Heard the single on the radio, seems more like a Talking Heads song than Pearl Jam, eh. Sounds like they used a drum machine ffs
Edit: Beaten haha but glad I'm not the only one who thought that!
Which show? I still hope I can get a single ticket for Nashville today even though I got screwed with Verified Fan. What a wasteWelp, the show sold out, so looks like I won't be seeing them after all. God I hate Ticketmaster.
Toronto. I got a spot in the "smart queue" and when I reached the end after waiting half an hour it said the tickets were all gone. Great feature.Which show? I still hope I can get a single ticket for Nashville today even though I got screwed with Verified Fan. What a waste
900 in front of me for SD. I messed up on presale and selected SD and LA and they ended up giving me LA codes :(Yeah, 4000+ people in queue for the San Diego show the moment it opened. RIP
Well they released a THIRD music video for the single lol Think this is the final complete one or something
Song has really grown on me, I dig it, was kinda iffy at first
I believe they have done it before with "Smile".Jeff and Stone switched instruments. I wonder if that's the first time?
Superblood Wolfmoon clip is out and I like it waaaay more than dotc!
Superblood Wolfmoon
Superblood Wolfmoon
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupSuperblood Wolfmoon · Pearl JamSuperblood Wolfmoon℗ 2020 Monkeywrench, Inc.Released on: 2020-02-18Producer, Studi...m.youtube.com
I'm a very weird case, I think. I love Ten and Yield, worship Avocado, and really don't care all that much about most of the rest.Out of curiosity, something I'd written, and wondering if fellow PJ fans agree or disagree -
"As a long-time fan, one who counts Pearl Jam as their favorite band, the group goes in waves. And fans adhere to those waves. You've got -
1) The Ten purists. It's a great album, a bone fide classic. But it's the only one that sounds like it. The purists like only it and hold "Jeremy" as the best thing they ever did. All Pearl Jam fans like Ten, but some Pearl Jam fans only like Ten.
2) Then there are those who loved No Code. They are also unique, mostly only liking Ten and No Code. No Code is a bit...ponderous. It's like people who loved Bush's Razorblade Suitcase or Live's Secret Samadhi, someone who came to a band in a special moment but didn't continue.
3) Beyond that, you get the ones who went hard on Vitalogy and Yield, albums that went wide abreast of mainstream tastes. They had great songs, but lots of experimentation that could feel aimless.
4) There's a very specific, older subset of fans who grooved to the stretch from the self-titled album to Backspace to Lightning Bolt. There's a lot to like there, but there's also a decade+ of songs that sound like generic rock radio. It was an "elder statesman" phase.
5) And, finally, you get into the diehard, the kind who ride or die for Vs., Binaural, and Riot Act. These are really mature albums, complex and varied in their sound but very accessible. These are albums that don't sound like anything else Pearl Jam did, not like anything other bands do."
I like this, but vs. really does sound like Ten. It's very early 90s sounding too and full of good singles. Wouldn't lump it in with binaural and riot act. I also think there are more yield and no code fans and lots of Vitalogy only fans. My hot take is vitalogy is way overrated.Out of curiosity, something I'd written, and wondering if fellow PJ fans agree or disagree -
"As a long-time fan, one who counts Pearl Jam as their favorite band, the group goes in waves. And fans adhere to those waves. You've got -
1) The Ten purists. It's a great album, a bone fide classic. But it's the only one that sounds like it. The purists like only it and hold "Jeremy" as the best thing they ever did. All Pearl Jam fans like Ten, but some Pearl Jam fans only like Ten.
2) Then there are those who loved No Code. They are also unique, mostly only liking Ten and No Code. No Code is a bit...ponderous. It's like people who loved Bush's Razorblade Suitcase or Live's Secret Samadhi, someone who came to a band in a special moment but didn't continue.
3) Beyond that, you get the ones who went hard on Vitalogy and Yield, albums that went wide abreast of mainstream tastes. They had great songs, but lots of experimentation that could feel aimless.
4) There's a very specific, older subset of fans who grooved to the stretch from the self-titled album to Backspace to Lightning Bolt. There's a lot to like there, but there's also a decade+ of songs that sound like generic rock radio. It was an "elder statesman" phase.
5) And, finally, you get into the diehard, the kind who ride or die for Vs., Binaural, and Riot Act. These are really mature albums, complex and varied in their sound but very accessible. These are albums that don't sound like anything else Pearl Jam did, not like anything other bands do."
I don't know. I like the first three categories, but especially No Code and Yield as a pair. I also have a soft spot for Binaural. That's where I stopped, though.Out of curiosity, something I'd written, and wondering if fellow PJ fans agree or disagree -
"As a long-time fan, one who counts Pearl Jam as their favorite band, the group goes in waves. And fans adhere to those waves. You've got -
1) The Ten purists. It's a great album, a bone fide classic. But it's the only one that sounds like it. The purists like only it and hold "Jeremy" as the best thing they ever did. All Pearl Jam fans like Ten, but some Pearl Jam fans only like Ten.
2) Then there are those who loved No Code. They are also unique, mostly only liking Ten and No Code. No Code is a bit...ponderous. It's like people who loved Bush's Razorblade Suitcase or Live's Secret Samadhi, someone who came to a band in a special moment but didn't continue.
3) Beyond that, you get the ones who went hard on Vitalogy and Yield, albums that went wide abreast of mainstream tastes. They had great songs, but lots of experimentation that could feel aimless.
4) There's a very specific, older subset of fans who grooved to the stretch from the self-titled album to Backspace to Lightning Bolt. There's a lot to like there, but there's also a decade+ of songs that sound like generic rock radio. It was an "elder statesman" phase.
5) And, finally, you get into the diehard, the kind who ride or die for Vs., Binaural, and Riot Act. These are really mature albums, complex and varied in their sound but very accessible. These are albums that don't sound like anything else Pearl Jam did, not like anything other bands do."
I like this, but vs. really does sound like Ten. It's very early 90s sounding too and full of good singles. Wouldn't lump it in with binaural and riot act. I also think there are more yield and no code fans and lots of Vitalogy only fans. My hot take is vitalogy is way overrated.
The big exception is No Code. I don't like any of the songs on that.