SIN Entertainment Fogerty — who was successful in winning an injunction to keep his former bandmates from using the Creedence Clearwater Revisited Name —launches a rare solo tour to show who really made the mu- sic. Fogerty date TBA. Cosmo's Factory July 24 at Pine Knob. ORGANIC: If electronic music re- ally is the next big thing, this should be the next big tour. Last year's single date featured leading techno lights such as The Prodigy, Orbital and the Chemical Broth- ers; this year you can also expect upstarts such as The Egg, Gus Gus and Spring Heel Jack. Local date T.BA. AEROSM1TH: The Bah-ston bad boys return, and the rocking na ture of their new album, Nine Lives, indicates that this might be the summer's real roar tour. Local date TBA. Also touring this summer. Smokin' Groovies Tour (Fugees, Cypress Hill and others), The Who, Boston, Rush, Live, Bush, No Doubt, Blondie, Marilyn Manson, Moby, Santana and Rusted Root, Super- tramp, John Mellencamp and Amanda Marshall, Counting Crows and the Wallflowers, Mot- ley Crue, the Jayhawks, Wilco Son Volt, Megadeth, Blues Traveler, Chicago and the Beach Boys (sep arately in Detroit). Also, Grand Funk Railroad, Luther Vandross and Vanessa Williams, Queensryche, Tina Turn- er and Cyndi Lauper, James Tay- lor, Jimmy Buffett, the Dave Matthews Band, the Doobie Broth- ers, the Allman Brothers Band, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Cheap Trick, Phish, Barenaked Ladies, Indigo Girls, Steve Miller Band, Boz Scaggs, Los Lobos, Willie Nelson and Jimmy Dale Gilmore, Hall & Oaths, Steve Winwood, Matthew Sweet, Kansas, REP Speedwagon, the Moody Blues, Dan Fogelberg, Weird Al Yankovic, the Summer Daze Tour (Steppenwolf, Blue Oys- ter Cult, Foghat, Pat Travers), the Blues Music Festival Tour (B.B. King, Robert Cray, Jimmy Vaugh an, Bluestime), the Manhattan Transfer, Harry Belafonte, Eddie Money, Huey Lewis & the News. Also, the G3 Tour (Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Kenny Wayne Shep- herd, Robert Fripp), Three Dog Night and America, Starship, Lit- tle Texas, Tim McGraw, Kenny G. and George Benson, 311, John Michael Montgomery, the Coun- try Comfort Tour (Hank Williams Jr., Travis Tritt, the Charlie Daniels Band, Jo Dee Messina, Anne Murray), Air Supply, Gordon Lightfoot, Aretha Franklin, Dar- ryl Hall & John Oates, Kenny Log- gins, INXS, Michael Hedges, the Brian Setzer Orchestra, Ben Harp- er. 0 , Grateful Dead Dick's Picks Volume Seven (Grateful Dead) Reviews of recent albums • Jimi Hendrix First Rays of the New Rising Sun (Experience Ifen- drix/MCA) The band is the secondary attraction on this latest set from the Dead's archives. Record- ed in London. during 1974, Volume Seven pre- serves a performance with the group's legendary "wall of sound" system, a 622- speaker monstrosity (only in the '70s ...) so cumbersome it was abandoned after just a few weeks. At this juncture, of course, the Dead was at its rootsy best, its sound defined by twangy guitar interplay and joyous chorale vocals. But the group heads for outer space in 'Weather Report Suite," "Dark Star" and "Spam Jam," and the 22-song repertoire of- fers a good representation of what playir' ig in the band was like at this point in its history. Santana Live at the Fillmore '68 (Columbia Legacy) Q11-) 1/2 The highlight of the vaunted new Jimi Hendrix re-release program which also includes allegedly en- : hanced reissues of the three Experience al- burns -- is this attempt to construct the al- bum Hendrix was working on at the time death. Of course, nobody knows what • of - First Rays would have become. Still, this 17- . • song presentation -- overseen by Hendn x co-producer Eddie Kramer and historian John McDermott — is the best assemblage of the rest so far. You know the tunes from previous posthumous releases, including blazers such as "Freedom," "Stepping Stone" and "Room- ful of1VIirrors," and the pretty "Angel." And the sound quality truly is striking, with a crispness that accents not only liendrix's playing and songwriting but