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 Post subject: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 7:36 am 
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Walking the Cow
Around the Bend
I Am Mine
Dead Man
God Is In Control / Limit Yourself
Masters of War
I'm Open
MOTH
Setting Forth
Guaranteed
No Ceiling
*Ed was presented with a Golden Globe satuette
Far Behind
Rise Up
Millworker
Soon Forget
Broken Hearted
Drifting
Hide Your Love Away
Trouble
Sing Out
Won't Back Down
Forever Young
Porch

Encore 1
Society
Throw your Arms Around Me
No More
Arc

Encore 2
Growing Up
Lukin
Hard Sun

AND I got a setlist :D :D :D
Masters of War was not on the setlist
he played Soon Forget in place of Can't Keep
Picture In A Frame was on the list before Trouble but wasn't played

It was a great show. Yep.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 7:41 am 
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AMAZING. Absolutely amazing. I am stunned.

One of the greatest shows and greatest performances I've ever seen.

And anyone whoever doubts or talks crap about Ed Vedder from here on out should just crawl back in their hole and die.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 7:47 am 
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Bee Girl wrote:
God Is In Control / Limit Yourself

what's this?


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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 8:03 am 
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It's from some commercial for a Christian music record he was watching. I can't remember the name of the compilation but I see them on TV in Seattle too.

Actually, he announced that he will be changing over to Christian Rock and those were a couple of songs form the new album.

Praise the Lord.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 8:06 am 
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haha. kind of fitting how he follows up with Masters Of War.


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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 12:46 pm 
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what the hell, play can't keep!

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 1:56 pm 
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Yea one of my best friends flew all the way from the Quebec area to go see this show, I can't wait to hear about how it all was.

And I just took a listen to the audience recording from the Berkeley show, even better than I'd hope it would be.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 5:10 pm 
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Lips wrote:
what the hell, play can't keep!


Yeah, I am hoping for that tonight.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 8:06 am 
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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Mon Apr 14, 2008 9:01 pm 
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www.reuters.com wrote:
Eddie Vedder Captivating in Solo Stand
By Craig Rosen

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - In a mock presentation in the middle of his set Saturday night at the Wiltern, Eddie Vedder finally received his Golden Globe for best original song for "Guaranteed" from "Into the Wild." Vedder jokingly thanked the writers for striking so he didn't have to attend the ceremony because he was on vacation surfing on the North Shore in January.

On a more serious note, Vedder thanked filmmaker Sean Penn, who enlisted him do the score, and the film's protagonist Chris McCandless, the honor student who ventured into the wilderness to find himself only to never return.

During the first of two sold-out shows at the Wiltern, Vedder's sympathetic songs from "Wild" served as the heart of his set on his first solo tour, but he also spent plenty of time tipping his hat to a variety of influences with well-picked and nicely executed covers.

As the frontman of Pearl Jam, Vedder was one of the most powerful and oft-imitated voices of rock in the '90s. He's already proven he can step away from Pearl Jam and stand on his own in the recording studio with "Wild." Yet the studio and the concert stage are two very different things. It remained to be seen if Vedder could command the stage by himself without the sturm und drang of his four Pearl Jam band mates.

Based on his performance Saturday night, Vedder can do just fine solo, even if this six-city, 10-show jaunt is serving as a warm-up of sorts before he rejoins Pearl Jam for a run of shows in June. Seated on a stool for most of the evening, Vedder played a variety of acoustic and electric guitars, mandolin, ukulele and banjo on a set that resembled a basement. Despite the fact that seats had been placed in the Wiltern's usually open floor, he made the gig feel casual from the get-go. "Sit down and enjoy and relax," Vedder said early on. "We're going to be here a long time."

True to his word, more than two hours later, Vedder finally leaped to his feet and brought the crowd with him on a rousing version of "Hard Sun," originally recorded by late-'80s Canadian act Indio. He was joined by opening act Liam Finn on drums and his back-up singer, EJ Barnes, in a moment of pure celebration. The previous two hours were more somber but never boring. Aside from his own songs, Vedder wrapped his throaty baritone around Bob Dylan's "Masters of War," James Taylor's "Millworker," a pair of Cat Stevens songs from "Harold & Maude," Bruce Springsteen's "Growin' Up" and the Beatles' "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away," which was transformed into a joyful sing-along. While he has yet to write a song that has as much resonance as the work of his heroes, Vedder proved to be a captivating solo performer, something that's not a given for the frontman of any superstar rock attraction.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

billboard.com wrote:
Harper, Irons Join Vedder In Los Angeles
April 14, 2008, 1:35 PM ET

Brian Cohen, L.A.
Ben Harper and former Pearl Jam drummer Jack Irons made surprise appearances last night (April 13) at the second of two Eddie Vedder solo shows at Los Angeles' Wiltern Theatre.

