Pearl Jam's performance at CFG Bank Arena in Baltimore, Maryland, on September 12th, was not just a show - it was a pilgrimage to the holy church of grunge gods by devoted fans from around the country. The performance would be a maelstrom of distorted guitars, existential angst, primal energy, shared rituals, and incantations of sacred songs set against a fervent crowd that made an expedition to the church of their beloved grunge deities. Tonight, nearly 15,000 fans would sing alongside their cherished band as some received their first sacrament at the temple of Pearl Jam, while others would participate in one for their hundredth-plus performance. Baltimore appeared on the tail end of their American Tour before the band embarked towards New Zealand and Australia as part of their world tour. Tonight, like every night before it, would show why this Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band is as fresh as ever and continues to sell out performances around the globe.
Opening tonight's performance was none other than Glen Hansard. Hansard, the founding member of the iconic Irish rock band The Frames, first crossed paths with Eddie Vedder and Pearl Jam in the early 2000s and has collaborated with Eddie Vedder and the band ever since. For nearly 45 minutes, he and his namesake band proved why he was picked to join Pearl Jam on this tour. Hansard doesn't just perform - he immerses himself in his performance, moving seamlessly between gentle, whispered verses and full-throated cries. At moments during his seven-song performance, one would wonder if he was releasing something deeply personal with every word. The evening's performance culminated with "Fitzcarraldo" and "Revelate" from The Frames. If you have not gotten enough of your Hansard fix, tickets are still available for his performance at the 9:30 Club on Wednesday, September 18th. (Ticket link here.)
For decades, Pearl Jam has toured around the world, performing countless times on a mesmerizing number of world tours, and has performed on all continents aside from Antarctica. If it wasn't for the environmental impact that the band is well aware of, we are sure that Pearl Jam could sell out an Antarctica Tour or "Antarctica (Pearl) Jam" Cruise in a heartbeat.
At 8:45 PM, Pearl Jam sauntered on stage like the battle-hardened rock and roll warriors that they are. Like the calm before the storm, these five silhouettes calmly prepared to feed the musical souls of yet another sold-out venue. For this tour, they added a giant backdrop hanging the entire arena width, and in the early moments of their performance, their silhouettes, just like the band and their electrifying concert, appeared larger than life.
They opened with "Can't Keep," that brooding anthem from Riot Act, making its tour debut like a ghost from 2014. The audience cheered with delight, as this deep cut had only been performed a scant 25 times since they first performed it live in 2003. The message was clear—the past isn't dead; it's just simmering below the surface. Moreover, Pearl Jam was here to let it boil over and spend the evening performing songs from ten of their twelve albums.
With the screen backdrop still showing a scant sunrise of light, the sound exploded into "Present Tense," the crowd inhaling the existential words like they were gospel. Vedder's voice, weather but potent, floated over Mike McCready's shimmering guitar licks, leaving the audience in a trance of introspection.
Then came "Given to Fly" — a fist-pumping, body-swaying anthem that sent shockwaves through the room. It wasn't just a song; it was an ascension as if the entire arena was preparing to lift off and soar above the brick-and-mortar confines of downtown Baltimore.
With that ascension, then came the light show as the stadium erupted into shared jubilation. With explosive lights, "Corduroy" showed off the band's raw grunge power and the band's undying relevance.
The band then introduced the audience to two fresh cuts from their latest album, Dark Matter - "React, Respond" and "Dark Matter." Each of these new songs was their latest song with lightning bolt influences and sonic experimentation.
We were reminded that a voyage with Pearl Jam is a pilgrimage into the unknown. With over two hundred songs plus countless covers, each performance is uniquely its own. Vedder would take a moment to talk to Stone Gossard on stage to ask what song he would like to play next, pointing out that the band is a democracy, and they would decide what song they wanted to play next. Vedder would joke that despite the band being a democracy, he was, in fact, their dictator. A dictator or, perhaps better yet, a primordial navigator with their trusty sextant piloting us towards the musical North Star on the distant horizon - no one does it better than Vedder.
The arena was turned upside down as the band returned to a Vitology song with the appearance of the ethereal and bass-heavy rumble of "Tremor Christ." The music and Vedder's visceral delivery crashed over the audience, washing over the crowd in waves of dissonance. Vedder's voice rose and fell like a preacher at the pulpit. This wasn't a performance anymore; it was a rock and roll sermon and ceremony.
"Wreckage" and "Unthought Known" kept the pace wild and frenetic. By the time they launched into Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold" — a partial cover but with the bite of a full-scale assault — the crowd was a boiling cauldron of fists and sweat. Pearl Jam took a sip from the well of the gods of classic rock, spit it back out, and made it their own.
And then came "Even Flow." The arena exploded with the roar of the crowd and the collective energy of every soul singing along with Vedder. If there was ever a church of music - this was one such moment where the devoted followers ascended to the altar of one of the most anthemic songs of the eara. The raw energy of the audience's fervent singing and McCready's guitar solo. This blistering scream from the past served as a reminder that rock and roll is not dead — not even close.
In one of the more memorable moments, if one could point out one from the hundreds of this evening, was when Vedder told the audience, with paper in hand, that he had some good news and bad news for the audience. He spoke of the sad news of James Earl Jones passing and recalled sharing an evening with him in London many years ago, describing Jones greeting him with a "Good Evening Mr. Vedder" in that recognizable, deep, resonant baritone, and then talked of celebrating the 93 years that we had the great James Earl Jones.
