May 6, 2025 – Bridgestone Arena, Nashville, TN, USA

Show at a Glance

  • Number of Songs: 25
  • Show Length: 2:18

Setlist

Main Set: Indifference, Low Light, Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town, Scared Of Fear, Why Go, Given To Fly, Dark Matter, Wreckage, Running, Even Flow, Daughter/(Another Brick In The Wall (Pt. 2)), Brain Of J., Green Disease, Jeremy, Got To Give, Corduroy, Come Back, Porch

Encore 1: Keep Me In Your Heart, Setting Sun, Do The Evolution, Rearviewmirror, Alive, Baba O'Riley, All Along The Watchtower

Pearl Jam Show Notes 5/6/2025:

The band returns to Music City on a balmy-for-May Tuesday. High expectations coming into this show, with conversations in the community centered around possible guest appearances and the probability of deeper cuts to honor the backdrop of being in this legendary town. Indifference as the opener meets that excitement level right away, and this version doesn’t disappoint; the crowd certainly hits their cue and sings their lungs out! Next, Low Light finally makes its tour debut, with a strong showing from Ed and Mike pulling out that beautiful ’59 Les Paul. Perhaps it wasn’t supposed to debut there, however, as Ed then shares:

“We hear you love music here in Nashville, and that’s what we love doing best, so this seems like a good match – two songs in, and I’m going to say that I made a mistake in the setlist… I didn’t need to tell you that… but in this day and age, I want to be transparent and respect the relationship we’ve grown over the last many years…”

Small Town is a warm embrace, with a lovely outro vocal by Ed. The first Dark Matter song to ever be played in Nashville is Scared of Fear and by this point in the tour, it feels tight and groovy. Mike’s spacey guitar work over the bridge is fantastic, and it leads into some intricate solo work. Masterful version. Why Go and Given to Fly are textbook, and the crowd is really showing some energy now. Ed looks out the the crowd and makes mention of all the travelers:

“I’m noticing a lot of people from a lot of different places – Chicago, Boston – what’s that right there? LA? Sonics! (a fan in GA is holding a #33 Sweet Lew yellow Sonics jersey up) Now I’m confused… anyways, this is such a great city… I just learned of a cool punk joint just outside of town, it’s got a great name it’s called Dark Matter!”

A perfect spot for Dark Matter to be dropped into, and the band is feeling this one. As usual, Matt is showcased here, and the whole venue seems to be reverberating with Jeff’s bass line and the kick drums dominating. After Wreckage, Ed makes a comment about the building saying “This is the Bridgestone Arena, yeah? Is that like, tires and shit? Alright, let’s burn some rubber” to kick off Running. This version feels very bouncy and has a great groove; it’s definitely come into its own. Afterwards, Ed gives a shout out to his bandmates:

“I wanna say something about Mr. Mike McCready here, at the risk of embarrassing himself in front of all these musicians… what is he gonna do, fire me? Is he gonna quit? I just wanna say, when you come to a city like this, where there’s street performers, people playing guitar on any given corner, that might be twice as good as you… and they are getting dollars put into their guitar case. When something happens that you get voted into something like, say the rock n roll hall of fame… you accept it as an honor and it’s nice to be recognized by your peers… and, you always knew you were gonna be institutionalized at some point. (ha) You still don’t really acknowledge or accept it. However, there are some people on this stage that got elected for the second time! If you’re inducted twice into the RRHOF — like Mr. Matt Cameron! At that point I think you have to realize that “Yes, I am a fucking badass!” Let’s congratulate him, our hero – PJ, Soundgarden – Mr. Matt Fuckin’ Cameron.”

Of course, here is the rightful place for Even Flow and it’s a barn burner. Mike is all over the place, including down in front of the GA rail, interacting with the fans – and the crowd gets LOUD. Ed then tells a sweet story about a fan:

“Somebody told me a story yesterday, that reminded me of those times and it got intense around the end of the first record… when the second record went on sale at midnight. I think there was a place in Ohio where they broke windows… it was an intense thing. What an honor to have this kind of attention; we just wanted people to be safe – it was an interesting time. This young girl, age 13, and she was begging her parents, “Pleeeeease let me go to the record store and be there at midnight.” Her parents being wise and smart, and maybe not that they didn’t trust their daughter, but maybe not trusting all of the Pearl Jam freaks waiting in line at midnight. She went to bed disappointed and a little angry at her parents. She woke up the next day on a school day at the breakfast table and her dad walks into the kitchen and throws the CD in front of her cereal bowl. If you’re a parent with a daughter, a dad with a daughter, you know how much of a privilege that is. That story really rang true and it meant a lot to me, and to know that this woman Laura is here tonight. When she was losing her Dad, just last year, they talked about that story and had another laugh and a bit of a cry. And we wish he could be here. And then she came here by herself to celebrate her 46th birthday, but I just knew she wouldn’t be alone if she was with us!”

