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re: Layne Staley vs. Chris Cornell vs, Eddie Vedder.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:53 am to DeadHeadTiger
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:53 am to DeadHeadTiger
What type of talent?
Eddie was the lesser of the three from a vocal standpoint, but a better musician. Eddie was a good guitarist and drummer.
The guitar intro to Better Man was Eddie.
And while his vocal talent was not as good, Eddie's voice was a perfect fit for Pearl Jam.
Eddie was the lesser of the three from a vocal standpoint, but a better musician. Eddie was a good guitarist and drummer.
The guitar intro to Better Man was Eddie.
And while his vocal talent was not as good, Eddie's voice was a perfect fit for Pearl Jam.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 10:55 am to Wtodd
quote:
Grunge didn't have a specific meaning
Grunge was an aesthetic, not a musical genre
Posted on 2/3/26 at 11:23 am to DeadHeadTiger
Saw both Cornell and Staley live back in the day. Never saw Pearl Jam as I don't care for them. I think it is Cornell. We saw them in the Tabernacle in Atlanta for the first Audioslave tour. The man had the most powerful singing voice I've ever heard. I really think he could have gotten up there and done the show with no mic. Amazing.
Posted on 2/3/26 at 2:28 pm to DeadHeadTiger
Hulk Hogan vs Ric Flair vs, Eddie Vedder
Who had the most raw talent?
Who had the most raw talent?
Posted on 2/3/26 at 6:30 pm to Big Scrub TX
Cornell was the best vocalist, songwriter and musician of the three.
Posted on 2/4/26 at 10:12 am to Bjorn Cyborg
quote:
Grunge was an aesthetic, not a musical genre
In musical terms I simply refer to it as an era but agreed about "aesthetic" as well. Still remarkable how all that happened, but a recent visit to Seattle helped me understand more.
Posted on 2/4/26 at 3:04 pm to drizztiger
quote:
drizztiger
What a bump. I replied to this topic in 2018 and I've seen PJ 4 times since then.
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