Showing posts with label Pearl Jam Wrigley Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearl Jam Wrigley Review. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2018

It Doesn't Get Eddie Vedder Than This: Pearl Jam Powerfully Celebrates Heroes Across Two Winning Nights at Wrigley -- Chicago Concert Review

Concert Review

Pearl Jam
Wrigley Field, Chicago 
August 18 & 20, 2018
(both shows attended)
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In life, the way I try to live it, experience and enjoyment and enlightenment and memories and music are more important than numbers, statistics and database entries.

So in reviewing a concert--or in this case, a pair of concerts by the same artist--I try to gauge and share my admiration and appreciation at face value, in the here and now.

But in addition to saving all my ticket stubs, and writing reviews to post here, I keep track of all rock concerts I attend in a Filemaker "Shows Seen" database, as well as (less comprehensively) on Setlist.fm. (I also have a Shows Seen database for theater performances, which lumps in opera, classical & jazz concerts, comedy, ballet, dance, circus and other live art forms.)

So I can readily tell you that the two Pearl Jam concerts I attended, last Saturday and Monday at Wrigley Field, represented the 19th and 20th times I'd seen the Seattle band live.

Coming just days after having seen the Smashing Pumpkins for the 20th time--albeit with a far less consistent lineup--Pearl Jam is the fourth rock act I've seen this often, following U2 (22) and Bruce Springsteen, far in the lead with 50 shows.

Even more pertinent to this review, this was the fifth time I'd done a Pearl Jam double, meaning back-to-back shows.

So while I thought the band sounded great both nights, it especially didn't matter to me that Saturday's pacing wasn't idyllic and Monday was 1/2-hour shorter due to a thunderstorm delay. (Unlike in 2013, the band didn't take the stage until after the storms came and cleared.)

And although, in the universe of Pearl Jam concerts, Saturday night's show might have only merited @@@@1/2 (on a 5@ scale), I relished the band digging a bit deeper into their catalog, for songs like "Breakerfall," "Present Tense," "Can't Deny Me," "Footsteps" and "Alone," even if none rank among my top PJ tunes. (See the 8/18/18 Pearl Jam setlist here.)

Of 60 songs played across the two nights, only six were performed on both.

I don't believe anyone attending either of the shows got gypped, but have come to appreciate that--with heavily revised setlists night-to-night--a pair of Pearl Jam concerts can be appropriately viewed as companion pieces.

Monday's show, which didn't get underway until 9:30pm due to the storms, skipped to the band's typical low-boil start to open with more fervor--"Given to Fly," "Why Go," "Go," "Last Exit," "Mind Your Manners"--and would include "Jeremy" and "Black" (neither played Saturday) as well as the live debut of a Ten-era outtake, "Evil Little Goat." (See the 8/20/18 Pearl Jam setlist here.

Even from Wrigley Field's upper deck, Eddie Vedder's voice sounded as good as ever on both nights, and now into their 50s, the band--Stone Gossard, Jeff Ament, Mike McCready, Matt Cameron and touring musician Boom Gaspar--remain musically agile and sonically ferocious.

Adding significantly to both shows was the sense of occasion, for me personally as well as--from all
observations--for Eddie Vedder, an Evanston native and fellow lifelong, diehard Cubs fan.

After Pearl Jam played two shows at Wrigley in August 2016, the Chicago Cubs would win their first World Series in 108 years, with Vedder on hand to celebrate. A concert documentary, Let's Play Two, intertwined the Wrigley gigs with Cubs championship footage.

To be honest, the sold-out shows this time around weren't seemingly filled with Cubs-obsessed fans, as a number of mentions by Vedder didn't elicit the kind of roars one might expect.

Sure, when Cubs owner Tom Ricketts brought the World Series trophy onstage on Saturday there was substantial applause, but otherwise I had the sense that there were many out-of-towners, White Sox fans and others who didn't care much about the Cubs gathered at the Friendly Confines.

But although there were no musical guests as at Pearl Jam's recent Seattle ballpark shows, Vedder found many friends and heroes to celebrate.

Ex-Bull Dennis Rodman was on-hand Saturday, bringing a ukelele to the singer and making a brief speech somehow referencing North Korea.

Blackhawks legend Chris Chelios appeared Monday, giving Vedder a jersey memorializing another, the recently passed Stan Mikita.

