September 9, 2005
Jam
Music
      Artists A-Z
      Album Reviews
      Concert Reviews
      Concert Listings
      SoundScan Charts
      Lowdown Column
      Pop Encyclopedia

Movies
Television
Video
Theatre
Books
Country




ENT Blog
RSS Feed

REESE


Concert Review: Pearl Jam

MTS Centre, Winnipeg - September 8, 2005
Pearl Jam thrills largest crowd since MTS Centre opened
By -- Winnipeg Sun


WINNIPEG - No new album. No singles since the last millennium. No videos in more than a decade.

No problem for Pearl Jam.

The only remaining grunge band that matters (sorry, Mudhoney) have no reason to tour, but here they are playing sold-out shows across Canada.

Pearl Jam have always been a band that does what they want to do, from refusing to release videos to fighting the Ticketmaster monopoly. The band marches to their own rhythm and has earned the right to do whatever they want to do.

And they do.

Last night's concert for 15,748 at the MTS Centre -- the largest audience to fill the arena since opened last November -- wasn't for people who wanted to hear only the band's early singles. This was a show for fans who stuck with the band over the years, with obscure rarities, album tracks and covers making the set.

There was no way to predict what was coming next. They played whatever they wanted without an obvious plan.

Under a set of bright red lights, the band got the audience into it right away with Better Man off 1994's Vitalogy. Tracks were plucked from each album for the rest of the show with Grievance off 2000's Binaural and Given to Fly from 1998's Yield making early appearances.

Frontman Eddie Vedder is the obvious focal point and has the most animated stage presence. He possesses a powerful and passionate voice which he uses to chilling effect. He spent half the night with a guitar in his hand, adding an extra dimension to the group's guitar attack.

It was half-an-hour before he acknowledged the crowd, telling them they were the loudest so far in Canada. "Before we came out the pre-show crowd was insane. We didn't know what the f--- was going on," he said to roars of approval.

Vedder doesn't seen the sort to toss out crowd pleasing platitudes, so we believed him.

With Vedder howling into the mic, Mike McCready and Stone Gossard delivered a thousand bruising riffs, while bassist Jeff Ament and drummer Matt Cameron held down the bottom end, proving they are one of the most solid rhythm sections in rock. An extra keyboardist augmented the sound.

The band have developed over the years from writing hook-filled muscular rockers to branching out into artier material. Somewhere in the middle, Pearl Jam seems to be a group jocks and metalheads can find some common ground with, as evidenced by the diverse crowd who filled the arena.

They joined together to scream the lyrics to Not For You and sing the quiet chorus of Daughter. They were further bonded by Even Flow, featuring a Middle-Eastern tinged extended guitar solo.

At press time 75-minutes into their planned two-hour set, the band was tearing through Jeremy, which had the whole crowd singing along.

Pearl Jam proved they still have some links to the underground rock scene by choosing fellow Seattle rawkers The Supersuckers to open the night.

The veteran group, led by Eddie Spaghetti, got early arrivals to raise their devil horns in the air with a mixture of high octane rock 'n' roll and countrified versions of some of their best known songs.

A disguised Vedder, wearing a silver Mexican wrestling mask, helped them finish off their 40-minute set with a cover of X's Poor Girl.


More Concert Reviews

HOT MUSIC HEADLINES
Perry, Brand reach divorce deal
SOCAN buys Songwriters Hall
Beach Boys to perform at Grammys
Cohen, Del Rey debut on charts
Busey files for bankruptcy
Aguilera to reconcile with dad?
Trench singer has music in DNA
Metallica launching music festival
Missy Elliott to make comeback
Howie D invites fans on Israel trip
More Headlines
Beyonce trademarking 'Blue Ivy'
M.I.A. splits from fiance: Report
Juno Award noms unveiled
Madonna irate over finger flap
Bieber guard in airport fight
Rep: No Del Rey tour to postpone
Lady Gaga reveals tour plans
Report: Brown to perform at Grammys
Garth Brooks turning 50
Love threatens to sue over court docs


Who's coming and when
Want to know when your favourite band is coming to town? Check out Clive, JAM Music's extensive Canadian concert listings.
TV Listings
Wondering what's on tonight? Check out our TV listings for the complete schedule in your area.
Movie Listings
Find out what's playing at a theatre near you.

1. Leonard Cohen: Old Ideas

2. Adele: 21

3. Lana Del Rey: Born To Die

4. Various: 2012 Grammy Noms

5. Gotye: Making Mirrors

Courtesy Nielsen SoundScan Cda








What did you think of Madonna’s halftime show?
She’s still got it
I wasn’t impressed


Results