Stone Temple Pilots Late Night Performances From 1993-2010
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- čas přidán 4. 01. 2024
- 0:17 Wicked Garden
4:39 Vasoline
8:16 Unglued
11:10 Big Bang Baby
15:40 Lady Picture Show
20:24 Sour Girl
24:57 Sour Girl (featuring Junior Brown)
29:21 Atlanta
35:11 Between The Lines
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Weiland was a phenomenal front man. This band blew my face off when I was 19 and continue to do so at 49.
Same. I am 48 so I am really right there with you. STP and AIC were the staple... still are. The rhythms and melodies while introducing some blues are unmatched. I fear they will never be matched, but maybe that is good... no imitating...
I miss him so much, just the best! The best voice maybe of all time.
@@gannonkupkosr.9801 Same here. I'm 61 and saw both AIC and STP a couple times in my 30s and 40s. Best frontman ever and one of the best hard rock bands of all time IMHO.
Similar timeline here. I'll be 48 this year and I really became interested in these guys at 19 too. Years later now as an active musician I have an even deeper appreciation for their music.....
STP, Soundgarden, pj, aic. The Big Four..... Oh yeah, Nirvana, I wasn't as big of a fan of them.
I worked with these guys for Atlantic from 92-‘03 through many ups and downs. Great musicians, amazing song crafters, and even better human beings. Soooo many great memories!
So you worked in the musical industry in the best era: the 90s. Who else you worked with?
@@carlosgarita7094 it was a looong time ago, and a great experience. Bands like STP, Kid Rock, Overkill, Rush, Testament, Clutch, etc…
@@GachaMetal
You ever work with a band called “Billy and The Butt Boys” out of San Francisco?
@@tproudboomer5965 No, “but” if I did, they would’ve been the biggest band in the country! Lol
@@GachaMetal lol
I never understood how people can forget to turn on a singer's mic. Like literally blows me away every time I see it.
🤣 Reminds me of Velvet Revolver Rock am Ring 2007. They opened with Let it Roll and completely forgot about Scott's mic. Absolutely kills the opening hype of that concert for me.
Just happened at a Loverboy concert I attended a few weeks ago!
😂hahaa
0:17 Wicked Garden
4:39 Vasoline
8:16 Unglued
11:10 Big Bang Baby
15:40 Lady Picture Show
20:24 Sour Girl
24:57 Sour Girl w/ Junior Brown
29:21 Atlanta
35:11 Between The Lines
Kinda zoot soot riot
Thanks man
Thanx, bro!
✌️🤙
Thank you very much. 🤗
I'm 67 years old, and a "crazy" senior citizen who plays drums, STP IMHO, is the Led Zeppelin of the 90's, Scott was so damn talented and an outstanding front man, I sure do miss him, RIP! Jarred, thank you, for a great compilation!
Yeah I'm 64 and though the 70s was my era from music, I found this group to be gritty and powerful. Really liked Robert DeLeo on bass too. Trying to learn this song right now!
Imo his voice is fairly reminiscent of Jim Morrison's, especially in 'Atlanta'. They were great, STP. RIP Scott Weiland
what makes you say they were the led zeppelin of the 90s?
Respectfully as much as they hated hearing it, i think Soundgarden was the LZ of the 90s, but STP is one of the most unique and different sounds out there. Constantly compared to others like Pearl Jam, but Scott and the guys were wholly like any other sound out there.
I'm going to take a quote from "landencarrier5200" but Scott and the guys were wholly like any other sound out there. I was just trying to state a "newer" sound for a "newer" generation!
@@gonkdroid7281
His voice on Sour Girl is amazing!
"This is a mark of a great band" - David Letterman
Scott Weiland is a wildly under-celebrated artist. One of the greatest vocalists and frontmen of all time. The man was absolutely brilliant and highly gifted. Shame how he went but we all saw it coming. I had tickets to see STP but Scott pulled off the tour to go to rehab. Never got to see them live. Major bummer. At least we have the music he left behind. Man, what a true artist. STP got me through some pretty crazy times in my life and they’ll always have a special place in my heart.
the velvet revolver era… i think the drinking then was what ultimately got him
I was a patrol officer for a number of years, and my now late former partner was the biggest STP you're ever going to meet. Nothing like running call to call with Jeff blasting STP in the middle of the night on the city's dime. I didn't care for them initially, being a fan of late 60's and early 70's Laurel Canyon brand country rock, but by the time he died, I was a huge fan, which was like a mission of his. Mission accomplished, Jeff.
😢 he knew he was dying? And had to get you & STP to hookup before he could go ? 💖💖🥰
No one cares
@@billydamnit WRONG! PLENTY CARE!! AND GOOD CARING PEOPLE WILL ALWAYS OUTNUMBER TROLLS LIKE YOU BY THE MILLIONS! 💯💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥
@@billydamnit i care. F you. Why talk stuff when someone is opening up about some personal experience. F you. I hope you stub you’re toe tonight
Better believe no one gives a fuck about you either, asshole.
One of the best singers I've ever heard!!!!
Scott told Dave thanks for having us back every time! Rip Scott! #STP
What an insanely great band! The Deleo brothers are brilliant. Weiland is one hell of a front man and his voice 😍
Was… RIP😢
The DeLeos had a subtle complexity to their music. Very simple feel, but excellently crafted and very intricate at times.
He still IS a great front man in the footage of him performing..
Those bass lines are legendary!! All around amazing band!
Robert is criminally underrated as a bassist
DeLeo is an awesome bassist... roots in jazz... you should check out his interview with Rick Beato... much respect
Both those DeLeo brothers are amazing guitarists and extremely talented songwriters.
Scott had all the moves. As a woman whose son describes as "the cardboard dancer" I always enjoyed watching Scott dance. I think the secret to great dancing is having absolutely no inhibitions at all while doing it - something I'll never be capable of or ever mastering, at least not in this lifetime. Maybe the next one?
Doesn't always work. Look at Ian Curtis.
Only Morrison, Weiland and Micheal Hutchence from Inxs can move like that.
so you have secrets? I don't get the statement.
Scott could sing a song about cleaning toilets in the men’s bathroom at Dennys and make it sound cool
Ha ha. That's a great idea for a song.
Yeah, while Nikki Sixx is using the toilet water from the Denny's bathroom to shoot up could be part of the story line as well.
I heard nikki mention doing that on a Howard Stern interview once.
I hear that's what Interstate Love Song is about
"CAN YOU CLEAN...THE BATHROOOMM..CAN YOU SWEEEEP WITHHH A BROOOOM!"
@@jer8279 I want to sanitize the changing station
And refill the hand soap
I’ll mop the floors, wipe down the stall doors
And make the faucets sparkle
Your turn. 😀
God, Atlanta is such a beautiful song.
Yes!! Everyone always talks about the vocals on Sour Girl, but Atlanta is it for me!❤
This is fantastic! He sounds like Jim Morrison here . Jmo.
DeLeo’s guitar riffs were incredible. Only way I can describe them are inside out
underrated zen master. looked for maximal harmonies with minimal effort. Always considers ambiance over flash
Been a fan since 93. I was 13 yrs old and was completely mesmerized. Scott held my hand and sang to me during a Charlotte nc show .Completely blew my mind. I loved him so much. The entire band is too talented for words.
This band raised me musically! Started listening when I was 14…am 42 today and still the same goosebump when sons like “Still Remais” come through the speakers!
"Still Remains" is still my fav STP song and one of the great underrated songs in rock history
Man, so glad I got to see these guys at least once. Went on a family vacation to Myrtle Beach around New Years in 2001 and STP just so happened to be playing the small House of Blues venue during our stay. One of the most memorable shows I've ever been to. My mom and aunt ate and drank in the restaurant while me and my best friend got our faces melted 5 feet away from the stage in the concert venue.
Damn that’s tight,what a nice surprise!
The vocals on Sour Girl were excellent
Opening bars of The Peanuts "Christmas Time Is Here" into "Unglued" ...just badass! 🤘🤘
Lots of jazz chops in STP. Absolutely set them apart.
@@dartheejit6797 For sure. The high-end STP songs with the jazzy chords are absolutely timeless. I wasn't a grunge fan per-se, but the songs I liked, I really really liked.
Adhesive Love
Used to think the comparisons to Pearl Jam was funny back then but I’ll take STP every time
Not even close. STP for the win.
Same here anyday.