Saturday, Pearl Jam performed "Missing," a Chris Cornell solo song (drummer Cameron was his Soundgarden bandmate) and Vedder led the crowd in a massive phone-light singalong of Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down," after sharing that Petty had loved playing Wrigley last summer.

Other cover songs over the two shows included "Leaving Here" (Eddie Holland), "Know Your Rights" (The Clash), "Rebel Rebel" (David Bowie), "Rockin' in the Free World" (Neil Young), "Rain" (The Beatles)," a truly blistering "I Am a Patriot" (Little Steven), "We're Going to Be Friends" (The White Stripes) and, wrapping up Monday night, "Baba O'Riley" (The Who).

Vedder mentioned and thanked many Cubs players, manager Joe Maddon, the Ricketts family and team president Theo Epstein, donning a shirt in the latter's honor on Monday. And as he was in 2016, former New Orleans Saints player Steve Gleason, now stricken with ALS, was on hand, at least on Saturday. (Let's Play Two nicely chronicles his friendship with Mike McCready.)

And lest I'm making you think these were mainly nights for paying homage, pure joy was had in hearing Pearl Jam blast through "Rearviewmirror," "Porch," "Corduroy" and everything else, while singing "Alive" at the top of your lungs with 40,000 others never gets tiresome.

I can't deny being mildly chagrined at how few young people I saw in the crowd. I would like to hope some teens and twenty-somethings still love rock 'n roll, but at Pearl Jam and a recent Wrigley show by Foo Fighters, youth was rather scant.

Hopefully, any teens there to "check it out" despite only knowing a few Pearl Jam classics would have been dazzled by Vedder's voice, the musicianship, energy, many superb songs and tributes to musical & baseball heroes.

Given some of the setlist choices, they may have occasionally had their patience tested, and though a bit shorter, I think Monday wound up being the better show.

I even think I enjoyed the Foo Fighters' latest Wrigley show--they played two in July, but I only attended one, as they don't mix setlists up much--a smidgen more than either Pearl Jam concert, despite liking the band itself a bit less. (For the record, I've seen Foo Fighters 14 times, my fifth highest tally.)

But as I tried to establish above, loving these two Pearl Jam shows wasn't only about loving each of the Wrigley performances.

And having been a fan since shortly after the band's debut album, Ten, was released in 1991, it really "doesn't get Eddie Vedder than this."

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From Monday, a clip of the rare "U" as posted to YouTube by PearlJamOnLine.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Alive, All the Way: Pearl Jam Knocks a Pair of Prodigious Blasts Out of the Friendly Confines -- Chicago Concert Review

Concert Review

Pearl Jam
Wrigley Field, Chicago
August 20 & 22
(both shows attended)
@@@@@ (for each & both)

Pearl Jam's phenomenal first album, Ten--the uniform number of the band's original namesake, Mookie Blaylock--was released 25 years ago Saturday, on August 27, 1991.

Though I recall reading a Rolling Stone article around the time of the album's release, I didn't pay much attention or acquire the CD until after Nirvana's Nevermind broke open grunge--and alternative music for that matter--upon its release on September 24 of that year.

Living in Los Angeles at the time, I'm pretty sure I bought Nevermind and Ten in the fall of 1991, as I was familiar with both bands when they co-opened for that Red Hot Chili Peppers that December at the L.A. Forum (foolishly, I didn't attend).

So I was well "into" Pearl Jam as Ten became a blockbuster and "Alive," "Even Flow" and "Jeremy" became staples on Alt Rock radio and MTV.

I believe I bought their second album, Vs., immediately upon release in October 1993 (a month after Nirvana's In Utero) and likewise got all their subsequent albums rather instantly.

Having moved back to the Chicago area by then, I acutely rued not being able to get a ticket to a March 1994 concert at the old Chicago Stadium not long before it got torn down, but beginning in 1995--in Milwaukee, not the Soldier Field show on the tour short-circuited by the band's battle with Ticketmaster--I've now seen Pearl Jam 18 times.

Including shows on both Saturday and Monday at Wrigley Field.

This makes them the longest running band that I've loved, in real-time, from their first album on.

(I didn't get into U2 until at least War or Under a Blood Red Sky, having been oblivious to their debut, Boy and follow-up October. Similar scenario with the now disbanded R.E.M., and while I've been a big Green Day fan since they broke with 1994's Dookie, that came not only after Ten but two of their own indie releases. Living in L.A., I didn't hear of the Smashing Pumpkins' 1991 debut Gish, though became a big fan with 1993's Siamese Dream.)

