Sunday, March 3, 2024

Pearl Jam "Dark Matter" (Single)

 




It's a bit cliched to reminisce, out loud at least, about when and where you first heard a certain song and the effect said song had on you. I'm going to do it anyway. I have three songs that I heard, coincidentally all while driving to or from work or school in the early 1990s, that I can distinctly remember the place, time, and circumstances surrounding the first time I heard them. One was "Smells Like Teen Spirit." One was "Cherub Rock," and one was "Even Flow." Each one of these songs stimulated my auditory nerves like I can only imagine that first hit of your drug of choice did. I wouldn't know the ins and outs of how a first hit of heroin or coke might feel. I'm straight edge as far as that stuff is concerned. Nevertheless, I know what it feels like to feel high. My highs are linked explicitly to good music, good books, and good art. All of which have swirled around the bands who produced the music mentioned above. Only one of those bands has continued to give me repeat experiences of the type of "you remember where you were when you heard it first" moments. It's quite an accomplishment for a band, 32 years on from that "Even Flow" moment to recreate, for this listener at least, a similar experience. That's what happened with Pearl Jam's latest single, "Dark Matter." This time though, the urgency and the call to action in the music is tempered with the power of authority that only longevity, and a track record for evoking a change in the consciousness of their listeners, can provide.