10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
For Those About To Rock I Salute You, November 28, 1999
The songs on this live CD were performed amazingly well. New bass lines, endings and guitar solos turned old songs into new power. I did have a couple problems with this CD however, the main one being I thought the selection of songs was not that great. There were a lot of songs that were too soft to really rock the house off on the album. The only other thing that bugged me was poor sound quality. Any true Pearl Jam fan that does not get this is making a mistake but for newcomers I would reccomend holding off until you are more aquintated to the band.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Live Album From A Great Band, September 6, 2003
This Pearl Jam live album was recorded during the Yield tour in 1998. At the time like everyone else I was disappointed by the setlist because it didn't have some of their bigger hits (Animal, Jeremy, etc) Years later I have stopped lamenting what should have been on here and focus on the great songs that are on here.
1. Corduroy. Great song from Vitalogy. Starts this live album off right.
2. Given to Fly. My favorite of all Pearl Jam songs. Taken from the Yield album this live version soars and gives me chills. Amazing song.
3. Hail Hail. Great fast paced rock song taken from No Code.
4. Daughter. An acoustic driven song that has a special addition part added on while played live. Taken from Vs.
5. Elderly Woman Behind The Counter In A Small Town. Another acoustic song taken from Vs. One of the better tunes to sing along too.
6. Untitled. This song is not from an album and can be considered as the intro to MFC.
7. MFC. Good midpaced rocker taken from the Yield album.
8. Go. This is a really fast punkish song taken from Vs. One of my favorites.
9. Red Mosquito. Great opening guitar and really good song from the No Code album.
10. Evenflow. Hit song from Ten. The guitar interplay and solos are wonderful.
11. Off He Goes. Great acoustic song from No Code.
12. Nothingman. Another acoustic singalong from Vitalogy.
13. Do the Evolution. Fast paced punk rocker that really scorches. Taken from Yield.
14. Betterman. Big hit off of Vitalogy. Starts slow and acoustic before they crank up the amps.
15. Black. Perhaps the greatest version ever recorded. Taken from Ten.
16. F*ckin Up. Neil Young cover. Great album closer.
This is a realy good CD to start your Pearl Jam collection. I reccomend getting all of their albums. They have made 2 studio albums since this tour to hear those songs live I reccomend you get any of their official live bootlegs. Pearl Jam are a great band and they really are one of the best live bands ever.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A good live record, but lacks the energy of the unedited shows., August 29, 2005
Known by its fans for its stunning live performances and having flooded the market with seemingly endless (146 as of now) live albums, selecting a live Pearl Jam record can be a bit of a chore. "Live on Two Legs" has two distinctions the other live work doesn't-- it's the only live record from the 1998 tour and its a compilation of shows rather than a single show.
What does this mean? Simply put, the performances are stunning start to finish-- there's no flub ups, there's no forgotten lyrics, and there's no songs that feel a bit flat. But with that, there's a sort of lack of coherence in performance-- Pearl Jam is one of the few bands that's translated well from a live act to record BECAUSE their live albums don't edit out the goof ups, the crowd chats, and so on, well, except for this one. But because it's a compilation, it is rather well polished.
Still, it's a good set-- fantastic perforamnces of, among others, "Daughter" (featuring parts of "Rocking in the Free World" and "W.M.A." on the tag), the "Untitled"/"MFC" suite boils and blows over, and "Do the Evolution" is always just a monster at the live shows. And with each album that was then-available represented (with four from the then new "Yield", three each from "Vs." and "Vitalogy", and a pair each from "No Code" and "Ten"), fans of any of the material are likely to be happy.
Still, I'd check out any of the commercially available 2003 shows (particularly the mostly acoustic Benaroya Hall show) before this one, but if you're nervous about where to jump in and want a polished but somewhat inauthentic feel for the band's live show, this might be a good place to look.
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