So I didn't need much convincing about how great a band--and concert act--Pearl Jam remains even after all the members have turned 50, especially as their October 2014 show in Milwaukee was one of the best I've ever seen.

But I got a double dose of proof at my favorite place on earth, made all the more special by how great the Cubs are playing this year and Eddie Vedder being one of the most prominent diehard Cubs fans (he was born in Evanston).

And though I'd seen Pearl Jam at Wrigley in July 2013 and will never forget sticking around until 2am after a rain & lightning delay of nearly 3 hours, these shows went a good bit smoother.

In terms of pacing, Saturday's show felt a tad uneven--perhaps exacerbated by my having a seat somewhat obstructed by the soundboard tent--but lasted 3 hours and 20 minutes, ending with Vedder singing his ode to Cubdom, "All the Way" alongside his favorite player from childhood, Jose Cardenal and 3 children of Ron Santo, before a final blast through the Who's "Baba O'Riley."

Cheekily referencing their 2013 show at Wrigley, I loved the early cover of the Beatles' "Rain," and smiled at "Bee Girl," saluting the star of Blind Melon's "No Rain" video.

Along with several boisterous ballpark singalongs to anthems such as "Jeremy," "Alive," "Black," "Even Flow," "Better Man," "Corduroy" and a cover of Cheap Trick's "Surrender"--all repeated on Monday, which otherwise featured 29 songs not played on Night 1--the show included several wonderful non-musical moments.

A soldier and his girlfriend were brought onstage and a marriage proposal unfolded; former NFL player Steve Gleason, beset by ALS and the subject of a new documentary, spoke electronically and quite life-affirmingly; Vedder dedicated "Light Years" to Gord Downie of the Canadian band the Tragically Hip, who were playing their last show the same night due to Downie being beset by terminal brain cancer.

Of the 34 songs played Saturday, 8 were covers--including the Ramones' "I Believe in Miracles," Bob Dylan's "Masters of War," Little Steven's "I Am a Patriot" and Pink Floyd's "Comfortably Numb" beyond those already mentioned--but not only couldn't anyone say they were cheated, this coalesced with an evening in which Vedder clearly was reveling in childhood heroes, both baseball and musical.

Though 20 minutes shorter in heeding to Wrigley's 11pm concert curfew rather than blowing past it, Monday night's show was more of a musical tour de force.

After "Oceans," "Footsteps" and "Off He Goes" provided a slow-groove opening triptych, the band began rocking at full-tilt far earlier than on Saturday, with early reprises of "Better Man" and "Corduroy" leading into "State of Love and Trust," "Why Go," "Animal" and "Given to Fly."

Subsequent highlights included "Wishlist," "Mind Your Manners," "Got Some," "Rearviewmirror" and guitarist Stone Gossard handling lead vocals on "Don't Give Me No Lip."

Both nights seemed to find the band relaxed and enjoying themselves in a venue sacrosanct to Vedder--and me--and as on Saturday, Monday brought many reminders of why I relish Pearl Jam well beyond their music.

Routinely verbose and gracious, Vedder delayed the music for about 5 minutes twice, first in highlighting several charities the band was supporting with a portion of ticket sales--and matching donations from Cubs Care and Theo Epstein's foundation--and then in reading letters he'd received conveying how much the band meant to certain attendees suffering from great illnesses and hardships.

Prior to "Man of the Hour," he noted that Monday would have been the 49th birthday of another famed Seattle frontman, Layne Staley of Alice in Chains, who passed in 2002 after long battling serious demons.

And amid the band's most fervent rocker, "Lukin," Eddie stopped the song cold to point out a jerk in the audience who was harassing a woman and have him tossed.

Unless it was some kind of weird dream, I also think Dennis Rodman showed up onstage, and even cradled Vedder in his arms.

All in all, it made for a pretty amazing couple of nights. Each show was fantastic in its own right--you can view Saturday's Pearl Jam setlist here, and Monday's here--but in varying greatly, the two-night stand validated my double-dipping. (This marks the 5th time I've seen Pearl Jam in pairs.)

Saturday night I went solo and and enjoyed sitting behind home plate next to an ardent Pearl Jam follower in from Toronto; Monday I was accompanied in the upper deck by my most frequent concert companion, Paolo. Both scenarios and perspectives considerably abetted my delight.

