Seven O'Clock

General Pearl Jam discussion.
Post Reply

Rate Seven O'Clock

5 Stars
79
44%
4 Stars
63
35%
3 Stars
23
13%
2 Stars
7
4%
1 Star
6
3%
 
Total votes: 178

reconstruction_ seeds
Broken Tamborine
Posts: 262
Joined: Fri March 06, 2020 5:59 am
Location: South Bend IN

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by reconstruction_ seeds »

cutuphalfdead wrote:With or Without You is a fantastic song and 7:00 is nothing like it.
You're right that it sounds nothing like With or Without You but it beats the holy hell out of that sappy bastard.
"Time to take leave all formal functions"
User avatar
blueviper
Rank This Poster
Posts: 4133
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 2:03 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by blueviper »

warehouse wrote:
Ms Harmless wrote:
Brett wrote:Why does Ed say hands twice in the "all hands on deck" line? Is it just because he thinks it fit the meter better that way. I think it would have been fine with one hands.
I don't know why Ed did it, but I like the effect of emphasis; the two phrases mean different things:

"this fucked up situation calls for all hands" = this calls for everyone, a whole community, even you

"...hands on deck" = so keep busy, focused on the work, put your back into it
i wonder if its a baseball reference. like even the people waiting to be up, its time. it does come across kinda awkward, but the meaning of the phrase, as you point out, makes the line mean something different.

im usually not big on analyzing lyrics, but ed is great on this album.

I think it comes more from a naval aspect with ships at sea. All hands on deck to help out with sails, rigging, etc. I could be wrong.
St. Louis (1998, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2022)
User avatar
tragabigzanda
Production Police
Posts: 51634
Joined: Tue September 24, 2013 5:56 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by tragabigzanda »

pearl jam sucks now
Last edited by tragabigzanda on Fri January 02, 2026 1:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Jorge
NYUCK NYUCK NYUCK
Posts: 36493
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 3:35 pm
Location: Buenos Aires

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Jorge »

DeeDee wrote:

The chorus reminds me of this song.
Haha wow I hear it
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
User avatar
Antelope
Banned from the Pit
Posts: 46
Joined: Thu March 19, 2020 9:20 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Antelope »

Ms Harmless wrote:
Brett wrote:Why does Ed say hands twice in the "all hands on deck" line? Is it just because he thinks it fit the meter better that way. I think it would have been fine with one hands.
I don't know why Ed did it, but I like the effect of emphasis; the two phrases mean different things:

"this fucked up situation calls for all hands" = this calls for everyone, a whole community, even you

"...hands on deck" = so keep busy, focused on the work, put your back into it
I agree with this. The first phrase is a statement of fact and the second is the actual call to action.
User avatar
evenslow
Stone's Bitch
Posts: 9164
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 6:47 pm
Location: unnamed mental hospital

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by evenslow »

Antelope wrote:
Ms Harmless wrote:
Brett wrote:Why does Ed say hands twice in the "all hands on deck" line? Is it just because he thinks it fit the meter better that way. I think it would have been fine with one hands.
I don't know why Ed did it, but I like the effect of emphasis; the two phrases mean different things:

"this fucked up situation calls for all hands" = this calls for everyone, a whole community, even you

"...hands on deck" = so keep busy, focused on the work, put your back into it
I agree with this. The first phrase is a statement of fact and the second is the actual call to action.
this makes sense.
Strat wrote:Alas, we are RM
reconstruction_ seeds
Broken Tamborine
Posts: 262
Joined: Fri March 06, 2020 5:59 am
Location: South Bend IN

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by reconstruction_ seeds »

This song, especially Ed's vocal delivery, definitely reminds me of 80's era Bette Midler.

Sorry, I just needed to make a crack at the 100 or so comparisons this song has gotten here.
"Time to take leave all formal functions"
User avatar
4/5
See you in another life, brother
Posts: 6985
Joined: Thu December 20, 2012 4:45 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by 4/5 »

I'm in love with this song.
"I want to see the whole picture--as nearly as I can. I don't want to put on the blinders of 'good and bad,' and limit my vision."-- In Dubious Battle

User avatar
dimejinky99
what on earth am I talking about
Posts: 39789
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 12:35 am

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by dimejinky99 »

I love this one. So much.
Calibrate your enthusiasm
RAG319
A Return To Form
Posts: 238
Joined: Tue August 21, 2018 6:51 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by RAG319 »

This song is weird. For the life of me, I can't tell what Stone does in the intro. All I hear is Mike's patented micro vibe/phaser stuff, drums and bass. But for a weird mid-tempo, slow burner with a whacky prog rock chorus...it's extremely listenable.
User avatar
Superblood Wolfmoon
AnalLog
Posts: 1867
Joined: Thu November 21, 2013 10:01 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Superblood Wolfmoon »

This one’s hitting hard on a Sunday night friends. I don’t know what more you could ask of these five human beings than a song as beautiful as this.
I'm trying real hard to be the shepherd.
Waverider
A Return To Form
Posts: 180
Joined: Mon July 01, 2013 6:57 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Waverider »

If I only had the moment of 4:38 - 5:15 of this song to listen to, My emotions would still continue to spin with wonderful feelings.
User avatar
dimejinky99
what on earth am I talking about
Posts: 39789
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 12:35 am

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by dimejinky99 »

The ‘chorus’ on this (is it a chorus?) really really brings back to me that line in long road ‘these night like wings have fallen’

Maybe just the melody or how it’s sung.

