Friday, May 05, 2006

Pearl Jam on SNL, RS Interview with Eddie Vedder

Here's a link to the video of PJ playing World Wide Suicide on SNL.

And here's a great interview that Austin Scaggs of Rolling Stone conducted with Eddie Vedder, posted April 21. I've picked out only a few highlights.

RS: Why do you think the musical community has been so quiet recently about the war, about the president? Or maybe you don't think that?

EV: I'm not sure what's out there. People like Steve Earle are a great example. He goes on Bill O'Reilly. It's beyond commendable. It's gutsy and I think a lot of it, it doesn't get heard. Or maybe people don't like to mess up a good time. I mean, we could talk about it in this interview, and it might not be the part that gets in. We could talk about Democrats and why they aren't leading an anti-war movement. Are they waiting for a shift in the polls? We could talk about our country in ways outside the war, like why they refused to sign the Kyoto Protocol, in regard to environment. Why aren't we agreeing to strengthen the conventions on biological weapons? Why haven't we signed the ban on landmines? Why haven't we banned the use of napalm? They refuse to be subject to the jurisdictions of the International Criminal Court. They can get away with anything. If you highlighted the classic aspects of this war, find out who's fighting and who's dying, and why are there billions of dollars being spent on this war and schools are crumbling and 45 million people in the US don't have health insurance? This is all stuff I've been reading in a book on Iraq called The Logic of Withdrawal by Anthony Arnove. It seems like it's a class issue, because there are things going on underneath this spectacle of war, and the Bush administration is using it as a distraction for the ills of this country that are being not only ignored but exacerbated. But, is anybody else saying that in interviews, and are they being edited? I'm not sure. Right now, we are in a situation where the "Worldwide Suicide" song is getting airplay, and three years ago that might not have happened. After 9/11, they took "Imagine" off the air! It's interesting...I'm not sure why.

RS: Do you have a favorite self-titled record out there?

EV: Ha ha. The first three Zeppelin records were untitled. Those are great.

[Not quite accurate, Eddie... The first three Zep albums were Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin II, Led Zeppelin III, and the fourth was titled with the four symbols you see as my profile picture. But I appreciate the sentiment...]

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