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- <text id=93TT0112>
- <link 93TO0124>
- <title>
- Oct. 25, 1993: Rock's Anxious Rebels
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 25, 1993 All The Rage:Angry Young Rockers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 60
- Music
- Rock's Anxious Rebels
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A young, vibrant alternative scene has turned music on its ear.
- But are the new stars too hot to be cool?
- </p>
- <p>By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY--With reporting by Patrick E. Cole/Los Angeles and Lisa McLaughlin/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> This is the story of how a gas-station attendant and high school
- dropout grossed more than $50 million for a record company and
- found himself in the middle of rock's noisiest controversy.
- </p>
- <p> Only three years ago, Eddie Vedder was working the night shift
- at a service station in San Diego, sometimes telling people
- he was a security guard to impress them. He doesn't have to
- worry about that anymore. Today the 28-year-old singer and lyricist
- for the alternative-metal band Pearl Jam is rock's newest demigod.
- His group's debut album, Ten, has sold nearly 6 million copies
- and still ranks in the Top 30 of the Billboard album chart more
- than 90 weeks after its release. This week the Seattle-based
- quintet will release its second album, called simply Vs., which
- is expected to be one of the biggest-selling albums of the year.
- </p>
- <p> They haven't built that Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland,
- Ohio, yet, but when they do, they'd better save a room for Vedder.
- He's got all the rock-idol moves down. Does he have a painful,
- shadowy past? Check. Does he have an air of danger and sensuality
- reminiscent of Jim Morrison? You bet. Does he refuse to adopt
- the trappings of a rock star, thus demonstrating that he's such
- a genuine article he doesn't need stardom? Absolutely. Is he
- happy to be on the cover of TIME? No way.
- </p>
- <p> Vedder is a product of the thriving world of alternative rock,
- a musical genre that rejects the commercial values of mainstream
- pop. Alternative has no strict definition, but it has a feel.
- Its musicians reject show-biz glitz. They support progressive
- social causes. Many of them avoid dating groupies and models.
- Their music is usually guitar-driven, with experimental touches.
- While pop songs are often about love, alternative lyrics are
- usually about tougher feelings: despair, lust, confusion. Alternative
- rock is a reaction, especially among the twentysomething generation,
- to all the years of being subjected to Madonna's changing hair
- color and MTV close-ups of George Michael's butt.
- </p>
- <p> Alternative rock has been simmering for years, ready for this
- moment of boiling over. The Georgia-based band R.E.M. was an
- alternative pioneer in the mid-'80s that went mainstream years
- before Pearl Jam was even formed. What's new is that the record
- charts are now crowded with alternative bands ranging from the
- arty-rock quartet Smashing Pumpkins to the folk-tinged Soul
- Asylum. MTV's Alternative Nation program and the Lollapalooza
- road tour, which feature the new breed, have become the hippest
- venues going.
- </p>
- <p> And therein lies the controversy: alternative music is currently
- one of the most potent forces in the mainstream, which has triggered
- an identity crisis and rancorous debate among musicians and
- fans. If these rockers are stars now, fans ask, haven't they
- become everything we're against? Nothing better symbolizes the
- struggle for this musical genre's soul than the success of Pearl
- Jam, a band adored by followers but reviled by some fellow musicians
- as sellouts, poseurs or opportunists riding on the fame of their
- fellow Seattleites, Nirvana. Nirvana leader Kurt Cobain has
- said that bands like Pearl Jam are "jumping on the alternative
- bandwagon." Cobain and his crew have released a new album, In
- Utero, that is deliberately abrasive (three weeks after its
- release, it ranks No. 3 on the Billboard chart).
- </p>
- <p> Vedder, who has already had his share of inner conflict, has
- been dizzied by the transformation from outsider to idol. "Any
- kinda quick success of the kind we had is inevitably bound to
- provoke some degree of contempt," he told Britain's Melody Maker
- newspaper. "I end up having a lot of difficulties with it myself.
- I'm being honest when I say that sometimes when I see a picture
- of the band or a picture of my face taking up a whole page of
- a magazine, I hate that guy." In keeping with rock tradition,
- alternative is defiant. The twist is what it's rebelling against.
