In which circumstances did you discover Pearl Jam ?

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  • JT_JamFan
    JT_JamFan Posts: 170
    After the Hair Metal implosion of the late 80's, I was listening to tapes in the car (while delivering pizza) because the radio was not to be trusted! After a steady diet of Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, and The Doors with a lot of Fugazi thrown in I found a rock station I could trust to not throw Poison and Motley Crue at me every hour. I heard "Alive" and knew that somebody out there was still writing Rock n Roll!
    Escape is never the safest path....

    Atlanta 9.1.98
    Dallas 11.15.13
    Ft. Worth 9.15.23
  • tino_11
    tino_11 Posts: 2,190
    In 2008 a friend told me about this film, 'Into the Wild', that he'd just watched and lent me the DVD...you know the rest!
    'F*** the pessimists. F*** 'em.' Eddie Vedder
  • kw18
    kw18 Posts: 3,909
    Lots of really cool introduction stories here, with a surprising mix of recent discoverers and not-so-recent. :)

    I was first introduced to Pearl Jam when I received a Vitalogy cassette tape as part of a Secret Santa gift exchange with my Youth Group. That's gotta be fairly original, right? :P
    "Where's KW?"
    "Let's check Idaho."
  • EB218946
    EB218946 Posts: 4,017
    Heard Hunger Strike on Seton Halls Pirate radio 89.5 WSOU. Ed's voice was so powerful in that song! I went and bought Ten after that and have been a devoted disciple since.
  • kwdaley
    kwdaley Posts: 499
    At university... Friend came over with the Ten CD which had just been released. Blew me away. Totally like nothing I had ever heard (gotta remember, hair metal and corporate rock were still huge then). This was my first exposure to the Seattle sound (along with Soundgarden... whose CD Badmotorfinger I had bought before Ten)... Nirvana's Nevermind hadn't even been released yet.
    Ottawa 2011
    London 2013 "The Dundas Hookers on Crack" Show
  • Wow, there are great stories on this thread.

    Keep them up 10c
  • evsgjamm
    evsgjamm Posts: 2,108
    Late bloomer for me, relatively speaking. Watching Hockey Night in Canada in the living room with the family back in 1999-2000 ish and during a stoppage of play, this song came on and I was captivated. I was heavy into music, but new music at that time was Frogstomp, Creed (puke), Matt Good, Marcy Playground etc.... but I knew my best friends older brother was into music before I was. The next day I went to their house and we started shuffling through his early 90's CD's looking for that SOUND I heard ... after a few discs, Track 2 from a 1991 album with a pinkish/red cover.... ohhhhohohoh EEEVEN FLOWWWWWW. I was ALIVE & felt RELEASE like I'd never felt it before. ONCE I walked out of that house, my life was changed forever. (too tired to continue having song title fun)
    Vancouver '03, Paramount Theatre '05, Saskatoon '05, Calgary '05, Edmonton '05, Saskatoon '11, Calgary '11, Calgary '13

    2010 WATCH IT GO TO FIRE!!
  • Wimsta
    Wimsta Posts: 25
    First riff of Alive, on MTV (not 120 minutes) ... It worked out well, you could base entire friendships on music at my JR High.
  • DamianK
    DamianK Posts: 192
    I was doing my A levels and heard a song on the radio called Alive by a new band Pearl Jam whilst driving into school. Went out and bought the single straight away and haven't looked back since!!
  • I was lying with my girlfriend at the time (about 20 years ago, we were 17/18), on her bed in her parents' house. Ten was playing in the background; she was very much in to Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains, Nirvana. At one point she started singing along to Once.........."backstreet lover on the side of the road....." and I was absolutely hooked. Fell in love straight away and have been ever since. Unfortunately not with her, but that's a different story!
    Flanders
  • pleatherman
    pleatherman Posts: 472
    edited July 2014
    I like reading about people getting into the band after their wave of super-popularity in the '90's. Although, my discovery happened during the height of that maelstrom.

    Wasn't until I was in junior high that I sought out any music, in general. Ten was the first album I bought and the best investment ever made!

    But before that I was aware of the name, mostly because the other kids in school talked about them. Granted, I didn't have MTV so any exposure to popular music was limited.

    Two peripheral memories of the band stand out. Some awards show announced the name "Pearl Jam" and by the time I looked up at the TV, they showed some other hair-metal group. I just assumed they were one and the same.

    The second memory was accompanying someone to the mall and helping him decide which PJ album to buy (his only choices were Ten and Vs.). Naturally, I told him "start with the first one, whatever that is."

    However, my formal introduction to Pearl Jam occurred watching SNL in April '94 when they just happened to be the musical guest. Needless to say I was completely blown away. I don't even remember if I liked the music at the time.

    As time goes by, I'm probably blowing it out of proportion, but I remember it affecting me in a way I couldn't comprehend. I thought, this must be what heavy metal music is like! There was screaming and loud visceral sounds (I didn't stay up for "Daughter"). My untrained ears could not make out the underlying melody or differentiate the guitars. They were intimidating in a way, and yet I connected with how down to earth they looked compared to groups my older siblings listened to years back.

