Although the sensibility did show up on most of their studio recordings,
Built to Spill were long renowned for their ability to stretch out in concert, where the balance between two of their most dominant influences -- noisy, electric
Neil Young and noisy, angular
Pavement-esque pop -- tilted decidedly toward the former's extended jams. In fact,
Live's defining performance is a 20-minute cover of
Young's
"Cortez the Killer," on which
Doug Martsch's vocal and guitar work bear an amazingly accurate similarity to
Young, almost to the point of flat-out imitation. Yet somehow, the performance doesn't feel derivative -- it seems more like
Martsch is staking out long-coveted territory and one-upping his way into something very much his own, making the expanded length of the already epic song absolutely necessary. It's a powerful, majestic performance that makes the preceding songs seem like a perfect buildup, and it also has the effect of dwarfing the extremely good performances that follow it. The exception, of course, is another 20-minute jam that closes the album, this time the
Built to Spill original
"Broken Chairs," which essentially underlines the point made with
"Cortez." As for the nonepic songs, there are five other well-chosen
Built to Spill originals, plus terrific versions of
the Halo Benders'
"Virginia Reel Around the Fountain" (actually a
Martsch side project) and
Love as Laughter's
"Singing Sores Make Perfect Swords." What's more, the sound quality is excellent, even crystalline (for a concert recording). It's as definitive a concert document of the band as you're likely to get, and it's close to being essential listening even for fans who aren't keen on live albums. ~ Steve Huey