Stone Gossard _ Naked.
El integrante de Pearl Jam concede una entrevista a Ken Wilber para su sitio Integral Life, en la que detalla como ha evolucionado la banda y los aspectos mas importantes dentro de la misma. Dividida en 2 partes.
Part1:
Summary: Every now and again, pop culture is forced to reinvent itself. Like an epic drama among Hindu deities, our collective tastes are born, destroyed, and reborn again, swinging like a massive pendulum from one aesthetic extreme to the other. As a new cultural niche b ecomes more and more popularized, what typically begins as fierce artistic independence eventually devolves into reck less overindulgence, and creative novelty slowly bleeds away until all that is left is a formulaic husk used to manufacture tomorrow’s next fads. It is usually at this point, when a particular scene becomes so over-saturated that it can no longer support the weight of its own excess, that the entire scene will die an often-humiliating death, bloated and alone on an unflushed toilet.
Part 2:
Summary: Continuing the conversation from Part 1 of this fascinating dialogue, Stone and Ken take a personal look at some of the experiences that have defined Pearl Jam’s iconic career. Stone guides us through an intimate walkthrough of the band’s last five albums: No Code, Yield, Binaural, Riot Act, and the self-titled Pearl Jam. They discuss in detail some of the wild oscillations that occur in Pearl Jam’s overall sound, between what might be described as a more traditional classic-rock sensibility and their more experimental forays into sonic novelty, causing critics to describe just about every other a lbum as a “deliberate break from their sound”—indeed making it very difficult to nail down what exactly their sound is in the first place.












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