Rage Against The Machine Member Reveals How He Got Dumped For Eddie Vedder

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Former Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello discussed how Brad Wilk ‘broke up’ with him for his good friend Eddie Vedder in 1991 when he nearly joined Pearl Jam in a new It’s Electric interview with Lars Ulrich on Beats 1. Alternative Nation transcribed his comments.

“Then Brad actually went away for awhile to join the beginning version of Pearl Jam. He and Eddie Vedder had been friends, and Pearl Jam made the Ten record, parted ways with that drummer, and called Brad to ask him to join, I think they were called Mookie Blaylock, he asked him to join Pearl Jam. So Brad broke up with me to go to rehearse with Pearl Jam in England.

Brad and Eddie were in a band called Indian Style in the San Diego area. Eddie, like Brad, is a drummer, so he invited him to practice the songs from Ten. While Brad was away, two timing me, another drummer introduced me to Tim [Commerford] and Zack [de la Rocha]. When Brad finally came back, eventually the four of us got in a room, and it sounded like Rage Against The Machine really from the get go.”

Rage Against The Machine drummer Brad Wilk discussed auditioning for Pearl Jam in 1991 in a recent Let There Be Talk podcast interview. Alternative Nation transcribed his comments.

“They go to England to mix Ten, which Tim Palmer was doing, I get a call from Eddie: ‘We just lost our drummer, I’d love for you to come up and meet everybody. I’m going to send you the tape of the songs.’ I’m like shitting my pants, I’ve never been out of the country, I’ve got to go get my fucking passport, I’m listening to the songs, I’m super young and thinking this is my break, this is my time. I go to Europe and we play together, me and Eddie have this history, and we’re bonding over in Europe, but to the others I’m just the new guy.”

“The original drummer that played on Ten had drug issues, so they needed a new drummer. So this was right after that guy, Ten wasn’t even mixed yet. They’re at this farm house in England mixing Ten, and I’m just so young, and they’re on Sony/Epic Records at the time.

Long story short, I go there, and I just don’t click musically, mostly with Jeff, who is an incredible bass player, awesome guy, and this is a classic case, it doesn’t matter how good you are, chemistry is everything. It just wasn’t clicking. For me, I wanted to be blinded by that, I just want to be in a band with my buddy, what an incredible opportunity. It didn’t work out, and I remember kind of leaving Europe with my tail between my legs, driving off going fuck, there was my opportunity.”

“I was there about a week, we’re rehearsing, we’re playing. Some of it I thought sounded incredible. Maybe some of it just didn’t, for whatever reason, that’s the way it goes. It wasn’t exactly clicking, who knows for whatever other reasons, but I just wasn’t the guy.”