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LAURENCE KESTERSON / Staff Photographer
The crowd out to hear Pearl Jam at the Spectrum's last gasp, which was considerably younger than the one at Bruce Springsteen's farewell shows, was also out to experience one last high-volume blast of Philadelphia history.
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History lives one last night as Pearl Jam closes it out

Forty-two years after opening its doors with the Quaker City Jazz Festival, and 15 months after its impending demolition was announced, the Spectrum said the last of its long goodbyes in South Philadelphia Saturday night.

The master of ceremonies for the momentous occasion was Eddie Vedder, the charismatic rock star whose band, Pearl Jam, played the final four shows at the venue, which opened in 1967.

The grand finale brought the curtain down on the storied arena, which was home to championship Flyers and Sixers teams before the Wachovia Center opened in 1996. And it closed out a packed October that included a four-night run by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.

"This is it!" Vedder exulted, with both arms raised, as the band hit the stage at 8:58 p.m. and launched headlong into "Why Go."

A few songs later the front man, fired up and feeding off the supremely stoked Halloween night crowd, took a deep breath and said: "I don't want to say goodbye to this place. I don't even want to think about it yet. I just want to keep . . . rocking."

After blasting through the punkish "The Fixer," from the band's new album, Backspacer - in which Vedder sang, "When something's gone, I want to fight to get it back again" - he had more end-of-the-Spectrum thoughts to share.

"I tell you, everybody in this band would have wanted to be here for the last night in this building, even if we weren't playing here," Vedder said. "So I understand we have a big job to do. We're going to have to pace ourselves, because we're going to be here for a long time."

Later, he addressed rumors that the finale would feature everyone from Springsteen to Neil Young to Billy Joel. He said none of them would be coming. "Who starts these rumors, anyway?" asked Vedder, who also denied rumors the band would play till 3 a.m. "They stop selling beer here at 11:30." (At midnight, though, Vedder was leading a crowd 18,000 strong in a sing-a-long of "Better Man," and there was no end in sight.)

Instead, the populist rocker brought out 89-year-old stagehand Charlie DiFabio of Havertown, who's worked at the Spectrum since its inception. DiFabio asked everybody to enjoy the show, and got a larger ovation than the band did when it played the rarity "Out of My Mind." (Though not as big as the one given a woman dressed as a cancan dancer, brought on stage by Vedder holding a sign that said the Phillies were ahead, 3-0).

The fans who witnessed the Spectrum's last stand were there first and foremost to see Pearl Jam. Nearly 20 years into their career, the Seattle grunge survivors continue to command an enormous audience, and, led by Vedder, a rock-and-roll true believer, they're a powerful live band that delights loyal fans by not just playing signature anthems like "Jeremy" and "Alive" but also digging deep into its expansive catalog.

The crowd, considerably younger than the one convened for Springsteen's shows, was also out to experience one last high-volume blast of Philadelphia history, by gathering in the oval arena that's played host to the Rolling Stones and Prince, Madonna and Frank Sinatra, Charles Barkley and Bobby Clarke.

"It means a lot," said Chris Cerulli, 23, hanging out with his friends Justin O'Pella, Rich Wood, and Derek Dutill, all of Roxborough, in the parking lot before Friday's show. "There's two nights left, so they're going to pull out something special for us." (That night's surprises included a closing, cathartic cover of The Who's "Baba O'Riley.")

"The atmosphere in here is great," said Wood, 22.

Besides all that, there was an even greater motivation for the four buddies to make it back to the mythic arena. "In Rocky, Apollo Creed says, 'I want to fight Rocky Balboa in the Philadelphia Spectrum.' They show it on TBS all the time," Cerulli said.

"I saw my first concert here when I was 11," said Joe Ippolito, 39, of Norristown. "It was Van Halen. It was the first place I got turned on to live music."

Ippolito, a teacher at the Philadelphia High School for Creative and Performing Arts and former singer for the cover band Flip Like Wilson, acknowledged that time had run out on the Spectrum.

"Unfortunately, it's also really outdated," he said Friday, standing by the Main Street Music booth, where the Manayunk record store was selling merchandise at Pearl Jam's invitation. "I just almost got crushed walking around the concourse.

"But for a music fan, it's magic when the lights go out. It's like every kid's fantasy when you walk through those doors. I've seen everybody here. Jane's Addiction, U2, Bruce Springsteen, the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Kiss. I've seen Bobby Clarke and Mario Lemieux here, Dominique Wilkins and Eddie Vedder.

"And I'll tell why it's a shame that they're tearing it down: Can you tell me where the Target Center is? The Xcel Center?" (A Google search reveals both are in Minnesota.) "But the Spectrum? That's part of Philadelphia."

