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Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Fri April 22, 2016 6:03 pm
by dimejinky99
LoathedVermin72 wrote:I've been listening to PJ shuffle today and I have to say that this band is very good
Except that song. And every other song they've ever written.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Fri April 22, 2016 7:31 pm
by Monkey_Driven
LoathedVermin72 wrote:I've been listening to PJ shuffle today and I have to say that this band is very good
This brings a smile to my heart.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Tue April 26, 2016 3:05 am
by LoathedVermin72
Been jamming to a playlist of 20 songs I felt like listening to. Really falling in love with PJ again.
Spoiler: show
In the order my iTunes shuffled them into:
Do the Evolution
Lukin
Animal
Thin Air
Oceans
Hail, Hail
Once
Evacuation
Brain of J.
Go
Even Flow
Comatose
In My Tree
My Father's Son
Mankind
No Way
Ghost
Last Exit
Habit
Help Help

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Tue April 26, 2016 3:07 am
by Birds in Hell
Great songs, one and all.

:nice:

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Tue April 26, 2016 3:16 am
by Kaius
Why would you taint a wonderful playlist with a shiny turd like MFS

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Tue April 26, 2016 3:23 am
by LoathedVermin72
Ha, I knew someone would bring that up.

Man, those last few lines of IMT...man.

"Still got it, still got it..." :cry: :)

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Tue April 26, 2016 3:53 am
by LoathedVermin72
Have they ever closed a concert with Help Help? Made for a great closer of the playlist.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 6:19 pm
by evenslow
Not sure where to put this, but it qualifies as praise and the General Pearl Jam Praising thread could use beefin' up.

Useful reminder of how people "out there" view Pearl Jam.

Why Pearl Jam 2016 Is Better (and More Important) Than Pearl Jam 1991

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-fag ... 18880.html
Spoiler: show
I have to admit, aside from digging the 4-5 MTV hits off their now-classic 1990 release, Ten, I was never a big Pearl Jam fan. In fact, up until yesterday afternoon, when my girlfriend told me her company had a box next to the stage at MSG, I still thought they were a bunch of over-hyped, mediocre, whiny, grunge rockers who’d long since past their prime. I mean, c’mon, you can’t tell me there aren’t a thousand bands out there who write songs as good, if not better, than the monotonous, “Better Man.”

I won’t take all the blame, though. Over the past few decades, mainstream media’s done a terrific job of turning Eddie Vedder into the poster child for all things depressing and whiny. Granted, his lyrics about suicide and abuse definitely don’t help matters, but, to me, in public, only Michael Stipe seems to be more of a downer.

As a result, I’ve pretty much gone through life with the p.o.v. that Pearl Jam is a band that’s been lucky enough to ride the coattails of their early ‘90s mega-success, when they — along with Nirvana, Alice in Chains, and Soundgarden — ruled the rock world, but since then, have never really come close to the energy/grooves of their first album. What a difference a few hours make.

I’ve seen/performed with many a band in my day and I can say, without reservation, Pearl Jam put on one of the best live shows I’ve ever seen.

Obviously, I’m a wee bit surprised. Not just because, for a minute when they first hit the stage, I thought Jon Stewart took Mike McCready’s spot, until I realized it was just a silver-haired version of the band’s long-time lead player, but, as previously mentioned, I was expecting nothing more than a brooding, melodramatic, preachy two hour semi-acoustic romp, filled with Vedder and his droning voice. However, what I, and the other eighteen thousand-plus in attendance got was an incredibly refreshing, upbeat, and non-stop no-frills rock show from start to finish. In this day and age, when half the artists out there don’t even play an instrument, let alone write their own songs, it was awesome to see the Keepers of The Gate letting the world know they’re more vibrant, and perhaps important, now, than they’ve ever been.

All of this lost time of not being a Pearl Jam fan kind of pisses me off, actually, because the energy and intensity they bring live is, in my opinion, sorely missing from many of their recent recordings. I know bands always sound a bit different live than on the record, but this was night and day. Almost as if they were two different bands; the one that mainstream AOR radio loves, and the guys who just steamrolled through their set like a house on fire. Heck, even “Better Man” rocked.

