Superunknown was a breakthrough in many ways. Not only did the album bring Soundgarden a new audience, it dramatically expanded their vision, as well as their accomplishments. If Down on the Upside initially seems a retreat from the grand, layered textures of Superunknown, let it sink in. The sound of Down on the Upside is certainly more immediate, but the band hasn't returned to the monstrous, unfocused wailing of Louder Than Love. Instead, they've retained their ambitious song structures, neo-psychedelic guitar textures, and winding melodies but haven't dressed them up with detailed production. Consequently, Down on the Upside is visceral as well as cerebral -- "Rhinosaur" goes for the gut, while "Pretty Noose" is updated, muscular prog rock. Down on the Upside is a deceptive album -- it might seem like nothing more than heavy metal, but a closer listen reveals that Soundgarden haven't tempered their ambitions at all. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track List
(try tracks 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,9,10,11,12 and 13)
Actually that is about the time I gave up tapes and started buying CDs. It doesn't mean someone is/young. For me - I had an extensive tape collection so I put off the updgrade for a CD player for quite a while. Maybe they truely meant this was their first CD purchase, not their first music purchase of any kind.
Actually, "bona" didn't say that he or she bought it when it was new--people actually buy cd's years after they come out--crazy concept, huh? The person would only be 12 if they bought the cd when it came out in '96. Why do I have to explain this stuff to people?