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Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sat Oct 22, 2011 6:01 am
by DARTH
It was on PBS tonight.

If your a fan or a past fan this is a good Roc Doc. Not as good as Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage (I'll do a reveiw of that later.) but still pretty good.

For those of us who were young and coming of age in the early 90s it captures a great moment in Rock History (And more so if you were a scenster or Musician at the time)

There was a brief time from 1991 to 1993 when good music came out of the underground and outpaced the corperate machine. When good music got airplay on MTV and more than just College Radio and actually dominated and this Doc brought me back to it.

Bands like Soundgarden (My fave at the time), Alice in Chains, Nirvana, Red Hot Chili Peppers and Pearl Jam as well as to a smaller extent Sonic Youth, Primus,NIN, Dinosaur Jr. Rollins Band, Jane's Addiction, Mudhoney, the Pixies, Ministry, the Cult and to a even smaller extent Fudgetunnel,Screaming Trees, Blind Melon, Helmet, Last Crack, the Melvins and the like were out and about and getting attention and gaining fans. It was our generations musical and cultural late 60's.

It was a time when what was popular was not sucker corperate drones.
a time whe you would go to a party wearing a Fuck Corperat Rock! shirt from SST records and hear many of the above as well as Slayer, old school hardcore like Black Flag and good album cut classic rock and roll.
The film captures all that time and the rise of one of it's best bands and their friends.
itshows the Mother Love Bone days and the effet of it's frontman's Andrew Wood, Herion OD death had on the whole scene and how Gossard and Ament picked up the pieces with the help of McCready and Soundgarden's Chris Cornell and Matt Cameron on the Temple of the Dog album (One of my top 5 of all time) and the recruitment of Vedder.

But also shows when it got overexpossed, repackaged and when the corperations got wise and pushed their own copy bands like Stone Temple Pirates, Candlebox, Creed and the like.

It takes you through their overwellmed period, their fight with ticket master and their change in band dynamics, musical direction and McCready's drug problems. A s well as Vedder's problems with dealing with overwelming fame and attempted control by the corperate machine.

It goes into their collaberation with and mentorship by Neil Young. "For once their was an adult in my life who was leading by example" says Vedder.

You go through their self impossed step back.

And the irony of how a band who's frontman idolized the Who was center of a trajic crowed crush incident involving 8 deaths. It shows how this effected the band.

You see them today and even if you don't like them it's hard to deny their ability of musicians.

I was a Mother Love Bone Fan and was into TOD as the Seattle scene went from a noticable thing (but to be fair it did not seem bigger than the South Florida Hardcore/Thrash/Deathmetal scene and saw Pearl jam on their first tour before they were not as big as Alice in Chains or Last Crack. I was so close I could see scratches on Mc Cready's Start's pickguard. I was floored by that show and it was another thing for me that encouraged my drift away from my scene's orthidoxy to embracing the music I grew up on, letting my blues flag fly and developed a sense of fearlessness about mixing genre's so this film was a big treat for me.

It was also cool to watch my 9 year old who is developing a love of music watch it with intrest and see him moved by the music. Our cracking up together while they should a scene from Celebrity Death Match where a Claymation Vedder round kicks a Scott Strepthroat from Creed's head while demanding his voice back. =D>

I give it :rock: :rock: :rock: :rock: out of 5.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sat Oct 22, 2011 6:23 pm
by Sandman
Nice review. This is definitely on my list of things to see. I also want to see the upcoming U2 documentary thats going to air on Showtime I think next week.

I agree that the 90s were a pivotal time in music and a lot of good stuff was released. I like that you mentioned the Melvins. Stoner Witch was one of the most amazing albums ever. Another great band out of that era that never got much notice was Tad. Good stuff.

I was going to post a review of Nirvana's Nevermind 20th anniversary remaster but never got around to it. Sure in the end the whole scene was overexposed and over hyped but some great music came out of that time and place. Listening to Dave Grohl talk about how they just went in and recorded an album of stuff they liked without really thinking too much about it was cool.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sun Oct 23, 2011 2:57 am
by Shafpocalypse Now
I loved that era of music.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sun Oct 23, 2011 3:17 am
by Sandman

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sun Oct 23, 2011 4:53 am
by The Ginger Beard Man
I have to check this out. The early 90s were a great for music. By about 98 I lost interest in new stuff and didn't regain it until recently.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Mon Oct 24, 2011 5:46 am
by DARTH
:supz: :rock: TAD= 8 WAY SANTA! :rock: :rock:

Do you guys remember Dead Horse?

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Wed Oct 26, 2011 2:41 am
by Mickey O'neil
I'm a huge PJ fan. Will be watching this.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Fri Oct 28, 2011 5:26 pm
by TerryB
Pearl Jam sucks.

Death metal forever.

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 1:58 am
by DARTH
protobuilder wrote:Pearl Jam sucks.

Death metal forever.

Shit, got my Thrash/Death/Hardcore Metal pedigree down. I used to hang out at Malevolent Creation rehearsals. I've seen Obituary, Kreator, Napalm Death, Gwar, Grave, Coroner, Bolt Thrower, Violence, King Diamond, Helloween, Sodom, Destruction ect ect before my 20th BD, most before my 18th. Saw Sepultura the first time with 30 people and then got drunk with the band while we all tried to understand each other.
I spent most of my teens and early 20s around that scene but as a musician and music lover it got to be same old same old for me. How many detuned grind riffs, blast beats and Satanic Cookie Monster vocals can you listen to and not get bored?

My band could play a show with Deathmetal bands and Alterna bands, kinda like Primus or Alice in Chains could.

I used to get a preverse pleasure in making my Banger friends listen to the Pixies, PJ and old Soundgarden at my place. (My Bong, My Weed, My Music assholes!) but I got the same from making my old girlfriend's gaggle listen to Slayer :rock: Turned folks from both camps onto each other's music.(and to each other.)

Just got off the phone with my best friend from that era and he was talking about how I got him into Soundgarden and the Pixies. (And he got me into back rooms with Obituary and Deicide- Man that was partying!)

We are also glad we are in our late 30s and we had the balls back then to not just expouse the virtues of the heavy bands we all had in common but the bands most did not like.

I can not pick one of the following shows over any of them as my fav show,Pink Floyd 87, Kreator 89,96 Rush 94,02, Slayer 88, 91, 02, Pearl Jam 92, Primus 94, Rollins Band 04, Soundgarden 90, 92,94 Motorhead 88,89, 90, 95, 96 x 2,98 Paul Weller 96, Jethro Tull 02, Steely Dan 07, Black Sabbath 98, Iron Maiden 88, 08. all great rock bands I have seen live beside the afore mentioned bands and love.

It' all Rock and Roll and only Rock and Roll and I like it! :rock: :rock:
or for Proto "Music 4 You and Me not the fucking Industry!"
(Bio-Hazzard were great live too.)

Re: Pearl Jam 20- A Film by Cameron Crowe

Posted: Sat Oct 29, 2011 3:31 am
by DARTH
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5SYyNqo ... re=related

This was a great sing along when my parties included long hairs, skins, bangers, stoners, punkers and death rockers.

Had about 100 people singing this with us at a warehouse party once, fucking UNITY!