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The Living End | 
enlarge | Artist: Huesker Due Label: Rhino Encore Category: Music
Buy New: $12.98
New (48) Used (6) from $8.10
Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 82903
Format: Live Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 45582 UPC: 081227992668 EAN: 0081227992668 ASIN: B0018DPC74
Release Date: June 10, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $5.00 when you spend $25.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | New Day Rising | | • | Girl Who Lives On Heaven Hill | | • | Standing In The Rain | | • | Back From Somewhere | | • | Ice Cold Ice | | • | Everytime | | • | Friend, You've Got To Fall | | • | She Floated Away | | • | From The Gut | | • | Target | | • | It's Not Funny Anymore | | • | Hardly Getting Over It | | • | Terms Of Psychic Warfare | | • | Powerline | | • | Books About UFO's | | • | Divide And Conquer | | • | Keep Hanging On | | • | Celebrated Summer | | • | Now That You Know Me | | • | Ain't No Water In The Well | | • | What's Going On | | • | Data Control | | • | In A Free Land | | • | Sheena Is A Punk Rocker |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
"Nostalgia is the symptom of a dying culture"---Grant Hart April 4, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I had just became a Bob Mould/Husker Du fanatic in the early-1990s and was buying up their back catalogue of stuff when this CD came out in 1994. Anything "new" from Husker Du was a BIG thing, so I snagged it as soon as it hit the record stores. This live CD was compiled from shows from 1987 when they were promoting Warehouse: Songs and Stories, their last studio release, so many of the tracks come from that album. That's OK by me, as I love that album.
I don't usually care for live records but there are a few track here that sound even better here than on the studio releases. "Girl Who Lives On Heaven Hill" is one example as Grant Hart doesn't scream it at the top of his lungs like on New Day Rising. "Keep Hanging On" (recorded on Bob Mould's birthday) is another example. This version makes me like the song even more. I also like how you can really hear Hart's backing vocals like on "Standing in the Rain" and "Ice Cold Ice." Sometimes the backing vocals sound lost on the studio albums, but Hart and Mould sound great together and it really adds to the tracks. Mould sings the chorus to "Ice Cold Ice" a little differently which I also like. "Everytime" is sung by Greg Norton, the bass player with the cool mustache. He has a rough, buzz-saw voice. The song is pretty good. I have it also on a Warehouse Interview record. Unfortunately, "She Floated Away" sounds a bit stale here as it's missing the backing vocals (Hart provided both lead and backing vocals on the studio version). "It's Not Funny anymore" also sounds great here. "Now That You Know Me" was a pleasant surprise. It was recorded on Grant Hart's Intolerance solo album. "Ain't No Water in the Well" is way too yeehaw for my tastes.
Fans can find a lot of omissions here: "Diane" comes to mind, as well as singles "Could You Be the One?", "Makes No Sense At all" (actually, I don't miss them that much), "I Don't Want to Know If you Are Lonely," "Pink Turns to Blue," "She's a Woman (And Now He is a Man)" (one of my all-time favorites), and "Charity, Chastity, Prudence and Hope," but I think it is a good mix of early stuff ("From the Gut", "Target," "Data Control" [great rendition here], "In a Free Land") and later material. It ends with an ode to the Ramones, "Sheena is a Punk Rocker." I remember Joey Ramones on MTV's 120 Minutes saying he thought Husker Du was a Ramones rip-off band. Husker Du may have been influenced by the Ramones, but they created a style all their own and developed their style with each album, and it shows here. The booklet has a history of the band and a few photos including a long colorized one from the "Could You Be the One?" music video.
Please find a way to hear this album! September 28, 2005 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This band deserves so much more than they got. I really, really believe that aside from lack of big label promotion (of course!) their NAME killed 'em as a more referenced punk band. If that sounds stupid, I know from experience trying to get friends to hear them that the name is an immediate turnoff. It's too bad. If you like your punk rock tough and hardcore, this album can suffice - with lightning speed, but the melodies, changes, and soaring choruses will break your heart. "Keep Hanging On", "Celebrated Summer", and the way Husker Du plays "Terms of Physic Warfare" live are testaments to the songwriting abilities of Bob Mould and to a lesser extent Grant Hart and the band's capacity for pushing the emotional, yearning, nostalgia, bittersweet buttons. Musically, if you see Green Day's Insomniac as underrated, and emotionally if the Descendants "Hope" or "Bikeage" or "Jean is Dead" are you favorite songs from that band, and if punk anthems are your thing, just give this one a shot.
blistering classic April 21, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a great introduction to Husker Du, who in a perfect world should have been Nirvana big. Bob Mould's guitar sounds like a chainsaw cutting through a eucalyptus tree. Beautiful. I like the front of house mix sound too, appropriate for this band, who never sounded quite right on studio recordings in my opinion, except for Zen Arcade, what an awesome record! Anyway, this is great pummeling rock n roll and if I could paraphrase Robert Fripp,"Albums are like a love letter, concerts are like a hot date" This is a hot date.
AWESOME Live Epitaph from this classic band March 30, 2005 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
Husker Du were and are one of the best bands ever, one of those bands I wish I was old enough to be into when they were around or that they never broke up. That being said, this live album from 1994, 7 years after they broke up, could be seen as a last-ditch cash-in by Warner Bros. if it sucked, which it doesn't! This is visceral, punch-you-in-the-chest hardcore rock played at full decibel volume! And wow, can they play. Mould's guitar buzzsaw's through everything, Norton's underrated bass playing is like an earthquake, and Grant Hart's drums have never sounded stronger.....he sounds like he's going to break all his drumskins, he hits them so hard. And the songs....awesome versions of Ice Cold Ice, What's Going On, Celebrated Summer, Girl Who Lives on Heaven Hill, and more. Plus, three new songs they were working on before they broke up, Greg Norton's "Everytime" (a really heavy, savage rocker snarled by Greg Norton and Bob Mould), Grant Hart's catchy-as-hell and blistering "Now That You Know Me", and Bob Mould's "Ain't No Water In the Well" (which is actually the weakest of the 3 new ones...a romping blues stomper, nonetheless). All in all, even though Husker Du's entire catalog of studio albums are ESSENTIAL listening, after you've experienced those, you need to check this out!
Hard driving sound with a questionable playlist January 18, 2005 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This live recording did capture the raw power of Husker Du. The guitar is blaring, the bassline thumping and the drumming? Forget about it, about as fast as you can get. This was hardcore Husker Du doing hardcore Husker Du. HOWEVER, so many of their great songs are omitted in this concert. And I know someone is going to say "well they had so many great songs." Yeah, but no "Don't Want to Know if You are Lonely" or "Makes No Sense At All"? Give me a break.
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