fronted one of the most successful American post-grunge bands of the ‘90s, coming to prominence with their 1994 sophomore album,
. With his bald head and intense eyes,
cut a distinctive figure, but what separated him from other ‘90s alt-rockers was his utter earnestness: he adopted
’s open-hearted stance as his own, preferring sincerity to irony.
Alive was
Ed Kowalczyk’s first major activity outside of
Live in his professional career. A native of York, PA, he met the rest of the band while in middle school and the group played in a variety of incarnations before high-school graduation. After completing high school, the group worked steadily, eventually signing with Radioactive Records in 1991 and settling on the name
Live. Their debut album,
Mental Jewelry, arrived later that year but the big breakthrough came with
Throwing Copper in 1994.
Secret Samadhi followed in 1997 with
The Distance to Here appearing in 2000, around the time when
Kowalczyk started stepping outside the group, briefly appearing in
David Fincher’s 1999 cult classic
Fight Club and singing on
Tricky’s single “Evolution Revolution Love” in 2001.
Two other albums followed early in the new millennium --
V in 2001,
Birds of Pray in 2003 -- with the group’s last,
Songs from Black Mountain, appearing in 2006.
Live supported the album with a tour that lasted until 2009, when the band announced a hiatus following a show at the Palazzo in Las Vegas. Soon, it became apparent that the split was permanent due to a rift between
Kowalczyk and the rest of the band; the rift led to the rest of the group filing a lawsuit against the singer in May 2010 alleging they were due publishing royalties. royalties was the first member to launch a solo career, releasing
Alive in the summer of 2010. The record debuted at 166 on the Billboard charts but six on the magazine’s Christian chart.
–
Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi