Monday, 24 August 2009

Pearl Jam Emotion, energy drive






The biggest classic rock fans of the
alternative era, Evanston native Eddie Vedder and his bandmates in Seattle's Pearl Jam have now been faithful rocking arenas long enough to claim that denomination themselves.
On Sept. 20, the band will release its ninth studio album, "Backspacer," and a radical stylistic exit is unlikely. The long difference is the band is going without a major label for the first time, alternately using its Web site as well as iTunes, indie retailers and the Target chain.


Not since its start in 1990 and perhaps during the tense period a few years later when it waged war with Ticketmaster has the five had so much to prove. Perhaps as a result, it was an even more activated Pearl Jam than usual that pulled in to the United Center on Sunday for the first of two sold out nights.
"We've got a lot of emotion to get through tonight," Vedder said at the start. "So let's go through it together."
The group opened with a lovely conception of the droning, folksy "Long Road" before tearing into a rollicking "Corduroy" and a ferocious "Why Go," nicely decorating the contrasting poles of its sound.
"Why go home?" Vedder asked after the latter. "I am home, and it feels f---ing great to be here. Life experiences ... even if you don't live in Chicago [anymore], Chicago will always live in you, and it's nice to come back and see so many people come out for this."
"This" was a two hour jaunt through the Pearl Jam catalog, heavier on the hard rockers than the ballads this time, but as usual mixing signature hits with deep album tracks and, oddly, only a brief taste of the new tunes so much for crass commercialism.
The band did lose the plot a few times, notably during a futilely jammed out "Even Flow," which found guitarists Mike McCready and Stone Gossard trading tasty licks worthy of Chickenfoot as Vedder stood aside, smoking a cigarette and swigging from a bottle of wine. (Always the Romantic poet, our boy.)
For the most part, though, this was as focused and propulsive a set as I've seen Pearl Jam play in the last two decades. And like all true classic-rock pros, Vedder & Co. gave every evidence that they're ready to keep rolling for 20 years more.

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