May 18th, 1996
01) Jinx Removing
02) I Love You So Much It's Killing Us Both
03) Indictment
04) Save Your Generation
05) Housesitter
06) Boxcar
07) Face Down
08) Jet Black
09) Do You Still Hate Me?
10) Shirt
11) Parabola
12) Sluttering (May 4th)
13) Condition Oakland
14) Elephant
15) Bivouac

Audio recording exists, taped from audience.

Alex Bender's review of audio recording:

One of the last shows Jawbreaker played before breaking up, and it's an excellent one. The energy level is high throughout and the band is in top form; the performance is somewhat similar in execution to the 30 Apr. 1996 show on the live LP. Blake notes that Jinx Removing and I Love You So Much It's Killing Us Both are about the same girl, the latter being set three years later. He makes a lot of allusions to corporate music; for instance, he tells the crowd that Spin Magazine hated the song Save Your Generation, and also notes that throwing beer bottles is a very "MTV punk" thing to do. He continues on the faux-punk theme later by describing Boxcar as being about "mall punk," and even namedrops Epitaph as an object of scorn. Jet Black is performed in standard tuning - a full step higher than the album version, which is in D. Shirt is very fast and sounds similar to the bonus track on the live CD. Sluttering (May 4th) is also given a somewhat rare live showing. Still, the unreleased song Elephant overshadows everything preceding it since this version is the only available recording of the song. It's upbeat with a touch of melancholy, and strung together by an arpeggiated guitar melody. As above, Bivouac contains new, pretty instrumentation at the end interspersed between the louder sections.

The quality of this show is top-notch. It was recorded on DAT from the audience, and is one of the better audience recordings that I've heard. The instruments are all clear (although the cymbals can be shrill at certain points). The only problem is that the crowd noise can sometimes be annoying. Elephant has been circulating on the internet in MP3 form for some years in slightly lesser quality; my guess is that it was sourced from a cassette tape.