May 3, 2025 – Jazz Fest, New Orleans, LA, USA

Show Notes:

It was a beautiful day in New Orleans, but there was a high percentage chance of severe thunderstorms right around the time that PJ was set to take the stage (headliners go on at 5pm at Jazz Fest). As the…

Show Notes: 

It was a beautiful day in New Orleans, but there was a high percentage chance of severe thunderstorms right around the time that PJ was set to take the stage (headliners go on at 5pm at Jazz Fest). As the band took the stage and launched into Corduroy, the weather could not have been more beautiful. It was hot and a little muggy, but there was a decent breeze and the dark clouds could only be seen in the distance surrounding the venue. It ended up being perfect. The band unleashes a series of high energy songs to start the festival set, their first time at the New Orleans Jazz Fest since 2016. Corduroy features a call and response breakdown section and a fiery Mike solo in the ending jam, and don’t sleep on Matt’s crushing playing as well. Do The Evolution and Why Go follow, unleashing more high octane vibes upon the large and energetic crowd.  A beautiful Elderly Woman follows and in typical fashion brought the crowd together, and was followed by a short speech by Eddie referring to the political climate of the time. It was one of a series of speeches throughout the show that referenced the political and social climate. Here’s what he said before React, Respond:

“Oh, look – there’s a microphone and there’s a lot of people and it’s starting to feel a little tricky out there.  Maybe this should be, uh, just a second for a reminder: Don’t let these issues isolate you.  Don’t let them gain power by isolating us.  Don’t feel alone….If something makes you crazy don’t just react – RESPOND!”  

A tight and punchy React, Respond comes out swinging, which interestingly was 1 of only 2 Dark Matter songs to be played at this show. Up next is Wreckage, and what’s interesting about this version is more visual than the version itself: At Jazz Fest, artists do not have their own screens and light shows. So Wreckage was played without the large wave crossing the screen behind the band. It really let the song shine without having special effects to support it. Daughter was played without any tags or extended jams, and was followed by Eddie introducing the band:

“Mr. Stone Gossard on the guitar.  On the other guitar on the other side of the stage we have Mr. Michael McCready.  Events like this seem to bring out the best in Mike McCready.  I know this because I have been in a band with him for the last 34 years.  I personally have been to almost every Pearl Jam show there ever was (crowd laughs).  And I predict, based on this insider trading and amount of knowledge that I possess…I do predict that because of not only the presence of all you all and how beautiful you look under this perfectly cloudy sky.  I’m looking at all the faces and then coming to see one of our favorite faces in the whole world and that is of New Orleans’ hometown hero Mr. Steve Gleason and his beautiful family.  I predict that on this next song: Mr. Mike McCready is going to lose his fucking mind!”

Mr. Mike McCready did, indeed, lose his fucking mind in Even Flow. Eddie then goes on to plug Steve’s book that had recently been released. The band goes on to play Tremor Christ, a song that’s connected with Gleason because it was selected on his hand-picked setlist from Spokane in 2013. The song also has some history in New Orleans as they recorded it there in 1993, as Ed references. This is the first of a few songs that clearly point towards this show not being your run of the mill fest set. Eddie jokes that the band gets all sorts of requests for song requests to recognize “birthdays, anniversaries, and…circumcisions. Sorry, I don’t think that’s happened yet…let’s have that be a record that’s never broken.” This leads to the next song, and yet another atypical fest set inclusion, being dedicated to Kenny and Julie celebrating their 33rd anniversary, Love Boat Captain. Black follows with a great crowd singalong, soaring Mike solo, and brief We Belong Together tag. Jeremy brings the tempo back up, and just when it seemed like the show might settle into a series of hits to run out the show, we got another surprise in the form of Red Mosquito, featuring photographer and friend of the band, Danny Clinch, on harmonica. Danny did a great job going back and forth with Mike during the jam.