No one can sing like Scott. I miss him!
-can they both be great?
STP had consistently great albums to.
Love these guys. God bless Letterman for supporting so many bands.
Scott was always a great front man. As the years passed you could see he was getting thinner and wasting away. Thanks for giving the world your voice
One of my favorite bands… RIP Scott…
No doubt man. Lost a great one there. Fucking drugs.
Everybody on rock and pop is dying, so sad. Excuse my broken english.
Weiland was a star and a legend. Many artists that performed with him throughout his career were jealous of his charisma, unfortunately. RIP brother.
Jealous? Or did they simply admire his charisma 🤷🏽♂️
Billy Corgan said that at his funeral: so many were jealous of him
Scott looked so healthy during the Core tour
He always looked good
Before he started shooting H
Yeah, you can see the muscle mass loss over the course of appearances.
STP were a force with a varied catalogue of great tunes. They are still powerful and great on stage now despite the loss of Weiland. Go see them in 2024.
The DeLeo brothers were a huge reason behind the success of STP. Obviously, Scott was one of the best front men ever, but there's still lots of talent there without him.
@@Friscorockhead I have seen that first hand at the shows.
His vocals on Sour Girl are perfect.
Yeah most bands are lucky to have one or two songs as good as most of what they put out.they were talented and creative guys.
The DeLeos and Eric Kretz are immensely talented. But without Weiland it just isn’t STP anymore 🤷🏻♀️
93 was a great year to be alive.
Damn right it was. I miss it.
Killer version of “Sour Girl”
Big bang baby has one of the most badass riffs ever
Yep
Reminds me of a slowed down Peter Gun.
Reminds me of a slowed down Peter Gun.
Scott could sing a song about cleaning toilets in the men’s bathroom at Dennys and make it sound cool.
I love that song so much
Scott was a great lyricist. One of my favorite song writer of all time.
Scott IS
The only band from grunge era that had an evolution, what a band!
What a beautiful performance and voive of Scott on Sour Girl and Atlanta
Thanks for uploading this, these are some of my favorite "late night" musical performances of all time. STP's Letterman stuff disappeared a few years back, idk why. I always felt Dave appreciated them a little bit more than most musical acts he had
He definitely did. He knew he was hearing greatness.
And he tried to warn Scott. But Scott was already an addict from the age of 15-16. He was reaching fame and partying hard, he was young. He probably just saw Dave warning him as some old dude lecturing him about the dangers of drugs and partying, like a square.(Dave had just turned 30 at the time, Scott was maybe 25, maybe still 24, and he would see Dave as old, especially since Dave had been in the business since 1981).
@@AndrewLemmings1998 I agree, but Dave was 46 is '93, he was born in 1947.
Had the opportunity to see STP for free at UNH back in very early 2000s. Was about 15 feet from the stage. One of the best shows I have ever seen in my life. Scott's energy was beyond palpable, it was hard to take my eyes off of him
RIP Scott Weiland (October 27, 1967 - December 3, 2015), age 48
You will be remembered as a legend
There is no better band of the era than STP... they had it all. And how cool is it hearing bands playing with proper loud amps in a TV studio... sad how it goes these days...
90s had the best bands...all unique in their own way so to single one band out is like saying u like this son over ur other son.. just can't do it.
STP is my favorite son, lol...😂
@@scottgarrett744 u must have one son
I remember when this album Core came out. We were blessed with so many great albums during this time. The list goes on and on.
Scott at his healty shape of body and the 90s grunge worm jumping dance style always fun to watch😂
There are no words to express the grief I feel knowing I will never see this lineup again!
That's what YOU think 🤔
🎸🎸🎸💯💯STONE TEMPLE PILOTS🏆🏆🏆🌿🌹RIP SCOTT WEILAND , LAYNE STAYLEY , CHRIS CORNELL , CHESTER BENNINGTON 🌿🌹🌹🌿 RIP TO THE ONES GONE🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Rise In Power Scott 🫶
Atlanta was fantastic. Didn't know they did this one live on Late Night.
You can Dave really digs STP.
Melancholy can feel good because it reminds you of the happiness you experienced (and may now miss). Happiness can feel sad because you fear someday you will lose whatever it is that makes you this happy. STP / Soundgarden / Nirvana /Pearl Jam/Alice in chains/ Temple of the dog / Melvins /Smashing Pumpkins/ Mad Season. To many to name ✌❤🤘
1990s never be forgotten.
