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Temple of the Dog

Temple of the Dog

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Artist: Temple Of The Dog
Label: A&M
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $9.97
You Save: $4.01 (29%)



New (38) Used (78) Collectible (5) from $1.25

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 126 reviews
Sales Rank: 2741

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 5350
UPC: 750215350222
EAN: 0075021535022
ASIN: B000002GJH

Release Date: April 16, 1991
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Say Hello 2 Heaven
  • Reach Down
  • Hunger Strike
  • Pushin Forward Back - Temple of the Dog, Gossard, Stone
  • Call Me a Dog
  • Times of Trouble - Temple of the Dog, Gossard, Stone
  • Wooden Jesus
  • Your Saviour
  • Four Walled World - Temple of the Dog, Gossard, Stone
  • All Night Thing

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
This 1991 Seattle supergroup brought together Chris Cornell and Matt Cameron of Soundgarden with the surviving members of Mother Love Bone (Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard) and Eddie Vedder, later of Pearl Jam. The experiment worked. Cornell shines, seeming more comfortable here on this tribute to his former roommate and deceased MLB lead singer Andrew Wood than with his own band. "Hunger Strike" and "Say Hello 2 Heaven" combine glam and grunge better than anything in Love Bone's catalog, while "Wooden Jesus" is less didactic than anything in Pearl Jam's oeuvre. Most of the songs may be about loss and addiction, but this is compelling music for black days. --Charles R. Cross


Customer Reviews:   Read 121 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Ageless classic   August 25, 2008
Well this cd is like an old peice of cheese it just gets better as time goes on. Or something like that Lemmy Kilmister once said...... But any way who can forget Chris Cornell and Eddy Vedder sort of Soundgarden meets Pearl Jam experience!!!!!!! Well It just basically is Pearl Jam with Chris Cornell lead vocals.... And who could possibly hate that???????? Inspired by the death of his Roomate Andy Wood , Cornell delivers with a masterpiece "Say Hello To Heaven"


4 out of 5 stars "Love was my drug but that's not what I died of."   May 28, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Although numerous journalists, reviewers and aficionados have a penchant for dubbing Temple of the Dog the finest album that either Chris Cornell or Eddie Vedder have ever worked on, there lies an element of misguided truth in all the bluster.

Temple of the Dog is not a difficult album to love. It showcases much of what is great about the musicians involved (Soundgarden's singer Cornell and drummer Matt Cameron; and Pearl Jam's guitarist Stone Gossard, bassist Jeff Ament, lead guitarist Mike McCready and singer Vedder), and perhaps that which is unfortunately conspicuous by its absence or under-use in each band's catalogue.

The album is a requiem of sorts to Andy Wood - former roommate of Cornell and frontman for Mother Love Bone, of which Gossard and Ament were both members. Wood's death of a heroin overdose on the eve of the release of MLB's much-vaunted debut album Apple in 1990, is seen as something of a watershed moment for the burgeoning Seattle scene - the loss of an illusory innocence for the scene itself, a wake-up call for some (and sadly not others), and precipitating the birth of Pearl Jam.

The opening two tracks, `Say Hello 2 Heaven' and the epic `Reach Down' are the two that most apparently recall Wood in both a sensitive and luminous light, with the latter giving Mike McCready free-reign to solo for over 4 minutes continuously in what was effectively his debut professional recording. Similarly, `Hunger Strike' gave Vedder his debut lead vocal recording, combining with Cornell in a duet of two of their generation's finest and most distinctive voices.

Stylistically, the album sails closer to the MLB psychedelic/funk/glam-metal than any Soundgarden or Pearl Jam record has and is a refreshing counterpoint to each band's signature sound. The album is not an ode to Wood per se - with Cornell discoursing on many subjects found in his Soundgarden lyrics: the natural world and encroaching modernity and industrialisation (`Pushin Forward Back'), social inequality (the hit `Hunger Strike') and Christian evangelism (`Wooden Jesus') alongside tracks that are obliquely about Wood (`Call Me A Dog' and `Times of Trouble'), with Cornell's most graceful and sophisticated ballad (`All Night Thing') closing the proceedings.

Temple of the Dog is an album and a project however, that prospered as a result of circumstance and timing. Had Pearl Jam's debut `Ten' already have been released when this album was conceived, the impression is that it would not have been anywhere near as good. As such, Temple is a collaborative effort guided by Cornell's vision and NOT a supergroup as some would posit - there were no particular time restraints or pressures placed on the musicians; no egos to be kept in check and most importantly no subconscious attempts to out-manoeuvre each other. As Ament concludes in the liner notes, "no analyzing. No pressure. No hype. Just music to make music. Friends and a reason."



5 out of 5 stars ESSENTIAL GRUNGE CLASSIC....   April 29, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

In Seattle, the grunge movement had already gone underway a few years before it was made a national phenomemnon in the early nineties. These earlier years of the Seattle scene were alot less produced, and alot more underground sounding. Also, they scream in a lot of ways about flipping off the establishment and embracing the demons and not to mention, are excellent records. Many names on the scene at this time went on to bigger and better successes once the ball got rolling, but one of the big names in Seattle before the grunge boom was a band called Mother Love Bone. Their ride was cut short when lead singer met an all to common demise in '91.
When the scene boomed, it was apparent to many that a tribute needed to be payed to the man, and his contributions to the scene in general. The remaining members of the band put this one together, with a few of their friends from Soundgarden, and an up and comer at the time, Eddie Vedder.
I'm sure many have heard the song HUNGER STRIKE on the radio, as it still continues to get frequent radio play, but the rest of this album is an absolute classic, with song for song being a collection of hidden gems.
The album is a good line between the early grunge scene and the scene that became a huge commercial success. I recommend this to anyone who is new to bands like Soundgarden and Pearl Jam etc. and I also recommend going back a ways to bands like Mother Love Bone and any of the above bands albums before 1991. You will notice that a lot of them are a lot more free spirited, and I always see this album as one that ushered in some darker days... but thats what made grunge popular in the first place, no? A must have for alternative and grunge fans... Temple of The Dog.



5 out of 5 stars An Extremely Intense Album   April 27, 2008
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Temple of the Dog was a one-off project put together with members of Soundgarden (Chris Cornell, Matt Cameron) and a group of of musicians who soon became known as Pearl Jam (Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard, Mike McCready and singer Eddie Vedder). Singer Chris Cornell wrote much of the lyrics and music, making him a dominant force on this release.

The album and this project came about because it was inspired by friend/ex-Mother Love Bone singer Andrew Wood (who was a former friend/roommate and band mate to these musicians, but died of an overdose). So the album contains very insightful, powerful and emotional ballads like "Say Hello 2 Heaven" and "Hunger Strike", which show the mourning over their friend. The sizzling guitar solos and tracks along with Cornell's powerful slightly off-pitched vocals make this an extremely intense album.



4 out of 5 stars two words: chris cornell   July 13, 2007
 5 out of 6 found this review helpful

Even though Temple of the Dog began as a tribute side project in the memory of Andrew Wood and only put out one studio album, it is definitely worth listening to - especially if you dig Mr. Chris Cornell, formerly of Soundgarden and Audioslave or simply just the grunge of the early nineties, since Sir Eddie Vedder has a hand in this symphony as well...

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