In one of the odd ways that music is a constant thread throughout my life, on Monday in the baseball stadium of the team in first place in the NL Central, Pearl Jam ended the show with a cover of the Beatles' "I've Got a Feeling." This seemed like a strange choice, but I now believe Eddie was slyly referencing the Cubs and what seems like a great chance to win their first World Series in 108 years.

And just 8 days a week earlier, Paolo and I saw Paul McCartney play the same song in another NL Central ballpark, Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (Presumably without the same agenda.)

It's also true that on Monday before I left work for the concert, I learned that my current stint as a contractor will be coming to an end sooner than anticipated. While far from tragic and nothing I haven't experienced before, it was news for which yet another phenomenal concert by one of my favorite artists provided an emotional antidote.

And when, nearing 11:00pm, I sang along heartily as Pearl Jam blazed through Neil Young's, "Keep on Rockin' in the Free World," I could help but consider it my reason for being.

There.

And someday we'll go all the way.


Sunday, July 21, 2013

Let's Play ('til) 2: Weathering a Long Delay, Pearl Jam Reigns at Wrigley -- Chicago Concert Review

Concert Review

Pearl Jam
Wrigley Field, Chicago
July 19, 2013
@@@@1/2

Pearl Jam playing at Wrigley Field held the spectre of being an unforgettable night, even before the show was scheduled.

Not only is the band one of the best live acts in rock history, but singer Eddie Vedder was born and raised in Evanston, and seemingly remains a rather rabid Cubs fan.

He has conducted the 7th inning stretch a number of times, is supposedly good friends with Theo Epstein and Kerry Wood among others (including, who knew, Jose Cardenal) and wrote a diehard Cubs fan's ode in "All the Way" (as in "someday we'll go...") that he'd previously sung at solo shows in town.

Last September, when Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played two awesome shows at the Friendly Confines, Vedder made guest appearances both nights. 

So it wasn't hard to imagine him coming back with his own band, which I predicted just a few days later. (I think my guesses on who might play Wrigley this year were pretty solid, given that other than PJ, country star Jason Aldean--who I hadn't even heard of--was the only other concert (held on Saturday night) booked this season and that among my other imagined possibilities, The Rolling Stones, Taylor Swift, Bon Jovi, Phish, Fleetwood Mac and the Eagles all will play to enough fans in Chicago this year to fill the park or come close.) 

As Eddie said during the show, he--like me--considers Wrigley Field the best ballpark in the country, and it's likely my favorite venue of any type, anywhere. (Vedder offered no opinion on the changes coming to the landmark at Clark & Addison, at least not that I could hear.)

So although I'd been to 14 previous Pearl Jam shows, most outstanding and several memorable for the location and/or occasion--Summerfest (rather than Soldier Field) on their mostly abandoned (due to the Ticketmaster battle) 1995 tour, New York's Madison Square Garden in 1998, Cincinnati in 2000 just months after the band faced the tragedy of fans dying at a show in Denmark (like The Who had in Cincy), the 2004 Vote for Change tour at the old-school Toledo Sports Arena with Neil Young showing up, Lollapalooza 2007 in Grant Park, Alpine Valley for their PJ20 celebration in 2011--this one promised to be even more special. 

And from the moment the band took the stage around 8:15pm, it was pretty clear that this one meant a lot, especially for Vedder. But somewhat curiously, and/or admirably depending how you look at it, Pearl Jam--early on, but also late in the show--didn't seem to play to the likelihood that the Wrigley setting brought out a greater preponderance of casual fans. (To be fair, given that until a fall tour was recently announced, this was Pearl Jam's only 2013 U.S. show, a great number of hardcore fans likely traveled from out of state.)

After opening with "Release," a slow building song off their 1991 debut, Ten, they continued in a relatively mellow and obscurer vein with "Nothingman," "Present Tense," "Hold On" (a song I didn't recognize) and "Come Back," before engaging the crowd in a full-throated singalong to "Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town."

I didn't take this photo but don't know who deserves credit.
After which, at about 9:00pm, Vedder announced that they'd been alerted to serious weather due in about a half-hour, thus they would need to start clearing the field and wait out the storm, predicted to last 30-40 minutes.