From here on out the band settled in and delivered a series of songs for hardcore and casual fans alike to enjoy. The band tears through State of Love and Trust, one with amazing bass tone from Jeff during the breakdown, followed by Eddie referencing how they had to stop several times at the recent Florida shows, with a capacity of 3-4k, but New Orleans has been nothing but smooth sailing. Better Man featured a call and response in the jam, along with a brief Save It For Later tag and a fierce growl during the “don’t let me down!” line. Porch has a nice uptempo jam featuring some great interplay between Stone and Mike. Alive is preceded by a speech from Eddie talking about how we all live through tragedies and bad times, but that going through those times means you “learn to live and appreciate every moment in this fragile life.”  Yellow Ledbetter, Baba O’Riley and Rockin’ In The Free World are played in rapid fire succession to end this strong festival set. During the middle jam in RITFW, Eddie asks the crowd “Are we still free?” and sings “Keep on fighting for the free world” as the song heads back into the final verse and chorus and then heads into a fiery climax to end off the show.


May 1, 2025 – State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA, USA

Show Notes:

After a night one with quite a few curveballs, the band takes the stage with Ed telling the crowd, “Here we go, Atlanta,” and throws another curveball out of the gate, immediately setting the tone with a rare Present Tense…

Show Notes: 

After a night one with quite a few curveballs, the band takes the stage with Ed telling the crowd, “Here we go, Atlanta,” and throws another curveball out of the gate, immediately setting the tone with a rare Present Tense opener for the first time since 2013, and only the 5th time ever. Why Go is paired with an earlier than usual Do The Evolution without the music video visuals combining for a powerful one-two punch. Ed addresses the crowd after React, Respond, and acknowledges that it has been 12 years since they last played Atlanta. He says it’s too long to stay away, and thanks the city for keeping the band in their good graces and coming out to see them. He then gives Jeff a shout out:

“My good friend right here, Jeff Ament. He just raised his hands. Am I not allowed to call you my good friend? I mean, my bandmate for sure. I thought we were good (friends). What about the note at Christmas? Look, I don’t mind telling everyone that I’m in love with that man right there, Jeff Ament, well, actually, all of them. This is same sex marriage times six. LGBT, the B is for band.”

Ed then acknowledges Jeff’s good friend Coach Q (Quin Snyder) from the Atlanta Hawks, who was in attendance with his 4 kids ranging from 7-13 at their first rock concert. Ed encourages the crowd to give them their best and show them what it’s like. “Make it so they feel stoned even though they aren’t…I don’t think.” Before Dark Matter, Ed talks about having had tightness in his stomach all day and that he was trying all conventional ways to get better so he could be on top of his game for the show, until he isolated the problem, which was his realization that he was watching the news all day. He then told the crowd that, at one point, the newscast was going to a commercial and the anchor said, “Stay tuned because right after this commercial, stay tuned for more dark matter.” Ed tees up Even Flow by both honoring and challenging Mike:

“I was thinking about guitars, I’ve been thinking about the Fender Telecaster, I’ve been thinking about the Fender Stratocaster, here’s an example in the hands of Mr. Mike McCready right there. I think in a year or two that guitar, the design anyway, will be 75 years old. And I’m just glad that I’ve been around at the same time that Mike McCready had one in his hands, and I get to witness him play sometimes 4 or 5 nights a week. I mean, if this band has played…we’ve played over 1,000 shows, maybe 1,100. Let’s say it was 1,100 exactly. I’ve been to 10,998. I came to see Mike McCready. I’m a very lucky man. That is all because I know that my brother Mike responds under pressure, so I’m getting him into a corner to see what he has for you. What do you got tonight, Mr. Mike McCready?”

