There is no end to good concerts and there is no end in sight. Just a stone's throw across the border, it will be necessary to go on a summer jam with the American rock band Pearl Jam, who will bring their last year's album Lightning Bolt with them.
The year 1990 was written when they Eddie Vedder, Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard and Mike McCready got together and formed a cult rock group called Pearl Jam. Their beginning was not exactly rosy, as they ventured into musical waters at a time when it was booming grunge movements. Popular bands of the time, such as Alice in Chains, Soundgarden and Nirvana, Pearl Jam broke through with the album Ten. Singer of Nirvana Kurt Cobain described the young musicians as a group of profiteers who live at the expense of alternative mularia,
But it wasn't just the sound that connected all of these bands, but also the lyrics that touched on the dark themes of depression, suicide and loneliness. But what doesn't destroy, makes stronger, and Pearl Jam are with theirs Led Zeppelin-charged sound despite many criticisms, they got quite a number of fans and listeners and helped popularize grunge.
What's more - they survived it! While Nirvana burned down due to the death of Kurt Cobain, Pearl Jam went on a long way. Online music guide Allmusic declared them the most popular American rock 'n' roll band of the 90s, and radio stations identified them as the most influential modern rockers, who were now drawing inspiration from other, younger bands such as Puddle of Mudd and The Strokes. In 1998, a drummer joined the band Matt Cameron, a former member of the band Soundgarden, which broke up a year before, and stopped together with him in our Tivoli Hall.
14 years after the Ljubljana concert, with an unchanged line-up and with ten albums in their collection, the boys are coming just a stone's throw across the border. In addition to the musical machinery, they will bring 12 fresh songs from their latest album as part of their European tour starting on June 16. Lightning Bolt. We just have to decide whether we would rather experience them in Trieste or on Vienna. Or maybe on both ends?