Pearl Jam joue « Rockin' In The Free World » avec Chad Smith - Rolling Stone

2022-09-24 04:45:27 By : Luo Jack

January 6: Hitler fan rioter sentenced to 4 years in prisonDonald Trump sued by New York State for fraudVladimir Putin announces a "partial mobilization"47 people charged in sweeping pandemic aid scheme fraudFor Joe Biden, the Covid pandemic is overBillie Eilish performs her “Guitar Songs” in SingaporeRolling Stone Weekly No. 92: Lee Scratch PerryMotorhead celebrates 40 years of Iron FistFor Björk, "the violence in the United States is on an unimaginable scale""The Sound of 007", a documentary on the music of James BondRoger Waters returns to FranceArchive shifts its tour to 2023MaMA music & convention: the complete programMarcus King announces a concert in ParisBrad Pitt and Nick Cave exhibit sculptures and paintingsEzra Miller believed he was the MessiahSacheen Littlefeather accepts apology from Academy of OscarsCheck out the trailer for "Mr. Harrigan's Phone", Stephen King's adaptationCinema: Chicken Fries, soon in theatersShopping and gear: our back-to-school selectionBrad Pitt and Nick Cave exhibit sculptures and paintingsEzra Miller believed he was the MessiahSacheen Littlefeather accepts apology from Academy of OscarsCheck out the trailer for "Mr. Harrigan's Phone", Stephen King's adaptationMotorhead celebrates 40 years of Iron Fist[Cinema] Don't Worry Darling by Olivia WildeCINEMA: Moonage Daydream tells David Bowie[Chronicle] Marillion – Holidays In Eden"The First Time" with Bruce SpringsteenAyron Jones in "In My Room", the Rolling Stone concertLIVE SESSION – Last Train enters the stationFontaines DC in “In My Room”, the confined concertThe Last International in “In My Room”, the confined concertJust one day after performing a special concert at the Apollo Theater for SiriusXM, Pearl Jam returned to Madison Square Garden.It was the first time they had played in the New York venue in six years, and their set included many classics like "Given to Fly", "Daughter", "Do The Evolution" and "Alive".Halfway through “Rockin' In The Free World,” their traditional grand finale, Chad Smith, drummer for the Red Hot Chili Peppers, came running onto the stage.He perched on a tiny drum set next to his former bandmate, Josh Klinghoffer, who has played with Pearl Jam for the past year.As the song ended, Smith hugged Matt Cameron, who was wearing a Taylor Hawkins T-shirt.The relationship between Pearl Jam and the Chili Peppers dates back to their earliest days in 1991, when the two bands toured together. "Back when we were just a baby band with shit in our diapers , they took us on the road not just once to a big theater like this, not just twice, but they took us to Lollapalooza in 1992, Vedder recounted on Saturday.We have them to thank for changing our lives.»Other highlights from the concert at Madison Square Garden include a rare rendition of Mother Love Bong's songs "Chloe Dancer" and "Crown of Thorns," a tribute to 9/11 rescue workers, covers of "Sonic Reducer" by the Dead Boys and Prince's "Purple Rain" (featuring Klinghoffer on guitar and vocals), and an excerpt from Wet Leg's "Chaise Lounge" during "Daughter."Both Venus and Serena Williams were in the audience, and the band bowed to them before “Even Flow.”Vedder also hailed Seattle Storm icon Sue Bird, who retired from the WNBA earlier this year after an incredible 20-year career.Translated by the editorHarry Styles encourages his fans to register to voteArchitects: new extract from the next albumPearl Jam plays an extraordinary concert at the Apollo TheaterRed Hot Chili Peppers' Chad Smith pays tribute to Taylor Hawkins againEddie Vedder celebrates Joe Strummer's 70th birthdayRed Hot Chili Peppers stick out their tonguesRed Hot Chili Peppers: soon a new singleRed Hot Chili Peppers, The Return of the Prodigal BrotherBillie Eilish ventured to Singapore to record two live videos for 'TV' and 'The 30th' from her recent EP Guitar Songs.The videos, directed by Singaporean director Choānn and filmed in partnership with the Singapore Tourism Board, show Eilish and her brother Finneas performing acoustically in the island nation's lush park, Cloud Forest, at Gardens by the Bay.“Singapore was one of the first places I went on tour.I only stayed there for a day and absolutely fell in love with it,” Eilish said in a statement.Cloud Forest is one of the most beautiful places I have seen in my life.These two songs are really very important to me in many ways.I feel really connected to them and I protect them very personally, and I wanted to have a kind of peace with these songs that was really intimate and personal.I felt really comfortable doing it in a place as beautiful as Cloud Forest.»Eilish's Happier Than Ever tour brought the singer back to Singapore on August 21, about a month after the surprise release of Guitar Songs, her first new music since Happier Than Ever arrived in 2021."The 30th" is the first title she wrote after her second album.