Pearl Jam - Life After Love Bone
by Jennifer Clay
"It's been a really weird last four days. I've
been up all night. This mini-tour thing, the record
release after that - the whole thing seems kind
of intense. There are so many mind frames you
can go through. There's the business side. There's
the spiritual side. The art, the pure form. It's
really hard," singer Eddie Vedder muses as we
speed down a Seattle interstate to a club
where Pearl Jam is rehearsing songs from their
debut record, Ten.
Eddie's a novice when it comes to the business
side of music and being in a signed band. He
admits this is his first interview, and that
he isn't very good at it. I beg to differ. Soon, however,
he relaxes, and is telling the tale of how a
night watchman surfing on the beach in San Diego
ended up in Seattle in the amazing new band Pearl
Jam.
"Jack [Irons, drummer in Eleven and formerly
of the Red Hot Chili Peppers] sent me three of
their songs," Eddie explains. "I had them in
my head from the night before at work, and I went
surfing and had this amazing day. The whole time
I was out there surfing, I had this stuff going
through my head - the music and the words going
at the same time. I put them down on tape
and sent it off.
"I didn't really know what Stone [Gossard, Pearl's
guitarist] and Jeff [Ament, Pearl's bassist]
wanted. The music just felt really open to me.
Then I thought, 'Wow, the music is really good;
maybe I should have paid more attention. Maybe
I should have written it down. Maybe I
should have really listened to it before I sent
it off.'
"It was three songs, like rambling weird stuff.
One of them is called 'Alive,' and one of them is
called 'Once,' and then one of them was called
'Times of Trouble,' which, actually, Chris
[Cornell, Soundgarden] did a version of on the
Temple [Of The Dog] record. Mine was called
'Footsteps.' It was the same music, but different
words. There are two versions of that floating
around. Actually, the whole thing was a three-song
mini-opera. Using Stone's music, I set it to
this three-act play. 'Alive' was the first act,
and that has incest and violence. You have to read
all this into it. Actually, the violent one was
'Once' - he goes out and kills people. Then 'Times
of Trouble,' or my version, 'Footsteps.' That
song sounded like sitting in a jail cell. It's about a
guy who was tortured as a child, which is the
reason behind him turning into a mass
murderer."
Trapped in a car traveling about 55 miles per
hour with someone I don't know, in a city I don't
know, talking about mass murderers! I hesitatingly
ask, "Where did you come up with this
idea?"
"Personal experience," Eddie says, laughing.
"It's all coming in from all these other sources ...
stuff that you see. Real life is so much more
intense than any movie, any song, any book - if
you join up and see the right performance. It's
not something you could buy tickets for. Two
nights ago I'm staying in the basement of this
art gallery where we rehearse, and I was using
the restroom about three in the morning. I heard
these drunks in the back alley. I went to
listen through the crack in the door, because
I thought I could hear them better. I could
actually see through the half-inch clearing.
It was more intense than any movie. It was all so
real. There was a beginning, middle and end.
It was like drugs, violence, all within less than
20 minutes. It was fascinating."
For Eddie, who has worked with the homeless and
wrote the song "Evenflow" about the
homeless life, the experience was even more intense.
"If I could have actually sat in that
alcove of the alley with them and had these three
beers with them, I would have loved to. But
then I wouldn't have seen what I saw."
Eddie's real outlook and frank observations were
obviously to the band's liking. The bond was
nearly instantaneous for both Stone and Jeff,
who were just pulling their lives together after
their band Mother Love Bone had collapsed upon
the death of their friend and former MLB
singer Andy Wood. The founding Pearl members
recall their initial reactions to Eddie over
offee in a trendy Seattle cafe.
"We were blown," Stone explains. "He was really
the first that had it. We had a few other
tapes of singers, but it was always people singing
Mother Love Bone songs or trying to be like
Andy. When we heard Eddie's tape, it was like,
here's a guy who didn't really know anything
about Mother Love Bone for the most part. He
didn't have any preconceived notions about
what it was. He just related to these non-vocal
demos that we sent him."
"It was a kind of a sick, disturbed rock opera
- if Nietzsche were to write a rock opera," Jeff
says about Eddie's first three songs. "I mean,
lyrically, I think he's amazing. I think he's really
visual. I think just the fact that he's coming
from a completely different place than Andy was
coming from, that really appeals to us."
So Eddie went off to Seattle for a busy nine
days with Stone, Jeff, guitarist Mike McCready and
drummer Dave Krusen. "We rehearsed like crazy
for six or seven days," Jeff says. "We were in
the studio and recorded everything that we had
rehearsed, which was like ten songs. Then we
played a show. Within ten days, it was pretty
happening. Everybody knew it was the right
thing."
Eddie went back home, then came up again about
a month later and did the same thing -
rehearsed for a couple weeks and played some
more shows with Alice In Chains under the
name Mookie Blaylock, an underdog basketball
player for the New Jersey Nets. "We didn't
think we'd be very good, so we didn't want anyone
to know who we were," Stone says,
laughing. "We just kinda used his name, and some
people actually liked the name. Mookie
loved it, by the way. He's a great fan."
"Mookie's kinda out there. He's kinda this cult
player," Eddie says.
"Kinda mediocre," Stone cuts in, laughing. "He's
really got to bust his balls out there every
night," Eddie continues.
"He's not really good looking; he's just tough,"
Stone adds.
Might there be a parallel somewhere here?
"There's something about the mediocre sports
hero that this band can relate to," Stone says,
referring to the volleyball game he and Eddie
had played earlier in my visit - a definite lesson
in male bonding and competition. "Just knowing
that someday even a regular guy off the
street can win the championship, if the team
has the right chemistry."
Chemistry in motion and confidence on the rise,
the name was changed to Pearl Jam.
"Apparently my great grandmother Pearl married
some Indian chief," Eddie explains. "And
she used to make this peyote jam, Pearl's Jam.
It hasn't been passed down, but the idea still
stands." And the band was ready.
"We were looking to get a band together right
away [after MLBI," Jeff remembers. "We
thought it was going to take a lot longer than
it did. Once it started to happen, I didn't really
want it to stop. I basically told Michael [Goldstone,
A&R man] at Epic, 'it you want us on the
label, this is the schedule of things that have
to happen.' We had a schedule of when we
wanted to make a record. It was only six or eight
weeks after we'd been a band. It was exactly
what we didn't do with Mother Love Bone, and
that was to actually get some of the
spontaneity and freshness of the songs; to get
really close to them when they were written.
With Mother Love Bone, most of the songs on that
record had been written for a year. That's
the way a lot of music is made. It's an analytical
process, where you try to write a certain kind
of song for a certain kind of audience to sell
a certain amount of product or records. I think
that's not what it's about. I wanted to get back
to making a record that was a little bit more
raw, with a little more emphasis on getting the
intensity. I think we did that with this record.
There are some moments on this record that are
pretty incredible. At the same time, I think
there's a real looseness about it. I think it
properly captured where we were at as a band. I
don't think it overextended what we could do.
I think it's a real honest record."
Ten - which happens to be Mookie Blaylock's number
- has eleven songs. The speed with
which they were written and recorded doesn't
give them a half-assed feel. Rather, it adds to
the "real, raw, free" vibe. There are many incredible
moments, as in "Why Go," a true story
about a teenage friend of Eddie's who was hospitalized
after getting caught smoking pot, and
"Release," which was written when Stone was playing
and tuning up, and the rest of the band
was just hitting notes. Eight minutes later the
band recorded it on a tape lying around.
A creative and vibrant sense is alive in the
somewhat depressing, yet frank songs. The band
seems very aware of creating moods, which have
been captured on Ten. The sound is not like
Mother Love Bone, but more akin to Temple Of
The Dog, which Stone, Jeff, Mike and Eddie all
worked on with members of Soundgarden.
"This is not Mother Love Bone Part Two! This
is a totally different band," Stone says. "Mother
Love Bone, in a lot of ways, toward the end especially,
was a creatively stifling experience for
the people involved. I think that this is the
kind of band where we're not letting any ideas die.
If anyone has a legitimate musical idea, it at
least is coming to the point where we play the
song and record it, then make a decision as a
band whether we like the song and it's
something we're going to continue to play or
not. Mother Love Bone did a lot of editing even
before the song was written, as far as what we
were going to play and what kind of stuff we
liked. I feel like this band now is so much more
open to new ideas and types of things. It's
huge steps away from Mother Love Bone. In that
sense, I think similar ideas that we would
have had in Mother Love Bone that never came
to fruition are actually being finished at this
point. The more I play with Eddie, the more I
hear how his vocals work, and the more he
hears how I write songs, the better we'll get.
I think that's what I am even more excited about.
There are moments on the record that we have
right now that aren't perfect, which is great.
That's the kind of record we wanted to make."
Pearl Jam's first year was a busy one. They rehearsed,
wrote and recorded a smashing first
record; played a few shows; played a lot of basketball
and a little volleyball; recorded a song
for and had a bit part as Matt Dillon's backup
band in Cameron Crowe's new movie, Singles;
drank a lot of coffee and swallowed a few Excels,
natural Chinese herbs; made some great
music; and didn't spend much time wasted.
"I'm much more happy in this band than any other
band I've been in," Jeff adds. "Everybody
does their own thing. Nobody is telling anyone
else that they're playing too much or too little.
It just sort of falls into place. It's just the
way music should be. If there is a band leader writing
all the songs and telling everybody what to do,
then it's not a band. Then the guy should make
studio records. It's the way a lot of bands are
run, but not really a lot of bands in Seattle. I
think that's a pretty unique thing about what
is happening here. Everybody just kind of does
what they want to do, and they tell everybody
else to f?!k off."