close




Browse Lyrics by Artist

Stay Connected to VH1



Also In Artists



Browse VH1 Artists

A B C D E F G
  H I J K L M N  
  O P Q R S T U  
  V W X Y Z #  




100 Greatest Women In Music
Ellie Goulding
"Starry Eyed"
Buy It
40 Greatest TRL Moments
Deluka
"OMFG"
Buy It
Mob Wives
The London Souls
"Steady Are You Ready"
Buy It
Mob Wives
Nabiha
"Midnight Blues"
Buy It
Mob Wives
Mayer Hawthorne
"The News"
Buy It


news

Live



Live's Ed Kowalczyk


 

 
by Frank Tortorici


Live plan to release a new album by the end of the year. ( )

Pennsylvania-bred rockers Live, known for their spiritual, anthemic songs, are in the process of finishing a new album. The band, led by emotive singer Ed Kowalczyk, had multiplatinum success with its 1994 LP, Throwing Copper.



Sign up for our daily Music & Pop Culture News alert!

E-Mail this story to a friend
XML RSS Feed Add RSS Headlines

Add to My Yahoo Add VH1 News to My Yahoo
Edward Joel Kowalczyk was born 28 years ago today in Lancaster, Pa. In the early '80s, he met York, Pa., residents Chad Taylor (guitar), Patrick Dahlheimer (bass) and Chad Gracey (drums), who were in the band First Aid. Adopting Kowalczyk as lead vocalist, they assumed a number of band names before settling on Public Affection.

The group developed a following in Pennsylvania and released a cassette, The Death of a Dictionary (1989), on their own Action Front label. The group later changed its name to Live, after drawing it out of a hat, and signed with Radioactive Records.

Live's first album, 1991's Mental Jewelry, was produced by Jerry Harrison of Talking Heads. The LP's songs, including "Operation Spirit (The Tyranny of Tradition)" and "Pain Lies on the Riverside," were inspired by one of Kowalczyk's heroes, the Indian philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti.

Singles such as "Selling the Drama" and "I Alone" helped Live become radio favorites. "Lightning Crashes" was even more popular, spurring the album to sell more than 7 million copies.

The group's next LP, Secret Samadhi (1997), which included such tracks as "Heropscychodreamer" (RealAudio excerpt), went platinum.

Last year Live donated profits from one of their concerts to benefit the lightning victim of the 1998 Tibetan Freedom Concert. Earlier this year, Live played the Tibetan Freedom Concert in Wisconsin. They will perform at Woodstock '99 later this month in Rome, N.Y.

The group's upcoming album, A Distance to Here, produced by Harrison, will include tracks such as "The Dolphin's Cry." Kowalczyk describes the LP, due in October, as "a happy record."

"We've always been a band that questions things," Kowalczyk said. "Up to this point, there's been a certain amount of angst. Now we've come to a place in our lives where we've been through so much ... that we're comfortable being a big band."

Other birthdays: Ruben Blades, 51; and Stewart Copeland (The Police), 47.











 
SPONSORS
AD: