Larger Than Live
Larger Than Live is the fifth studio album by heavy metal band Keel. It was released in 1989 on Gold Mountain Records. The album consists of six new studio tracks and six of the band's previous songs recorded live at The Roxy in West Hollywood, CA. It was also the only album to feature keyboardist Scott Warren and guitarist Tony Palamucci (as guitarist Marc Ferrari left the band due to creative and personal differences).
Larger Than Live | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album / Live album by | ||||
Released | September 1989 | |||
Venue | The Roxy, West Hollywood, California | |||
Studio | Sound City Studios Van Nuys, California | |||
Genre | Heavy metal, glam metal, hard rock | |||
Length | 54:53 | |||
Label | Gold Mountain/Gold Castle | |||
Producer | Ron Keel and Allen Isaacs | |||
Keel chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal | 6/10[2] |
Following the filming of the music video for the song "Dreams Are Not Enough," lead vocalist/founder Ron Keel announced the disbandment of Keel.[3]
Track listing
- Side one - studio
- "Evil Wicked Mean & Nasty" (Ron Keel) - 4:21
- "Riding High" (Dwain Miller, Kenny Chaisson, R. Keel, Scott Warren) - 3:24
- "Die Fighting" (R. Keel) - 4:40
- "Dreams Are Not Enough" (Phil Wolfe, R. Keel) - 4:16
- "So Many Good Ways to Be Bad" (R. Keel, Steve Diamond) - 4:08
- "Fool for a Pretty Face" (Jerry Shirley, Steve Marriott) - 4:18 (Humble Pie cover)
- Side two - live
- "Hard as Hell" (R. Keel) - 4:06
- "Rock and Roll Animal" (Marc Ferrari) - 6:15
- "Private Lies" (R. Keel) - 4:38
- "Rock 'n Roll Outlaw" (Gary Anderson, Mick Cocks, Peter Wells) - 4:12 (Rose Tattoo cover)
- "The Right to Rock" (Bryan Jay, Kenny Chaisson, Ferrari, R. Keel) - 6:06
- "Cold Day in Hell" (R. Keel) - 4:29 (Steeler cover)
Tracks 1-6 are new studio tracks, tracks 7-12 are live recordings.
Personnel
- Band members
- Ron Keel - lead vocals, guitar, producer
- Tony "The Kid" Palamucci - guitars, backing vocals
- Bryan Jay - guitars, backing vocals (on tracks 7-12)
- Kenny Chaisson - bass, backing vocals
- Scott Warren - keyboards, piano, backing vocals
- Dwain Miller - drums, backing vocals
- Additional musicians
- Jaime St. James, Kevin Dubrow - backing vocals on track 6
- Bryan Jenkins - backing vocals
- Paula Salvatore - harmony vocals on track 5
- Production
- Allen Isaacs - producer, engineer on tracks 1-6
- Bryan Jenkins - engineer on tracks 1-6
- Jaimie Seyberth, John Falzarano, Ray Thompson - live recording of tracks 7-12
- Greg Fulginti - mastering
gollark: Again, you seem to just be assuming personhood here.
gollark: I disagree with saying "someone" for non-people entities.
gollark: There are various problems with this:- massive increase of complexity in guns- you would need to recharge it constantly, and it would need batteries and such, and would generally be a hassle- GPS spoofing (possibly just jamming, depending on design) would stop guns working- people could probably just remove the geofencing bit- how are you planning to keep the "do not shoot here" lists updated on all of them?
gollark: I sent this mere *hours* ago.
gollark: Does the particular context of it change the meaning much? Or imply that you should only do that sometimes?
References
- "Keel Larger Than Live review". AllMusic. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
- Popoff, Martin (1 November 2005). The Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal: Volume 2: The Eighties. Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Collector's Guide Publishing. pp. 181–182. ISBN 978-1894959315.
- "History". Keelband.com. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008. Retrieved 2013-04-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.