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Joined: Sat January 05, 2013 7:30 am Posts: 8213 Location: nothing
To me, if there was one "standout" Pearl Jam song, this would be it.
I would describe it as the one that is most outer directionally different from what would be considered the sum of the calculated "average" pearl jam song.
At PJ20, at the start of that one note right before "if I can take you there....", I swear (and I wasn't expecting it) tears squirted straight out of my eyes. seriously.... straight. out. well not really, but maybe, I don't know. but it was unexpectantly overpowering emotional
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Joined: Sun September 15, 2013 5:50 am Posts: 22392
i have also squirted listening to this song
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To me, if there was one "standout" Pearl Jam song, this would be it.
I would describe it as the one that is most outer directionally different from what would be considered the sum of the calculated "average" pearl jam song.
At PJ20, at the start of that one note right before "if I can take you there....", I swear (and I wasn't expecting it) tears squirted straight out of my eyes. seriously.... straight. out. well not really, but maybe, I don't know. but it was unexpectantly overpowering emotional
That was my fav performance of this one as well. It had the perfect transition between the crowd and Ed that is so rarely achieved nowadays.
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Joined: Wed December 19, 2012 9:53 pm Posts: 22547 Location: Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Cameron Crowe wrote:
One of two songs contributed to the movie by Pearl Jam, "Breath" always felt like a part of the movie ... and a snapshot of the time in which the movie was made. The band had just acquired their new singer, Eddie Vedder, and bassist Jeff Ament had been working in the art department of the film. Three-fifths of Pearl Jam - then called Mookie Blaylock - even appeared in the movie as part of Citizen Dick, the fictitious band fronted by Cliff Poncier, played by Matt Dillion. The whole Seattle Music scene would soon explode, a surprise to us because the idea of Seattle being an important music mecca was initially a tongue-in-cheek joke as I wrote the script. But all the dreams of many of those struggling musicians would soon come true. Not just with the seismic arrival of Nirvana and "Smells Like Teen Spirit," but even earlier with one of the first real hits to emerge from Seattle since Heart and Jimi Hendrix years earlier - Alice in Chains' "Man in the Box."
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