also his en- semble arranging prowess. Allman Brothers Band Fillrnore East Feb. 70 (Grateful Dead) (1). There's something appropriate about the Grateful Dead's BROTHERS SAND label branching out to include bootleg-ish releases from kin- dred spirits such as the Allman Brothers Band. This seven- song collection isn't quite up to the stan- dards of the seminal Live at the Fillmore East (recorded a year later), but, taken from an Allrnans set opening for the Dead, it shows that the group isn't too far from that mark. "Whipping Post" is a compact and firey 8:12, but the half-hour glory of "Mountain Jam" reminds us that any Duane Allman performance we can get our hands on is usu- ally worth hearing. Allman Ifyou were at this show, chances are you would have gone to Woodstock the f'ol- lowing yearjust to hear Santana Almost 30 years later, we can only imagine how fresh Santana must have sounded at this early performance, particularly amidst the more turgid psychedelic explorations of the time The arrangements of "Jingo" and "Soul Sacrifice" are just a touch funkier than the version we'd become familiar with, and five of the songs have never made it onto an al- bum before, which makes this set even more of a revelation. Iggy and the Stooges Raw Power (Columbia Legacy) Not many albums have been loved so much for its songs and lambasted so much for its mix — done by David Bowie, no less. After a flurry of bootlegs of the pre-Bowie version, Iggy Pop went back into the studio to come up with his own treatment. It's about what you'd expect from Iggy — live, loud and in your face, with better definition on James VVilliamson's shred guitar and more oomph for the rhythm section. The songs, particularly "Searrh and De- stroy" and the title tiack, are still classic pieces of purik metal, while the liner notes NI interview with Iggy offers an illuminat- ing look at the era. 7*- 1 .71 third album in as many years, is a poignant, focused statement about harsh realities drawn from his own experiences. An auto- biographical thread unifies the album's 12 songs as Kramer sings about growing up in Detroit, the counterculture, the MC5's Chica- go performance during the 1968 Democrat- ic National Convention and his prison stay on a drug dealing conviction. But within his memories are timeless mes- sages — about the state of the working peo- ple he sings about in "Back When Dogs Could Talk" and "Shining Mr. Lincoln's Shoes," for instance, or about the armchair insurgents who are the subject of "Revolution in Apt. 29." It all sounds terrific, too, thanks to Kramer's collaboration with co-producer David Was on Citizen Wayne. Was adds loops, samples and other studio techniques to Kramer's tableau of blazing, sometimes jazz-inflected guitar rock. His singing has the power of conviction, and if that doesn't make you believe, Kramer's facile - guitar licks will remind you what it means to kick out the jams. The Pantookas Saind (Dogbtumy Records) Close your eyes when you put on this De- troit trio's album and you'll think you fell into the middle of the Merseybeat era, or even the Bea- ties' Revolver or Rubber Soul ses- sions. Devotees of not only the original British Invasion but also of all things power pop, the Pantookas' strengths are sumptuous harmonies, shim mering guitar work and Chris Richards' tight, deftly crafted and instantly humma- ble songs, which serve as reminders that a good writer can accomplish quite a bit in three minutes or so. "You're All I Need," 'Tears at the Table" and "Seagirl" are pop gems by any standard, and make sure you keep the CD in the player for the unlisted cover of George Harrison's "Wah Wah." - Gary Graff - Bagel Barometer Wayne Kramer Citizen Wayne (Epitaph) Outstanding ®&'Ct , Some musicians have a voice. Wayne Kramer has a conscience, and the former MC5 gui- tarist gives voice to that in the most plain and universal terms imaginable — which makes him one of rock's most vital and im- portant players. Citizen Wayne, Kramer's Very Good O Good O Fair No Bagels Awful 97