Top 10 Live Albums
Related Content
With few exceptions, rock’s best live albums were recorded in the pre-MTV days as a cheap way to give fans a taste of what they missed if they couldn’t get tickets or were busy puking up Boone’s Farm wine in the arena toilets. Thanks to the discs below, you can still visit those days with the help of a little imagination. This time, though, skip the screw-top wine.
10 Iggy and the Stooges, Metallic KO (Skydog) Metallic KO captures Iggy Pop doing battle with an entire biker gang at one of the Stooges’ final gigs in Detroit. Having baited the gang on a local radio program, Iggy spends the show unsuccessfully dodging bottles, M-80s and shovels—until he’s finally knocked unconscious. But not before he dedicates “Cock in My Pocket” to his mom. Nice.
9 Ted Nugent, Intensities in 10 Cities (Epic)
The Nuge certainly knew his way around the fretboard, but the map? Nope. On one cut here, the Motor City Madman greets the crowd with a hearty “SAN! AN! TONE! E! O!” To which a gentleman in the audience responds, “Suck my bone-E-O!” A sleeve credit helpfully identifies the city in question as Houston.
8 Jeff Buckley, Live at Sin-é (Legacy Edition) (Columbia/Legacy)
Columbia introduced Jeff Buckley to the world with an EP culled from these intimate live sets, performed at a tiny club in New York where the late Buckley held a residency. Buckley blows through his early originals, as well as an eclectic clutch of cover tunes, armed with only a budget Telecaster and a serious Robert Plant fixation.
7 Led Zeppelin, How the West Was Won (Atlantic) The Song Remains the Same might include Robert Plant’s immortal ad-lib “Does anyone remember laughter?” but even the band admit the album sucks. For a taste of Zep’s live glory, delve instead into this three-disc set, which includes a dazzling hour-long version of “Whole Lotta Love.”
6 Cheap Trick, At Budokan (Epic) The quartet from Rockford, Illinois, blaze through their power-pop gems here, with Lennon-voiced dreamboat Robin Zander pausing to inform the audience, “I want YOU to want ME!” Fans the world ’round were quick to RSVP “Yes.”
5 The Rolling Stones, Get Yer Ya-Ya’s Out! (ABKCO) Ya-Ya’s catches the Stones in their late-Sixties prime, with Brian Jones’ replacement Mick Taylor sounding in especially fine form and Mick Jagger teasing the crowd about his trouser malfunction.
4 Nirvana, Unplugged in New York (DGC) Smack might have been on Kurt Cobain’s backstage rider by the time Nirvana visited the MTV studios for a filming of Unplugged, but he’d lost none of his fire. Stripped of their grunge-y trappings, Cobain’s tunes stand up admirably alongside covers of classics by David Bowie, Leadbelly and the Meat Puppets.
3 Kiss, Alive! (Casablanca) The day after Kiss hit town, in the Seventies, study halls buzzed with play-by-plays of the band’s circus-like performance: Gene’s fire-breathing, Ace’s smoking guitar, Paul’s chest hair … You really had to be there, man. But if you were too sheltered to catch the “hottest band in the land,” this live album was as close as you could get to the real thing without singeing your eyebrows.
2 Peter Frampton, Frampton Comes Alive! (A&M) This sales juggernaut introduced scads of listeners to Frampton and his so-called talking guitar, with which he asked us, “Do you feel like I do?” And rock fans did … at least until Frampton’s ill-advised follow-up: a portrayal of Billy Shears (alongside the Bee Gees) in a film adaptation of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.
1 Johnny Cash, At Folsom Prison (Columbia/Legacy) At Folsom Prison in the late Sixties, the Man in Black turned the toughest of crowds into, well, a captive audience. Cash, in his prime and backed by a fiery band featuring rockabilly legend Carl Perkins, reaches out to 2000 inmates with an amazingly empathetic set list. Yet as terrific as it all sounds, this is one gig you can be glad you skipped.
Related
![]()
zedman
July 07, 2011 at 12:42am
I have great doubts about this list--primarily for two reasons.
1-It omits Deep Purple's Made in Japan--an iconic live album of gargantuan value.
2-It includes Intensities in Ten Cities. This album was lame--especially compared to Double Live Gonzo, if you must include a Ted Nugent album. Intensities includes the absolute worst cover ever of Land of a Thousand Dances. For that reason alone it should not be on the list.But then, these lists are about opinions, and not to be taken too seriously, so I'll just state my opinions as well, and not write you off.
I also would have included the Scorpions' Tokyo tapes.
![]()
explorer_jo
December 07, 2009 at 2:31am
I think Thin Lizzy's Live and Dangerous needs an honorable mention at least. I only knew Boys and Jailbreak before I heard that. They jam out some pure classic rock with a hard finesse that is pure gold
![]()
redstrat8
September 26, 2009 at 8:13am
ROCKIN THE FILLMORE-PERFORMANCE=HUMBLE PIE.WHEN FRAMPTON WAS WITH HUMBLE PIE WAS PLAYING SOME GUITAR NOT THE WIMPY STUFF
![]()
redstrat8
September 26, 2009 at 8:12am
KISS ALIVE WAS NOT REALLY LIVE MOST OF IT HAD TO BE FIXED IN THE STUDIO
![]()
thrasherhoads
September 25, 2009 at 6:36pm
Creo que en la lista pudieron haber estado si desea que la sangre de AC / DC y Tribute de Ozzy con Randy Rhoads, pero como es que omitieron Live After Death de Iron Maiden y Made in Japan de Deep Purple por el amor de Dios! !!!!!!!
![]()
zappa73
September 25, 2009 at 2:53pm
I loved that Guns and Roses "Live Era: 87-93" double album!
Van Halen's "Live: Right Here Right Now" was pretty cool too.
![]()
slice
September 25, 2009 at 9:20am
I love 'em. I wish radio would play more.
I first heard several Iron Maiden songs live then heard the much slower studio versions & was disappointed. When I hear the studio version of Hallowed, Total Eclipse, Icarus, & a couple others, they sound weak compared to the live version.
![]()
emanrocxs
September 23, 2009 at 10:05pm
Me, I woulda added " Tribute " by Ozzy ( featurng Randy Rhoads)," Decade of Aggression" by Slayer and would swap "Double Live Gonzo " by Nugent for " Intensities...".. Good list though!
![]()
djc4475
September 23, 2009 at 7:06pm
Well, i'm sure everyone will have their own personal differences with this list and my own opinions, but....i would have included The Who Live at Leeds, Allman Brothers Live at the Fillmore East, Neil Young & Crazy Horse Live Rust, and The Band The Last Waltz.