Is there any relationship in the lyrics I wonder
Calibrate your enthusiasm
User avatar
stip
The worst
Posts: 42946
Joined: Thu December 13, 2012 6:31 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by stip »

I quite like the way the more active verses and passive choruses (or alternate verses) are in tension with each other until the resolution in the outro
User avatar
Kevin Davis
tl;dr
Posts: 9312
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 6:06 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Kevin Davis »

I know that when people call this song Springsteen-esque they're referring to its verbosity and general delivery in the verses, which is something I definitely hear. But I also hear it in the chorus (or whatever it is) and the bridge, which are both extremely reminiscent of Magic-era Bruce; in fact there is one line ("there's still a fire in the engine room") that very directly recalls the melody and chord pattern to "Gypsy Biker" from that album, a simple but odd pairing that (I think) is made of a root major chord transitioning to the minor inversion of the fifth (most Western ears would be accustomed to hearing the fifth also as a major) -- so, C > Gm, for example. It's a slightly unsettling, very serious-sounding musical juxtaposition. Yet, with the rest of it, the lingering feel of that section is very gentle and comforting. One of my favorites on the album.
User avatar
Monkey_Driven
The Master
Posts: 28035
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 3:36 pm
Location: Mushroom Kingdom

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Monkey_Driven »

Kevin Davis wrote:I know that when people call this song Springsteen-esque they're referring to its verbosity and general delivery in the verses, which is something I definitely hear. But I also hear it in the chorus (or whatever it is) and the bridge, which are both extremely reminiscent of Magic-era Bruce; in fact there is one line ("there's still a fire in the engine room") that very directly recalls the melody and chord pattern to "Gypsy Biker" from that album, a simple but odd pairing that (I think) is made of a root major chord transitioning to the minor inversion of the fifth (most Western ears would be accustomed to hearing the fifth also as a major) -- so, C > Gm, for example. It's a slightly unsettling, very serious-sounding musical juxtaposition. Yet, with the rest of it, the lingering feel of that section is very gentle and comforting. One of my favorites on the album.
Yes, that's it! I was trying to place it.
User avatar
evenslow
Stone's Bitch
Posts: 9164
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 6:47 pm
Location: unnamed mental hospital

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by evenslow »

Monkey_Driven wrote:
Kevin Davis wrote:I know that when people call this song Springsteen-esque they're referring to its verbosity and general delivery in the verses, which is something I definitely hear. But I also hear it in the chorus (or whatever it is) and the bridge, which are both extremely reminiscent of Magic-era Bruce; in fact there is one line ("there's still a fire in the engine room") that very directly recalls the melody and chord pattern to "Gypsy Biker" from that album, a simple but odd pairing that (I think) is made of a root major chord transitioning to the minor inversion of the fifth (most Western ears would be accustomed to hearing the fifth also as a major) -- so, C > Gm, for example. It's a slightly unsettling, very serious-sounding musical juxtaposition. Yet, with the rest of it, the lingering feel of that section is very gentle and comforting. One of my favorites on the album.
Yes, that's it! I was trying to place it.
this is a good catch.
Strat wrote:Alas, we are RM
User avatar
Jaeti
Future Drummer
Posts: 2641
Joined: Mon July 08, 2013 5:47 pm

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by Jaeti »

Kevin Davis wrote:I know that when people call this song Springsteen-esque they're referring to its verbosity and general delivery in the verses, which is something I definitely hear. But I also hear it in the chorus (or whatever it is) and the bridge, which are both extremely reminiscent of Magic-era Bruce; in fact there is one line ("there's still a fire in the engine room") that very directly recalls the melody and chord pattern to "Gypsy Biker" from that album, a simple but odd pairing that (I think) is made of a root major chord transitioning to the minor inversion of the fifth (most Western ears would be accustomed to hearing the fifth also as a major) -- so, C > Gm, for example. It's a slightly unsettling, very serious-sounding musical juxtaposition. Yet, with the rest of it, the lingering feel of that section is very gentle and comforting. One of my favorites on the album.
I'm not a musician, so I don't understand the chord analysis here, but I love reading it.
User avatar
oneway23
Future Drummer
Posts: 2158
Joined: Wed January 02, 2013 4:57 am

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by oneway23 »

Jaeti wrote:I'm not a musician, so I don't understand the chord analysis here, but I love reading it.
Same here. Some fantastic analysis, Kevin Davis...thanks!
We still make records to be listened to — not that everyone will listen to a record track one to twelve in a row or side A or Side B — but we still make 'em in case somebody does want to listen to it like that, that's how we make em…
User avatar
evenslow
Stone's Bitch
Posts: 9164
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 6:47 pm
Location: unnamed mental hospital

Re: Seven O'Clock

Post by evenslow »

don't know if i can say this is my favorite song on the album but it's the one i look forward to the most.
Strat wrote:Alas, we are RM
Post Reply