Live Fast Die blitz-bombs through fast, snotty, obscenity-larded punk songs that sound marginally better than on the one-track recorded Bandana Thrash, but still not good enough to hear the words. (Except for “fuck”; I distinctly heard the word “fuck” in pretty much every song.) They’re good though, tipping the nod to New Hampshire’s only legitimate punk, G.G. Allin, as well as the Ramones and maybe the Germs. It’s not complicated, what they do, just 4/4 brutality pushed to warp speed. The drummer bashes straight on in a lather with his tongue hanging out like Michael Jordan. The skinny lead guitarist cutting into Van Halen-style shreds between songs just to prove he can do something besides up-and-down scrubbing. Camero Werewolf, the singer, hardly even breaks stride as King Khan hands him a shot, which he downs with his strumming hand in the short break between verses. They close with the Ramones’ version of Johnny River’s “Do Ya Wanna Dance”, and, poker-in-the-ass or not, we all kind of do. –Pop Matters
LiveFastDie are probably my favorite band in New York right now. Seeing them live is like watching three-to-five crazed gibbons spinning out of control on the edge of a towering precipice. –VICE
They like the Devil Dogs, production-less Ramones, early GG Allin, and the Reatards, and it’s a totally fuzzed-out, in-the-red garage affair that’s pretty darn good. –Some Guy on a Message Board
Oh boy. Another band that can hardly play their instruments and like to get wasted. Check back with them in a year and see who's dead. --LiveFastDie
Frustrated working with other people’s opinions of how things should function within a band, Camero Werewolf figured he would be better off doing everything himself. Putting the cart before the wheel, he set upon writing and recording under the moniker of LIveFastDie in late 2006 before the notion of a “band” even entered his mind. Some 3 full lengths, nine 7” and one cassette comp on a total of 13 labels in 6 countries later he still can’t tell you who’s in his band.
LiveFastDie’s show can feature any one of the 19 past and present members or just a Camero and an iPod.With a name that references the godfather of punk for whom they share the hometown of Littleton, New Hampshire with (if you don’t get it, put this down right now) and a sonic quality that gives the terms “lo-fi” and “in the red” a whole new meaning, LiveFastDie’s sound will redefine any of your preconceived notions of garage punk. And when they do play as a full band, the line-up may or may not feature people who have spent time in this handy alphabetical list of bands: 32 Buxton, Apocalypse, Atari, Baby Shakes, Baseball Furies, Black Time, Busy Signals, Captain Black Bush and the Post Menstrual Pirates, Compulsive Gamblers, Country Bears, Coy Dogs, DC Snipers, Dead Unicorn, Death Train, Dementia 13, Dick Army, Dynamite Arrows, Electric Shadows, Golden Error, Holy Smokes, Hot Machines, JazzJune, King Kahn and the Shrines, Liquor Store, Lover!, Man With Gun, Monsqueat, Moto, Reagan Youth, Sick As Death, Some Action, Spitzz, Stalkers, Star Spangles, Tampoffs, The Real Kids, The Shemps, The Snakes and Music, Titus Andronicus, Vee Dee, Vice City Rockers, Wellington Ladies Welfare League, Wolfs Blood and probably hundreds Camero doesn’t know about.

