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Pearl Jam Bio and Pearl Jam Pictures
Pearl Jam Biography
Pearl
Jam rose from the ashes of Mother Love Bone to become the most
popular American rock & roll
band of the '90s. After vocalist
Andrew
Wood overdosed on heroin in 1990, guitarist Stone Gossard and
bassist Jeff Ament assembled a new band, bringing in Mike
McCready on lead guitar and recording a demo with Soundgarden's
Matt
Cameron on drums. Thanks to future Pearl
Jam drummer Jack Irons, the demo found its way to a 25-year-old
San Diego surfer named Eddie Vedder, who overdubbed vocals and
original lyrics and was subsequently invited to join the band (then
christened Mookie Blaylock after the NBA
player). Dave Krusen was hired as the full-time drummer shortly
thereafter, completing the original lineup. Renaming themselves Pearl
Jam, the band recorded their debut album, Ten, in the beginning of
1991, although it wasn't released until August; in the meantime, the
majority of the band appeared on the Andrew Wood tribute project Temple
of the Dog. Ten didn't begin selling in significant numbers until
early 1992, after Nirvana
made mainstream rock radio receptive to alternative rock acts. Soon, Pearl
Jam outsold Nirvana,
which wasn't surprising -- Pearl
Jam fused the riff-heavy stadium rock of the '70s with the grit and
anger of '80s post-punk, without ever neglecting hooks and choruses;
"Jeremy," "Evenflow," and "Alive" fit
perfectly onto album rock radio stations looking for new blood.
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Krusen left the band shortly
after the release of Ten; he was replaced by Dave Abbruzzese. Pearl
Jam's audience continued to grow during 1992, thanks to a series of
radio and MTV hits, as well as successful appearances on the second
Lollapalooza tour and the Singles soundtrack (Stone Gossard also
embarked on a side project called Brad, which released the album Shame in
early 1993). Despite their status as
rock & roll superstars, the band refused to succumb to the
accepted conventions of the music industry. The group refused to release
any videos or singles from their second album, 1993's Vs. Nevertheless, it
was another multi-platinum success, debuting at number one and selling
nearly a million copies in its first week of release. On their spring 1994
American tour, the band decided not to play the conventional stadiums,
choosing to play smaller arenas, including several shows on college
campuses. Pearl Jam cancelled their 1994 summer tour, claiming they
could not keep ticket prices below 20 dollars because Ticketmaster was
pressuring promoters to charge a higher price. The band took Ticketmaster
to the Justice Department for unfair business practices; while fighting
Ticketmaster, they recorded a new album during the spring and summer of
1994. After the record was completed, the group fired Dave Abbruzzese,
replacing him with former Red
Hot Chili Peppers and Eleven drummer Jack Irons.
Vitalogy, the band's third album, appeared
at the end of 1994. For the first two weeks, the album was only available
as a limited vinyl release, but the record charted in the Top 60. Once
Vitalogy was available on CD and cassette, the album shot to the top of
the charts and quickly went multi-platinum. Pearl
Jam continued to battle Ticketmaster in 1995, but the Justice
Department eventually ruled in favor of the ticket agency. In early 1995,
the band recorded an album with Neil
Young. Meanwhile, Vedder toured with his wife Beth's experimental band
Hovercraft in the spring of 1994 as Stone Gossard founded an
independent record company; Mad Season, Mike McCready's side
project with Layne Staley of Alice
in Chains, released their first album, Above, in the spring of 1995.
Comprised entirely of Neil
Young songs, Mirror Ball appeared in the summer under Young's name;
although the individual members of the band were credited, the name Pearl
Jam did not appear on the cover due to legal complications. Pearl
Jam released a single culled from the sessions, titled Merkin Ball and
featuring the songs "I Got Id" and "Long Road," in the
fall of 1995.
In late summer of 1996, Pearl Jam
released their fourth album, No Code. Although the album was greeted with
fairly positive reviews and debuted at number one, its weird amalgam of
rock, worldbeat, and experimentalism dissatisfied a large portion of their
fan base, and it quickly fell down the charts. The record's performance
was also hurt by Pearl Jam's inability to launch a full-scale tour,
due both to their battle with Ticketmaster and a reluctance to spend
months on the road. The band spent most of 1997 out of the spotlight,
working on new material; Gossard also released a second album with his
side project Brad, titled Interiors. By the end of the year, Pearl
Jam had completed a new, harder-rocking record entitled Yield. The
album was greeted with enthusiastic reviews upon its February 1998
release, but its commercial fortunes weren't quite as clear cut. While
their sizable cult embraced the album, sending it to number two its first
week of release, Yield quickly slipped down the charts. Pearl Jam
supported the record with a full-scale arena tour in the summer of 1998,
issuing the concert LP Live on Two Legs at the end of the year; Jack Irons
did not participate due to poor health, and was replaced by ex-Soundgarden
drummer Matt Cameron. In 1999, Pearl Jam scored an unlikely
pop radio smash with their cover of the J. Frank Wilson oldie "Last
Kiss," originally released as the seventh in a series of
fan-club-only singles which had also featured several incongruous covers
in the past. Demand from fans and radio programmers resulted in the
nationwide release of "Last Kiss," and it eventually became the
band's highest-charting pop hit to date, peaking at number two and going
gold. The group returned in 2000 with the Tchad Blake-produced Binaural.
In order to circumvent bootleggers, their subsequent European and American
tours were recorded in full and released in an unprecedented series of
double-CD sets, each of the 72 volumes featuring a complete concert. ~
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
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