Harper dueted with Vedder on "No More," their contribution to the recent "Body of War" soundtrack/compilation album, and joined opening act Liam Finn and Eliza Jane Barnes for "Hard Sun."

Irons, who has made sporadic appearances with Pearl Jam since leaving the band in 1998, drummed on "Last Kiss" and, in tandem with Harper on slide guitar, helped Vedder power through a show-closing cover of "All Along the Watchtower."

Earlier in the evening, Finn joined Vedder for a cover of the Hunter and Collectors' "Throw Your Arms Around Me," which Pearl Jam frequently covers live.


Vedder's first solo tour concludes with shows tomorrow and Wednesday in San Diego.

ocregister.com wrote:
Mr. Vedder goes to Hollywood – and scores
Review: Eschewing obvious Pearl Jam signposts, Eddie Vedder focused on his film music and influences for a riveting, revealing performance in Tinseltown.
By BEN WENER
The Orange County Register

There are acoustic shows and there are acoustic shows – and then there's the lengthy, inspired and inspiring performance Eddie Vedder gave Saturday night at the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, which is a breed apart.

There are precedents for it, sure – Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen and Ray Davies, to name just a few forebears, have all done something similar in this same venue, Elvis Costello and Ed-friend Pete Townshend at places nearby. Vedder's living-room setup here (giant speakers behind him, a reel-to-reel player to his left, travel cases at his feet), to say nothing of the relaxed but often intense atmosphere of this encounter, certainly suggests he has learned much from studying their examples.

Yet Vedder has placed his own spin on this storyteller routine, as befits the first-ever solo tour from the increasingly iconic Pearl Jam frontman. (The mere 10-date West Coast run wraps with shows Tuesday and Wednesday at San Diego's Spreckels Theater.)

He has made solo appearances before, of course – often in L.A. He turned up at a tribute to the Ramones at the Avalon, a benefit for tsunami victims in 2005 at the Wiltern, and he served up a fairly full-length solo set at Royce Hall when Sonic Youth curated All Tomorrow's Parties at UCLA earlier this decade. But Vedder, 43, seems clearly aware of the aura of prestige that surrounds this particular run, enhancing it via custom-designed playbills spotlighting both Vedder's causes (freeing the West Memphis Three, saving Trestles, bringing an end to the Iraq War) and the various accomplishments of everyone involved in the tour, including opening act Liam Finn.

Which of his own credits Vedder chose to highlight, however, speaks to the sort of two-hour-plus performances he gave Saturday. Pearl Jam might as well be a footnote. Instead, his biography cites his film work, from cameos in "Singles" and "Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story" to, more importantly, his contributions to soundtracks, leading to last year's widely regarded work for Sean Penn's adaptation of the free-spirit saga "Into the Wild," the impetus for this outing.

Thus, rather than this evening being a survey of past glories dappled by a few new bits (as a Young or Springsteen gig would be), Vedder's set cautiously avoided easy nostalgia and simple crowd-elating pleasures by focusing on his developing body of work apart from Pearl Jam.

Not that PJ's catalog went unrepresented; Vedder just selected songs wisely. The peacefulness of "Around the Bend," the fierce independence of "I Am Mine," the anti-materialism of "Drifting," the poignancy of "Man of the Hour" and the ukulele ditty "Soon Forget," the frustration of "Porch" – all of them contributed to a thematic whole, perfectly complementing the stretch of similarly inclined "Into the Wild" material, placed as centerpiece. (He also finally received his Golden Globe for it, in a surprise moment that seemed to embarrass him.)

In doing so, Vedder somewhat deterred the usual Pearl Jam crazies from singing along to every utterance, though he did have to quell their enthusiasm at the outset. Noticing that the entire audience leapt to its feet upon his arrival – and showed no signs of settling in for the night – Vedder interrupted the first verse of his opening cover of Daniel Johnston's "Walking the Cow" to ensure the right mood was being set. "The thing that's nice about a theater," he pointed out, "is that you can all sit down and relax. That's why I put on the coat."

And still segments of the crowd insisted on being obnoxious, incessantly hollering out requests between songs, at times interrupting his tales and quips (and dead-on Matt Dillon impersonation) with unintelligible hosannas. I was gratefully in a quieter, more reverent section, but this was Dave Matthews at the Pantages all over again, with fans unable to draw the distinction between an arena experience where overcome excitement is welcome and an intimate gathering where respect for the artist and the atmosphere is a must. Makes me disappointed with my generation – you'd never see this sort of poor behavior at a Springsteen acoustic gig.

What (mostly) shut 'em up were illuminating moments when Vedder shared songs by his influences, many of them learned from films, or redone for the movies (like his handling of the Beatles' "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away," from "I Am Sam"). He recalled how he came to know Cat Stevens, for instance: "You couldn't get a 'Harold & Maude' soundtrack. You had to get four or five Cat Stevens records and make one yourself." Then he paid homage with back-to-back covers, a soulful "Trouble" and, on banjo, a rousing "If You Want to Sing Out, Sing Out."

