Something's Going On

A poor quality recording of a rehearsal at the Showbox in Seattle last week; new Pearl Jam!

[audio:somethings_going_on.mp3]

Be sure to tune in to “The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien” Monday night at 11:35pm to hear the band play a couple songs. Rumor has it the new album will be out in early Fall.

Here’s some more stuff off their 2008 X-mas Single as well:

[audio:santa_cruz.mp3]

[audio:golden_state.mp3]

Pearl Jam – Camden 6.19.08 Review

Susquehanna Bank Center – Camden, NJ
opener: Ted Leo & the Pharmacists

Main Set: Hard To Imagine, Corduroy, Severed Hand, Do The Evolution, All Night, In Hiding, Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town, Gone, Who You Are, Unemployable, Even Flow, Light Years, Grievance, Given To Fly, U, Rats, Why Go

Encore 1: Love Reign O’er Me, Better Man(Save it for Later), State Of Love And Trust, Black, Leash

Encore 2: No More, Crazy Mary, Porch, Yellow Ledbetter

editor’s note: the majority of this was written in the wee hours of the night after the show on 6/19

I went into my semi-annual Pearl Jam tour-a-palooza with a bit of trepidation at the thought of seeing yet another Pearl Jam show–my fifteenth. I’ve certainly enjoyed each and every one of the fourteen shows I’ve been to in years past, but there’s been a growing sense of staleness and contemptuous familiarity with some of the live sets. (Keep in mind this is all relative–Pearl Jam’s most staid and boring show is better than 97% of the crap bands on tour at this very moment.) I’ve not been following this year’s tour dates with the interest I had in the past–I don’t know what the setlists have been like, I don’t know what crowd reaction’s been, etc. My Pearl Jam fanaticism was in need of some rejuvenation.

Continue reading “Pearl Jam – Camden 6.19.08 Review”

Everything in Between

A nice, unexpected surprise on a Monday: new Pearl Jam! This showed up out of the blue today; leaked from an “internal promo disc” used during the production of the band’s rarities album, Lost Dogs (2003). So it’s not “new,” necessarily, but the public-at-large hasn’t heard it ’til today, so that’s enough of a qualifier to call it as such.

Here’s the full tracklist, most of which is already available in stores (and is thus not presented in audio form below):

Continue reading “Everything in Between”

Pearl Jam – Camden 5.28.06 Review

Tweeter Performing Arts Center – Camden, NJ
opener: My Morning Jacket
attendance: 18,000

Pre-set: Throw Your Arms Around Me (Ed solo), It Makes No Difference (Ed w/ My Morning Jacket)

Main Set: Wash, Go, Worldwide Suicide, Severed Hand, Corduroy, Save You, Given To Fly, Army Reserve, Grievance, Gone, Even Flow, You Are, Wishlist, Satan’s Bed, Garden, Whipping, Life Wasted, Rearviewmirror

Encore 1: Wasted Reprise, Man Of The Hour, Parachutes, Black/(So Lonely)/(We Belong Together), Crazy Mary, Alive

Encore 2: Last Exit, Do The Evolution, Glorified G, Comatose, Leash, Baba O’Riley, Yellow Ledbetter/(Star Spangled Banner)

Wow, where to begin. This show so far exceeded night one, quality-wise, that it does night two a disservice to even compare it. The Red Mosquito crew met up once again before the show, imbibing in the finest of ales as we all burned our faces off in the glaring, Philly sun. I had the good fortune to lodge in Cal Varnsen’s house the previous night. It was among the finest carpets I have ever had the pleasure to sleep on. Not only that, but he took us to Wendy’s the next day. I think we were all incredibly uncomfortable with Cal’s unnatural and disturbing love for Wendy’s food, but none of us dared say a word, lest we unleash his fury.

Some highlights from the pre-concert tailgate mainly all center around Dirty Frank, an orphan raised by drifters on the streets of Wilmington, Delaware. He greeted all of us with his trademark wit and fervor, calling all of us “motherf**kers” and “sons ‘a bitches.” It was all meant with love, though; a love magnified by his enormous vodka intake.

