"Live (for the One I Love)" is the second single from Céline Dion's All the Way... A Decade of Song album. It was released on February 14 2000 in Canada and selected European countries.
"Live (for the One I Love)" is an adaptation in English of the French song "Vivre," first performed by Noa and then by Hélène Ségara in the musical Notre Dame de Paris. Richard Cocciante composed the music and Luc Plamondon wrote the words. Will Jennings did an English translation (he also wrote the lyrics for "My Heart Will Go On").
Céline Dion performed this song on few French TV shows at the end of 1999 and during the "Millennium Concert" (last of the Let's Talk About Love Tour).
"Live (for the One I Love)" music video was directed by Bille Woodruff and released in 2000. It was included later on Céline Dion's All the Way... A Decade of Song and Video DVD.
The single peaked at #23 in Canada, #47 in Belgium, #63 in France, #82 in Switzerland and #89 in the Netherlands.
"Live (for the One I Love)" was also included on the Notre Dame de Paris album.
Live Earth was a series of worldwide concerts held on July 7 2007, that initiated a three-year campaign to combat climate change. The concerts brought together more than 150 musical acts in eleven locations around the world and were broadcast to a mass global audience through televisions, radio, and streamed via the Internet.
The umbrella organization for the event was Save Our Selves, founded by Kevin Wall (Executive Producer), and included major partners such as former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, the Alliance for Climate Protection, Earthlab, MSN, and Control Room, the production company which produced the event. The logo for the event was the Morse code distress signal. Brand Neutral, the environmental business strategy firm, served as the worldwide sustainability strategy and services partner for Live Earth, developing the overall sustainability strategy, staffing all members of the global "green team," creating the overall master plan for resource management, and supervising the execution of the Live Earth environmental strategy. Leading sustainability expert John Picard served as chief environmental and efficiency counsellor for the event. The worldwide producer of talent and venue programming for all of the events was Aaron Grosky. The worldwide producer of events was Lily Sobhani. Live Earth produced 60 short films, directed by leading filmmakers from the worlds of films, music videos, commercials and animation. The worldwide producer of Live Earth films was Kit Hawkins. The 22-hour global TV broadcast (world feed) and satellite distribution, as well as radio, internet and mobile production was overseen by Executive in Charge of Production André Mika. Unlike the similar Live 8 concerts, which were free, Live Earth charged admission but the event was made broadly available via television and the Internet.
The event set a new record for on-line entertainment with over 15 million video streams during the live concert alone. Television ratings were mixed, with 41% of households in Canada watching the concerts, while figures in the UK were characterized as a "flop". Television ratings in the United States were "dismal" as well, NBC's broadcast of Live Earth was the least watched network program between the Big Three Television Networks and Fox. . On the other hand, Bravo, an NBC Uni property, reported the highest Saturday ratings in the network's history Live Earth broke television audience records in Brazil with 37 percent of households via TV Globo, and Germany with twenty percent of households watching the N24 broadcast.