George Carlin is back and heâ??s funnier than ever. The Atlantic Records companion album to the four-time Grammy Award-Winning comicâ??s 13th HBO comedy concert, LIFE IS WORTH LOSING, is another Carlin classic, a... more » collection of side-splitting riffs and splenetic rants that cut straight to the heart of 21st Century America. Recorded live at New York Cityâ??s Beacon Theater, LIFE IS WORTH LOSING fi nds the legendary comedian with his dander at full mast, unleashing his righteous rage at such topics as â??Dumb Americans,â?? â??Autoerotic Asphyxia,â?? â??Extreme Human Behavior,â?? and more. As ever, Carlinâ??s blend of hilarious comedy and biting commentary forces listeners to confront the dark truths of modern culture while trying to catch their breath from non-stop laughter.« less
George Carlin is back and heâ??s funnier than ever. The Atlantic Records companion album to the four-time Grammy Award-Winning comicâ??s 13th HBO comedy concert, LIFE IS WORTH LOSING, is another Carlin classic, a collection of side-splitting riffs and splenetic rants that cut straight to the heart of 21st Century America. Recorded live at New York Cityâ??s Beacon Theater, LIFE IS WORTH LOSING fi nds the legendary comedian with his dander at full mast, unleashing his righteous rage at such topics as â??Dumb Americans,â?? â??Autoerotic Asphyxia,â?? â??Extreme Human Behavior,â?? and more. As ever, Carlinâ??s blend of hilarious comedy and biting commentary forces listeners to confront the dark truths of modern culture while trying to catch their breath from non-stop laughter.
A powerful continuation of Carlin's new, darker tone
Jonathan S. | California, United States | 01/10/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Haven't gotten my CD yet, so I can't comment on the conversion from live video to disc, but I've seen the material on HBO as well as live. Life Is Worth Losing further develops the cynical perspective first fully introduced in You Are All Diseased. The comic poem (A Modern Man) at the start of the album is classic Carlin wordplay, but everything that follows it is extreme in subject matter. Few comics dare to touch topics such as torture, suicide and necrophilia. That Carlin can make such topics amusing is impressive, but still more impressive is the emotional energy he continues to project in spite of his age. And rather than just make wisecracks about controversial topics, he ties it in to his personal philosophy, as an "entropy fan"- the surprisingly logical, natural and practical perspective that drives him to root for natural disasters, the collapse of nation states and the extinction of species. Interestingly, this album focuses less on the machinations of corporations, politicians and preachers than most past Carlin. It instead mostly examines the dysfunctions of individual humanity.
Carlin purists longing for a return to the subtle satire and middleground observations of 70s and 80s Carlin material will be disgusted by this. But if you liked the assaultive tone of "Complaints and Greivances", you need this album."
Making his twilight years count
Scott Sweet | Colorado Springs, CO | 03/15/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The tone of the CD shows right on the package: black and white photo, simple tracklisting on the back. The wackiness and "color" of his earlier decades has bled away, and now Carlin gets down to business the same way he did on "Jammin' in New York" and "Back in Town".
Much of the material addresses murder, suicide and neglect. Different roads lead to the same place. 1) There absolutely IS humor in how we face what we all share - mortality. 2) Why does Carlin lean so heavily on the subject this time around? THERE ARE MANY MORE DAYS BEHIND HIM THAN AHEAD OF HIM. Go with a smile, or go in denial. Carlin chooses the former.
"A Modern Man" is a cute loose-rhyme opening in exactly the same style as his previous "Advertising Lullaby". I started laughing really hard at the midway point, with "Dumb Americans". The first half relies upon what Carlin has offered since the '80s. So, "Dumb Americans" is the first peak, and he peaks again with the closing "Coast-To-Coast Emergency". The last piece paints an apocalyptic picture of how this sick, twisted universe can die and return as a better one.
My only disappointment is the FBI Anti-Piracy Warning on the back of the CD case. Invoking a government emblem to discourage unlawful behavior totally undermines an anti-establishment schtick. It's no different for Carlin than it is for A Perfect Circle.
This album doesn't introduce a lot of new material, but that's only because when Carlin holds a mirror to America, the view hasn't changed in at least 25 years."
Not so much funny as it is interesting
R.H. | CA | 04/16/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)
"This CD will go down as one of the least funny Carlin CD's. Very few belly laughs in this one, some might not even laugh once throughout the entire thing. So why 4 stars? Because I have never heard a better examination of American life by anybody. George shows us a man who has lived through America in its best and worst times and his examination into our need for consumption is thought provoking. While death is the overall motif of the CD, almost everything ties back into how over privelleged we all are and how truly animalistic human behavior is."
George Toughens Up
Christopher D. Fee | Rhode Island | 05/30/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"George's last CD sounded like somebody had gotten to him. It was vaguely apologetic, and almost felt like he was trying to recall his "Hippy Dippy" days so as to avoid persecution by the Neocons who are currently destroying the planet. Not good. Not funny. Not at all George-like.
This CD is George at his acidic best. Gone is the unfocused rage of "You Are All Diseased," wherein his observations were hurtful but not particularly well-grounded nor all that funny. He's a lot calmer this time around, and therefore a lot funnier. Carlin realized a long time ago that we humans are indeed doomed and manages to be amused by our self-inflicted demise. Excellent stuff. Painfully, inescapably accurate and therefore tremendously funny to those of us capable of laughing at our own colossal failure as a species.
People who don't like, are offended by, or who do not bust a gut laughing at some of George's more trenchant observations on this CD probably wear backpacks to keep their hands free so they can stuff their faces with ever-increasing amounts of disgusting food."
Dark
steve | 03/07/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"In my opinion, this is Carlin's darkest show yet. And who said that was a bad thing? In this performance Carlin takes the listener with him to a place where most of our minds have wondered from time to time. A fair amount of the material from this show is on death and suicide. I laughed so hard when he was talking about the thought process of someone about to commit suicide. The 24-hour a day suicide channel was funny for many reasons in my opinion. Not only was it funny in an absurd, over the top kind of way (like a lot of his stuff is) but it also provides an interesting take on reality tv and the crap they show. The grand finale was amazing. A series of catastrophes. There is some very dark stuff on this cd. A lot of it is not laugh out loud funny either. Most of it is an interesting and humerous look into these dark subjects. Well done Carlin."