RM Crew

Continue reading “Pearl Jam – Camden 5.28.06 Review”

Pearl Jam – Camden 5.27.06 Review

Tweeter Performing Arts Center – Camden, NJ
opener: My Morning Jacket
attendance: 18,000

Pre-set: Gone (Ed solo)

Main Set: Wasted Reprise, Life Wasted, World Wide Suicide, Do The Evolution, Animal, Severed Hand, Corduroy, Marker In The Sand, Given To Fly, Unemployable, Lukin/Not For You/(Modern Girl), Daughter/(WMA), I Am Mine, Jeremy, Present Tense, Why Go, Porch

Encore 1: Better Man, Come Back, Elderly Woman, Last Kiss (with members of Innocence Project), Alive

Encore 2: State Of Love And Trust, Blood, Even Flow, Comatose, Leash, Rockin’ In The Free World, Yellow Ledbetter/(Star Spangled Banner)

I don’t have a ton to say about the first show in Camden, as it seemed to feel more like a greatest hits night than anything “special.” It’s gotten to the point where I’ve seen so many shows that the setlist really needs to knock me out every night, or I deem it an “okay” show. But you’ve gotta put it in perspective as well–an “okay” show for Pearl Jam is a hundred times better than any other live act at their peak performance. The crowd was a bit too laid back for my tastes as well–they never matched the band’s energy, of which there was a lot.

I’ll stick to the highlights:

  • Ed spoke at length about the Innocence Project, which aids in using DNA testing to exonerate wrongly-convicted inmates and get them out of jail. Ed brought three such individuals from the Philadelphia area up onstage to join the band for Last Kiss. Two of the three were musicians and handled drum and vocal duties. The third guy was relegated to tambourine man. Very cool moment–what normally is a low point of any set (Last Kiss) turned into something pretty neat.

    PJ

  • Other than the Last Kiss moment, there was nothing that remarkable about the first encore. Pretty typical, low-key numbers before closing with the standard Alive.
  • The second encore is where the show hit its brief stride. The band went on a tear with State Of Love And Trust, Blood, Even Flow, and Comatose, sending the diehards in the crowd into a state of “rock coma.” But then–THEN–the crowd smart enough to know what they were seeing went nuts when the band launched into Leash, which debuted last week in Boston for the first time since 1995. The band was tight and it sounded as if they’d spent plenty of time on the song to make sure it was right. But the best facet of the performance was the crowd: we were screaming the lyrics with Ed, drowning him out for most of the song. Very powerful stuff.

Other than that, not a lot to report from night one. The seats I were in weren’t that great, despite being pretty close to the stage. I had a light shining directly into our section for most of the night, resulting in near-blindness. You’ll be able to see said light in a lot of the pictures I took on night one.

I also met a ton of badass people from a PJ message board I post on (yes, I used “badass” and “message board” in the same sentence) during the tailgate before the show. In addition to a massive sunburn, I had a blast talking and drinking with them. Good times.

Two Feet Thick notes:

Being the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend in the U.S.A., Ed mentions that it’s a great way to start the summer, and during “”Even Flow” sings that the “summer’s on its way”. This venue is in Camden, NJ, and Philadelphia is right across the river, thus why it is often considered a “Philadelphia” stop on the tour. With a big smile on his face, Ed references that saying “Where the hell are we anyways? Jersey? Philly?” and mentions that he should know better considering that they’ve played there before. The “Modern Girl” tag to “Not For You” returns, with Mike wearing a Sleater-Kinney t-shirt. “Present Tense” draws a big roar and the crowd sings the second verse. Before “Last Kiss”, the band seems to get comfortable and Matt puts on a Fender Telecaster hinting at something “special”. Ed tells the crowd that they are indeed doing something special tonight and tells of how their charitable proceeds from ticket sales tonight are going towards the Innocence Project, a non-profit legal clinic that works to free the wrongfully convicted through DNA testing. Ed introduces one-by-one three men who had a total of 45 years in prison before they were freed by the works of the Innocence Project. He tells the stories of Thomas “Tommy” Doswell, Vincent Moto, and Wilton Dedge, including how they each served more than a decade before they were freed. Vincent Moto then jumps up on the drums, and Tommy Doswell lays down a large lyric sheet and everyone together performs “Last Kiss”, with Ed and Tommy trading off verses. Vincent and Tommy are bursting with Joy and make Ed blush by starting a “Pearl Jam” chant. Wilton, Vincent and Tommy come back out for an extended “Rockin’ in the Free World”. As they are walking off, Wilton – visibly the shiest on stage – steps up to Stone’s mic, and poignantly implores the crowd that “you don’t have to be a rocker to make a difference in the world”.

Camden I Image Gallery