It was great to have Scott around for a long as we did. He could have easily croaked when he was much younger. What a talent he was. He often gets compared to other grunge era singers but to me he easily blows them all away. He has far more dynamic range. Him and Cornell were the elite....
Scott was so great. I almost wish i never saw him, then i wouldnt be sad hes gone.
Interesting perspective. I had a chance to see him solo around 2013-2014 and skipped out on it. People say that everything happens for a reason. I regret the decision not to go, but wonder if the reason was so I didn't witness him in that shape.
To never love would be a much worse fate.
To love is one of the greatest miracles.
You can't buy it and it Never Dies...
Never get tired of watching Scott.
I really liked this "collection" of STP and Late Show. Interesting to see the boys' visual changes over time. At first, very young (except Dean, the oldest of them all). Scott was very handsome in Lady Picture Show and Atlanta. I'm suspicious of this, but for me, Robert has always been the most attractive and over time, he's improved his look: he's so charming in his last performance, with his classic sunglasses. I love STP. I'm from Brazil and thank you for posting these presentations.
Definitely goodlookin
Holy shit! Haven’t seen this in decades. The first Letterman appearance
I'm sorry to hear he was MIA as a father, but each time I saw him he brought joy to this working stiffs life and that's gotta be worth something.
sadly he just had alot of issues and trauma.trust me, its hard to care when you are severly depressed and a heroin addict. He did an interview and his childrens mom was taking like 35 grand a month in child support and his previous wife was getting 15-20k a month for spousal support after they split. he had to keep touring to keep up those payments and sadlt never got a break and rehab when he was ready for it. RIP
My favorite bands of the 90s were Stone Temple Pilots , Alice In Chains, Type O Negative and Pantera!!!!😊😊😊😊 This is cool to watch, and remember what a good band Stone Temple Pilots was back then!!!! Miss😢 Scott Weiland!!!! 🙏 RIP Thanks for posting!!!😊
Man, I miss this era of music. It was so exciting. I have no idea what's happening now.
Awesome band (I would say quite underrated/overlooked here in Europe), Scott Weiland was one of the best front men, singer-songwriters and voices of all time IMO. He left a huge void since December 2015 but the songs will live forever. ♥
Great compilation! It was a nice surprise seeing Junior Brown performing with them.
Great historic video Jarred! STP forever!
It’s so wild to see Scott get more and more comfortable as time went on! What a front man. So smooth and confident!! What a talented guy that just controlled the stage! Missed so badly!!!
My favorite rock band of all time I was 14 when I first heard them!!! Got to see them twice before Scott passed was an amazing experience!!!
One of the greatest bands ever. They could have been as big as Zeppelin if Scott could have kept his demons at bay. I saw them on the Tiny Music tour and they had it all. RIP Weiland.
Doubt that. Radio stations would never play any of their later stuff.
But sadly, without those demons he may not have been the musician or The Lyricist that he was. A lot goes that goes the same for many, many, many singers. Send a message I can real some led Zeppelin's dazed and confused. I went on to run the soundboard at many prestigious venues in the midwest that allowed me to spend time with a lot of bands and even become friends with a few musicians. I was lucky enough to witness some really amazing fans right at the beginning of their formation such as Linkin Park, when they opened for when they were the opening band after the show I was lucky enough to know some people who were friends with them and I got to hang out and listen to Mike shinoda and Chester along with Brad their guitar player two songs acoustically on the bus. Of my opinion, the only front men who I've known to get clean and sober and still continue to write amazing music is Jacoby from Papa Roach, Corey Taylor of Slipknot and James Hetfield. Other than them I'm hard-pressed to think of anyone off the top of my head who continued to put out the same level of amazing music they did before they got sober, after they were cleaning off drugs. There's a certain romanticism that music has allowed to continue such as heroin influencing and making Ben's great like Eric Clapton, sublime and Stone Temple pilots. It's all b******* though I spent over 10 years on heroin heroin and it slowly takes your soul and what I mean by that is it numbs you out it deadens your nerves and stops you from feeling, literally. So you don't have this same connection with your emotions and you just become this flatlined emotional person instead of having emotional highs and lows. It's not a ride that I would suggest anyone buy a ticket to take. Regardless of how influential it has supposedly been on great musicians, I promise you from first-hand experience it has not been a contributing factor. Now alcohol, I feel allows some people to say things a certain way and talk about things that they wouldn't otherwise talk about if they were sober either because it's embarrassing like being molested as a child or something else that was messed up that happened to you. And I feel like alcohol is much more of a contributing factor to great music than heroin or any hard drugs could ever be. It's also well known fact if you think about it most of the great musicians started off drinking and smoking weed and then once they got on the road and started touring that's when the hard drugs became available where they were exposed to them and use them to cope on the road with loneliness or not being able to sleep on the bus while it drives for 10 hours overnight. All I have to say is either way I know it's very selfish of me but I'm glad that all this amazing music is here for us to connect with and enjoy and be inspired by.