Vedder would go on to discuss the good news: Taylor Swift's presidential endorsement and that a judge struck down North Dakota's near-total abortion ban. Vedder would explain that the band members have partners we have partners and daughters to grow up with the same right to reproductive freedoms that his own generation had and further encouraged the audience to make our voices heard.
This was the perfect springboard for "Daughter," blending it seamlessly with the haunting and altered lyrics of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall, Pt. 2." Vedder enshrined his sentiments into the song as he sang, "Leave our daughters alone. Leave our bodies alone." This wasn't just nostalgia; it was a merging of iconic voices, a challenge to the systems that cage us all in.
Vedder then piloted us to a story of three protagonists inscribed in the song "Deep" as he navigated us toward darker, murkier waters. In a collective catharsis, the audience screamed into the evening, "Can't touch the bottom!" The great release of singing alongside "Deep" with thousands singing along with the same vigor as us - such is the church of Pearl Jam. At the song's conclusion, Vedder would tell us that the three protagonists did not sadly have the upper hand and bookend "Deep" with their latest Dark Matter song, "Upper Hand."
Next, the backdrop would be prominently featured with a cartoon backing to the primal scream of "Do the Evolution." The backdrop, along with the song, snarled and howled into our collective consciousness with the kind of passion and energy that Pearl Jam knows how to deliver.
"Jeremy" arrived like a dagger to the heart, as visceral and gut-wrenching as the day it was penned. A song that hasn't lost an ounce of its punch — raw, unnerving, and tragically relevant. As Vedder howled the lyrics and McCready's guitar pierced the venue, we were all transported back to that first moment we first heard one of the most iconic songs of the 1990s.
"Lukin" came and went in a flash, a two-minute burst of fury that left everyone gasping for breath before closing the main set with "Porch." CFG Bank arena is blocks away from the decommissioned Baltimore Gas and Electric Power Plant, but leave it to Pearl Jam to power the entire city with the energy produced by their performance ending climax. Mike McCready writhed on the ground, bowing before us all with prodigious guitar licks as Jeff Ament pushed his weathered bass to its climactic breaking point.
During the encore break, a sharp crack rang out, and a few minutes later, Vedder took to the stage alone to explain that there was a technical difficulty. Eddie, ever the showman, but more importantly, a kind human who deeply connects and loves his audience, began interacting with the crowd. He first spotted and read a sign that it was someone's first Pearl Jam concert, then another one indicating it was their 142nd concert, and then one indicating it was their 151st show. Vedder joked, "151, is that Bacardi or shows." He wished someone a happy 59th birthday and read how someone drove from Vancouver to Baltimore just to see this performance. He would further talk candidly about taking a breath and taking the experiences of this tour all in Australia and New Zealand and how this is their 34th year being a band, and they still cannot believe it.
Hansard then appeared onstage with his well-worn acoustic guitar in tow. While the soundboard problem was furiously worked on behind the scenes, these two close friends would start the encore with the slow exhale of The Swell Season's cover of "Falling Slowly." Vedder and Hansard's voices intertwined like old friends reminiscing over hard-earned scars - it was vulnerable, delicate, and profound.
With the soundboard problem resolved, the turbines of Pearl Jam's power plant ignited for a full-throttle monster encore.
"Black," the first of the many jewels in Pearl Jam's crown jewel of anthemic songs, emerged. The crowd, a swirling mass of emotion, clung to every word, every note of every musician on stage. It was as if time itself paused, the world outside the arena ceasing to exist. Pearl Jam wasn't done. They segued to "Spin the Black Circle" and once whipped up a whirlwind of energy, vinyl worship, and punk fury, spinning the crowd back into chaos before the band unleashed a blistering cover of Dead Boys' "Sonic Reducer," a fierce reminder of their punk roots and tribute to Vedder's favorite baseball player.
Soon after, "Alive" erupted like a volcano from the stage. The arena was now a living, breathing organism, screaming back the chorus, a declaration of survival that echoed through every brick and beam in downtown Baltimore. But just like every breathing living organism, there is a time for rest and recovery. Vedder stopped alive as one person became unbalanced and nearly passed out. Vedder, the caring, empathetic soul, told the fan that there was no reason to apologize and that the fans in Philadelphia just a few days back were passing out left and right during the first song alone. After the medics gave the all-clear, the band picked it up right where it started, and in just a few seconds, fans were waving hands in unison as Vedder threw tambourines into the audience. Vedder continued to spot special fans in the audience and kept on throwing tambourine after tambourine into the crowd.
Then, like a gift from the gods of rock, "Baba O'Riley" — The Who's masterpiece and one that Pearl Jam has made its very own — reverberated through the space, Vedder's voice merging with the cries of a thousand souls! And with those thousand souls came what seemed like a thousand more tambourines being launched into the crowd as McCreedy handed guitar picks to fans near the stage.
They closed with "Yellow Ledbetter," McCready's guitar weeping into the night as the crowd swayed, lost in the magic. It was a fitting end to a night that wasn't just a concert but a manifesto: Pearl Jam is still here, still fighting, still alive.
Pearl Jam would end the night with Vedder and Jeff Ament wearing vintage Washington Bullets jackets. After saluting the audience, Vedder ended the evening by telling us, "Take care of each other. Take care of democracy." And that we will.
We used to laugh, we used to dream
We used to dance, we used to believe
"Scared of Fear" // "Scared of Fear" from Dark Matter
Rest assured, fans of Pearl Jam will continue to laugh, dream, dance into the night, and always believe in these icons of rock!
Setlist
Setlist
Setlist
Click here to see the setlist for Pearl Jam's performance at CFG Bank Arena
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Enjoy photos by our photographer Jason Herman.
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