5 Surprising Facts About Pearl Jam’s ‘Vs.’

Pearl Jam’s Vs. exploded into the world in October 1993 with zero music videos, maximum riffs, and one very intense goat on the cover. It spent five weeks at #1 on the Billboard 200 and sold nearly a million copies in its first five days—without a single TV performance or interview blitz. Raw, restless, and recorded with something to prove, Vs. became everything a second album can be and more. Here are five lesser-known facts about the record that gave us “Daughter,” “Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town,” and a lot of unfiltered emotion.

1. The goat on the cover? That’s not just a goat.
The black-and-white angora goat on the cover was photographed by bassist Jeff Ament at a farm in Montana. It became more than a striking image—it symbolized how the band felt at the time: boxed in, under pressure, and restless. Ament later said, “We were slaves,” which might explain the goat’s fence and gaze. The cover perfectly captured the tension of a band pushing back against the machine. One fun fact: early pressings featured no album title—just the goat.

2. Drummer Dave Abbruzzese wrote the riff to “Go”—on an acoustic guitar.
Pearl Jam’s hardest-hitting track on Vs. started not with a guitar hero solo, but with a drummer and an acoustic. Dave Abbruzzese came up with the main riff to “Go” during a jam session, and the band built it up from there. Stone Gossard added the siren-like guitar line, and Mike McCready later threw his Telecaster on the ground after his solo, which can be heard in the final recording. It was wild, spontaneous, and a perfect example of how the band worked as a unit. Also, Vedder once joked the lyrics were about his pickup truck.

3. They skipped music videos—and still made history.
After “Jeremy” became an MTV staple, Pearl Jam stepped away from the spotlight. They released Vs. with no music videos, no interviews, and very little traditional promotion. Still, the album sold more copies in five days than any other album in SoundScan history at the time. For five years, it held the crown for fastest-selling album of all time. Fans leaned fully into the music—and the band delivered.

4. “Daughter” topped charts with a drum kit made of just three pieces.
The song’s smooth acoustic groove came together in an unexpected way. Producer Brendan O’Brien suggested simplifying Dave Abbruzzese’s drum setup for the recording. He played with only a 26-inch kick drum, snare, and 18-inch floor tom—no tom fills, no flashy cymbals. The result was a crisp, dynamic beat that let the song breathe and soar. It became Pearl Jam’s biggest rock radio hit at the time.

5. The album came close to being titled Five Against One.
Before Vs. received its final name, the band planned to title the album Five Against One, a lyric from “Animal.” The phrase reflected the inner and outer tensions of making the record—bandmates versus expectations, individual versus industry. Even the cassette versions had “Five Against One” printed on them before the name changed. Eventually, they landed on Vs., a nod to the broader conflicts woven through the songs. The title matched the fire in the music perfectly.

So the next time you hear Vs, remember the powerful, goat-staring, drum-smashing, camera-free statement. Pearl Jam stepped forward with a bold sound and a clear message: music, on their own terms.