BVS
Blue Crack Supplier
I guess we'll see...
Headache in a Suitcase said:june 3 - east rutheford, continental airlines arena (final show of leg 1 of the tour)
Ed Preset: No Surrender (Bruce Springsteen Cover)
Headache in a Suitcase said:could have gone because i couldn't make the party because my car broke down, but didn't have a ticket and nothing dropped on ticketmaster.com durring the day
phanan said:
That must have sounded incredible.
Hewson said:
MrsSpringsteen said:
That's awesome, mp3 anyone?
angelordevil said:
http://www.you sendit.com/transfer.php?action=download&ufid=587B6BA476C4DBE8
Live in Atlantic City 9/30/05
Dirty Frank basically ends with the guitar riff from Freaky Styleyangelordevil said:The song is also very reminiscent of an actual Pearl Jam song, Dirty Frank, which was written (and obviously influenced) while on tour with RCHP.
Yeah, but he's no Bono on the axe.phanan said:
Bruce is such an underrated guitar player...
But he concedes that another oft-told tale is less accurate: that the name Pearl Jam came from Vedder's great-grandmother Pearl, who, he used to claim, was married to an American Indian and was in the habit of making preserves spiked with various hallucinogenics. His great-grandma really was named Pearl. The rest is, indeed, "total bulllshit."
Told of Vedder's admission, Ament and McCready seem relieved. They cough up the true -- if less romantic -- tale behind the band's name. Brainstorming in a Seattle restaurant to come up with something, anything, to replace their original name, Mookie Blaylock (inspired by the NBA star), Ament came up with "pearl." The band didn't settle on the second half of its name until a 1991 trip to New York to sign a deal with Epic Records. Gossard, Vedder and Ament drove out to see Neil Young play Nassau Coliseum. "He played, like, nine songs over three hours. Every song was like a fifteen- or twenty-minute jam," says Ament. "So that's how 'jam' got added on to the name. Or at least that's how I remember it."