But sadly, without those demons he may not have been the musician or The Lyricist that he was. A lot goes that goes the same for many, many, many singers. Send a message I can real some led Zeppelin's dazed and confused. I went on to run the soundboard at many prestigious venues in the midwest that allowed me to spend time with a lot of bands and even become friends with a few musicians. I was lucky enough to witness some really amazing fans right at the beginning of their formation such as Linkin Park, when they opened for when they were the opening band after the show I was lucky enough to know some people who were friends with them and I got to hang out and listen to Mike shinoda and Chester along with Brad their guitar player two songs acoustically on the bus. Of my opinion, the only front men who I've known to get clean and sober and still continue to write amazing music is Jacoby from Papa Roach, Corey Taylor of Slipknot and James Hetfield. Other than them I'm hard-pressed to think of anyone off the top of my head who continued to put out the same level of amazing music they did before they got sober, after they were cleaning off drugs. There's a certain romanticism that music has allowed to continue such as heroin influencing and making Ben's great like Eric Clapton, sublime and Stone Temple pilots. It's all b******* though I spent over 10 years on heroin heroin and it slowly takes your soul and what I mean by that is it numbs you out it deadens your nerves and stops you from feeling, literally. So you don't have this same connection with your emotions and you just become this flatlined emotional person instead of having emotional highs and lows. It's not a ride that I would suggest anyone buy a ticket to take. Regardless of how influential it has supposedly been on great musicians, I promise you from first-hand experience it has not been a contributing factor. Now alcohol, I feel allows some people to say things a certain way and talk about things that they wouldn't otherwise talk about if they were sober either because it's embarrassing like being molested as a child or something else that was messed up that happened to you. And I feel like alcohol is much more of a contributing factor to great music than heroin or any hard drugs could ever be. It's also well known fact if you think about it most of the great musicians started off drinking and smoking weed and then once they got on the road and started touring that's when the hard drugs became available where they were exposed to them and use them to cope on the road with loneliness or not being able to sleep on the bus while it drives for 10 hours overnight. All I have to say is either way I know it's very selfish of me but I'm glad that all this amazing music is here for us to connect with and enjoy and be inspired by. Rest in peace to all of the great ones we lost too soon. The list is far, far too long to even begin to list everyone here.
