Dark Matter

Album: Dark Matter (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • Dark matter is a mysterious substance that makes up a significant portion of the universe's mass, roughly 85%, yet remains undetectable by direct observation. We know it exists based on its gravitational effects on visible matter, like stars and galaxies, which move in ways that can't be explained by the gravity of known matter alone.

    Here, Pearl Jam blasts the shady dealings of the powerful, likening their deceptive talk to dark matter – unseen but shaping our future for the worse.
  • The song's lyrics are pretty cryptic but they seem to delve into societal anxieties, critiquing manipulative communication and its negative impact. The bass-heavy track targets "demagogues," calling out their damaging rhetoric and the burden their decisions place on others.
  • The thumping song is the title track of Pearl Jam's 12th album. Dark Matter was recorded at Shangri-La in Malibu, California, under producer Andrew Watt's watch. The band recruited Watt (Justin Bieber, Ozzy Osbourne, Post Malone, The Rolling Stones) to helm the record after the lifelong Pearl Jam fan worked on frontman Eddie Vedder's 2022 solo LP Earthling.
  • The album was laid down over three weeks in 2023. "When we were in the studio with him this past year, he really kicked our asses, got us focused, and playing, song after song," guitarist Mike McCready told Classic Rock of Watt. "It took a long time to make Gigaton, but this new one didn't take long. Andrew was like: 'You guys take forever to make records. Let's do this, right now.'"
  • Pearl Jam debuted "Dark Matter," along with the rest of the album, in late January 2024 at the Troubadour in West Hollywood, California.
  • The Icelandic singer Björk also recorded a song titled "Dark Matter" in 2011. In her tune, Björk vocalizes a series of seemingly nonsensical vowels and consonants, a deliberate choice reflecting the inexplicable nature of dark matter phenomena.
  • Pearl Jam topped Billboard's Rock & Alternative Airplay chart for the first time when "Dark Matter" climbed to the top of the tally dated March 2, 2024. It surpassed the band's previous best, "The Fixer," which peaked at #2 in August 2009.
  • Speaking with Spin, guitarist Stone Gossard revealed the story of the song's creation. It all started with drummer Matt Cameron's warm-up routine. "Matt comes into the studio and tunes up his drums every morning," Gossard explained. "90% of the time, he'll start playing a beat just to warm up. When we heard him play what became 'Dark Matter,' we were like, oh my god, that's f---ing classic."

    The band quickly capitalized on the momentum. "We asked him to let us record it and we made a little loop," Gossard said. "Jeff [Ament, bassist] and I took that home and both of us were writing to it."

    Within a day, the song was taking shape. "We both came in the next day and played our parts," Gossard continued. "We needed a bridge, and then [McCready] had a bridge. We had that song in literally 24 hours."
  • Gossard sees "Dark Matter" as a turning point for Pearl Jam's creative process. "I look at it as the lighthouse of what's possible for the band in terms of changing our writing style and really honoring the rhythm first and foremost," he said. "I look at that as a Matt Cameron song, because I don't know that I've heard a drum beat start a song like that. It feels unique."

    "Ed's lyric is very timely, even though I don't know exactly what it means," he added. "It just feels good to hear somebody say that. I love that it's really hard rock but it doesn't feel gratuitous or fake. It feels real to me. I wrote the little [hums the descending riff in the song's pre-chorus], and everybody's got something in that song that's special."
  • Eddie Vedder wrote all the words for the Dark Matter album on the spot as the band were playing and arranging.

    "It's cool to be in the same space, drinking the same coffee, when the whole song goes down," PJ bass player Jeff Ament reflected to Uncut magazine. "For me, the overall vibe mostly fills like, 'Here we are at the end game, it's this beautiful world, with all the technology and intelligence... what are we gonna do about it? Are we gonna fight each other to the death to extinction, or can we come together and save what we have?' It's hopeful. We're hopeful."

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