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The band's name came from a line in the Marc Bolan song "Suneye", from the 1970 T. Rex (album) which features the verse "Tyrannosaurus Rex, the eater of cars." Eater later recorded a cover version of T-Rex's "Jeepster." Eater were known for being one of the youngest bands, if not the youngest band, in the punk scene.
Ed Kowalczyk was the lead singer, lyricist, and main songwriter for the band Live from its formation until 2009. When he left the band, the other three members issued a statement detailing what they felt were inappropriate actions by Kowalczyk in regards to contract and salary negotiations. [ 3 ]
Live / l aɪ v /, often typeset as Līve, LĪVE, or +LĪVE+, is an American rock band formed in York, Pennsylvania, in 1984 by Ed Kowalczyk (lead vocals, guitars), Patrick Dahlheimer (bass), Chad Gracey (drums), and Chad Taylor (guitars). As of 2022, Kowalczyk is the only remaining member of the original lineup.
The music on The Turn is jointly credited to all four members of Live, however none of the three remaining original band members receives a lyric writing credit. Shinn is credited as lyricist on all songs, with producer Jerry Harrison receiving a co-writing credit on seven tracks, his daughter Aishlin on three and songwriter Bruce Wallace on five.
Live at the Padget Rooms, Penarth is the fifth album by Man, released in September 1972.It was the band’s first live album although they had previously been featured on two tracks totalling 26m 46s (Spunk Rock and Angel Easy) on a "various artists" live double album, Greasy Truckers Party released earlier in 1972.
12 Tracks (11 studio & 1 live) from Man, Do You Like It Here Now..., Be Good to Yourself..., Back into the Future, Rhinos, Winos and Lunatics, Slow Motion, and Maximum Darkness. The Dawn Of Man CD (1997) Recall SMD CD 124; All of Revelation and 2 Ozs of Plastic with a Hole in the Middle plus the bonus singles
The band formed in 1998 and was initially planned to be the side-project of Dave "Dixie" Collins, the band's vocalist and bassist who was occupied with his primary project Buzzoven, however, the band disbanded the same year so he decided to concentrate his efforts on Weedeater and made it his new primary project, recruiting members Dave "Shep" Shepherd on guitar and Keith "Keko" Kirkum on drums.
Live from the Fox Oakland was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Blues Album. [8]In a review for AllMusic, Mark Deming described the music as "a muscular fusion of blues, soul, rock, and funk that's emotionally powerful and technically dazzling," and noted that "the show captures the group in strong form."