Review
Matt Cameron
Cavedweller

Dine Alone (2017) Kevin Fitzpatrick

Matt Cameron – Cavedweller cover artwork
Matt Cameron – Cavedweller — Dine Alone, 2017

Matt Cameron has long been the kind of drummer that most drummers wish they were. Seemingly able to play anything - to bounce from project-to-project with nary a blurred line. In short, Matt Cameron knows his shit. 

It would be fair to say that despite being the drummer for Pearl Jam since 1998, Cameron will forever be inexorably linked to Soundgarden. A band synonymous with both a sound and a city. So now that Soundgarden has become tragically a thing of the past, what’s a drummer to do but release a solo album?

It would easy (and lazy) to assume that Cavedweller is any kind of response to the circumstances of earlier this year, but this album has been in the works for years. Maybe even decades, with ideas gone unused in Wellwater Conspiracy and Hater.

And ideas seem to be what Cameron is full of. And like any great architect he has the skills to bring these ideas to fruition. Enlisting what was essentially David Bowie’s final backing band, Cameron sticks mainly to vocal and guitar duties and it’s on tracks like “Blind” and “Through the Ceiling” that you can hear Camerons true voice, giving promise to what’s ahead in the years to come.

Tracks like “All At Once” and “Unnecessary” shine with a glossy 70’s rock sheen that could just as easily sound at home on a Taylor Hawkins solo album. It’s the mixture of depth and levity throughout that really gives the album some weight, stamina and girth. 

Matt Cameron – Cavedweller cover artwork
Matt Cameron – Cavedweller — Dine Alone, 2017

Related news

Matt Cameron Forms Jazz-Trio

Posted in Bands on July 3, 2008

Recently-posted album reviews

Painkiller

The Great God Pan
Tzadik (2025)

Painkiller, the trio of John Zorn, Bill Laswell, and Mick Harris shows no signs of slowing down. The Great God Pan is their third full-length, since their reunion in 2024, and in many ways it is an unexpected offering. In keeping with their interests in the metaphysical realm, Painkiller find inspiration from the famed Arthur Machen horror novella. Here, the … Read more

Painkiller

The Equinox
Tzadik (2025)

Painkiller sees three absolute masters of extreme music join forces. John Zorn of Naked City and a billion other projects, Mick Harris who transcended from Napalm Death drummer to illbient guru with Scorn, and producer extraordinaire Bill Laswell. Their first two records, Guts of a Virgin and Buried Secrets are strange meditations traversing between free-jazz, grindcore and dub. Still hungry … Read more

Dauber

Falling Down
Recess (2025)

The lazy approach would be to call Dauber "ex-Screaming Females," but that barely scratches the surface. If I had to pick one band to namedrop a comparison to, it would be labelmates Night Court. They play a familiar style but with a lot of quirks that set it apart from the genre standard-bearers. It's driving and energetic -- more importantly, … Read more