Mike remains undefeated, of course, rising to the occasion with a killer solo, playing most of it behind his head. Ed shouts out Mike and then pivots to Matt, saying:

“And the engine that we’re all driving, or the engine that’s driving us. As of this week, a two-time RRHOF inductee, honoree, you get to see a legend tonight, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Matt Cameron. What a great human. I mean, really, I can speak for everybody on stage and all our crew and everybody, we lucked out with a good bunch, but we’ve especially been grateful, without you, we might not have stuck around, so thanks for keeping us together.”

This leads to an excellent mid-set Immortality, a big highlight tonight, that had the entire band migrating over to be huddled up in front of Matt’s drum kit by the end of the outro, with Ed shouting out Matt again at the end, “The mighty Matt Cameron!” On night one, Ed named just about every Atlanta venue they ever played, with one glaring omission being the Fox Theatre, home of one of their most legendary shows in the band’s history. Ed here gives the Fox Theatre its due:

“I just wanted to introduce this next one just because there’s a connection to Atlanta. I read that 30 years ago, last year, it was something we put out. I guess we had done a radio broadcast from the historic Fox Theatre here in Atlanta. And for some reason, Mike McCready was just absolutely on fucking fire that night, and I remember this next song was put out as a single or something, and we don’t normally play it, but in honor of the timing and the history, this one is called Dissident.”

Dissident is down tuned, but effective with him, ending the song pointing his finger at the crowd and practically speaking rather than singing, “Escape is never the safest path, but do it anyway, do it anyway.” Corduroy features a great solo by Mike as Ed, Jeff, and Stone once again huddle in front of Matt’s drums as it builds to a fiery conclusion, before unexpectedly dropping right into a fantastic version of All Those Yesterdays. Ed sits at the edge of the stage and sings to the crowd for the first couple of minutes of the song. Right before the bridge, Ed sings “All those yesterdays, all Atlanta Braves.” Hail, Hail makes a rare late-set appearance, and Ed is handed an Atlanta Braves hat at the end of the song and also amusingly realizes that he came away from interacting with the crowd with a bracelet he doesn’t recognize. Ed mentions that the arena is one of the most eco-friendly venues in the country, before returning to talk about the Fox Theatre in a story he says he doesn’t believe he’s told before that unexpectedly reveals the origins of the recording of Better Man.

“We’ve had so many experiences in this part of the country, in this city in particular. Some of the aficionados out there will know that we recorded maybe 4 or 5 records right here. It’s called Southern Tracks Studio. I was thinking it was starting around No Code to even Backspacer. But then I remembered there’s a song on Vitalogy. This song, we tried recording a couple of times. We tried to record it when we were together recording Vs. The reason…it has something to do with here, the way it evolved, because we could never get the sound like the energy it had when we played it live. And what we ended up doing, we checked for a really good guitar solo, and it turned out to be the one from a night I mentioned earlier from the Fox Theatre. I don’t know if you know this, we took the version of the song from the Fox Theatre; we took all the crowd out of it, so it sounded like it was in a studio. We had a great take of Mike McCready and all we needed was an introduction with a guitar and organ. And so, we just set up a couple of mics. Brendan O’Brien was with me producing, my good friend Nick (DiDia). In one take, we did the organ and the intro, I played guitar and sang and that was the version. So, when you hear it on the record, it’s the Fox Theatre coupled with a little bit of Southern Tracks right here.”

While it has certainly been known that Ed wasn’t happy with the versions recorded during the Vs. sessions, resisted the potential commerciality of it, and how he nearly gave the song to Chrissie Hynde; this was a great revelation about how they finally arrived at the version that finally made him comfortable with its inclusion on Vitalogy. All of this made for a very memorable Better Man with great crowd participation during the Save It For Later tag, which Ed acknowledged afterwards. Ed shows the crowd his shirt, which says, “End Gun Violence” and adds, “that’s all it says, that’s all it needs to say. What’s so hard about that?” He then talks about having met someone who was a kid in Parkland who suffered through that school shooting, who then had to endure another one at University of Florida. He pointed up to a jersey at the end of the arena and said, “from one pistol to another” referencing Pistol Pete Maravich (originally an Atlanta Hawk) and dedicated Porch to him.

