40 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 28, 1988 I Cowboy Junkies The Trinity Session RCA Records The best non-bottled Canadian export since Joni and Neil is a group with an uncharacteristically stupid name and a unbelievably original sound. Call it post-apocalyptic hillbilly. I picture this Toronto quartet perched on the wreckage of a rusted-out Buick in the middle of a vast nuclear wasteland, spinning their haunting ballads of love and loneliness t9 an audience of radioactive tumbleweed and dusty- faced orphans. *The Cowboy Junkies dare to cover the Velvet Underground and Hank Williams on the same record, a move which speaks of their taste as wells at their ambition. They recast these disparate traditions into a singular, visionary whole. Sparse instrumentation - a mandolin jangle here, a harmonica wail there - percolates beneath Margo Timmins' husky whisper to create a highly personal style at once familiar and uncommon. The pink sticker slapped on the shrink-wrap of this record quotes Lou Reed marvelling, "The best and most authentic version of 'Sweet Jane' that I have ever heard." Reed, the song's author, should know of course. While dozens of bands have recorded shit- kicking interpretations of the Velvet Underground anthem, the Junkies bathe it in their silver light of understatement and arrive at a brand-new conclusion. Not to be overlooked, their originals are lean, tasty slabs of hillbilly woe. "200 More Miles," stands tall in a long tradition of lonesome highway laments. "There'll be no warm sheets welcoming us to fall into tonight," Timmins warns, suggesting that our journey has just begin. "To Love Is To Bury," with its accordian and dobro flourishes, languishes in murderous morbidity without sinking to self-pity or cheap humor. Finally, a band that speaks softly and carries a big stick. One hit of Cowboy Junkies and you'll be hooked, too. -Mark Swartz Big Audio Dynamite Tighten Up Vol. '88 CBS Records Mick Jones, lead singer and guitarist of Big Audio Dynamite, has now proved to the music community that no depth is too low for him to stoop in the quest for financial security. His Clash bandmates obviously discovered this a half a decade ago when they booted him from the group. Worse yet, Jones has now become so absorbed in his own self-worth that his over-inflated ego has phagocytosed any of his remaining creativity. The latest B.A.D. LP, Tighten Up Vol. '88 , comes with a record sleeve overly adorned with pictures of the man in a variety of different "Yes, I'm Cool" poses. The back of the album presents the senescent Jones in a tuxedo and combat boots, one foot on the ground and one on an amplifier, a bottle of champagne in one hand and a top hat in the other. Strictly for the birds. Musically, we must remember, that Jones' more famous contribu- tions to the Clash were those tunes that Clash fans always hated (e.g., "Train in Vain," "Should I Stay or Should I Go"). And thus, we are faced with Tighten Up, yet one more example of Jones' unin- presumably named for the 1968 rhythm and blues song (and dance craze) created by Archie Bell and the Drells, the music contained therein can hardly be described as similar. It can be more adequately described as slick '80's disco -- every song sounds exactly the same as the one that preceded it. It would be nice to say that there is one song on the record which is even relatively decent, but to do so would violate the record reviewer's hippocratic oath of honesty to the reader. In addition, Jones has, once again, filled the space between the songs with his banal "signature" snippets of conversations. It's only after listening to his albums that I can truly understand just how much I have taken for granted those few seconds' respite listeners usually gets to rinse their palates between cuts. But, perhaps the biggest clue that this record is, in fact, "B.A.D." is the disclaimer Jones offers his audience. In "Just Play Music," the last song on the album, Jones sings, "Just play music/ Critics, mags and interviews/ Who cares about bad reviews?" Hopefully, the record-buying public does. This is not only B.A.D., it's R.O.T.T.E.N. -Emily Porter 0 I c. .c. D 0 0 D 0SPECIAL NOTEo o 0 O As announced in the final fall 0 o term schedule and elsewhere, p O classes for the Winter Term 1989 0 will begin on Thursday, Jan. 5,1989 p o 0 0 0 o Office of Registrar 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00000000000000 0 Jones ...tightens up triguing and momentarily fashion- able works. Though the album is Clive Gregson and Christine Collister Mischief Rhino Christine Collister possesses probably the best husky female voice to come recently out of the British "folk/acoustic" scene, and her consort Clive Gregson (ex-Any Trouble) plays a quality guitar. His Telecaster is obviously indebted to Richard Thompson (in whose band Gregson plays, and Collister sings), and his songwriting to Elvis Costello. To- gether on stage they are an incredible pair, a dynamic duo, just vocals and guitar. What with the tiny and unassuming Collister scorching the living hell out of the audience, and Gregson with his "stand back everyone, I have my guitar" style, it's little wonder. They don't play folk, though they often play to "folk" crowds. At their best, they're a simple guitar pop duo with better than most vocals and licks. Still, that said, this album is terribly bland, and a damn sight more boring than their first LP, Home And Away (Flying Fish). Jazzy touches to poppy songs, it's all okay, but nothing reaches over to grab you. The songs are cute, the singing pretty and pretty good, ah, but nothing memorable here. It should be noted that the domestic Rhino release is different than the Special Deliv- ery/Topic import: two throwaways were thrown out and replaced by two better, though not terribly exciting, songs. - VJ. Beauchamp Death Leprosy Combat Records I admit it, I love heavy metal. I probably should have outgrown it a lo-o-ong time ago, but something in my psyche cries out for doses of distorto screaming guitars, thunder- ing drums, etc. - played LOUD. It must be a sign of some kind of. (gasp) maturity, though, when all the posing and postulating pile up too high and I have to laugh out loud. Some bands take themselves too seriously. Check it out: "...there's no need to inflict grievous bodily harm upon yourself, they're here to do it for you!" "...capable of wiping ou herds of stampeding cattle at 100 paces..." and my favorite, "... eight tracks as subtle as bubonic plague" - all from Death's bio. It's true, too; there's no pretense on this here album, only in the press' releases. It all comes down to power. All their rantings would fall on unsympathetic ears if they weren't one of the 'best of the rest' speed/- thrash/death metal groups around.4 With a better producing job, cleaning up their occasionally jumbled sound, Death would stand right up there with the MegaSlaythraxica boys. Most of the songs were written by guitarist/vocalist Chuck Schuld-, iner. Death built a following in the metal underground, signed to Combat Records, and released Scream Bloody Gore, their first album. After touring and stabilizing the lineup long enough to write some new tunes, Death recorded Leprosy, also on Combat. Eight songs, only one over five minutes long, and no wasted See Records, Page 9 : " Il Most likely to Asucceed. PAI- . 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