ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, December 4, 1991 Page 5 The King RecordsT u , ;yy N S r Dinosaur Jr. EP of unreleased and live tracks, the is d e a d , k v+ F Pk e tF$r 4 51*_n ': S IS -:I Whatever's Cool With Me perfect Christmas gift for us Dino- r sy w x ~ aft xr, \ a~y :SiJe heads who are hungry for a fix until o t . It has been suggested in these the next full-length album. n ot U n cle b55 , very pages that Bob Mould is God. The title track is a blast. Sloppy ,w If so, then J Mascis is the Son, indie guitars Clatter and lurch into trip- rock's own "Christ of apathy." hammer drums, while Mascis hap- Amherst, MA's number one wiped- pily watches it all roar by. His -elAa'V, out kid has been performing musical strained "I don't know what the miracles since Dino Jr.'s 1985 debut, hell I'm doing but who cares?" vo- by Annette Petruso i -Dinosaur, through 1990's Green cal delivery is right on the money. : WL S ..1._,,* ., , ";?' *,.$ a w. D inosau 1"AflI ' 1 -,V._ . . The southern Illinois-based band Uncle Tupelo has this reputation problem. Everyone but everyone compares Tupelo to two Minneapo- lis exports. The favorite is Husker DO. "I just got sick of it recently," says drummer Mike Heidorn. "Yeah, it's been up there a lot ... I don't see too much comparison myself, personally, but I guess it's there ... It's pretty flattering and all that stuff." Soul Asylum is also a common comparison, though Heidorn dis- agrees with it. "No. That's a flat out no, I guess. I don't know where it comes from. It's this Midwest thing, Minneapolis, Illinois. It's nice, though. It's cool. I guess. It's hard. People have to describe it somehow ... They have to compare it, and I guess those are the things they come up with," he says. The Husker thing isn't obvious to me, but part-time vocalist/ bassist Jeff Tweedy's singing on "Gun," the first track of Uncle Tupelo's second album, Still Feel Gone, is kind of reminiscent of Soul Asylum's Dave Pirner, as is the gui- tar part. Heidorn liked my idea that "I feel so lonely, baby, I feel so lonely, I feel so lonely, I could die ... Uncle Tupelo is more comparable to Jerry Lee Lewis, in that the both artists explore the possiblities of combining country and rock. But in Tupelo's case, the rock is on the al- ternative side. Just check out the harsh rocker "D. Boon," Tweedy's tribute to the dead Minuteman. "I think what he meant by that songs was the fact that this D. Boon guy - (someone) he never really met, ever in his life, lived about three thousand miles away - had made a mark on this guy's life here in Illinois so much that he had to do something about it," explains Heidorn. "I think Jeff was kind of into the feeling that ... part of (D. Boon) is part of me now," Heidorn contin- ues. "I know he says that in the song. It's like he's amazed that somebody over there could do that to somebody over here. And he'd like to do that to other people ... There's something about (Boon). He's god, I guess." And I thought Bob Mould was. Anyway, Uncle Tupelo may not af- fect people as much as Mould or Boon yet, but the excellent Still Feel Gone captures strong images of the band's part of the midwest. Much of the despair and harshness of life that fellow Midwesterner John Mellencamp also describes is summed by Uncle Tupelo, but with a dollop of country. The band's mu- sic, then, is not quite rockabilly, but something more pure, yet sadly bru- tal. Main vocalist/guitarist Jay Ferrar's songs, especially, have a country tinge to them, extending to his phrasing, tone and accent. "(The Midwest) probably makes the music what it is, although I don't know how much different it would be, say, if we were from New York. I don't know what elements actually show -up in the music. 'Cause I know that, if ... it's good in Illinois, if things are good for you in your life, that it could be the See TUPELO, Page 7 CHANNEL Z We love Luci, and you will too after you watch Pavarotti in the Park tonight (8 p.m., Channel 56). Everyone's favorite tenor will cele- brate his 30-year career in Hyde Park, London, where the great one will sing "O Paradiso," "Cielo e Mar" and "Vesti la Giubba," ac- companied by the Philharmonia Orchestra and a 120-voice choir. The Italian Stallion's performance should fill your dreams with Nonna's gnocchi. who what where when "Andy, where's my 15 min- utes?" David Bowie pathetically whined on Tin Machine's debut al- bum. Well, Dave, we hate to break it to you, but your 15 minutes (OK, half-hour) expired somewhere in between Ziggy Stardust and that movie with the Muppets. Your Dial-A-Hit Tour last year was al- most as lame as the Stones signing a six-year record deal. And despite all the penis hoopla, Tin Machine II sucked. But if you dig out the glit- tery dresses and the make-up for tonight's Tin Machine show at Clubland, maybe we'll check you out. Tickets are $18.50 in advance at TicketMaster (p.e.s.c.), with a spe- cial discount for people who used to watch The Soupy Sales Show. Do you want $100? Audition for Starbound, U of M's annual talent competition on Dec. 4, 5,&W. Sign up at UAC, 2105 Union, or call 763-1107 for info LIVE JAZZ Tuesday & Wednesday " 10-12 In The Underground ER I DRINK SPECIALS HO COV! m