Sunday, August 9, 2009

Vedder, April 2008


Live at UC Berkeley:

The Zellerbach


Eddie Vedder is the lead singer to the band Pearl Jam. Pearl Jam has been around since the early 90’s and they have grown significantly over the years and they have become a powerful quintet and they are beloved around the world. They established a dedicated strong fan base early in their career because of the energy that they put into their live shows. Each night they create a different set list from the night before and at each show, something surprising happens, Eddie will climb 35 feet up the scaffolding and atop the speakers and continue singing a song the band was jamming on for the previous 15 minutes, or Mike, the guitarist will rip into a Led Zeppelin instrumental cover and throw his guitar over the back of his head and solo for 5 min on that as a transition into the next part of the song, or any given night, they will invite a surprise guest onto stage, Ben Harper, Sean Penn, Neil Young, Jack Johnson,..the list goes on. In their musical career, they have released eight albums and they are working to release their ninth this year. Each album is arranged with two or three guitars, drums, vocals, ukulele, and bass. Some of these songs make you want to run around in circles in the mosh pit and slam dance and other songs are ballads and the vocals are soft and when listened to in a quiet room with head phones, a shivers may go through your body.

Last year Eddie came out with a solo album for Sean Penn’s film, Into The Wild. He created road songs, songs that fit the story and fit the life of Chris McCandless. Eddie’s process for writing this group of songs was very real. He wrote them with a variety of instruments including the uke, mandolin, guitar and banjo. Shortly after, he went on tour with these songs on the west coast and then the east coast there after. He played Santa Cruz and Berkeley where my friends and I saw him. Eddie came out on the stage with just a guitar and played some cover songs and told some stories. He strummed through the songs of James Taylor, The Beatles, Springsteen, and a Cat Steven cover from the film Harold and Maude, If You Want to Sing Out, he played on the banjo. After a set of cover songs, he played some songs from Into The Wild. Hearing them live, they sounded better than on the album because they had a raw sound to them, an organic sound, it was just Ed and the instruments that he brought with him and it went along well with the ideas and thoughts on life that these songs are about, Chris McCandless' life. After he performed the songs from Into The Wild, Ed came out with a vocal machine and said “this is, uhh, science”. He performed a song from Riot Act called Arc. In this song he loops his voice over and over again with different vocal structures and plays them over each other and by the time he completed the last loop, it sounds like an entire ensemble of vocalists.

It was a wonderful treat to see Eddie in this form, away from Pearl Jam, away from the large concert venues, away from the massive crowds. This intimate performance allowed Vedder to shine in his own artistic talent and gave him and the audience alike a chance to share and enjoy the masterpiece soundtrack of songs that he created.

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