December 26th, 2012

The Pearl Jam Ten Club holiday single for 2012 is a live version of “In the Moonlight” featuring Josh Homme, recorded at last year’s PJ20 festival.

August 15th, 2012
Twenty years later, McCready says the Singles soundtrack is the one record he has up on his wall at home in Seattle. ‘I remember writing “State of Love and Trust” with [Pearl Jam bassist] Jeff Ament,’ he laughs. ‘I remember stealing the riff from some guy at a party somewhere here in Seattle. Well, just that one chord. The riff I came up with, but the one chord—it’s like a C chord where the A is—I had never seen that before. I didn’t steal it, I _appropriated_ it.’
March 8th, 2012

Everybody Loves Our Outtakes, taking one for the team edition: Ex-Pearl Jam drummer Dave Abbruzzese gets smacked in the face over “Jeremy”



In the lead-up to next week’s release of the trade paperback edition of
 Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge (out March 13; order info here), I’ve been sharing some of the book’s better outtakes for my faithful blog readers. In order to avoid confusion, I excised the following story from ex-Pearl Jam drummer Dave Abbruzzese, which involves a woman upset by PJ’s classroom-shooting mega-hit “Jeremy.” Dave told me the shooting the woman said she’d witnessed occurred in the early- to mid-’80s in Richardson, Texas (he recalled hearing about the incident back when he was going to school in nearby Mesquite). That doesn’t sync up with what Eddie Vedder has said were the two incidents (the primary one in Richardson, but in 1991) that inspired “Jeremy.” In retrospect, I think I should have kept the story in the book, as it’s a good one:

DAVE ABBRUZZESE (Pearl Jam drummer) Around 1999, I went out and toured with the Harry Apes BMX. When we played in Dallas, this girl came up to me after the show and said, “I need to speak to you,” and she seemed distressed. We sat down at the table, and she just smacked the shit out of me—just whack, across the side of the face. She said, “How dare you?”

She was crying, and I come to find out that she was the girlfriend of Jeremy, the real kid. She was in the classroom when it happened. She told me that his family and friends and her, they tried so hard to deal with the grief and then, just as they’re moving on with their lives, it’s the No. 1 song and video. She basically expressed all those years of distress from having to replay this memory over and over. So I took one for the band.

Previously:

February 21st, 2012

Recently unearthed audio of Eddie Vedder’s early, preBad Radio band the Butts! (H/T TwoFeetThick.com)

February 10th, 2012

enterlandrew:

Mother Love Bone  promotional Shine cassette

Serial: 839 011-4
Format: Clear Cassette - Picture Sleeve
Label: Polygram
Origin: USA
Year: 1989
Updated: 13/10/2008 22.34.24

Reblogged from Until the Ocean
January 16th, 2012

Guitar maker Mike Lull, Pearl Jam bassist Jeff Ament and photographer Lance Mercer. Bid on two of Lull and Ament’s JAXT4 Jeff Ament signature electric basses here.

January 12th, 2012
It was a singing penis… a little singing cock singing, ‘I’m still alive.’ Six million dollars we turned down to prevent our song from being sung by a cock.
Eddie Vedder, on refusing to sell the rights to “Alive” for a Viagra ad (via whispertoariot)

(Source: sasscameron)

Reblogged from Jezebel Jinx
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Official Tumblr for Everybody Loves Our Town: An Oral History of Grunge, a Time magazine book of the year. (Now in paperback; purchase info here.) The blog is run by the author, freelance writer/editor Mark Yarm; he is of no relation to Mark Arm of Mudhoney.