On Friday, Vedder expressed similar regrets. "Why don't they just save the f- place?" he asked. "Forty-two years is not that old. I'm 44," he said, showing off his biceps.

Vedder paused, and acknowledged that nothing he said from the stage would keep the wrecking ball from coming down.

"OK, it may be too late to save this place," the scruffy singer said before he and his band - guitarists Mike McCready and Stone Gossard, bassist Jeff Ament, and drummer Matt Cameron, plus keyboard player Boom Gaspar - hurled into "Tremor Christ." "So let's just f- celebrate it."

And for four nights, that's just what Pearl Jam did.

"We jumped at the opportunity to be part of these last shows," Vedder said. "We consider it a huge honor."

Earlier in the week, Vedder expanded on the idea of the Spectrum as a holy temple of rock when he said that during a sound check "there were these shafts of light coming through these side windows. It was like God's light, if there is one. It was amazing."

Pearl Jam took the stage each night after a video montage showed clips of Julius Erving and Bernie Parent as well as Springsteen and the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia while the "Theme From Rocky" blared.

And they showed why, despite coming from thousands of miles apart, Pearl Jam and Springsteen made for a perfect pair of acts to bring down the curtain on the cramped and beloved arena, which was so busy in its '70s heyday that it made the slogan "America's Showplace" more than an idle marketing boast.

As with its superstar athletes, Philadelphia prefers its rock stars gritty as well as talented, down-to-earth, and appreciative of tradition. And it helps if they play it like they mean it.

And as Pearl Jam made plain all week long, it is nothing if not the hardworking band, and the influence of the classic rock bands that built the Spectrum's legend courses through their music. That's particularly true of Vedder, whose arena roar is unmistakably reminiscent of such original rock gods as Jim Morrison and Roger Daltrey. All of which made Pearl Jam an ideal choice to bring the history of the Spectrum alive one last time.

 


Contact music critic Dan DeLuca

at 215-854-5628 or ddeluca@phillynews.com. Read his blog, "In the Mix," at http://www.philly.com/

philly/blogs/inthemix

Comments   
Posted 04:38 AM, 11/01/2009
Dickie Thon
I wanted to be at Game 3. I ended up at the Spectrum. PJ came out in the Devo jumpsuits and headgear...Whip it. I was offered a Sro ticket at the Bank for $215.00. I didn't take the young businessman up on his offer. I expected PJ to play until at least 1 am. They were finished at 12:35. Phillies game ended 13 mins later. I went with a guaranteed winner. God bless the Spectrum. The sound was quite clean and booming... Vedder rhetorically asked 'why do we keep tearing our coliseum's down... Rome and Athens still has theirs... we build Target's and Red Robin's on ours. Phil's in 6. The will the next three games. I can't wait.
Posted 07:39 AM, 11/01/2009
summerdaleSULLY
Dan DeLuka is to blame for there not being any special guests @ this show. F Hugh.
Posted 08:53 AM, 11/01/2009
Big Earn
Pearl Jam was awesome. I'm not a huge fan of theirs but they (Vedder) did a fantastic job respectfully shutting that beautiful place down. I'll never forget the sound of the spectrum.
Posted 10:20 AM, 11/01/2009
bobcitydoc
This arena has been closing now for what seems an eternity. Enough already. Anyway, Vedder can still go to the Palestra if he has a hankering for old stuff.
Posted 10:42 AM, 11/01/2009
blchrrf39
Good Riddance....Go Giants
Posted 11:46 AM, 11/01/2009
johnfod
Requiem for "America's Showplace". Thanks for the memories. Just for the record... Check out this review of a concert held at the Spectrum on April 12, 1969: http://home.comcast.net/~loudfast/writeweb/jimiphil.htm
Posted 02:53 PM, 11/01/2009
footlooseman
nice link johnfod!!! thanx!!!
Posted 04:46 PM, 11/01/2009
GoingPostal10
blchrrf39, what an idiot. Don't you feel dumb making a statement like that. Pearl Jam ROCKS, The Spectrum ROLLS and by the way, the Eagles kicked the Giants a-ses. What was the final score; oh I know Eagles 40-17. GO PHILS!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted 05:16 PM, 11/01/2009
L.A.Smith
Great column...Great shows....Tremendous memories of the Spectrum!!!!! Don't know why there wasn't more of an uproar to stop its demolition.
Posted 12:06 PM, 11/02/2009
Kenny Junod
i ate too many kamala burgers down there friday. great weekend down the sports complex
Comment removed.
Posted 07:45 PM, 11/03/2009
footlooseman
hats off to neil youngs awesome show last december!!!
12 comments
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