Tuning In To The Music Scene Ti U) C./) LU Gary Graff is the editor of CI LU 88 MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide (Visible Ink Press). Listen to his 'Rock 'n' Roll Insider" reports at 8:35 a.m. Thursdays on WRIF-FM (101.1). Former Oak Parkers Don (Was) Fagenson and David (Was) Weiss talk about their new ventures. GARY GRAFF SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS things up and are even "hatch- ing a few eggs together," as Weiss puts it. "The bad blood has dissipat- ed over time and been replaced by a mutual yen for getting that old feeling back," says Weiss, who lives in Los Angeles with his wife; son, 16; and daughter, 9. His father, Rubin Weiss, did radio voices for "The Green Hor- net" and "The Lone Ranger." "It's like you miss your right arm; we were a pitcher-catcher combo. One of us got traded, but it allowed other [stuff] to hap- pen." Fagenson says that the Orquestra Was project drips of the jazz influences Weiss brought to Was (Not Was). Even . Kramer, who took part in that album, notes that "the missing link was David." "It's just nice to get our friend- ship back on track. I certainly miss him," says Fagenson, who lives in the Hollywood Hills with his second wife, Virgin Records executive Gemma Corfield and their 3.year-old son Henry. An- other child is due in July, and Don Was (Fagenson): His new band, Orquestra Was, releases a new album, Forever's a Long, Long Time, on Tuesday. -- MOOHSA3l39 3N1108V0 A 010Hd he last we saw of Was (Not Was) — the off- beat and multifaceted Detroit band helmed by former Oak Parkers Don (Was) Fagenson and David (Was) Weiss — was not a pretty sight. A schism between the two childhood friends reached a head in 1994, with the two sniping at and about each other, mostly via third parties. The Was Brothers, it seemed, were living up to their adopted name. The good news is that Fagen- son and Weiss only gained ca- reer momentum. Fagenson became one of pop and country music's hottest producers, win- ning Grammys and working with a wealth of A-list artists in- cluding the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Bonnie Raitt, Bob Seger and Willie Nelson. Weiss, meanwhile, did some producing on his own (most no- tably the "X Files" soundtrack album) and worked on commer- cials for Microsoft, Acura, Infin- ti, Canon cameras and Top-Elite golf balls. They each have new projects coming out in the near future, too. On Tuesday, Fagenson's new band, Orquestra Was, re- leases Forever's A Long, Long Time, a collection of Hank Williams lyrics set to jazz and R&B melodies that also includes a short film starring singer Sweet Pea Atkinson. - Weiss, meanwhile, co-pro- duced Citizen Wayne, the latest album by former MC5 guitarist Wayne Kramer, which comes out in early May. But the best news is that the Was Brothers have patched ..