    Somewhere along the way, "Jeremy" was the official song that ignited my fierce devotion and that summer I bought Ten and never looked back. From then on it was Pearl Jam, first and foremost, and everything else second-tier. And that still hasn't wavered to this day.
    Post edited by pleatherman on
  • ComeToTX
    ComeToTX Austin Posts: 8,081
    i think it was alive on the mtv video countdown. i was 11.
    This show, another show, a show here and a show there.
  • covered in bliss
    covered in bliss chi-caw-go Posts: 1,332
    A local radio station has a program called new noise at 9...pretty sure that was my first taste. Bought the cd but became completely hooked when I saw them on mtv unplugged. It originally aired 22 years ago yesterday!
  • RB90590
    RB90590 Posts: 227
    In January of 1991, 14 year old me was talking with one of my dad's best friends from college. He knew I was all about music, and told me about his nephew. Remember vividly him telling me that his nephew, Mike was playing with a couple of the guys from a band called Mother Love Bone (was not familiar with them, but had heard the name). He then went on to tell me that they had got this surfer guy from California to sing for them, and he thought they really had a chance to make it big.

    Didn't actually hear them for a few more months, but got updates about name changes and how I should check em out from my dad's friend.

    Can't remember when I finally heard them, but alive was my first exposure.

  • tribejammer05
    tribejammer05 W'Ville, OH Posts: 696
    My Dad bought the import Jeremy single at a record store in Cleveland. It had Yellow Ledbetter on it which had gotten some local radio play and my Dad heard the DJ say "it was a rare find". (At the time). My Dad was excited to get it. Jeremy, Yellow Ledbetter, and Footsteps is all I listened to a lot. Asked for Ten for my 12th birthday. Been hooked since.
    "There's a $10,000 bill in it for you."
    "Oh yeah? Which president's on it?"
    "Uh, all of them. They're having a party. Jimmy Carter's passed out on the couch."

    Columbus 2000
    Columbus 2003
    Hershey 2003
    Toledo 2004
    Cincinnati 2006
    Chicago/Lollapalooza 2007
    Columbus 2010
    Chicago/Wrigley 2013
    Pittsburgh 2013
    Portland 2013
    Cincinnati 2014
  • PJ_Soul
    PJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 50,851
    There are already a few threads about this - search turntables in the forum and you'll find loads of info. Here is one of them:

    http://community.pearljam.com/discussion/200639/turntable-help

    :)
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • hedonist
    hedonist Posts: 24,524
    edited May 2014
    spearhead said:

    I was alone and far away when I heard The Band start playing...on the lip, late take off.

    Well done!

    And perfect for me, speaking of late takeoffs - I'd heard Black for the first time in early 1999 and loved it from voice to lyrics to music. Didn't think much more about it until I read a review of the best albums of the 90s. Usually I don't put much stock in the opinions of professional critics, but something hit me when I read about Ten. I bought that and Yield as my formal introductions, and in retrospect, it was such a beautiful illustration of the journey from their beginning to the then-present.

    Evolution, baby!

    Joined the old Sony BBS shortly after. That place, with this music, were the catalysts for some amazing slices of life that I'm still scarfing down :)

    edit - ha! pleatherman and I both said "formal introduction". Fitting term.

    Post edited by hedonist on
  • pleatherman
    pleatherman Posts: 472
    I enjoy how everyone's personal story is pretty unique. We took separate journeys but wound up in the same spot!

    TV certainly has played a vital role for more than a few of us. When PJ20 shows up on television every now and again, it makes me wonder if it will have a lasting effect on any newcomers, or perhaps channel surfing is a thing of the past? What do I know, I'm old!

    Thinking back, I remember the Atlanta '94 broadcast being a major catalyst for me. It was re-broadcast several times during that spring/summer. I remember thinking how dangerous the band seemed. I find that funny now that I'm more familiar with the band members. But back then what did I know, I was young!
  • PJ_Soul
    PJ_Soul Vancouver, BC Posts: 50,851
    edited May 2014

    I enjoy how everyone's personal story is pretty unique. We took separate journeys but wound up in the same spot!

    TV certainly has played a vital role for more than a few of us. When PJ20 shows up on television every now and again, it makes me wonder if it will have a lasting effect on any newcomers, or perhaps channel surfing is a thing of the past? What do I know, I'm old!

    Thinking back, I remember the Atlanta '94 broadcast being a major catalyst for me. It was re-broadcast several times during that spring/summer. I remember thinking how dangerous the band seemed. I find that funny now that I'm more familiar with the band members. But back then what did I know, I was young!

    I became a fan when I heard Ten, but PJ20 was actually what finally made me get a 10C membership. It is a pretty crappy documentary (why SO much about Mother Love Bone???), but it still inspired me to connect with the rest of the fans, so that's pretty sweet. :)
    With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world. Be careful. Strive to be happy. ~ Desiderata
  • jeff2040
    jeff2040 Des Moines, IA Posts: 1,619
    I was a little behind the times since I was born in 1987 and was a little young when the band was blowing up. In the summer of 2008 my brother bought a house and there was a garage sale down the street that had Ten for $1. He asked me if I wanted the cd and I figured it was only $1 and I knew Jeremy, Alive, Even Flow, and Black from the radio. I also remembered I Am Mine, World Wide Suicide, and Life Wasted from when the music videos were released. It took me a few months to finally listen to Ten but when I did I was blown away and immediately went out to buy Rearviewmirror. After hearing that I had to buy all of the studio albums and even found out about the bootlegs. (which has been an expensive habit) I joined the Ten Club in April of 2010, a week before I drove down to Kansas City to my first show. I've now been to 7 shows in 5 different states over the past 4 years. My family thinks I'm crazy so I'm glad that there are a few other "special" people out there in the world who understand the power of Pearl Jam! :))
    Sometimes you find yourself
    Having to put all your faith
    In no faith