But sadly, without those demons he may not have been the musician or The Lyricist that he was. A lot goes that goes the same for many, many, many singers. Send a message I can real some led Zeppelin's dazed and confused. I went on to run the soundboard at many prestigious venues in the midwest that allowed me to spend time with a lot of bands and even become friends with a few musicians. I was lucky enough to witness some really amazing fans right at the beginning of their formation such as Linkin Park, when they opened for when they were the opening band after the show I was lucky enough to know some people who were friends with them and I got to hang out and listen to Mike shinoda and Chester along with Brad their guitar player two songs acoustically on the bus. Of my opinion, the only front men who I've known to get clean and sober and still continue to write amazing music is Jacoby from Papa Roach, Corey Taylor of Slipknot and James Hetfield. Other than them I'm hard-pressed to think of anyone off the top of my head who continued to put out the same level of amazing music they did before they got sober, after they were cleaning off drugs. There's a certain romanticism that music has allowed to continue such as heroin influencing and making Ben's great like Eric Clapton, sublime and Stone Temple pilots. It's all b******* though I spent over 10 years on heroin heroin and it slowly takes your soul and what I mean by that is it numbs you out it deadens your nerves and stops you from feeling, literally. So you don't have this same connection with your emotions and you just become this flatlined emotional person instead of having emotional highs and lows. It's not a ride that I would suggest anyone buy a ticket to take. Regardless of how influential it has supposedly been on great musicians, I promise you from first-hand experience it has not been a contributing factor. Now alcohol, I feel allows some people to say things a certain way and talk about things that they wouldn't otherwise talk about if they were sober either because it's embarrassing like being molested as a child or something else that was messed up that happened to you. And I feel like alcohol is much more of a contributing factor to great music than heroin or any hard drugs could ever be. It's also well known fact if you think about it most of the great musicians started off drinking and smoking weed and then once they got on the road and started touring that's when the hard drugs became available where they were exposed to them and use them to cope on the road with loneliness or not being able to sleep on the bus while it drives for 10 hours overnight. All I have to say is either way I know it's very selfish of me but I'm glad that all this amazing music is here for us to connect with and enjoy and be inspired by. Rest in peace to all of the great ones we lost too soon. The list is far, far too long to even begin to list everyone here.
But sadly, without those demons he may not have been the musician or The Lyricist that he was. A lot goes that goes the same for many, many, many singers. Send a message I can real some led Zeppelin's dazed and confused. I went on to run the soundboard at many prestigious venues in the midwest that allowed me to spend time with a lot of bands and even become friends with a few musicians. I was lucky enough to witness some really amazing fans right at the beginning of their formation such as Linkin Park, when they opened for when they were the opening band after the show I was lucky enough to know some people who were friends with them and I got to hang out and listen to Mike shinoda and Chester along with Brad their guitar player two songs acoustically on the bus. Of my opinion, the only front men who I've known to get clean and sober and still continue to write amazing music is Jacoby from Papa Roach, Corey Taylor of Slipknot and James Hetfield. Other than them I'm hard-pressed to think of anyone off the top of my head who continued to put out the same level of amazing music they did before they got sober, after they were cleaning off drugs. There's a certain romanticism that music has allowed to continue such as heroin influencing and making Ben's great like Eric Clapton, sublime and Stone Temple pilots. It's all b******* though I spent over 10 years on heroin heroin and it slowly takes your soul and what I mean by that is it numbs you out it deadens your nerves and stops you from feeling, literally. So you don't have this same connection with your emotions and you just become this flatlined emotional person instead of having emotional highs and lows. It's not a ride that I would suggest anyone buy a ticket to take. Regardless of how influential it has supposedly been on great musicians, I promise you from first-hand experience it has not been a contributing factor. Now alcohol, I feel allows some people to say things a certain way and talk about things that they wouldn't otherwise talk about if they were sober either because it's embarrassing like being molested as a child or something else that was messed up that happened to you. And I feel like alcohol is much more of a contributing factor to great music than heroin or any hard drugs could ever be. It's also well known fact if you think about it most of the great musicians started off drinking and smoking weed and then once they got on the road and started touring that's when the hard drugs became available where they were exposed to them and use them to cope on the road with loneliness or not being able to sleep on the bus while it drives for 10 hours overnight. All I have to say is either way I know it's very selfish of me but I'm glad that all this amazing music is here for us to connect with and enjoy and be inspired by. Rest in peace to all of the great ones we lost too soon. The list is far, far too long to even begin to list everyone here.
I was lucky enough to see them live at a music festival back in ‘99 when I was 16. My girlfriends and I slowly snuck up to one of the front rows from our lawn seats (as you could easily do back then) in just in time to watch STP perform once the sun went down; it was a once in a lifetime experience that still gives me chills when I remember it. RIP Scott; you and the guys put on a show that was truly the stuff of legends.
STP is one of those bands that rarely comes around, but when they do......holy shit. Scott Weiland is such an amazing artist. this band is a classic
Got to see them a few times, and AIC, and Soundgarden, back in these days of OG's. Oh yea.
