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WORLD'S COLLIDE
- The end of a 21 year chase
October 2005
When Hurricane
Katrina ravaged the Gulf Coast, our nation experienced a devastation
the likes of which we've never seen, wiping out thousands of homes,
taking thousands of lives, and virtually wiping out the rich cultural
heritage that is New Orleans. In this time of crisis, the world's
musical community has come together like no other time in our history,
staging numerous benefit concerts that have raised tens of millions
of dollars. As a result, numerous moments that fans could have never
anticipated have unfolded before our eyes.
For me, the
most memorable moment occurred October 5 in Chicago, when Robert
Plant joined Pearl Jam for a show at the House of Blues. Plant and
the Strange Sensations opened the evening before Pearl Jam took
the stage, performing on the most intimate stage the band had graced
in years. While anticipation in the crowd was high, little did anyone
know just how magical this night would be by evening's end.
Plant returned
to the stage for the final five songs, starting with "Going
to California," "Little Sister," and "Money."
He and Eddie Vedder harmonized beautifully, trading vocal leads
as smoothly as Warren Haynes and Derek Trucks swap guitar licks.
After digging down to the roots of their youth, performing Elvis,
then the Beatles, the two reached even deeper, into the Led Zeppelin
catalogue, pulling out a song that had never been performed live
- "Fool in the Rain."
This is the
song that literally changed my path in life when I first heard it
in 1984. At that very moment, I left behind years of pop fandom
(the previous year, I had traveled 250 miles to see the Jackson
Five) and discovered the wild world of rock-n-roll. I'd searched
for a live version of "Fool in the Rain" for years, only
to learn that no member of Zeppelin has ever performed the song
live.
I never dreamed
that one day Plant would sing this one, let alone sing it with Pearl
Jam, a band whose music was introduced to me by Dave Schools just
after their debut CD. Dave said the band reminded him of Led Zeppelin
(our mutual favorite band). He loaned me his copy of "Ten"
and I've loved it ever since, so much so that I would rate the CD
as one of my ten (non-Zeppelin) favorite discs of all time.
Listening to
the show close with a dead-on version of "Thank You,"
I was taken back in time. When I realized it was in fact 2005, I
felt a circle has just been completed. Zeppelin brought me to rock-n-roll,
then I found a band I affectionately call Panic. Hanging at Dave's
house, talking about our Zeppelin bootleg collections, telling tales
of standing in front of the mirror doing his best Jimmy Page impersonation,
I found Pearl Jam. I always trusted Dave's musical advice and, as
usual, his comments that Pearl Jam was "the closest thing to
Zeppelin" he'd ever heard, I found a new outlet for my wild
rock-n-roll side. And now, 21 years after my search for a live "Fool
in the Rain" began, Vedder convinces Plant to finally perform
the song live.
In the span
of five and a half minutes, my 21 year search was no more. In the
end, I was left with one thought - there's nothing better than an
honest tune live.
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