To follow that is Daughter, enhanced by the too-relevant “government, leave women’s bodies alone!” Another Brick In The Wall tag. Then comes a glorious Brain of J with a fan (friend of LO4L Jason Brown) getting pulled onstage to sing the last bits of the song alongside Ed. Jack White had gifted a new guitar to Ed, who confirms that we won’t be seeing him that night, as he’s touring in Texas, but he gushes about how great of a human Jack is, having spent some great time with him in Japan recently. Jack taught Ed that the secret between having quality product and making money – is that you won’t make money, but you’ll make people happy. “This song is about the fuckers who take all of your money… it’s called Green Disease!” and what an on-point rendition it is; they’ve clearly rehearsed it a bit since it last showed up in Chicago back in 2023. Jeremy sounds fantastic, with Jeff’s bass tone taking us right back to 1992. The singalong on this one is next-level. For a lot of people that attended multiple shows on this tour, this next one closes out their Dark Matter bingo card… Got to Give gets just its third play, and it simply doesn’t sound good. One of the guitars isn’t meshing with the rest of the band, and it’s distracting in all of the worst ways. Even Matt seems a bit off here. At some point mid-song, a guitar switch is made, but the damage is done. Ed shows his space-nerd side, mentioning that a friend in the crowd tonight has travelled over 200 million miles, over twice the distance to the sun – NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, which sets up Corduroy. Oddly, a strange placement here, Come Back is next, and without any setup, as we so often get a dedication for this one in recent years. It’s a lovely version, with Ed feeling like he’s meandering a bit against a backdrop of such gorgeous musical texture. Something about this version feels right at home in Nashville; a little more improvisation all around, just fitting of the setting. Porch closes out your main set complete with circle jam. Coming back from the encore break, Ed states:

“You know, there’s so much music here in this town and there’s so much music that comes through this town, just I gotta tell you, on behalf of us and the crew, it’s just so appreciated that we can show up and have this kind of energy come, reflect back to us. We are so grateful, it’s been a long time, you know… as some of us have lived longer than we might have thought we would’ve or we’ve lived long enough to have experience more than we thought we would have or we certainly have been in a band longer than we thought we would have, I wish upon you all the rewards of long relationships. If you’re out there… loyalty and kindness and forgiveness, goes such a long way… why am I talking about this? I have no idea whatsoever… you know what it is? I guess it’s stuff that I’ve been thinking a lot about and I’ve been feeling and then, if you’re gonna put a mic in front of me, in front of people that I think about and I care about, then this is what’s gonna happen… and the reason why, it doesn’t happen all the time… I don’t even know if this is happening right now… I think it comes from, the fact that we don’t know if it might not ever happen again, and you want to take the mic and tell people that you admire and respect and are grateful to, you want to tell them that while you have the chance. Which brings me to the sad news that we got last week, that we unexpectedly lost a great Australian surfer, whom at one time was beating Kelly Slater… Kelly called me, pretty upset – I just wanted to introduce you, to let you know that we lost a great one – Mr. Shane Herring. If you’d be so good to light up your phones, let’s send this one back to the folks back home thinking about him.”

The speech leads to Keep Me In Your Heart which is a gem of a song, and Ed does it amazing justice this time, and every time. A powerful moment. Setting Sun is interrupted for a medical emergency. “We can’t talk about the fragility of life and play a song while somebody’s on the ground – thanks, Nashville.” The song is restarted, which causes it to lose some of its power, but they finish strong. The energy starts to come back to the crowd with Do the Evolution up next, then really cranks up with the next oddly-placed song: Rearviewmirror in a slot other than main set closer! This clearly whips some fans into a frenzy, which matches well with a non-extended, punchy version of RVM. In the home stretch, Alive precedes Baba with the house lights coming towards the end of Alive. Always the bittersweet moment, looking around the arena and seeing the sea of joyous faces, but knowing that the end of the show is near. Baba is a fun version, with Ed donning the sequin jacket and tossing tambourines out. At the end of Baba, the same fan that had earlier been pulled on stage gives a Cubs jersey to Ed, who proceeds to twirl it overhead as All Along the Watchtower begins. Ed then pours some wine into a sequined shoe that he had and serves it to the guy who gave him the jersey. Notably, Jeff is now sporting the Sonics jersey from earlier. Strong first night in Nashville!

Aaron Redmond

From buying ripoff-priced bootlegs in '95 to my first show at Alpine Valley '98 to my wife and I spending our first anniversary at the PJ 20 festival to six shows in '21/'22, I've been obsessed with the Pearl Jam live experience for nearly 30 years. I love that anything - ANYTHING - can happen at a Pearl Jam show!


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