Love me some STP! Sour girl live on Leno is the best live version I have ever heard, and with string accompaniment! Scott’s voice on SG is just beautiful. He should still be here, along with many others who also had amazing talent and passed before and after him because of addiction. The autopsy show said Scott Weiland had beat his heroine addiction approximately 11 years before his death. You wouldn’t know it if you watch any interview he did in 2015 while on his last tour. He talks in a monotone pitch like he had primitive shock treatments or ECT-Electroconvulsive therapy. A video from a fan went viral and showed him destroying Vaseline. It was hard to watch and made me almost tear up. A few shows later he was gone. A drug screen revealed he had cocaine, alcohol and the amphetamine MDA - a drug similar to ecstasy - in his system. The medical examiner also noted a history of cardiovascular disease, asthma and multi-substance dependence.
he IS still here
When the melody perfectly drops into the riffs, it's pretty magical.
LOL Robert looks the same as today.
No other band has ever had their brilliance so overlooked by critics as much as STP & to think that it was because of a BS Mandela effect is just so heartbreaking. They deserved so much respect for their creativity💔
While I agree they were far better than people realized,I was there and they were a huge band.kany people loved them
What's the Mandela effect of this band?
@@andrewstone999 many people, especially critics, dismissed them as a Pearl Jam knockoff. Some even gave reviews **without listening to the album.** They were the rated poorly by critics yet #1 by listeners (for example, Rolling Stone Magazine) when they first debuted, but eventually the critics voices spread & many people didn't even give them a chance. The Mandela effect comes from society being conditioned to think that they were Pearl Jam knockoff when the music that STP wrote for core was done before Pearl Jam even released an album! So it was an impossible statement, yet after hearing it everywhere in newspaper articles, tv, radio dash eventually people believed an impossible lie. People are so protective over Pearl Jam because many of them were in Mother Love Bone which is credited with starting grunge. PJ happened when Wood, the singer of MLB died. So people were very protective of their love and passion for Pearl Jam especially after they lost MLB. They were basically the Red Sox and the Yankees of the music world - you basically couldn't like both you had to pick one. It was so bad even Rolling Stone admitted that they had wronged the Stone Temple Pilots. Their Rock critic who bashed them admitted that they were actually his favorite live band to see! Billy Corgan to this day apologizes to STP whenever he sees them because he feels terrible for the role he played in it. The list goes on. I consider myself a rock aficionado and I've never heard of another band having had so many apologies from key players in the music industry for having dismissed their brilliance. At the end of the day Pearl Jam was a great band with awesome guitar but when you listen to the vocals - there's nothing similar to the *capabilities* of Eddie Vedder to Scott Weiland. Both are talented & deserving of respect. Yes, Scott Weiland had a good range and could do a lot of vocal impressions so of course he could sound like Eddie vedder or Jim Morrison but any person who can make a lot of impressions can sound like somebody else! When we look back now at the albums, Pearl Jam was very much a product of their time where is the Stone Temple Pilots add some music of the time but they were also very much ahead of the time and still relevant. The catalog can still be played today and enjoyed by today's standards. Much of Pearl Jam can be too because it's very nostalgic - but it's still very clearly a product of its time. It seems as though some people really didn't want to let go and might have even viewed STP as a threat to what they knew and was familiar to them
@@erikkibler3466 I was there too and yes many people love them obviously because they have the number one alt rock song of their time at the time, there is no doubt that the impossible comparison to the other band did hinder their career. There's no question about it! That's the heart of the matter.
What? Lol..
Honesty, "Hey, what are you lookin'' at? She was a happy girl the day that she left me!" is a brilliant lyric. Like "You broke her heart!" "Oh yeah? She seemed pretty happy the day that she left me..."
Sour Girl was an underrated song and a great video. Scott Wieland was a super performer RIP.
I liked STP, but when I heard Big Bang Baby, it was love. That whole album is off the charts, easily one of the best of the 90s.
One of my favorite entertainers... God rest his soul 🙏
Loved them in 1992 and still do. Scott W., Chris C., Layne S., Andrew W., and Kurt C.. All the greats I still listen to.
Will always be my favorite band....❤
Must comment again. Scott looked so gorgeous in the clip of them doing Lady Picture Show. My favorite look of his. I love you, sir. 😔💜
first time hearing them live and it is awesome. I'm a fan all over again
Jarred your videos are extraordinary. Thank you for compiling the performances of STP/VR for our enjoyment and for prosperity ✌🏽
I don't know how else to say it but they are my number one band of all time...yep I said it, I'm 53 years old and love them more now than when I was in my early 20"s. Long live STP!!!
tanckyou
mr. Jarred Walker
exelent program of STP.
