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V, Live

BY LUKE SMITH
Daily Music Editor
Published September 10, 2001

V, Live Radioactive Records

Paul Wong
Dude, have you seen the size of that thing?" 20010911, arts, New Line greenlights, <br><br>Courtesy of Compaq

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Ever since 1999"s The Distance to Here, Live has been meandering around the musical desert searching for nirvana or at least a commercial bone since 1994"s Throwing Copper. Now Live returns to CD players everywhere with an unhealthy dose of Indian-fused stadium post-grunge layered with do-overs of their back catalog of "hits."

"People Like You" recalls the dynamics of "The Dolphins Cry" from their The Distance to Here. "Flow" is a complete remake of "Run to the Water," another song that failed to dent the charts and the public ear.

The mop-topped Monkees make a near-cameo on "Like A Soldier" which constantly threatens to breakout into an alt-rock rendition of "Stepping Stone."

Live also chugs along in the direction of bad rap, bringing in a special guests to appear with a "featuring" credit in the video and ideally, to thicken the sound. They do this on V with the help of Tricky, the trip-hop sultan himself. He lends his vocals to the single "Simple Creed" a song driven by a failed stadium guitar riff and R2 D2-ian synth warbles.

"Transmit Your Love" rides somewhere between a VH1"s "Bands on the Run" winner Flickerstick ballad and a cover of their own "They Stood Up For Love."

With V, Live has demoted themselves into the third-tier of post-grunge rock firmly behind low-level stock rockers Stroke 9 and in the same category as Aussie-hit machine Silverchair. Now Ed"s shed his cue-ball look and there may not be a tomorrow for Live, especially if they keep putting out albums like V.

Grade: C-


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