Ed doesn’t leave the stage for an encore break and addresses the crowd and, eventually, although it seems Ed is doing his normal solo slot, it becomes clear that the whole band is onstage. Ed asks if anyone is turning 50 anytime soon and proceeds to interact with a few of them. He talks about how 50 isn’t that old and drinks a toast to those who are turning 50 and all the years until 60. He then talks about a close friend Dr. Matt Jaffe, a proud Georgian, and thanks him for being there and helping his family and the band. Ed then says:

“Lastly, I want to shout out to number 10, Mookie Blaylock. You’ll always have part of our heart. I think everybody in this room knows that the first name of the band was named Mookie Blaylock. You don’t know that if I were to have a boy, I was going to name him Mookie Blaylock. I had girls. This one’s for all of you who have good friends or that you’re a good friend to and you wish you could even be a better one”

This leads to Off He Goes being played with the whole band seated. During Black, Mike is on fire, playing most of his solo on his knees in front of his pedals. As it winds down, Ed walks over to him and joins him on his knees, as he sings the “We belong together” part, almost as if singing it to him. Ed tells the crowd, “One more quiet one” before launching into a mid-encore Rearviewmirror, which the crowd is quite surprised to get after Porch ended the main set. Ed tells the crowd:

“We said we thought we were missing one song. Josh immediately said this one, and we said, ‘Okay.’ If you’re ready, I think we’re ready. And Rick (Beato), this goes out to you”

It leads into the unmistakable first notes of Leash. The combination of RVM and Leash took the energy to another level in the encores. Opening band, Dead Pioneers, were invited onstage for Rockin’ In The Free World, during which Ed sang, “There’s a thousand points of light for our fellow man. Make sure they don’t get deported while we can.” Yellow Ledbetter closes out a high-energy night with the band really starting to hit their stride on this short run of shows.


April 29, 2025 – State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA, USA

Show Notes:

Can’t Keep returns as an opener. Its only the third time it’s been played in the last 11 years, and the first song to be played in Atlanta at all in 13 years. It’s been a long layoff between Atlanta…

Show Notes: 

Can’t Keep returns as an opener. Its only the third time it’s been played in the last 11 years, and the first song to be played in Atlanta at all in 13 years. It’s been a long layoff between Atlanta shows, with the last non-festival show happening in 2003. There were numerous technical issues throughout the evening. Several times, McCready’s guitar cut out on audio, sometimes for extended periods. Jeff was particularly animated and jumping around stage all evening. After Given to Fly, Eddie does a quick check-in with the room, asking “you guys good out there?” pulse-check before they hit the gas again. Before Wreckage, Ed gets distracted by something in the crowd, calling out that “someone’s got a big stick,” then trying to figure out what it is, asking if it’s like a crutch and then asking again what kind of stick it is. He says he’s not going to worry about it for the moment, but notes it’s an odd thing to have in a large crowd, adding that as long as it doesn’t have a trigger, he guesses it’s okay. He pivots briefly to the nearby group, telling them to be safe and commenting that she looks fine, then does a quick aside asking “do I know you?”, and when she says yes he jokes that he doesn’t believe her. He closes the bit with a general warning to “be careful with the long pole,” calling it good advice for anyone. After that, Eddie thanks Atlanta, says he was admiring Stone’s guitar work, then talks about Stone putting the next song together 35 or 36 years ago, back before Eddie met them, when it was Jeff, Stone, and Matt. He then gives Even Flow an alternate title, calling it “Keyfob in a Car Park.”

