Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, September 19, 1989 My Bloody Valentine Isn't Anything Creation/Relativity Loop Fade Out Rough Trade Noise pop is to Anglo-indie types as Byrdsian jangle is to Amero-col- lege types: the hep thang. Of course, hepper-than-thou college types on this side of the Atlantic know that noise is whereit's at: Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Happy Flowers, Pussy Galore, why, the list goes on and on! But college chart action for such stentorian sounds in America is all too brief in a nation where the folk rock jangle rules. Will talent be rec- ognized in its own lifetime? For those college types who care, the answer to that question can be found in local record stores via our cousins across the ocean: Great Bri- tain to the rescue! Sure, it's easy to pick on the British music scene for being fickle, but rarely does talent go as unrecognized there as it so often does here. Just look at the dominance of noise talent in any British music weeklies: Mudhoney, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., all in the top 20. And those noisy rockers aren't just com- ing from America. Bands like Spacemen 3, My Bloody Valentine, and Loop are turning up the ampage across the British isles. From out of Dublin's depths and into the British indie top 20 comes My Bloody Valentine, with Isn' t Anything. At its inception, My Bloody Valentine's inspiration was the Butthole Surfers, whose influence has since been altered into the guitar onslaught of Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr. and their ilk, exchanging Di- nosaur's '70s radio regurgitations for somewhat more '60s melodies. The guitars stretch from their almost minimal use in the syncopated, al- most hip-hoppy beat of "Soft as Snow (But Warm Inside)" to the downer plodding of "I Can See It (But I Can't Feel It)." (I guess the Valentines are into parenthetical ti- tles.) Vocals are shared by Kevin Shields and Bilinda Butcher. It's Butcher's voice that immediately grasps, on songs like "Lose My Breath," which remind listeners of Kim Gordon's shimmering, less abrasive side, like "Eye of the Be- holder" off of Sonic Youth's Sister. On "Feed Me With Your Kiss," Shields and Butcher plead to each other for nourishment, accompanying a melody that sounds like an army of Pussy Galores, only not as offensive. Lyrically, they take their cue from the coded sexual imagery that has al- ways been present in rock and roll, disguising such urges and frustrations in light, dreamlike vocals applied to equally dreamy imagery. Or perhaps they really are singing about dreams and just kissing. A cloud of roaring guitars envelops Isn't Anything, urg- ing listeners to not worry about shades of meaning and just abandon themselves into the ecstasy of My Bloody Valentine. Loop tap into the noise fount, too, but at a different source: psychedelic garage gods Spacemen 3. Like Spacemen 3, Loop are into loud, MC5-type fuzzbox riffs, a dense mix, repetition. It's easy to tell that Loop vocalist Robert is trying to sound like Spacemen 3's Sonic Boom, but it's hard to tell what the songs are about, as the vocals are buried under the driving rhythm, while all kinds of guitar solos wreak havoc from all around. Robert says something about taking us "out of this world" over and over, guitars raining down constantly under the clear skies of the "Black Sun," the album's first track. That song's ec- static vortex sucks us into an album dominated by repeating bass lines, consistent drumming, and guitars all over the place, every dial turned to ten. Turn on and turn it up. -Greg Baise Eurythmics We Too Are One Arista Eurythmic - characterized by per- fect proportion and harmony, or by movement in rhythm. With that definition in mind, try to understand why I'm so excited about this new release, the first from Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart in three years; also the most musically varied of their eight-record career. Annie's lyrical content has, over the years, won me over, bringing me close enough to artist-listener obses- sion as I want to get. Simply put, the woman mystifies. Songs about the derangement of love, such as rrr "You Have Placed a Chill In My Heart," "Who's That Girl," "Here Comes the Rain Again," and "Cool Blue" have mapped out a thematic lexicon with an incredible range, ranging from emotional freedom ("Sexcrime," "Let's Go") to its dis- tant opposite, of utter dependency ("I Need You," "Aqua"). All of this spanning an awesome string of al- bums, all of equal quality. The most astonishing part of Eurythmics is that with such open- mindedness, freedom reigns. Some- how, the Two do form One - Dave Stewart becoming the shadowy figure in the back, while Annie calls on an incredible vocal range that demands recognition, even within the scope of soul. With all of this going on, the beauty, or the harmony of Euryth- mics can be defined in a word: liber- ation. In 1984, when Annie made her commercial debut in a business suit and short red hair, she laid the groundwork for something special - a woman could sing for a man, as a man, or about a man, and the differ- ence didn't exist anymore. "Some of them want to use you/ some of them want to be abused," she declared. That was the beginning. From that point, anything could happen - and did. Their last album, Savage, was a conceptual album returning the two to their electronic punk beginning. And although a distinctive, hypnotic effect was the result, it served up much of the "synth-pop" that they are criticized for. This time around, they have captured a more rounded- out sense of musicality, with more of a live feel to it. We Too are One is an even sample of almost every- thing the Eurythmics have done. From its opening notes, the record is a shock. The opener, "We Two Are One," is amazingly visceral. Dave seems freer now more than ever with his synth basslines, his piano fills daz- zling leaps to and from the beat. Is that Ann making those squeegee sounds, or is it keyboardist Pat Sey- mour? It is impossible to tell. She sings "People like us are too messed up/ to live in solitude/ I'm gonna cure that problem baby/ I'm gonna fix it good" with a humility that is both modest and free. Madonna can't funk with this. But the optimism on that track is Eurythmics (Dave Stewart and Annie Lennox) stand right by each other's sides on their latest album, We Too Are