Beyond that, the media has a lot of explaining to do for turning Vedder into a martyr. Perhaps he was more of a buzzkill in days gone by, but from what I saw last night, he seems like a really positive, fun, and easy-going guy; only making one reference to a non-music issue and it was a simple dedication to the late professor/author, Howard Zinn.

Other than that, he was cracking jokes all night and swigging from a bottle of vino. Even going as far as to get the band to play a song they never tried before in honor of a friend’s birthday. A minute later, the entire crowd was singing The Doobie Brothers’ Takin’ It To The Streets while Vedder did his best post-grunge Michael MacDonald impersonation.

What I realized last night, is that the one thing a concertgoer gets to see, that you’ll never experience listening to an iPod, or the radio, or even watching a video, is the earnestness. What I saw last night is a band of guys who not only care deeply about the music they play, as well as believe in what they’re doing, they truly appreciate every second of the success they’ve been lucky enough to attract. And it shows.

In the end the thing that impressed me the most, and perhaps it’s because I come from the old school when bands didn’t use backing tracks, is that it didn’t really matter that it was The Garden. You could’ve told these guys they’re playing to 100 people at The Saint in Asbury Park and they would’ve put on the same exact show.

In an era where laser shows and costume changes seem to set the bar as to whether or not a $200 ticket was worth the price, to see a group of guys rocking out for three straight hours, with nothing more than their songs and their presence, and to do it on the world’s biggest stage definitely gives one hope that all is not lost in the world of iHeartRadio-controlled live music.

Add to that that music, itself, in all its forms, when it comes from the heart, is the glue that can effortlessly link us together — no matter our background, color, or political views — for a few magical moments. It definitely did last night.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 7:38 pm
by stip
thanks for sharing that :)

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:23 pm
by bodysnatcher
good article. really cool to see the interpretation of a live show that we've all known and love, and one that many have grown accustomed (and almost bored) with.

i really enjoyed the call-out of them just putting on a good rock show at the level they are able to do it, when those rarely exist anymore

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:25 pm
by Strat
That made me smile and get a little emotional.

Im just now back at work after the trip and life is miserable. I want to go back.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:26 pm
by CopperTom
I'm glad you enjoyed yourself.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:26 pm
by bodysnatcher
Strat wrote:That made me smile and get a little emotional.

Im just now back at work after the trip and life is miserable. I want to go back.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:35 pm
by Strat
Just a great trip all around. Bob Mould was also a great time on Friday night. Ate all the good food, bougth some great records, smiled and laughed, waved to stip.

Thanks 10c!

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:36 pm
by bodysnatcher
Sounds like a great trip Strat. You still going to Telluride?

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:40 pm
by Strat
bodysnatcher wrote:Sounds like a great trip Strat. You still going to Telluride?
You bet! Will be a complete opposite trip and just as fantastic. Camping in the middle of nowhere, morning coffee, breakfast over a camp stove, beer, poop in the woods, shuttle into town to see Pearl Jam in one of the most beautiful places in the world? you bet.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Wed May 04, 2016 9:58 pm
by bodysnatcher
Strat wrote:
bodysnatcher wrote:Sounds like a great trip Strat. You still going to Telluride?
You bet! Will be a complete opposite trip and just as fantastic. Camping in the middle of nowhere, morning coffee, breakfast over a camp stove, beer, poop in the woods, shuttle into town to see Pearl Jam in one of the most beautiful places in the world? you bet.
you had me at "poop in the woods"

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Thu May 05, 2016 9:01 am
by dimejinky99
Imagine the clusterfuck for tickets if this happened

http://www.alternativenation.net/pearl- ... residency/

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Thu May 05, 2016 10:54 am
by E.H. Ruddock
dimejinky99 wrote:Imagine the clusterfuck for tickets if this happened

http://www.alternativenation.net/pearl- ... residency/
Seriously. The Pit might implode.

Re: General Pearl Jam Praising

Posted: Thu May 05, 2016 11:41 am
by Kevin Davis
“I was excited, but hesitant in a way,” he says. “I feel sometimes when you do a whole record, not that we’d done it a lot, but you have to stay in formula about how the record is, and there’s not a lot of spontaneity. But Vs. was really fun since there’s a lot of upbeat songs. It had energy I didn’t know it would have. I remember I struggled with No Code a couple of years ago, so I was happy that didn’t happen again.”
Ugh. God I am so sick of hearing about "energy" at Pearl Jam shows.