Photo Courtesy of Eddie Vedder   
 Take one warbling baritone and add the melodic plucking of the Aloha  State’s favorite instrument and what do you get? As one may (easily)  guess, Eddie Vedder’s Ukulele Songs, released May 31, is a compilation  of 16 tracks including Pearl Jam covers, unreleased songs from the past  decade and a select few uke essentials. Throughout this collection,  Vedder examines love, life, and loss all through the petite lens of the  ukulele and does so with genuine charm.  
 For those of you familiar with Pearl Jam’s big and mighty alt-rock  sound, Eddie Vedder’s monogamous relationship with such an itsy-bitsy  instrument may come as a surprise but, as has been said, the best  surprises come in small packages and the surfer-singer-songwriter wields  this little baby with the finesse and ease that makes this album  perfect for summer days, camp-fire nights and lingering post-memorial  day tans.  
  Photo: Getty Images   
 For those of you turned off by Vedder’s softer sound, worry not.  Though  Eddie is employing a smaller weapon, he has not quit riding the  big  waves but is simply holding still enough to enjoy the sounds of   crashing waves and the oscillation of his hammock, a nice break for the   part time Pearl Jam frontman, part time solo artist and full time   quietly wounded king of manly heartbreak. Perhaps one of the best aspects of this collection is the stark   contrast between the lightness of the ukulele and the gravelly texture   of Eddie’s Voice. Eddie’s celebrated croon grounds the ethereal sound of  the ukulele so that the whole thing doesn’t fly away in the beach  breeze. It is not just the mai-tai flavored summer sound oozing from these   tracks that make the timing of this release ideal, but in a year that   could be called Pearl Jam Palooza (tour, documentary, reissue and   festival) this album seems like the perfect party favor a decade’s worth   of faithful fans Though the title clearly warns listeners, Ukulele Songs does  not  present audiences with much musical diversity, and this pigeonholed   niche is both freeing and isolating for Eddie. 35 minutes alone with   Eddie and his feelings might be overkill for some, but there is no   denying that the seamless and flowing progression of the featured tracks   makes this album incredibly listenable.