One. somewhat limited - much of this record seems to be written with a poison pen. "Sylvia," a mournful ballad, follows the lines of other la- ments of the lost, i.e., "Belinda," or "Jennifer." Sylvia, with a tattoo that reads 'love and hate,' isainclined to suicide, and we wonder why until Ann reveals "the finger prints of strangers, on the ugly bedroom floor/ reveal the only traces of what Sylvia was for." On another track, Annie strips it bare, singing quite simply, "You hurt me and I hate you." "The King and Queen of America" is a vicious stab at all political lead- ers, and the first of its kind from Eurythmics. The rest of the album seems to follow suit: Ann ap- proaches the familiar with malice, in an obvious drive to create momen- tum. Other songs "How Long?" and "Angel" seem somewhat confused in their direction. However poignantly Dave may have produced these tracks, he cannot disguise their obscurity. Not to downgrade the overall impact of the album; it follows an evolution of sorts. Most likely, this is yet an- other one written with artistic liberty - requiring some amount of assimi- Tuesday Nites are College Nites at ANXIETY ATTACKS? Do you have agoraphobia or sudden attacks of fear, apprehension or anxiety? If you experience such attacks 4 times a month or live in fear of them and are between 18 and 40 years of age you may be eligible for FREE evaluation, treatment and pay in a major U of M research study directed by G. Curtis, M.D. If you believe you are eligible call (Mon-Fri). U-M Anxiety Program 936-7868 lation to fully appreciate. We Too Are One is a mainstay, an exclamation point following the train of successes like Be Yourself Tonight and Revenge. It represents the end and, hopefully, the beginning of different chapters - fair enough, even if three years was a looong wait. A new Eurythmics album is always a great deal. Let's hope that the next one is another forward step into the unknown. - Forrest Green III Jane Siberry Bound By The Beauty Reprise/Warner Bros. Records It's difficult for me to be objective about Canadian singer/songwriter Jane Siberry - ever since I fell in love with her ethereal voice and haunting, wandering, poetic songs on her 1986 release The Speckless Sky, I've spent many a long hour trying to convince friends that she deserves deification. Even trying to be objec- tive, however, I must say that her new release, Bound By the Beauty, is one amazing record. For those unfamiliar with her ma- terial, my stock description is that it's to the right of Laurie Anderson and to the left of Suzanne Vega. That is not doing her justice, however; her sound, and especially her voice, are truly original. Some people describe it as simply odd; and admittedly some of the cuts on the new release (such as The Life Is the Red Wagon and Everything Reminds Me Of My Dog) are nothing like standard female rock vocalist fare. However, on this album, Siberry tries out many differ- ent styles; some of the pieces are reminiscent of the extended art-rock pieces found on her previous release, The Walking, while others, including the shimmering title track, sound like left-field country/folk rock. The subjects of Siberry's songs vary tremendously: Hockey brings to life a pick-up hockey game on a frozen Canadian river; Miss Punta Blanca describes a short affair with a Cuban motorcycle dealer. The last song, Are We Dancing Yet? chroni- cles a romantic seduction in progress: "Did you just touch my hand? Did you just kiss my shoulder...?" She is at her best lyrically when she describes moments like these, but what distinguishes this album's songs from others she has done are her uniformly strong melodies. The album was recorded with very little overdubbing except for vocals, which works well for her - never before has Siberry's band complemented her dense, yet fragile lyrics so well. Jane Siberry deserves a wider audi- ence; if justice is served this albud will gain her many new fans. Take a risk on this one; you won't be disap- pointed. -Will Thomas The Jesus Lizard Pure EP Touch and Go Records The Jesus Lizard? This vinyl gila monster probably deserves to be cru- cified simply for its name. God, and it's engineered by Albini (Big Black, Rapeman) which does nothing but spin a web of nightmares about the direction the Pixies went post-debut album. Nightmares like that I do not need. Unfortunately for JL they are.4 swimming in the wake of some pretty big names. Chicago - in which they are based - has been the soil to spawn a bumper crop of fan- tastic bands: Breaking Circus, Rifle: Sport, Arsenal, and of course Al- bini's own Big Black. Can they compare? Sadly, no. My insistence in the past years that any band out of Chicago sucks if they aren't as good at what they do as Big Black was has, caused problems, but let's face it, I dig good Chi-town music and The Jesus Lizard ain't it. Side one is pretty useless - a collection of inconsistent intensity and noise crawls around aimlessly, clawing at a sound they merely scratch out at their hottest moments. Comparisons could only verbally de- face any band these jokers could be influenced by - but - the music sounds like Men and Volts at times, and vocalist David Yow's (Scratch Acid) scaley growling and deep bel- lows of course call up memories of his Chicago predecessors. Like John Brannon of Laughing Hyenas minus the angst (i.e., minus the power, in- fluence, attraction, talent...) Side two is a bit better, though far from faultless. Very Wiperish guitar 4 from Duane Denison on "Starlet" - repetitive riffs laid down like a cur- tain into which Yow and ex-Acid mate bassist David Wm. Sims, also of Rapeman, throw themselves, gi- ing a taste of what this band could become. "Starlet" is followed by :a very dark, coldblooded version of "Breaking Up is Hard to Do." At best a novelty. Not so hot. -Robert Flaggert Kick Off College Nites and Celebrate our 4th Anniversary tuesday the 19th with two rocking bands: r The Right Bike. ORIE\TAL SPAS & VERY SPECIAL GUESTS LEGAL TENDER The Right Price. The Right Place .......... _ / 4 STUDENT DISCOUNTS BIKES $99 & UP GR ATIEAKES CYCLING & FITNESS. For a great deal, and a great deal more! We guarantee satisfaction and the best prices. 560 S. MAIN at Madison " Ann Arbor " 668-6484 Start the year right. Come jam with the crew and get $1 off cover with student ID. All students 19 and older invited to J Barrymore's first weekly College Nite II