- What angers today's rockers and their fans is that life is so
- unjust, which they learned at a vulnerable age. Alternative
- rock is the sound of homes breaking. If you are in your teens
- or 20s, chances are your family has been through a divorce.
- Alternative music has become an emotional sound track, speaking
- directly to unresolved issues of abandonment and unfairness.
- "I tried hard to have a father/ But instead I had a dad," Nirvana's
- Cobain sings on In Utero. One of Pearl Jam's biggest hits, Jeremy,
- is a song about a boy who kills himself in a classroom: "Daddy
- didn't give attention/ To the fact that Mommy didn't care."
- Pearl Jam's keen sense of angst has garnered the band comparisons
- with the Who and U2.
- </p>
- <p> Can they survive the hype? While Pearl Jam, Nirvana and their
- colleagues have a real message to deliver, most of this was
- overlooked during the past two years by trend watchers who were
- more interested in the way they dressed and the Seattle scene
- they came from. Style mavens fixed upon the thrift-shop wardrobe
- of flannel shirts and torn corduroy jackets, dubbing it the
- grunge look. For a fashion shoot, Vanity Fair dressed Manhattan
- socialites and celebrities in flannel and denim. All this exploitation
- made the term grunge deeply unfashionable among American youth,
- but bands like Pearl Jam have shaken off the label, becoming
- better known for their music than their baggy shorts.
- </p>
- <p> In terms of influence, alternative musicians borrow from the
- rough edges of rock's history. Out of the 1960s comes the spirit
- of social protest and artistic freedom. From the late 1970s
- come the primitive, do-it-yourself sensibility of punk and the
- slam-dancing and stage-diving mayhem that went with it. "We
- rip off everyone equally," says Shannon Hoon, lead singer of
- Blind Melon, which has sold more than 1 million copies of its
- first album this year. The trick is to sample riffs from somebody
- who's so long gone that the modern repetition of it sounds fresh
- and new. Even the theatrical group Kiss--whose members wore
- demonic makeup onstage--is cited as an influence by today's
- alternative rockers. "I had the worst crush on the God of Thunder,
- [Kiss bassist] Gene Simmons," says Kat Bjelland, lead singer
- for the punkette group Babes in Toyland. "They appealed to me
- because they're really basic. Plus they're so evil!"
- </p>
- <p> Alternative rockers keep a clear conscience about all the borrowing
- because their hodgepodge sound is homemade, not the formula
- of a record company. "I don't like labels," warns alternative
- rocker Juliana Hatfield, a winsome woman with a girlish voice
- and a guitar that barks. "But if you want to put me in that
- category, it's O.K. with me, because being labeled alternative
- has a certain amount of respect that goes along with it. It
- means that you've started out on your own, the ethic of doing
- everything yourself."
- </p>
- <p> The alternative movement was dependent on the entrepreneurship
- of dozens of independent record labels, or indies, that sprang
- up during the 1980s as major labels focused more on such superstars
- as Bruce Springsteen and Madonna. Seattle's Sub Pop Records
- was founded in 1986 to capture the musical moment, market it
- and move on to the next moment. Sub Pop co-founders Jonathan
- Poneman and Bruce Pavitt envisioned their small record company
- as a kind of Motown of the Pacific Northwest. "The problem with
- the music industry in the '80s was that the major labels had
- their doors shut to new ideas," says Pavitt, who used to work
- for Muzak, the elevator-music company.
- </p>
- <p> Sub Pop's proprietors had keen ears. They produced some of the
- first recordings by a whole string of bands that went on to
- national success: Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins, Soundgarden and
- Alice in Chains. As soon as the bands became widely heard, however,
- they jumped to major labels. After Sub Pop's most promising
- band, Nirvana, left the company and released the huge hit Nevermind
- (more than 4 million copies sold) on the Geffen label, other
- major labels began an indie-band feeding frenzy. Bands that
- had been playing in taverns were being offered $300,000 contracts.