That also left me wondering if his elegiac rendition of Dylan's "Forever Young" wasn't learned from "The Last Waltz." The Bard's "Masters of War," however, here delivered with matter-of-fact coldness, has been in Vedder's playbook for so long now, some fans react as if he wrote it.

Other nods to formative songwriters this night also stayed on point: the rural impressionism of James Taylor's "Millworker," the exuberant release and stoic defiance of Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down," the rebelliousness of Springsteen's "Growin' Up," the passionate romance of Neil Finn's "Throw Your Arms Around Me," performed as a duet with Liam. (Townshend's "Love Reign O'er Me" was conspicuously absent, but the Who giant's sense of melody and guitar playing, along with Finn's chord structuring, is evident in virtually all of the "Into the Wild" songs.) (Correction:"Throw Your Arms," written by Mark Seymour, belongs to the Australian band Hunters & Collectors. I learned it from Finn, and forget that it's one of few regular covers in his repertoire.)

It was, in subtler than suspected ways, a tour de force – an opportunity for Vedder, in that distinctive, deeply resonant baritone of his, to open up about himself and his outlook on life without ever getting too heavy-handed about it. The surfer may sing "Masters of War" with as much venom as anyone who has ever tried, but for all his outspokenness, his journey remains an inward progression. Fix this crazy world, yes, he seems to say – but find yourself first.


Liam Finn, justifiably garnering acclaim for his do-it-yourself debut ("I'll Be Lightning") and his one-man-band performances, was an ideal opener and assistant to Vedder on "Wild" stuff like "Society" and "Hard Sun." But for all his obvious instrumental talent and skill at generating loops to conjure a bigger sound, there was something about his set that left me wanting.

Once the New Zealander layered on all the parts and made space for accompanist Eliza Jane Barnes, many of his songs were invigorating – yet the building process can be laborious to watch again and again. As grew to be the case with Jack White, I'm already longing to see what Finn may someday do with a proper band behind him.

Contact the writer: 714-796-2248 or bwener@ocregister.com

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 3:33 am 
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Lips wrote:
what the hell, play can't keep!


I second that! All through my journey for the solo tour, following him from Bay Area down to Los Angeles, I waited and waited for Can't Keep. And it did not show up! But I won't complain. I got to experience his first ever solo tour and I got to hear Brokenhearted live!! And that is just simply priceless!
Lucky stars in MY eyes....

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 4:40 am 
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I'm liking all of these reviews so far.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 5:08 am 
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anybody who didn't know how fucking amazing Walking the Cow was... that to me separates Dave A era fans from the rest


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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 5:38 pm 
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"Walking the Cow" (new version) gets my vote for the best song on this tour. It fully displays all of Ed's talents. And his restraint with the song's melody is f'n genius.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 8:28 pm 
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100pacer wrote:
"Walking the Cow" (new version) gets my vote for the best song on this tour. It fully displays all of Ed's talents. And his restraint with the song's melody is f'n genius.

How is it a "new version"? It sounded just like his 1992 cover of it, to my ears.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 8:30 pm 
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punkdavid wrote:
100pacer wrote:
"Walking the Cow" (new version) gets my vote for the best song on this tour. It fully displays all of Ed's talents. And his restraint with the song's melody is f'n genius.

How is it a "new version"? It sounded just like his 1992 cover of it, to my ears.


or 1994.

never really liked the song. still dont. it could be replaced with just about anything (other than Dead Man) and I'd be happy.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 8:43 pm 
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fan of it since I first heard it on In Rock We Trust


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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 9:00 pm 
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Isaac Turner wrote:
fan of it since I first heard it on In Rock We Trust

There you go, my thoughts exactly...
And it does seem a bit different for me, mainly because it's being perfectly sung, it sounds to me like a softened version.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 9:34 pm 
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given2fly23 wrote:
punkdavid wrote:
100pacer wrote:
"Walking the Cow" (new version) gets my vote for the best song on this tour. It fully displays all of Ed's talents. And his restraint with the song's melody is f'n genius.

How is it a "new version"? It sounded just like his 1992 cover of it, to my ears.


or 1994.

92, 94. I'm old, my memory is hazy.

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 Post subject: Re: Los Angeles Wiltern Theater 4/12
PostPosted: Tue Apr 15, 2008 9:48 pm 
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Buby wrote:
Isaac Turner wrote:
fan of it since I first heard it on In Rock We Trust

There you go, my thoughts exactly...
And it does seem a bit different for me, mainly because it's being perfectly sung, it sounds to me like a softened version.


This feeling towards a lot of the songs I expected Ed to perform led me to not be that interested in his solo tour. I wish I could have seen one of those shows, I think.


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