After Even Flow, Ed says Mike met someone who specifically requested the next song. He calls the person he’s dedicating it to one of his biggest heroes growing up, says he was a huge hero in Atlanta when Ed was a kid and still is, and identifies him as number 44, Mr. Hank Aaron and starts into Unthought Known. Daughter includes a tag of Dead Moon’s It’s OK. After Dark Matter, Ed thanks the crowd for listening and liking the new ones. Not For You includes a tag of Sleater-Kinney’s Modern Girl. Severed Hand appears in the penultimate main-set slot, usually reserved for their bigger hits. After Severed Hand, Ed asks for the house lights so he can find a kid named Isaac in the crowd, saying he’s been noticing a lot of young folks up front. He explains he got a note from a boy named Isaac’s mom, Jennifer, and tries to locate them. He fumbles a bit on Isaac’s age, then cracks a side note about another kid nearby who’d better start playing guitar tomorrow if he wants to play like Mike McCready, and asks if he can toss a tambourine over so it gets to Isaac. He then shifts gears and says what the band does onstage took more guts 30 years ago when they were shy and unsure, but Isaac has more guts than all of them because he’s been through so much and is still there tonight. Without putting Isaac on the spot, he calls out people who’ve marked themselves as organ donors on their license, saying that choice is exactly what keeps good people alive and helps them heal. He thanks Isaac for being a living example and sends love from the band.

To begin the encore, Eddie says a fan traded him a jersey and he traded back a bottle of wine, then gives a shout to crew member Simon (from Dublin, Ireland) who helps him out. He introduces the next song as a Warren Zevon song, says Zevon played Atlanta a lot and liked playing there, and that the audience should know some of his songs, but even if they don’t know this next one it’s special because it’s the last song Zevon wrote – Keep Me In Your Heart. There’s a very clear intro to Spin The Black Circle:
<p style=”text-align: center;”><strong><em>”Alright, we have a song about records and record machines and record players and black vinyl and colored vinyl and Third Man Records.”</em></strong></p>
<p style=”text-align: left;”>Alive is introduced as “one of those songs we played back in Lollapalooza 1992.” After, Eddie thanks Georgia, then does band introductions, including Jeff  and noting his wife Pandora has just landed in town. He then talks about the Rock ‘N’ Roll Hall of Fame and says one of them is being inducted a second time, congratulating Matt Cameron for being inducted with Soundgarden. Various members of the band play snippets of Soundgarden songs like Outshined, Superunknown and Spoon Man, and Ed pops a bottle of champagne handing a cup over to Matt who drinks it with a massive smile on his face. Ed checks in with the crowd after Baba O’Riley and asks if they want one more. The night closes with repeated thanks and a simple sign-off, sending “much love from the northwest to the southeast,” telling the crowd he loves them, wishing them good night multiple times, saying they’ll see them next time, and ending with “Goodbye…It was fun.”</p>


April 26, 2025 – Hard Rock Live, Hollywood, FL, USA

Show Notes:

We kick off part two of the casino run on a Saturday night with an ever hypnotic version of Release. It would flawlessly transition into a very up tempo version of Of The Girl that got off to a hot…

Show Notes: 

We kick off part two of the casino run on a Saturday night with an ever hypnotic version of Release. It would flawlessly transition into a very up tempo version of Of The Girl that got off to a hot start, but ended up losing a little steam towards the end due to Ed jumping in too early on the vocals. Regardless, the band and crowd alike are in great spirits. Mike puts on an impressive display, more shreddy than its normal bluesy vibe. A double dose of Yield songs, Given To Fly and Do The Evolution, are played here to get the energy going. Ed yells out “go Stone go!” during his patented solo in Evolution. Ed mentions a sign in the crowd that reads “shows = 140, tambourines = 0” which he tells the person holding it to fuck off. But even though he’s mean in the beginning, he’s nice in the end as long as he doesn’t forget. Ed then gives attention to a matter in the crowd, and while they wait, he proceeds to tease a fan wearing an Aaron Judge New York Yankees jersey. He discusses a little bit of the band’s history in the state of Florida going back to 1992, and tells this story about playing in a small club called The Edge in Orlando:

“I climbed up on the I-beam, and then a big head security guy who looked a lot like that guy in the Aaron Judge jersey, he didn’t know who the fuck i was because he wasn’t paying attention to the eight songs we had already played. And he was climbing on the thing wanting to kill me. Right when he was about to grab me I leapt off, the crowd grabbed me and I was floating around on my back, and I just gave him (gestures with his middle finger)”

Dark Matter and Wreckage sound polished coming off of a tour year where they were both played essentially every night. Daughter’s tag is the ‘hey hey, it’s ok’ bit from Sonic Youth’s Androgynous Mind, but right after the tag finishes up, there is a killer transition into Not For You. The chords break in before the tag is complete, flipping the tables into an extremely energetic rendition of the Vitalogy song. The Modern Girl tag is teased at the end as Ed plays a little bit of what he usually does to begin it, but no lyrics are ever sung. Ed says hello to a young girl in the audience and says it would really piss the lady with the sign off if I gave a tambourine to you and not her. Ed then references the local newspaper review of night 1’s show that read that McCready was an absolute arsonist. Then he jokes about Florida Governor, Ron DeSantis, attempting to arrest Mike to send him to a prison in El Salvador. Mike then proceeds to light the building on fire with another amazing rendition of the Even Flow solo played almost entirely behind his back. Ed then takes a moment to single out Matt Cameron and calls him the guy that rubs the sticks together to ignite the fire. Sparks continue to fly as Scared Of Fear is played with fun energy at a rampant pace, and Mike sets the stage ablaze with an incredible solo for Immortality. The ending of Immortality has the entire band huddled around Cameron feeding off of each other, leaving Ed to shout out ‘fuck yeah Matt Cameron!’ at the song’s conclusion. 

Ed decides to switch up the setlist adding in Faithfull for what was originally supposed to be I Got Shit. During the song, a crew member comes out to help Ed pour wine into red solo cups. He continues to dole out more wine through the song’s bridge. Black follows up, and surprise surprise, it’s the show’s biggest highlight. The overpowering emotion that McCready displays during the solo is echoed out into the small theater, and he is feeling the energy by moving across the stage with fury. As the crowd sings the doot-doo-doot-doos, Ed adds this on top of it:

“Happiness is real when happiness is shared. And healing can be real when the sadness is shared.”

After Black, Ed says they are gonna play a song probably for the last time on this tour because they only play it when one of their children is in the audience. He then talks about being in a band for 34 years where back then they never thought they could write songs that resonate with parents. He then goes around and mentions where everyone used to work before the band got big, and when he gestures over to Josh, Josh said he was hanging up pictures of them on his wall. Ed then shares a story about his daughter Olivia’s run in with actor Zach Galifianakis:

“He was introduced to her and said ‘OH! I always wanted to know… have you ever sung to your dad, Don’t call me daughter?’”

Ed then congratulates Mike’s oldest daughter for getting accepted into one of the best colleges on the whole planet. Something Special is then played for the only time on this tour. Better Man and Porch finish out what’s “technically” the main set, even though Eddie never ends up leaving the stage. He says instead of going backstage and arguing about the set, he’d rather just talk to the audience. He toasts them, and then talks about a guy named Steve in the crowd who requested to hear Hard To Imagine tonight. Ed says we can’t play that one tonight (BOO!), but we’re gonna invite him to one of the other shows on this tour so we can do right by him (Note: There was no payoff to this story). He shouts out a few happy birthday messages for some teenagers, and wishes a happy wedding anniversary to a couple who had been to over 30 shows together. Ed then shares this story about being in a grocery store:

“For whatever reason, I had to get my fruits and vegetables and protein and get the fuck out of there and i just wasn’t in the mood to be hassled. I go into the produce section, get a couple of things and got my cart and keep moving. Sure enough, I wasn’t there that long and this guy he’s following me, and I’m like fuck, I’m just not in the mood today. I pretended like I didn’t notice him and just kept moving. But now he’s coming even stronger, and he’s got his wife with him and I’m like here it comes. And he says ‘excuse me sir, I think you have our cart.’ same fucking apples and bananas that I had, I didn’t know! He didn’t know who I was, and that’s the way I like it”

Just Breathe is played solo here, and a quick fashion note, Ed is wearing a hat with the grunge Mickey Mouse cartoon. The intro to Upper Hand is played, but we have yet another incident in the crowd that forces the band to stop and restart from the top. The band carries on and puts on a riveting performance. Ed talks about the Seminole tribe that invited them to play in this venue, and then shares an incredible story about how tribe had a very special gift for Jeff:

“There was a bass that he played on the second record of ours which was called Vs. He rented it to play it, and when we were done making the record, he wasn’t able to buy it, they had already sold it or something. It was something that stuck in his head for 32, 33 years, and our good friend out there Chris he says ‘you know, I think we have that fucking thing!’ Because they own all of it, you see. And they are caretakers and custodians, and they also grew up knowing and fighting injustice, so this was an injustice that they felt they could repair. So Jeff showed up at the show last night, and a bass guitar that was sitting in the clutches of the Hard Rock Cafe for 30 plus years was sitting in the dressing room waiting for Jeff. What an act of generosity, thank you, Chris.”

The bass that Jeff is playing is a 1961 Fender Jazz bass, black with a red pickguard. Once the band kicks into Elderly Woman, a song he had recorded using that bass, Ed gleefully shouts ‘that bass!’ The bass is rolling and Jeff is grooving the entire time. Although not mentioned, Sonic Reducer is played three days after the death of David Thomas, who wrote the song with the band Cheetah Chrome before the Dead Boys recorded it. Ed is swinging his mic at the end, and Stone and Jeff are face to face rocking out. Pearl Jam’s bread and butter finish off this set, Alive, Rockin’ In The Free World and Yellow Ledbetter. During Alive, Ed is given a Florida Panthers inspired jersey with the Vs. sheep head on the shield instead of a cat. This was created by our good friend and contributor, Mike Cribier. McCready noodles a little bit of Superunknown after the end of Alive. Ed dedicates RITFW to the opening band, Dead Pioneers, and Chris from the Seminole Tribe joins the band to sing and dance on stage. Jeff is using the 1961 Fender Jazz bass again on Ledbetter as this closes out a two night stay in one of the most unique venues they’ve ever played.


April 24, 2025 – Hard Rock Live, Hollywood, FL, USA

Show Notes:

The opening night of the 11-show 2025 tour emanated from an intimate venue at Hollywood, Florida’s Hard Rock Casino. This is their first show in Florida since the 2016 tour. It was a difficult ticket to acquire as the venue…

Show Notes: 

The opening night of the 11-show 2025 tour emanated from an intimate venue at Hollywood, Florida’s Hard Rock Casino. This is their first show in Florida since the 2016 tour. It was a difficult ticket to acquire as the venue held room for only 7,000 patrons, about half the size of a normal Pearl Jam arena show. The stage at the venue was too small for the titanic video screen that the band had been using on the 2024 Dark Matter tour legs, so they opted with a smaller screen instead. Being close to the beach, the show and tour appropriately kicks off with Oceans as you can feel the band with a pep in their step after not being on tour for five months. Present Tense to follow that up was lively with incredible energy from crowd and band alike. Ed belted the impactful lines with furious passion as the band thrashed all over the stage. After Why Go, Ed talked about playing to 50,000 people in Australia a few months back, and while that felt great, a place like this feels really great. He quips “I feel lucky, I feel lucky in a casino and that’s dangerous” before rolling into Deep.