Fortunately, the $52 seats I had with 3 friends were in the stands down the right field line and under cover. When the rain came--which despite some scary lightning strikes nearby supposedly wasn't as bad as the storms that forced the early end of shows by Phish at Northerly Island and Bjork at the Pitchfork Festival--we got wet but not too much.

By around 10:15pm, it seemed like the rain, thunder and lightning had stopped, but fans weren't let back on the field. Though I feel that pausing the concert--and even canceling it if need be--was the prudent thing to do, unless the PA system was turned off there should have been some announcements made, especially for the sake of fans waiting on the undoubtedly stuffed and steamy concourse. Of course, everyone who had a smartphone was likely checking the weather reports and Twitter, where the band posted this:

Although I had some concerns about the last Purple line train being scheduled to run north to Central--where I was parked--from the Howard Station at 1:55am, I wasn't going anywhere. And from the looks of things when the show resumed at 11:45, neither did about 95% of the crowd.

Vedder came back on by himself and donned a #1 Cubs jersey, spoke for a good while for his love of the ballpark and relayed the scenario behind his writing, "All the Way," which he proceeded to play. He then brought onstage 82-year-old "Mr. Cub," Ernie Banks, who along with Jose Cardenal had been featured in the story Eddie had just told. Ernie spoke to the crowd and a strange night got that much cooler.

By the time the rest of the band--still comprised of original members Stone Gossard, Mike McCready and Jeff Ament, along with drummer Matt Cameron, who is also in Soundgarden but has been part of Pearl Jam since 1998--came back on stage in full, it was about midnight.

They launched into the all-the-more topical "All Night," from their rarities collection, Lost Dogs.

This, and the also rather relevant, "Why Go" (...home?), made me guess that Vedder had re-drafted the original setlist for the show's resumption after the 2hr45min delay.

And especially as I doubt Ernie Banks would have been brought onstage eight songs in--to accompany "All the Way"--had things gone as planned, I am skeptical that the image below represents a setlist that was written up pre-show (rather than a revised one).

But with Vedder announcing that they'd been cleared to keep playing, to their great credit--if to the ire of Wrigleyville residents and babysitters across the land--they wound up going until 2:00am, at which point Eddie cited it as their curfew. This seemingly restricted them from playing big favorites like "Daughter," "Better Man," a cover of The Who's "Baba O'Riley" and, most notably, "Alive"--they also left out "Jeremy"--but I have no real complaints about the setlist (you can see what was actually played on Setlist.fm).

I did, however, think the sound was atrocious, as the music seemed to reverberate off the grandstand giving me an annoying sense of hearing double drumbeats. But it's not like the band got to do another soundcheck after all their equipment was plugged back in after the storm.

No, I won't pretend I wouldn't have rather heard a couple of the missing hits mentioned above than "Leatherman" or especially "Bugs" (a weird song off Vitalogy with Vedder playing accordian).

But Pearl Jam previewed three songs off their rather coincidentally named forthcoming album, Lightning Bolt, including the title song (video below), and they also went way back to Gossard & Ament's Mother Love Bone days for "Chloe/Crown of Thorns." (These tunes are on Singles soundtrack, and though I haven't heard them recently enough to be ravenously appreciative, I thought it was cool they were included.)

Other post-midnight highlights included "Corduroy," an extended and phenomenal "Even Flow," "Rearviewmirror," a cover of Pink Floyd's "Mother" (seemingly slated to be followed by "Daughter"), "Black" and the show-ending "Rockin' in the Free World" by Neil Young.

In sum, though the rhythm of the show seemed a bit askew (with and without taking the delay into account), the acoustics were substandard to the point of annoyance and some cherished songs were omitted or dropped, there were enough great musical moments to remind me why I love Pearl Jam, abetted by their playing 3 hours on a night when they easily could have pulled the plug a good bit earlier (or even not plugged back in at all).

To be honest, when they came back after the delay, I was expecting them to rip through perhaps an hour of greatest hits. Though I certainly wouldn't have minded hearing a few more, not only have I've heard them all before (this personal Setlist.fm song history is pretty cool), I actually admire Pearl Jam even more for staying iconoclastic at such as populist venue.

This wasn't the best show of theirs I've ever seen, but nonetheless it will definitely stand as a night--and morning; I got home at 4:30am--I won't forget as long as I'm still "Alive."

--
Appropriately, here's a YouTube clip of their new song, "Lightning Bolt," posted by VideoGremmie, followed by a couple more of my photos: