ARTS The Michigan Daily X-Clan samples a rich hi~story by Forrest Green Ill G rand Verbalizer Brother J., announcing the X-Clan on their de- but album, To the East, Blackwards., in the song titled "Funkin Lesson," "Where you goin'? What's your speed?/ What's your pleasure? What's your need?/ Trees and branches, roots and seas/ forwards, backwards, many degrees/ questions, answers, what's the sum? We have come." J. can kick these melodramatic ballistics if he so desires. Besides his talent for understated, flowing rap de- livery, Brother J. taps the pulse of collective young Black America like no other. While flowing over grooves largely taken from the col- lected works of Parliament- Funkadelic, J. draws on an amaz- ingly extensive gamut of sources and references when dropping vainglori- ous science. Patrice Lumumba, Marcus Garvey, Osiris, Mattin Luther King Jr. and Queen Nefertiti are frequently mentioned in the swirling sea of ref- erences that J. draws on. This is well represented on the cover of To the East, Blackwards, which shows the foursome in a pink Cadillac, headed on a direct course to the Crossroads J. refers to. The faces of the X-Clan - J., Professor Overseer X, rhythm provider Sugar Shaft and Architect Paradise, have been neatly juxta- posed within a collage of African figures, the aforementioned as well as so-called subversives Angela Davis, Adam Clayton Powell and W.E.B. DuBois. Even as they give Wednesday, November 21, 1990 Page 5 Waterboys' great Scott gets back by Michael Paul Fischer 461 was denying myself that plea- sure (playing electric guitar) for three or four years," explained chief Waterboy Mike Scott recently in Musician magazine, regarding his lengthy immersion in the acoustic world of Irish folk. Denying us the pleasure too, some would say; the release of a complacent, mediocre new album, Room to Roam, had turned many ad- mirers impatient with the oddity of one of rock's greatest spiritual con- tenders selling himself short. The good news for them is that Scott is finally charting the course of "moving back - rockwards" out of perhaps the strangest rock 'n' roll de- tours since Bob Dylan's "born- again" phase in the late '70s. It was just five years ago that Scott stood on the verge of immi- nent rock 'n' roll stardom: the epic sound and visionary zeal of 1985's This is the Sea left critics on both sides of the Atlantic uttering his name in the same breath as those of Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and Van Morrison. But the purist Edinburgh native had always exhibited reserva- tions about commercial success, and after bassist/keyboard player Karl Wallinger left .in 1986 to form World Party, the beatific rhythms of fiddler Steve Wickham began to de- fine a new sound in the Waterboys' live shows. Scott's heart - and his group - drifted gradually westward, first to Dublin, then to Galway. The result was 1988's remarkable Fisherman's Blues, a triumph not only in the way it negotiated Scott's path out of following an un-follow- Ireland's Waterboys hit the road with a bare-bones lineup -drummer Ken Blevins, bassist Trevor Hutchinson, leader Mike Scott, and saxman Anto Thistlethwaite - after dismissing four Gaelic instrumentalists. X-clan know their history and they'll be happy to tell ya all about it. uppable success, but also its development of a new rock-roots raison d'etre that never patronized. But Blues' Yeatsian promise of blissful artistic escape becomes parodic on Room to Roam - the album contains a cut called "Song from the End of the World," and Scott's music itself seems to have had hit a creative dead-end. The rest of the album equally flouts' all expectations. But as 1990 draws to a close, Scott has suddenly regained his senses and finds himself scrabbling his way through musical arrange- ments for an autumn American tour backed now by only the sax/bass/drums core left in the wake of the sudden departure of half his eight-piece Irish-based ensemble. As word in the British press has it, Scott's "Big Music" - bolstered by the recent addition of a three-piece brass section - is ready to make a long-awaited comeback. THE WATERBOYS play at the Royal Oak Music Theater Friday at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $18.50 (plus service charge), available at TicketMaster. credit to the Nation of Islam as well as El Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, the X- Clan does not crumple under the weight of its many references. Rather than falling into some liberal scheme of collective struggle however, Brother J. utilizes a tone somewhere between Chuck D.'s re- bellious determination and Ice Cube's relentless, nihilistic anger. In "The Ways of the Scales," he ad- dresses various perpetrators didacti- cally, "Now I see children of Originals doomed to lose/ teachers and preachers remain confused/ talk about humanists and true black ways/ talkin' revolution when you're out to entertain/ ignorance you're talkin' in your crackhead neck/ take you back to Egypt where you learn respect." The track utilizes the Tom- Tom Club's "Genius of Love," with Tina Weymouth singing, "There's no beginning and there is no end," to outline the sense of 360 degrees of existence. Moreover, Brother J. is not the diplomat Chuck D. tries to be, but instead rages along with his people. See CLAN, Page 7 Union Carbide Productions Financially Dissatisfied, Philosophically Damaged In the Air Tonight skyclad Sweden has never been known for its rock music output. Actually, be- ing of Swedish descent can be quite embarrassing for a music fan when you think about it, what with ABBA, Yngwie, Europe and Roxette being the country's most visible exports. Until Union Carbide Productions, that is. This band is not only noticeable because they're different, they're no- ticeable because they are 1-o-u-d. From this noise stems an abrasive- ness that could teach some of those other Swedes a thing or two. Unless, of course, "The Look" and "Carrie" * constitute good rock 'n' roll. Basically what these guys do is rehash the sentiment and the sound of local legends MC5, an under- standable undertaking but one that is not all that original. The albums are fast-paced, with Philosophically being the more melodic of the two, bringing back a musical era most of us missed the first time around. Detroit, Ann Arbor, Gteborg -' it's all the same. Looks like angst is1 an international language. Kristin Palm Hindu Love Gods Hindu Love Gods Giant , You know guitar-obsessed Peter Buck longs to do real rock 'n' roll, . more R&B than R.E.M. Could ever be with someone like Michael Stipe controlling the vocals. Thus forms Look Your Best! - 6 Barber Stylists For MEN & WOMEN H!! DASCOLA STYLISTS Opposite Jacobson's . 668-9329 the basis for latest incarnation of the Hindu Love Gods - three members of R.E.M., including Mike Mills and Bill Berry, with stout-voiced Warren Zevon singing and playing guitar - covering tunes by people like Prince, Woody Guthrie and Robert Johnson. Most of the blues covers sound like R.E.M. doing blues with Zevon's thick deep bellowing sound that has just a little less captivation than the songs need to gel. They R.E.M.ed two Robert Johnson songs, "Walkin' Blues" and "Travelin' Riverside Blues" into some simile of rock 'n' roll! The latter's opening chords are played so they resemble a Pylon song. The songs reverberate with an intriguing yet historical touch of white men do- ing Black music and making it safe. It is safe but swell. "Raspberry Beret" and "Battleship Chains" are more awkward- sounding in comparison. The Gods turn "Raspberry Beret" into a damn good rock song with heavy guitars but Zevon's vocals add an it's-all-right- but-all-wrong tinge to the song. But this very ungainliness fashions a dis- tinctive quality making it the most groping cover on the album. Zevon's singing also shapes "Chains" into a superficially gauche tune but it doesn't have as much charm as "Beret." The Gods reach their pinnacle during songs like "Mannish Boy," "I'm a One Woman Man" and "Vigilante Man" where Zevon's old- man singing style clicks with the guitars and the tunes. "I'm a One Woman Man" sounds kind of silly when Zevon adds this coun- try/mountain man tint to his voice. But it works with the spirit of the song. This self-indulgent project suc- ceeds only because it's simultane- ously bad and good. Zevon and com- pany chose some fairly sacred cows and covers them in manners that range from creatively interpretive to downright annoying in fashion. The Gods obviously like the music they chose and they are properly enthusi- astic. The mockery they, especially Zevon, make within songs adds the irreverent quality needed to do inter- esting covers. -Annette Petruso The Grateful Dead Without A Net Arista Records Among the clich6s coined about the Grateful Dead, one holds that their studio recordings are empty blotter compared to their live sound. Thus they have released nearly as many live albums as studio efforts. If you have never heard the Dead live, this release is a good a place as any to start (a cliche in itself). This project is divided into two discs or tapes, the "1st Set" and the "2nd Set." (I don't know how they might divide the three records in the vinyl version.) The songs appear in basically the same order as they would at a.Dead show, with the ex- ception of "Help On the Way->Slipknot-+Franklin's Tower," which appears on the second disc about where the Dead would play the The Hindu Love Gods hang on a porch as bands from the South who appear in the Daily always seem to be doing. only pre-chosen improvisational segments at a real concert, "Drums-+Space." The performances on this release were recorded over a period from October of '89 through this year's Spring Tour which ended in April. The opening song, "Feel Like A Stranger," is from the legendary Warlocks shows last fall in Virginia. (Brent Mydland's "long long crazy crazy tour" backing vocal gives this one away). Local Heads may be in- terested to know that the next num- ber, "Mississippi Half-Step Uptown Toodeloo," is from the March show in Hamilton, Ontario, according to the Dead fanzine Golden Road. As they have done on previous live recordings, the Dead have chosen to redo their vocal parts in the studio, though not on every cut, such as the aforementioned "Stranger," and "Althea," which still See RECORDS, Page 7 5" Vaa u N FOR JUNIOR NURSING STUDENTS .. A SUMMER STUDENT NURSING EXPERIENCE AT MAYO FOUNDATION HOSPITALS Here is your opportunity to work at Mayo Medical Center for the summer. Summer Illis a paid, supervised hospital work experience at Saint Marys Hospital and Rochester Methodist Hospital, both part of Mayo Medical Center in Rochester, Minnesota. You are eligible for Summer IlIl after your junior year of a four year baccalaureate nursing program. It includes experience on medical and surgical nursing units or in operating rooms. I Application Deadine: I Benefits include:L;ecember 1,1990 " Hourly salary of $8.45 " Differentials of $.50/hour for evenings, $.60/hour for nights Subsidized apartment living " r I