“That's why it's called 'The 30th' because something happened on November 30, and it was the most indescribable thing to see and experience.I had written down all those thoughts I had, Eilish said.I was with Finneas, and I said, 'I'm sorry, I don't know what you were planning on doing, but we have to write this song about it now.Translated by the editorContents of L'Hebdo N°92 – 09/23/2022 – Available now!Well, already, there was the controversy, about which the “experts” of the Lemmyist cause are still tearing themselves apart – and a few others always quick to get involved in this kind of debate: the first two words of the opening title which gives its name to the opus, necessarily never printed on the different visuals of the album in 1982 and after, are they really “Sieg Heil”?Four decades later, it is obviously no longer a provocation among others by Mr. Kilmister that we will remember when (re)leaning on this anniversary edition, but this rough production, almost punk in spirit, signed Fast Eddie Clarke, who left the ship just before the release of the album, following yet another globe catch with the captain.In more ways than one, Iron Fist sounds like a first swan song for Motörhead, for lack of a track as strong as an “Ace of Spades” or an “Overkill” – even if we don't sulk not our pleasure on “Go to Hell” or “Shut It Down”, martial, to name a few.Tables of the law that, by happy coincidence, we find as a bonus on the May 1982 live in Toronto, “endowed” with a very rotten sound but “so Lemmy”…3 Editorial review Editorial reviewFind this chronicle of the reissue of Iron Fist by Motörhead and many others in Rolling Stone n°146, available for pre-order.Iron Fist reissue is availableSpeaking to Pitchfork ahead of the release of her new album Fossora, Björk revealed that after decades of a life split between New York and Iceland, the singer has returned to her home country for good partly because of the Covid-19 pandemic and the wave of violence in the United States, from mass shootings to police brutality."The violence in the United States is on an unimaginable scale," said Björk.And having a half-American girl at school [in New York], 40 minutes from Sandy Hook… (Here she is referring to the school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012.) When we are here, I absorb all of Iceland.If one person is killed in the north, we all hurt.It's an island mentality.In the United States, being a simple islander, all this violence was too much for me.»A few weeks ago, Ozzy Osbourne, now back in England, also explained that he was "fed up" with shootings in the United States.“Everything is completely ridiculous there.I'm tired of people getting killed every day.God knows how many people have been killed in school shootings.And there was this shooting in Vegas at this concert… It's crazy.(Osbourne referring to the 2017 Route 91 Harvest shooting where 60 people were killed.)Bjork's new album Fossora, her first since 2017's Utopia, is out September 30.The singer previously released a debut single, "Apotos," which was partly influenced by her mother's passing in 2018.Translated by the editorDirector Sam Mendes and James Bond producer Barbara Broccoli discuss the importance of music to the franchise in a new clip from the documentary The Sound of 007, which will be available from October 5 on Amazon Prime Video.The film, directed by Mat Whitecross, will examine how music has helped shape the history of the Bond franchise, from James Bond 007 vs. Dr. No to Dying Can Wait.It will not only explore the classic Bond theme, composed by Monty Norman and originally performed by John Barry, but also share the stories behind the creation of the many hits that have been recorded for the franchise.In the film's new trailer, Mendes (who directed 2012's Skyfall and 2015's Spectre) discusses the virtually supernatural stature Norman's Bond theme has taken on in pop culture: "You're in the womb, do you hear?Heartbeats and the Bond theme.»Broccoli, on the other hand, notes how inseparable the music is from the character of James Bond: “[Bond] doesn't spend a lot of time talking about what he does or how he feels.So the music always had to give you a sense of what's going on inside Bond – the adrenaline, the tension, the joy, the anxiety.»The Sound of 007 will also include interviews with Daniel Craig (who has just completed his tenure as the secret agent), composer David Arnold and some stars who have recorded particularly famous songs for Bond: Paul McCartney, as well than Billie Eilish and Finneas.Translated by the editor40 years after its release, the track “Iron Fist” still resonates with Motörhead fans.It's time to...Discover Sahar, Tamino's new album, available this Friday, September 23.A solar album, at the crossroads of...This Wednesday, September 21 comes Don't Worry Darling, a thriller directed by Olivia Wilde that immerses you in the years...The 50 Greatest Bass Players of All TimeFreddie Mercury: 10 things you didn't know about the singer of QueenThe Rolling Stone interview – Roger Waters settles his accountsThe 100 Greatest Drummers of All TimeThe Last Days of Chester BenningtonCult interview – AC/DC: Meeting with Angus YoungAmy Winehouse, portrait of a tortured icon© Copyright Rolling Stone France 2022. 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