Three Dark Matter songs are played consecutively keeping up with the mid-set theme from 2024 setlists, and afterwards, Ed asks the crowd if there’s anyone who’s never seen the band live before. He introduces them to Mike McCready and says that after not playing since December (it was November) he’s itching to play right now. This of course leads to a soul crushing rendition of Even Flow. The intro of Down needs to be halted due to an issue in the crowd, but when they jump back into it, it’s a fun, energetic version. After Corduroy, Ed makes a toast to Matt Cameron and says they were invited to play this venue by the Seminole tribe of Florida. Before the show, the tribe honored the band for their work with the indigenous people throughout the country, mainly Jeff Ament, who has built nearly 42 skateparks on reservation land for years. He mentions that Jeff was given the name “Holds Water” by the indigenous community for his continued support. After Won’t Tell, Ed says they are gonna play one they don’t normally play, which ends up being Leatherman. Leatherman was also played at the tour opener in Vancouver in 2024. Prior to Lukin, Ed shares a story from being on tour in Florida in 1992. After stopping at their hotel, he went down to the beach to read a book. Here’s what happened:

“I was a bit tired, not really sleeping through the night and I passed out. Woke up a couple hours later resembling a piece of.. What would you call it? Crispy bacon. We were playing the Cameo Theater in Miami. It had this little overhang, so I climbed up this thing and I jumped off. The feeling of 260 hands scraping your sunburned back was very memorable. That feeling, it felt like this sounds…”

The combo of Lukin and Porch close out the main set with the video images of the latter still presented as a rearview mirror for whatever reason. Midway through the solo, Ed asks if this room is ready for lift off, then goes to the top of the platform leading the crowd in a call and response moment before the massive ending. After the encore break, Ed comes out with his shiny red Telecaster given to him by Tom Petty. He acknowledges himself on screen wearing a Hawaiian shirt and said he didn’t realize how much he looked like Jimmy Buffett before saying kind words about him posthumously. He plays I Won’t Back Down for Petty, his favorite Floridian of all time. Footsteps is played via request for a fan named Chris who had been in a coma for months and not expected to survive. Once he got out of the coma, his friends tried to get him to the Fenway Park shows the year prior, but his health prevented him from going. However, he was in attendance with his friend Mike to hear the request get fulfilled. The band performed a powerful rendition of the song seated the entire time.

The biggest surprise of the show came when the band performed So You Want To Be A Rock ‘n’ Roll Star for the first time in fifteen years. Written by The Byrds, this is one of their lesser played covers with this rendition played for just the eighth time in their history. As he’s done in the past, Ed took the song’s bridge to send a message to the crowd:

“It’s one thing to be a bunch of guys, girls, people of the same makeup. If you like them well enough to think ‘do you want to start a band?’ I would recommend that to anybody looking for a way to express themselves and communicate, I would recommend starting a band. Just for fun. Just to feel the power. So that’s one thing just to have some fun, but can I just say to have been given the opportunity to be a band together for 34 fucking years and to be supported by you all and people like you all. People all over the planet who let us hopscotch all over the world just to play our music, and you’ve made friendships up here that we couldn’t have had without you. We just cannot thank you enough for the support you have given us after all these years.”

Ed says normally we wouldn’t play this right now, but we’re gonna take this request from Mordecai, or anyone who has a birthday or a sore knee or whatever else. The request is Crazy Mary (which is, in fact, normally played in this spot). Midway through the song, we have another incident in the crowd as a young woman is attended to. Ed during this time is handed a jersey that reads Crazy Mary with a number 10 on the back. Wine is being passed around the crowd, something that was not happening regularly during covid era shows. The solo duel is so intense that it leaves Mike flopping down on the stage at the song’s end.The set ends with show stopping versions of Alive and Baba O’Riley, and to close out the show… finally! For the first time since the first leg of 2024, Setting Sun is once again the show closer. Mike puts on one of the jackets given to the band in the Seminole Tribe ceremony prior to the show, and Setting Sun brings a sense of warmth and finality to the 2025 tour opener.