Soundgarden - Superunknown (20th Anniversary) (1994) [MP3]
- Category Music
- Type MP3
- Language English
- Total size 141.8 MB
- Uploaded By z0test0
- Downloads 516
- Last checked 9 hours ago
- Date uploaded 2 years ago
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Quote:
By early 1994, however, the playing field had changed considerably: Though Pearl Jam were still the most popular rock band in America, they were actively trying to be the least visible one, declaring a moratorium on videos and interviews in an orchestrated (and ultimately successful) campaign to kill their own hype. Nirvana, likewise, were in the midst of a similar retreat, and though their story had yet to reach its tragic conclusion, ominous warning signs were in the air. But as a band that enjoyed a steadier ascent than their flannelled friendsâand whose records got progressively better after jumping to a majorâSoundgarden didnât seem so conflicted about success. Their response to the Seattle-scene media storm wasnât to try to avoid it, but transcend it, and embrace the opportunity to, for a moment, become the biggest band in the land.
Usually, itâs a bad sign when the wild-child frontman of your favorite group cuts his hair and starts wearing shirts. But the clean-cut Cornell that emerged with Superunknown was emblematic of the albumâs mission to deliver maximal effect with minimal histrionics. With its despairing worldview, gold-plated production, and CD-stuffing 71-minute running time, Superunknown is a quintessential â90s artifact. But thanks to its still-formidable high-wire balance of hooks and heft, the album nonetheless represents, some 20 years later, the platonic ideal of what a mainstream hard rock record should be. And even if thatâs an ideal to which few contemporary bands aspire (aside from, say, Queens of the Stone Age), Superunknown remains a useful model for any left-of-center artist hoping to achieve accessibility without sacrificing identity.
For Soundgarden, the push toward pop was the result of incremental evolutions rather than a spectacular leap. Where Badmotorfinger introduced flashes of psychedelia and paisley-patterned melody amid Kim Thayilâs pulverizing riffage, on Superunknown, these elements become featured attractions. The once-oblique John Lennon references gave way to unabashed homageâcenterpiece power ballad âBlack Hole Sunâ is pretty much âLucy in the Sky With Diamondsâ turned upside down and dropped in a heap of soot and coal. That song counts as Superunknownâs most wanton act of subversionâsetting its apocalyptic imagery to a tune so pretty, even Paul Anka can dig itâbut if that element of surprise has been diluted by two decades of perpetual rock-radio rotation, the album boasts a wealth of less celebrated deep cuts (the queasy psych-folk of âHead Down,â the dread-ridden doom of â4th of Julyâ) that retain a palpable sense of unease.
Even the albumâs eternal fist-pump anthemsââThe Day I Tried to Liveâ, âFell on Black Daysâ, âMy Waveââare infected with misanthropy and malaise, making Superunknown the rare arena-rock album that makes just as much sense in blacked-out bedroom. (And yet, despite the junkie intimations of its title, âSpoonmanâ is really just about a man who plays with spoons.) That said, if you donât hate the world now quite as much as did when you were 18, you may find yourself skipping over the leaden likes of âMailmanâ and âLimo Wreck,â while developing a newfound appreciation for how bassist Ben Shepherdâs India-inspired oddity, âHalfâ, injects a welcome dose of absurdity into the mix.
By fortuitous coincidence, Superunknown hit stores the same day as Nine Inch Nailsâ The Downward Spiral, an album boasting a similarly expansive scope and thematic framework, albeit approached from a drastically different set of influences (â80s new wave, goth, and electro as opposed to â60s classic rock). The connection between the two albums is strong enough that the two bands toured together in 1994 andâdespite some shit-talkinâ in the interimâare reuniting once again this summer for a joint-20th-anniversary jaunt. For casual Soundgarden fans who still own the record, a concert ticket may ultimately be a more efficient way of celebrating Superunknownâs birthday than by shelling out for this reissue (available in two-and five-CD box set iterations), whose bonus material mostly amounts to demos and rehearsal tapes that cast this epic album in a more normalizing light. However, you do develop a greater appreciation for the final product when you hear the ideas that got scrapped along the away or relegated to B-sides, like the dirgey embryonic arrangement of âFell on Black Daysâ (a.k.a. âBlack Days IIIâ), the free-form ambient stew of âJerry Garciaâs Fingerâ, and a club-friendly industrial funk mix of âSpoonmanâ by Steve Fisk that sounds like a test run for his beat-driven project Pigeonhed.
You also get a glimpse of the bandâs future course with a beautifully spare acoustic treatment of âLike Suicideâ that points the way to 1996âs more temperate Down on the Upside, the album that effectively triggered Soundgardenâs subsequent 13-year break-up. But then the go-for-broke, peak-conquering triumphalism of Superunknown was itself a harbinger that the writing was on the wall for this band at the time. When Cornell sings, âAlive in the superunknownâ on the albumâs acid-swirled title track, itâs both a valorous testament to Soundgardenâs last-gang-in-town fortitude and a telling prophecy of the uncertainty to come, with grungeâs early â90s stranglehold on alt-rock radio soon to be loosened by the emergence of pop-punk, Britpop, electronica, and nu-metal. But amid a musical landscape now splintered into infinite subgenres, Superunknown remains the very definition of no-qualifiers-required rockâa tombstone for a once-dominant aesthetic, perhaps, but also a solid, immovable mass that endures no matter how dramatically its surroundings have changed.
TRACKLIST
01 Let Me Drown
3 min 52 s - 277 kb/s
02 My Wave
5 min 12 s - 283 kb/s
03 Fell On Black Days
4 min 43 s - 282 kb/s
04 Mailman
4 min 26 s - 289 kb/s
05 Superunknown
5 min 6 s - 274 kb/s
06 Head Down
6 min 9 s - 275 kb/s
07 Black Hole Sun
5 min 18 s - 279 kb/s
08 Spoonman
4 min 6 s - 303 kb/s
09 Limo Wreck
5 min 48 s - 277 kb/s
10 The Day I Tried To Live
5 min 20 s - 274 kb/s
11 Kickstand
1 min 34 s - 295 kb/s
12 Fresh Tendrils
4 min 16 s - 276 kb/s
13 4th Of July
5 min 8 s - 289 kb/s
14 Half
2 min 14 s - 292 kb/s
15 Like Suicide (Album Version)
7 min 4 s - 276 kb/s
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Files:
Soundgarden - Superunknown (20th Anniversary) (1994) [MP3]- 01 - Let Me Drown.mp3 (7.7 MB)
- 02 - My Wave.mp3 (10.6 MB)
- 03 - Fell On Black Days.mp3 (9.5 MB)
- 04 - Mailman.mp3 (9.2 MB)
- 05 - Superunknown.mp3 (10.0 MB)
- 06 - Head Down.mp3 (12.1 MB)
- 07 - Black Hole Sun.mp3 (10.6 MB)
- 08 - Spoonman.mp3 (8.9 MB)
- 09 - Limo Wreck.mp3 (11.5 MB)
- 10 - The Day I Tried To Live.mp3 (10.5 MB)
- 11 - Kickstand.mp3 (3.3 MB)
- 12 - Fresh Tendrils.mp3 (8.4 MB)
- 13 - 4th Of July.mp3 (10.6 MB)
- 14 - Half.mp3 (4.7 MB)
- 15 - Like Suicide (Album Version).mp3 (13.9 MB)
- cover.jpg (239.0 KB)
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