I knew Scott was not long for this earth and had the privilege of seeing STP live a few years before my premonition came true. An amazing talent, a voice that could range from gritty to ethereal, and iconic moves and style to rival Bowie. Guess it's true what they say--better to burn out than fade away. RIP Scotty - hope you've found peace.
I saw Stone Temple Pilots live for the first time in a summer festival in Portugal back in 2001. I watched them live for the last time in Sydney a bit less than 1 year before Scott was gone 😭
@@H3llb0undI wanted to ask this to anyone who's seen them in their prime and near the end to ask what they thought about Scott's singing, so it's completely random to ask this out of nowhere, but what did you think of his voice in 2001 compared to the end? Almost every video I've seen of him singing from like 2013 onwards always seems like he's on drugs so his voice is slurred and it overall just sounded terrible, and I wanted to ask what you thought about him when you saw him last and if he looked like he was doing good or if it seemed like he was on drugs at the time too. I'd love to hear back whenever if possible, thanks for reading this!
@@kingdedede1715 If I remember correctly, it was around 2012 and it was a great show. His voice and singing were on point. And I hate going to shows where the bands just phone it in.
I've heard of his bad performances/bad days, but Scott seemed to be healthy and in a good mood.
It was their own headlining show not a festival, so it was a smaller venue in Sydney and the sound was great overall. I might even have a setlist somewhere.
Comparing to 2001, it seemed to me like no time had passed. They sounded and looked the same. Scott had a different hair colour 😅
I believe there's videos of the performance in Portugal in 2001. I'll try to find some.
It's for me the best place to have a summer festival. And on that year the line-up was just AMAZING. The band just before STP was Queens of the Stone Age, another one of my favourites.
Scott actually said "the guys before us were Queens of the Stone Age, we're just Queens" haha
The location Is called Paredes de Coura. It's in the middle of a mountain in the north of Portugal and you can literally see the border with Spain. Almost like a National Park with camping sites and rivers.
The background of the stage is literally trees, mountain tops and the clear night sky.
@@kingdedede1715 here's the video. If the link doesn't work, just search for Stone Temple Pilots Paredes de Coura. Should be a top result.
czcams.com/video/uZOXvsZsLYo/video.htmlsi=DOu5xodR6qW3Oa8j
@@kingdedede1715 I also replied with a video link, But I guess YT deletes/hides those. Just search for Stone Temple Pilots Paredes de Coura.
I have been a fan since high school in the nineties but it was when they toured for No. 4 and played Roy Wilkins Auditorium that I fell in love. Scott caught a lemon Starburst I threw to him. He shoved it in his leather pants and threw it back to me. I ate it. He smirked and they carried on. I pass Roy Wilkins almost everyday because I live close by and it always makes me get that adrenaline rush. One of the best shows of my life. I love you, boys. 💜
One of my favorite bands of all time! ❤❤❤
Thank you for bringing us this gem, STP simply rocks !!
Thank you for posting these awesome songs! I saw a bunch of these performances back in the day. STP were a fantastic band, brilliant!
RIP Scott. We miss your voice, buddy.
Thank you so much for posting performances. Saddens me thinking of Scott. Glad I saw STP a bunch.
that energy radiates from YOU now 🫡
❤ man he was soooo charismatic and i love how he danced. I would have loved to see them live. What an amazing band.
i miss the 90s😵
junior brown brought some flavor to sour girl i never knew it needed
Magnificent.
Awesome! Thanks!
Awesome times Scott had a great voice.
Thanks for the video
Kretz is an absolute drum machine! They way he lays back is what gives these songs the trademark STP groove.
Awesome 😎😎 Easily one of my favorite Bands!!!!!! The orchestra is superb 👌👌👌👌
Man I love STP! Favorite song-- Interstate Love Song.
GAAAAHHHH they’re so amazing.
You can tell Scott really admired 70s Bowie, both in performance and dress.
This is a great performance. Wow.
This Atlanta performance is strait David Bowie. Fantastic video, thank you for the upload!
Fantástico!
This was Awesome!!! Thank you 😊