Down On The Upside by Soundgarden

Down On The Upside

Soundgarden

1996

Down On The Upside is a Alt/Indie album by Soundgarden, originally released in 1996. On Gatefold: 76 pressings tracked, owned by 36 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Alt/Indie
  • Grunge
  • gritty
  • brooding
  • smoky

About

For a band that spent their career evolving—from the scrappy, noisy punk of debut album <i>Ultramega OK</i> to the metallic <i>Badmotorfinger</i> and more nuanced <i>Superunknown</i>—it’s no surprise that Soundgarden approached their fifth album looking to further experiment with their sound. <i>Down On the Upside</i> was, however, more a refinement of their approach on <i>Superunknown</i> than a radical reboot. While introducing instrumentation such as mandolin and mandola (the furious “Ty Cobb”), Rhodes piano (“Overfloater”), and Moog (“Applebite”), the trademark elements that catapulted <i>Superunknown</i> to mainstream acclaim—Chris Cornell’s anguished/angelic vocals and introspective lyrics; their ability to craft anthemic rock songs without compromising their artistic vision; their freewheeling approach to complicated time signatures—remained very much intact. Following the protracted sessions for <i>Superunknown</i> with producer Michael Beinhorn, the quartet opted to co-produce <i>Down On the Upside</i> with engineer Adam Kasper, favoring a rawer aesthetic over their laboriously crafted predecessor. The contrast between the LP’s more commercial moments is stark—while “Pretty Noose” (about an attractively packaged bad idea) and the “Black Hole Sun”-esque “Blow Up the Outside World” speak very much of a band au fait with commercial expectations, “Never the Machine Forever” (guitarist Kim Thayil’s sole contribution to the record) is a growling, aggressive throwback to the band’s earlier output; the downbeat, atmospheric “Applebite” drowns Cornell’s vocals in a distant haze; while “Never Named” is a two-and-a-half minute exercise in punk abandon. By the time Soundgarden released <i>Down On the Upside</i>—its title is taken from a line in the bluesy “Dusty”—popular music was in flux. The grunge scene of which they’d been designated figureheads was waning, due in no small part to the 1994 death of Kurt Cobain and disbanding of Nirvana, not to mention Alice In Chains’ absence due to vocalist Layne Staley’s drug addiction. Soundgarden too would break up while touring <i>Down On the Upside</i>, burned out by years of nonstop activity. Though they would reform in 2010, for more than a decade their fifth album stood as their swan song: a singular piece of work from a band that didn’t so much cater to the mainstream, but brought the mainstream to them.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Pretty Noose4:12
  2. 2Rhinosaur3:14
  3. 3Zero Chance4:18
  4. 4Dusty4:34
  5. 5Ty Cobb3:05
  6. 6Blow Up The Outside World5:46
  7. 7Burden In My Hand4:50
  8. 8Never Named2:28
  9. 9Applebite5:10
  10. 10Never The Machine Forever3:36
  11. 11Tighter & Tighter6:06
  12. 12No Attention4:27
  13. 13Switch Opens3:53
  14. 14Overfloater5:09
  15. 15An Unkind2:08
  16. 16Boot Camp2:59

Credits

Performers

36 collectors on Gatefold own this · 76 pressings tracked on Gatefold