- Many of these groups were founded on the principle that mainstream
- music was bankrupt, which only made them more attractive to
- mainstream labels.
- </p>
- <p> Pearl Jam came together as a serendipitous offshoot of a Sub
- Pop band called Green River. Rock legend, passed along by the
- resentful, has it that bassist Jeff Ament and guitarist Stone
- Gossard split from that band because the lead vocalist wanted
- to stay true to the experimental spirit of alternative rock,
- while Ament and Gossard wanted to become big-time rock stars.
- The band they formed, Mother Love Bone, combined a heavy-metal
- sound with bouncy tunes. Just as the group seemed ready to break
- through in 1990, its lead singer died of a heroin overdose.
- </p>
- <p> Enter Eddie Vedder. He was living in San Diego, fronting an
- all too fittingly named band called Bad Radio. A musician friend
- gave him a cassette marked simply stone gossard demos '91 and
- told him the guitarists on the tape were looking for a singer.
- Vedder listened to the tape, then went surfing. Lyrics came
- to him. "Son, she said/ Have I got a little story for you."
- Vedder rushed back to his apartment, wrote three songs and recorded
- himself singing the lyrics over the melodies. Vedder sent the
- demo tape back to Seattle, where bassist Ament listened to the
- deep, intense growl of the California stranger. As he recalls
- that day in Rolling Stone, he played the tape three times, then
- picked up the phone. "Stone," he told his pal, "you better get
- over here."
- </p>
- <p> One of the songs would later become one of Pearl Jam's biggest
- hits: Alive. The song is about a mother who has disturbing news
- for her son: "While you were sitting home alone at age thirteen/
- Your real daddy was dying." The emotions in Alive were torn
- from Vedder's own life. Vedder was born in Chicago, the oldest
- of four children. The first records he can remember enjoying
- were Motown records, songs by the young Michael Jackson. Neil
- Young came next, and the Who's album Quadrophenia. He identified
- with its portrayal of adolescent trauma. Vedder never knew his
- real father. He was raised by a man who he thought was his father
- and with whom he often clashed. By the time his mother told
- him the truth, Vedder had migrated to San Diego, and his biological
- father had died of multiple sclerosis.
- </p>
- <p> Vedder followed the tape to Seattle, where guitarist Mike McCready
- and drummer Dave Krusen rounded out the new band's lineup (Krusen
- was later replaced by Dave Abbruzzese). The group landed a deal
- with a major label, Sony's Epic, but when its first album came
- out in 1991, the musicians found themselves in the midst of
- the hype storm about Seattle bands. Nirvana exploded into prominence
- first, with its anthemic Smells Like Teen Spirit. When Pearl
- Jam drew attention as the Next Big Seattle Sound, Nirvana's
- Cobain seemed to bristle at sharing the limelight, dismissing
- Pearl Jam as retrorockers and copycats.
- </p>
- <p> "Everyone was kind of taken aback because Pearl Jam was such
- a complete success right away," recalls Eddie Roeser, lead singer
- of the Chicago-based band Urge Overkill. "They want to make
- honest music--it's not their fault that they're commercially
- huge."
- </p>
- <p> Pearl Jam's fame built steadily with such hits as Alive, Even
- Flow and Jeremy. What really put the band over the top was its
- live performances, dominated by Vedder's vocal power and mesmerizing
- stage presence. He reminded fans of an animal trying to escape
- from a leash. Especially in the first year or so, he hurled
- himself into crowds, surfing on upraised hands. He climbed the
- scaffolds around a stage, dangling from dangerous heights. He
- stood still in front of a microphone, folded into himself, tearing
- emotions out of himself as he sang. "I'm kind of a cynic about
- these guys who cross their arms when they sing," Soundgarden's
- Kim Thayil says of the first time he heard Vedder sing in a
- Seattle club. "But there were songs that Eddie sang that sent
- shivers up my spine." Pearl Jam cemented its reputation as a
- heavyweight contender in August at the MTV Music Video Awards,
- where the band won four awards, including best video of the
- year for Jeremy, and joined Neil Young for a stirring version
- of his song Rockin' in the Free World.
