Birds in Hell wrote:I was being genuine! These dudes were really something.Farmer John wrote:Yeah, we heard you guys the first thousand times.
...and they're still kind of alright.
Birds in Hell wrote:I was being genuine! These dudes were really something.Farmer John wrote:Yeah, we heard you guys the first thousand times.
Vitalogist wrote:As a hotel manager, you can imagine the amount of beige I’ve seen in my career.
dimejinky99 wrote: Hang on I check on my Grindr
Good question. I got into Pearl Jam when I was 11 (early 1995), so a lot of these kinds of songs weren't really out there then. Growing up listening to the band, I don't think I was ever aware of whether or not a song was "on the fringe" or anything like that--I would be thrown by one every once in a while, but for the most part they were all just songs that I either liked or I didn't. But yeah, my "of all time" list would definitely look a lot different, probably tending towards the more familiar material. Along the way a lot of those songs have been tied into social and cultural moments that have given them long-term relevance for me. But at the moment, these are the songs that I find myself getting most genuinely excited about, musically. A lot of my listening over the past few years has tended jazzy, so I think I'm most captivated by the songs that seem just slightly off-kilter ("Evacuation," "Cropduster," "Moonlight"), or that manipulate melody in a way that feels quizzical and bold without sacrificing beauty ("Strangest Tribe," "Parachutes"). A great (very "Stone") moment is the end of the chorus to "Strangest Tribe," when Eddie draws that long i sound out and ends on that slightly wayward major chord--I love that, it surprises me every time, and leaves the tone of the song in an entirely different place than where it began. I'd liken it to when someone you know is driving you somewhere, but won't tell you where. You're familiar with the layout of the town, so as you ride along, you begin making educated guesses, to the point where you're certain you've figured out where you're going, and then the person drives you into the parking lot of some awesome place you had completely forgotten existed. A lot of the songs on this list have moments like that.stip wrote:there's only 3 of these songs i'd even give 4 stars to. I do not mean this dismissively in the slightest if it sounds like that, but were you attracted to the more marginal songs (in terms of the kinds of songs PJ writes/plays/etc) from the beginning or has that shifted over time?Kevin Davis wrote:Right now, at this particular moment in time?
Around the Bend
No Way
Evacuation
Cropduster
Rival
Sleight of Hand
In the Moonlight
Strangest Tribe
Man of the Hour
Parachutes
Daughter is definitely in my top 10, probably top 5.Birds in Hell wrote:Tremor Christ
Evacuation
Hail, Hail
Rearviewmirror
Last Exit
Faithfull
Animal
Brain of J.
Sleight of Hand
In the Moonlight
Daughter
While a Western guitar motif lost on the swings drum bass fusion, get your own thoughts into the subconscious often forgotten. "Pendulum" is a sweeping soul from the ballast.