| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 195815 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 11/28/2008 2:15:11 AM MST |
| Price Used: | $3.39 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | |
| Release Date: | 2006-01-09 |
| Label: | Radioactive |
| UPC: | 008811139728 |
| Binding: | Audio CD |
| Published By: | Radioactive |
| ASIN: | B0000071MW |
| Category: | Music |
Tracks on Throwing Copper by Radioactive
- The Dam at Otter Creek
- Selling the Drama
- I Alone
- Iris
- Lightning Crashes
- Top
- All Over You
- Shit Towne
- T.B.D.
- Stage
- Waitress
- Pillar of Davidson
- White, Discussion
- Operation Spirit - Live, Live [1]
- Good Pain - Live, Dahleimer, Patrick
- Heaven Wore a Shirt - Live, Dahleimer, Patrick
- Negation - Live, Dahleimer, Patrick
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Album Details
Special Edition of the Hit Album from Live with Four Great Bonus Tracks Unique to this Edition. 'operation Spirit' and 'good Pain' Are from their Debut Album While 'heaven Wore a Shirt' and 'negation' Are Unique to the Bonus Disc.
Amazon.com
Ed Kowalczyk knows a thing or two about transmitting personal anguish through song. Even though the Live frontman is often derided as a budget-bin Michael Stipe, there is no denying his cathartic influence on this Pennsylvania foursome's musical direction. Throwing Copper is not only Live's most successful release (six-million-plus copies sold) but also the best showcase for Kowalczyk's fierce vocal prowess. From the violent "Selling the Drama" to the moving "Lightning Crashes," this is an album of unparalleled intensity by a singer and group of rare passion. --Aidin Vaziri
Customer Reviews
(3.5 stars) Pretty good, although I could name about at least a hundred better bands - Reviewed on 2008-04-20
3 customers found this review helpful, 6 did not.
I know they're usually considered about the worst thing ever to happen to '90s rock, but I don't care, I kinda like Live. I mean, none of their stuff is as good as Nirvana or any other top-flight alt-rock band, and I don't at all like anything from Secret Samadhi, but they're good, in the sense that Stone Temple Pilots or Counting Crows or some other band that only a '90s rock obsessive like me would enjoy even in the least. I don't care about how they were an influence on Creed (who suck, by the way, although "My Sacrifice" is a pretty good song), nor do I care about the extreme religious content in their lyrics. They write good songs, even though everything they do is taken from the books of the far superior Nirvana (music) and U2 (lyrics). There were four big radio staples on this album, and I like them all: "I Alone" goes from delicate abstractions to head-banging riffage; "Selling the Drama" has an interesting delivery to make up for its completely pretentious lyrics, which include Ed Whatever comparing himself to Jesus; "Lightning Crashes" is a fascinating song-long build-up with a giant release; and "All Over You" has storming riffs and a crashing chorus, though again the lyrics are stupid ("Our love is like water, pinned down and abused for being strange" is a little sample for you); the semi-epics "Pillar of Davidson" and "White, Discussion" are really cool. And yes, there is plenty of other good stuff, too! The intense "Iris" and even more intense "Dam at Otter Creek" rule; "Top" has some sweet guitar parts. But there is plenty of bad stuff. "S*** Towne" is aptly titled; "Stage" and "Waitress" are two horrid hardcore punk tunes right in a row, and hardcore punk isn't what these guys do best; the hidden track is dull country. And there's no originality, and dumb lyrics throughout. Not because they're religious, mind you, but because they try too hard to look like big-deal poetry. Still, good album! Not a landmark or anything, though. They're not half as good as Smashing Pumpkins or anyone like that, either.
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Book Subjects
- Adult Alternative Pop/Rock
- Alternative Pop/Rock
- Pop
- Pop/Rock Music
- Post-Grunge
- Rock