for a garage band) melding of punk, metal, and white boy blues. Mark Arm has never sounded so angry and suicidal. "P.C.C" is overblown metal at its best. The lyrics are disturbing and comical at the same time. "Ozzie" is a stroke of genius. From the quirky opening sample of what sounds like some 1940's Humphrey Bogart film to Arm's ear-numbing werewolf impersonations, it is a testament to the band's disturbingly skewed take on the art of rock n roll, as they try to get into the head of the serial murderer who had just started to gain infamy in 1980's Seattle. Great solo, too. "Unwind" is without a doubt the most original blues update I have ever heard from any group of guys of European-American descent. What starts as an apparent tongue-in-cheek blues reference smolders and then detonates with Arm's decapitated growl. Stone Gossard is absolutely brilliant throughout this CD, and this track especially is his showcase. Amazing. "Forever Means" is probably my favorite Green River song. This one track is probably the pinnacle of everything the band stood for - all of the rock hybridization that would become synonymous with early 90's Seattle rolled seamlessly into 4 minutes and 20 seconds of screeching, cathartic, buzzsaw bliss. Nihilistic rock at its finest. Absolutely incredible. "Swallow My Pride" is almost just as good, with a sexy female vocal to boot. One of the best songs of personal and sexual alienation I have ever heard. "Porkfist" is perhaps what Motorhead would have sounded like if they traded the moors of England for the evergreen forests of the Pac Northwest. Jeff's inventive, proto-funky bass lines keep this one thrumming and thumping. Sounds like early Soundgarden, or should that be the other way around? (No disrespect to Soundgarden, also one of the greatest, or to their fans). The rest of the tracks are not as groundbreaking, but still distortion pedals full of fun. Stone and Bruce's (Fairweather) guitars blister white hot, churning up the air like a chainsaw blade. Mark screams bloody murder lyrics like no one else before or after him, making Johnny Rotten and Stiv Bators nearly pale in comparison. Jeff's bass is unobtrusive on all the tracks, but really shines on the above, as well as "Take a Dive". So, no. Mudhoney or Pearl Jam this most assuredly is not. For a start, Green River was much more complex musically and interesting than Arm's later aspirations and is far more punky and aggressive than PJ. This is is rock history on laser-inscribed plastic and it is a great, great listen from start to finish. Hugely influential and original at the time, the band's members took chunks of Green River with them. Mark brought the aggression, attitude, "grunge", and atonal catterwalling to Mudhoney. Stone and Jeff brought their complex craftsmanship, impeccable teamwork, and adoration of 70's rock to Mother Love Bone, and later - you guessed it - to a little ol' band some of us have heard of called Pearl Jam.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Good CD but Most of the Tracks Are Mislabeled,
By
This review is from: Dry As A Bone/Rehab Doll (MP3 Download)
I usually oppose giving bad ratings for the product as opposed to the music but Amazon screwed up on this one. Its a good CD (a compilation of what is essentially the earliest recordings of the grunge movement) but all of the tracks that have the artist listed as "Soundgarden" are actually either bonus tracks or from the Dry as a Bone half of the CD. Check it out, but Amazon, fix the screw-ups.
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