Live from the Fall

Live From the Fall is American jam band Blues Traveler's first full-length live album, released on July 2, 1996 (see 1996 in music). It presents highlights of the band's autumn 1995 tour on two discs.

Track listing
">" indicates a segue directly into the next track.

Disc one

 * 1) "Love and Greed" (Chan Kinchla, John Popper) – 5:15
 * 2) "Mulling It Over" > (Kinchla, Popper) – 8:04
 * 3) "Closing Down the Park" (Kinchla, Popper) – 12:55
 * 4) "Regarding Steven" (Popper) – 4:42
 * 5) "NY Prophesie" (Kinchla, Popper) – 5:14
 * 6) "100 Years" (Popper) – 4:59
 * 7) "Crash Burn" (Kinchla, Popper) – 3:24
 * 8) "Gina" (Popper, Kinchla) – 6:45
 * 9) "But Anyway" (Kinchla, Popper) – 5:55
 * 10) "Mountain Cry" (Brendan Hill) – 15:17

Disc two
Abbreviated titles (one or two words each) are used in the liner notes to indicate the songs on this disc.

"Go Outside and Drive" > – 10:48 "Imagine" (John Lennon) – 19:46
 * 1) "Alone" (Popper) – 15:43
 * 2) "Freedom" (Popper) – 4:15
 * 3) "The Mountains Win Again" (Bobby Sheehan) – 5:42
 * 4) "What's for Breakfast" (Popper, Sheehan)– 4:02
 * 5) "Go Outside and Drive" > (Popper) – 9:06
 * 6) "Low Rider" > (War)
 * 1) "Run-Around" (Popper) – 4:35
 * 2) "Sweet Talking Hippie" (Hill, Kinchla, Popper, Sheehan)

Song information
"Closing Down the Park" is a song about the Tompkins Square Park Riot. No studio recording of it has ever been released outside of a demo.

A studio version of "Regarding Steven" is included on the CD single for "Run-Around."

The performance of "Alone" contains a previously-unreleased bridge section which later became part of the song "Traveler Suite" from Decisions of the Sky.

The "Go / Low / Go / Run" medley includes snippets from the following non-Blues Traveler songs: "Linus and Lucy," "Tequila," "Loser," "Inchworm," and "La Bamba."

"Sweet Talking Hippie" and "Imagine" are included on the same track, but both are standalone performances without a segue from one to the other.

"Sweet Talking Hippie" includes a snippet from the "Galop Infernal," composed by Jacques Offenbach for the operetta Orpheus in the Underworld.