- </p>
- <p> Pearl Jam's new album, which is full of animal confrontation,
- was called Five Against One until the band changed the name
- to Vs. at the last minute. (As a result, the first pressing
- will be devoid of title.) The new disc combines politically
- correct views with punk-inspired belligerence. The music is
- layered with guitars and strong percussion; the tunes have the
- power of heavy metal but the melodic flavoring of great pop.
- Several of the songs are vitriolic attacks on patriarchal society.
- Glorified G. is a slam against rural lugs and their weaponry:
- "Got a gun/ Fact I got two/ That's okay man, 'cause I love God."
- The song W.M.A. is a critique of an actual crime in which a
- black man named Malice Green was beaten to death with flashlights
- by Detroit police. "White Male American/ Do no wrong," the song
- goes. "Dirty his hands it comes right off."
- </p>
- <p> The irony is that the initials W.M.A. could stand for many of
- the people who will buy Pearl Jam's album. In fact, they stand
- for all the members of the band, as well as most of the people
- in the alternative rock scene, though female musicians have
- grown in prominence. In the liner notes to the Nirvana compilation
- Incesticide, lead singer Cobain wrote, "If any of you in any
- way hate homosexuals, people of a different color, or women,
- please do this one favor for us--leave us the f---alone!"
- And Scott Weiland, the flame-haired singer for Stone Temple
- Pilots--grungelike newcomers who have an antirape song called
- Sex Type Thing--recalls feeling disturbed at a recent concert
- when he looked out into a crowd made up of the kind of good-looking,
- middle-class guys who used to beat him up in high school.
- </p>
- <p> Alternative musicians are a far cry from the strutting, white-male
- rockers of decades gone by. They tend to be antisexist, pro-tolerance
- and pro-underdog, whether it's animals or humans. The same goes
- for female rockers. When Chicago hyperintellectual singer Liz
- Phair, 26, played her explicit debut album Exile from Guyville
- for her parents, she was surprised at the reaction. "The first
- time my mother heard it, she wept," says Phair. "Not because
- she was shocked, but because she was so moved at hearing something
- so revealing from her daughter."
- </p>
- <p> Many alternative rockers have tried as well to broaden the demographic
- reach of their music to be more inclusive. The annual traveling
- rock carnival Lollapalooza, which helps bring regional acts
- to a national audience, has made a point of including rap acts
- such as Arrested Development and Ice Cube. "A lot of white kids
- will not go to a black show," says Ted Gardener, producer of
- Lollapalooza. "They'll buy the records, but they won't go see
- the band. They're afraid they might get killed. And some black
- kids feel the same way about white shows. Our attempt is to
- try to bring new styles of music together." The sound track
- to the movie Judgment Night features collaborations between
- rappers and rockers, including one by Seattle rapper Sir Mix-A-Lot
- and local band Mudhoney. "Alternative and rap grew out of the
- same thing," says Sir Mix-A-Lot. "We both did our thing in a
- basement, and it grew and grew until the major labels took notice."
- </p>
- <p> Yet any movement that pays so much homage to purity and anticommercialism
- is bound to be divided by charges of hypocrisy, especially when
- the lure of big bucks is at hand. The movement now finds itself
- drifting from the ideals that gave it birth: to express anti-Establishment
- ideas and make music for misfits. "It appealed to me and my
- friends because our generation is so dead to the world. There's
- nothing waiting for us when we get out of school," says Bonnie
- O'Shea, 21, a student disc jockey at the State University of
- New York at Oneonta. But when 5 million people buy an album,
- they can't all be outcasts. Some of them are going to be Rush
- Limbaugh fans who just like the beat. "I don't think all of
- these new fans know what they're listening to," says O'Shea.
- "I hope it's a short-term thing. I want my music back."
- </p>
- <p> Whose music is it anyway? Adults are always trying to find out
- what kids are up to, replicate it, and then sell it back to
- them. The kids like rap? Let's give them Vanilla Ice! Usually
- the youth-oriented products that adults come up with are all
- too obviously a grownup's conception of what a young person
- wants. The suits are, after all, suits. Getting a handle on
- youthful culture is like trying to hold onto one's adolescence.
- It slips away--it's meant to.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, the debate over who's fake in the alternative world
- rages on. The following exchange took place on MTV's cartoon
- series Beavis and Butt-head:
- </p>
- <p> Beavis (watching Stone Temple Pilots' video Plush): Is this
- Pearl Jam?
- </p>
- <p> Butt-head: This guy makes faces like Eddie Vedder.
- </p>
- <p> Beavis: No, Eddie Vedder makes faces like this guy.
- </p>
- <p> Butt-head: I heard these guys, like, came first and Pearl Jam
- ripped them off.
- </p>
- <p> Beavis: No, Pearl Jam came first.
- </p>
- <p> Butt-head: Well, they both suck.
- </p>
- <p> Members of the indie community are wary, almost paranoid, about
- the movement's being copied or co-opted by the mainstream. "One
- of the things that I think has really affected the underground
- negatively," says Bill Wyman, columnist for a Chicago alternative
- newspaper, "is this whole idea that this is `our' little scene,
- it's for us, we play really loud music, we don't want fans,
- we don't want major record deals, it's uncool to be popular
- and to publicize your band."
- </p>
- <p> Nirvana's Cobain once wrote a song called School: ridiculing
- the alternative world: "You're in high school again! No recess!"
- Just as in school, certain styles and viewpoints are considered
- "cool" in the alternative scene; those that don't fit in are
- derided. This year the critically acclaimed band Smashing Pumpkins
- had a hit single called Cherub Rock, an attack on alternative
- dogmatism: "Stay cool/ And be somebody's fool this year."
- </p>
- <p> "A lot of these parameters that are bandied about in the alternative-music
- community are ways of criticizing people," says Smashing Pumpkins
- singer Billy Corgan. "And again, it goes back to high school.
- You know, I don't like the clothes that you wear. That just
- becomes what alternative music is rebelling against."
- </p>
- <p> If alternative bands keep flooding into the mainstream, then
- the word alternative may go out of style, just as "progressive
- rock" became passe in the 1980s. "Alternative" has become a
- marketing tool. "Five minutes ago, I saw an ad for Bud Dry:
- `The alternative beer with the alternative taste,' " says Jim
- Pitt, who books musical acts for NBC's Late Night with Conan
- O'Brien. "Pretty soon you'll see an ad where they're moshing,
- `Out of the mosh pit and into a Buick.' It's the cycle of American
- pop culture. Things get absorbed."
- </p>
- <p> Pearl Jam is now on probation, forced to prove that success
- hasn't spoiled it. The group and its record label have responded
- by promoting the new album very little and even holding off
- on making rock videos for the time being. Some critics of the
- band claim its members have handled their fame poorly. "I've
- heard Eddie Vedder complain about MTV, as if he had been bound
- and gagged to make the video for Jeremy and forced to sign a
- record contract with a major label," gripes Alternative Nation's
- veejay, who goes by the name of Kennedy. Her advice: "Don't
- bite the hand that feeds you, and if you're not hungry, get
- the hell out of the kitchen."
- </p>
- <p> Yet in most respects, Vedder is showing a surfer's balance.
- His only visible excess is that he has taken to lugging a bottle
- of wine around stage when he performs. He has the same girlfriend,
- Beth Liebling, that he's had for nine years. Even the spat with
- Nirvana is patched up. "That's all been taken care of now, that
- whole relationship," he told Melody Maker.
- </p>
- <p> On Pearl Jam's first album is a song called Release, for which
- no lyrics are given, perhaps because the subject matter is too
- painful for Vedder to see in print. It captures the feeling
- of embracing the past, with all its hurt and controversy, and
- setting out on a new course. "I'll ride the wave/ Where it takes
- me," Vedder sings, imagining he is singing to his lost father,
- dreaming that he is uniquely himself but still somehow an amalgam
- of his father and his past. "I'll hold the pain/ Release me."
- It's a healthy attitude in a music genre ruled by high school
- passions. If he keeps it, the dropout who became a rock star
- may be ready for the head of the class.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-