Life Is Worth Losing

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Life Is Worth Losing
Live album by George Carlin
Released January 10, 2006
Recorded November 5, 2005
Genre Comedy
Length 71:20
Label Eardrum/Atlantic
Producer George Carlin
George Carlin chronology
Complaints and Grievances
(2001)
Life Is Worth Losing
(2006)
It's Bad for Ya
(2008)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars[1]
Wiki letter w.svg This table needs to be expanded using prose. See the guideline for more information.

Life Is Worth Losing is the eighteenth album (not counting audiobooks, compilations or the George Carlin on Comedy interview CD) by American comedian George Carlin. It was recorded simultaneously with the live broadcast of the HBO special of the same title, his thirteenth HBO stand-up comedy special, and was his final special recorded from the Beacon Theater. It is the first project Carlin had undertaken since completing drug rehabilitation in 2005.[2]

Early on in the program, Carlin proudly announces that he was 341 days sober at the time of the recording, and that 2006 will be his 50th year in show business.

Contents

[edit] Production

The album was initially slated to be titled I Like It When a Lot of People Die, the same title he intended to use for his 2001 Complaints and Grievances, before changing it following the September 11, 2001 attacks. Not long after the show was scheduled to be aired and recorded, Hurricane Katrina took place, forcing Carlin to again consider a new title.[citation needed]

During his 2007 comedy tour, he had been explaining early on during his performances that he had moved away from "coasting" on his material from this recording and made haste in creating new material because of the dark nature of the subject matter. He said that after the material was sinking in he got to thinking and realized that it was "fucking depressing".[citation needed]

A DVD of the show was released on February 27, 2007 by MPI Home Video.

[edit] Awards

The album was nominated for Best Comedy Album for the 49th Annual Grammy Awards making it his seventh album to be nominated for a Grammy award since 1966. It lost to Lewis Black's The Carnegie Hall Performance.[citation needed]

[edit] Track listing

  1. "A Modern Man" (3:53)
  2. "Three Little Words" (3:51)
  3. "The Suicide Guy" (7:06)
  4. "Extreme Human Behavior" (13:41)
  5. "The All-Suicide TV Channel" (3:13)
  6. "Dumb Americans" (10:56)
  7. "Pyramid of the Hopeless" (8:43)
  8. "Autoerotic Asphyxia" (4:54)
  9. "Posthumous Female Transplants" (3:34)
  10. "Yeast Infection" (4:38)
  11. "Coast-to-Coast Emergency" (6:51)

[edit] Charts

Chart (2005) Peak position
US Billboard Top Comedy Albums Chart 4

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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