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Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Tue February 18, 2025 2:24 pm
by Sloppy Dupree
Maybe Questlove should replace Matt C.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Tue February 18, 2025 5:08 pm
by Hatfield
96583UP wrote:Ed also gave a shoutout to Questlove but not Captain Kirk who was carrying the tunes and way more prominent
Kirk didn't nail Waiting and was okay for most of Corduroy, but he was holding it all in for that ending. :shock:

Ed wrote quite the jam vehicle. I imagine lots of guitarist would love to play over that ending.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Wed February 19, 2025 9:17 pm
by worldwithyourheart
heard Won't Tell recently at a Starbucks in downtown Atlanta

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 1:12 am
by 96583UP
Sloppy Dupree wrote:Maybe Questlove should replace Matt C.
ha you spelled Dave A with a Q and some other letters

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 1:12 am
by 96583UP
Hatfield wrote:
96583UP wrote:Ed also gave a shoutout to Questlove but not Captain Kirk who was carrying the tunes and way more prominent
Kirk didn't nail Waiting and was okay for most of Corduroy, but he was holding it all in for that ending. :shock:

Ed wrote quite the jam vehicle. I imagine lots of guitarist would love to play over that ending.
it is a good jam vehicle indeed

if Ed would simply honor the original bridge

there would be no more land war in eastern europe

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 5:40 pm
by scrub12
Bill Burr talked about sitting next to Ed at the SNL show and how nice he was on his podcast this week.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 7:15 pm
by Sloppy Dupree
scrub12 wrote:Bill Burr talked about sitting next to Ed at the SNL show and how nice he was on his podcast this week.
That’s funny. I mostly know Burt’s joke about how Eddie pretended to hate being famous.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 8:00 pm
by 96583UP
Ed loves cash

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 9:18 pm
by scrub12
Sloppy Dupree wrote:
scrub12 wrote:Bill Burr talked about sitting next to Ed at the SNL show and how nice he was on his podcast this week.
That’s funny. I mostly know Burt’s joke about how Eddie pretended to hate being famous.
He said he told Ed he hated him because Pearl Jam made all his favorite metal bands disappear but he eventually came around to the band. Ed just laughed and said he was happy he came around on the band before asking what metal bands he liked.

Think he called Ed “the sweetest guy.”

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 9:28 pm
by wease
scrub12 wrote:
Sloppy Dupree wrote:
scrub12 wrote:Bill Burr talked about sitting next to Ed at the SNL show and how nice he was on his podcast this week.
That’s funny. I mostly know Burt’s joke about how Eddie pretended to hate being famous.
He said he told Ed he hated him because Pearl Jam made all his favorite metal bands disappear but he eventually came around to the band. Ed just laughed and said he was happy he came around on the band before asking what metal bands he liked.

Think he called Ed “the sweetest guy.”
Who were his favorite metal bands?

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 9:52 pm
by Birds in Hell
It doesn't make a lot of sense, it was primarily the glam/hair metal stuff that fell out of favour in the early 90s (maybe that's what Bill Burr was really into!) but that process was happening long before Pearl Jam really hit it big.

In many ways, Pearl Jam were pretty late to the party and closer to riding the already-existing alternative wave, like Stone Temple Pilots etc. Bands like Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Living Colour and Soundgarden were already releasing successful major label records in the late 80s and Nevermind was an absolute smash in 1991 and hit number one on the Billboard charts in January 1992 (famously displacing Michael Jackson), a time when Pearl Jam were still playing small clubs and bars in Europe and playing third down the bill to RHCP.

I don't think it was until later in 1992 things really started to pick up steam for the band: MTV Unplugged aired in May that year, the Lollapalooza tour started in July and the Jeremy single/video came out in August. By that stage, any transition away from hair metal was already well underway.

Anyway, it was probably just a way for Burr to break the ice.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Thu February 20, 2025 10:35 pm
by 96583UP
i wonder if Burr ever had big metal hair

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 11:57 am
by stip
Birds in Hell wrote:It doesn't make a lot of sense, it was primarily the glam/hair metal stuff that fell out of favour in the early 90s (maybe that's what Bill Burr was really into!) but that process was happening long before Pearl Jam really hit it big.

In many ways, Pearl Jam were pretty late to the party and closer to riding the already-existing alternative wave, like Stone Temple Pilots etc. Bands like Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Living Colour and Soundgarden were already releasing successful major label records in the late 80s and Nevermind was an absolute smash in 1991 and hit number one on the Billboard charts in January 1992 (famously displacing Michael Jackson), a time when Pearl Jam were still playing small clubs and bars in Europe and playing third down the bill to RHCP.

I don't think it was until later in 1992 things really started to pick up steam for the band: MTV Unplugged aired in May that year, the Lollapalooza tour started in July and the Jeremy single/video came out in August. By that stage, any transition away from hair metal was already well underway.

Anyway, it was probably just a way for Burr to break the ice.
Pearl Jam was the latest of the big 4 to break (and mother love bone wasnt going to kill hair metal), but they rapidly eclipsed Nirvana at the time, and when pearl jam gets really big you reach that critical mass of cultural dominance that dethrones the hair metal genre. nirvana breaks through. pearl jam and nirvana elevate things from a scene/niche to cultural juggernaut that transcends just one super popular band

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 11:58 am
by stip
eclipsed in the US

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 12:56 pm
by Sloppy Dupree
96583UP wrote:
Sloppy Dupree wrote:Maybe Questlove should replace Matt C.
ha you spelled Dave A with a Q and some other letters
Dave A was definitely great. He’s my number two after Jack. Sorry, Matt.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 1:44 pm
by lecherouslittlestump
stip wrote:
Birds in Hell wrote:It doesn't make a lot of sense, it was primarily the glam/hair metal stuff that fell out of favour in the early 90s (maybe that's what Bill Burr was really into!) but that process was happening long before Pearl Jam really hit it big.

In many ways, Pearl Jam were pretty late to the party and closer to riding the already-existing alternative wave, like Stone Temple Pilots etc. Bands like Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Living Colour and Soundgarden were already releasing successful major label records in the late 80s and Nevermind was an absolute smash in 1991 and hit number one on the Billboard charts in January 1992 (famously displacing Michael Jackson), a time when Pearl Jam were still playing small clubs and bars in Europe and playing third down the bill to RHCP.

I don't think it was until later in 1992 things really started to pick up steam for the band: MTV Unplugged aired in May that year, the Lollapalooza tour started in July and the Jeremy single/video came out in August. By that stage, any transition away from hair metal was already well underway.

Anyway, it was probably just a way for Burr to break the ice.
Pearl Jam was the latest of the big 4 to break (and mother love bone wasnt going to kill hair metal), but they rapidly eclipsed Nirvana at the time, and when pearl jam gets really big you reach that critical mass of cultural dominance that dethrones the hair metal genre. nirvana breaks through. pearl jam and nirvana elevate things from a scene/niche to cultural juggernaut that transcends just one super popular band
bush was way bigger than nirvana and Pj combined (and probably still is). At one point in the 90s they estimated 70% of the US population owned a copy of Sixteen Stone

In 2025 Pj can barely sell out an EU tour and bush is playing stadiums globally

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 2:19 pm
by McParadigm
stip wrote:mother love bone wasnt going to kill hair metal
Of all the goofy ahistorical fables that rock ‘n’ roll tells about itself, “Nirvana killed hair metal/saved rock ‘n’ roll“ is by far the lamest. Please include a trigger warning.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 2:25 pm
by tragabigzanda
pearl jam sucks now

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 6:49 pm
by blueviper
lecherouslittlestump wrote:
stip wrote:
Birds in Hell wrote:It doesn't make a lot of sense, it was primarily the glam/hair metal stuff that fell out of favour in the early 90s (maybe that's what Bill Burr was really into!) but that process was happening long before Pearl Jam really hit it big.

In many ways, Pearl Jam were pretty late to the party and closer to riding the already-existing alternative wave, like Stone Temple Pilots etc. Bands like Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Living Colour and Soundgarden were already releasing successful major label records in the late 80s and Nevermind was an absolute smash in 1991 and hit number one on the Billboard charts in January 1992 (famously displacing Michael Jackson), a time when Pearl Jam were still playing small clubs and bars in Europe and playing third down the bill to RHCP.

I don't think it was until later in 1992 things really started to pick up steam for the band: MTV Unplugged aired in May that year, the Lollapalooza tour started in July and the Jeremy single/video came out in August. By that stage, any transition away from hair metal was already well underway.

Anyway, it was probably just a way for Burr to break the ice.
Pearl Jam was the latest of the big 4 to break (and mother love bone wasnt going to kill hair metal), but they rapidly eclipsed Nirvana at the time, and when pearl jam gets really big you reach that critical mass of cultural dominance that dethrones the hair metal genre. nirvana breaks through. pearl jam and nirvana elevate things from a scene/niche to cultural juggernaut that transcends just one super popular band
bush was way bigger than nirvana and Pj combined (and probably still is). At one point in the 90s they estimated 70% of the US population owned a copy of Sixteen Stone

In 2025 Pj can barely sell out an EU tour and bush is playing stadiums globally
Spotify
Bush: 3.9M monthly listeners

Pearl Jam: 14.3M monthly listeners

ok.

Re: Random Pearl Jam References

Posted: Fri February 21, 2025 11:47 pm
by Birds in Hell
tragabigzanda wrote:
Birds in Hell wrote:It doesn't make a lot of sense, it was primarily the glam/hair metal stuff that fell out of favour in the early 90s (maybe that's what Bill Burr was really into!) but that process was happening long before Pearl Jam really hit it big.

In many ways, Pearl Jam were pretty late to the party and closer to riding the already-existing alternative wave, like Stone Temple Pilots etc. Bands like Jane's Addiction, Faith No More, Living Colour and Soundgarden were already releasing successful major label records in the late 80s and Nevermind was an absolute smash in 1991 and hit number one on the Billboard charts in January 1992 (famously displacing Michael Jackson), a time when Pearl Jam were still playing small clubs and bars in Europe and playing third down the bill to RHCP.

I don't think it was until later in 1992 things really started to pick up steam for the band: MTV Unplugged aired in May that year, the Lollapalooza tour started in July and the Jeremy single/video came out in August. By that stage, any transition away from hair metal was already well underway.

Anyway, it was probably just a way for Burr to break the ice.
Not a big deal, but STP was formed in 1989.
That's true but they weren't signed to a label until April 1992, very much part of the post-Nevermind, 'alternative goldrush' era.

Anyway, here's a bunch of kids wearing brand new Nirvana shirts attending the Sydney Big Day Out in January 1992, four months after the album's release - and Krist Novoselic directly asked about the album's meteoric success: