x__,_ . ..... . -..-.- ----..E RTS Godflesh tears away at metal By KIRK MILLER With the recent signing to a major *cord company, a controversial video by the decade's most controversial artist and being the opening band for the very selective Danzig/Type 0 Negative audience, Godflesh vocalist S/guitarist Justin Broadrick has some- thing more important on his mind. "We should be in Providence, but our bus broke down yesterday," he lamented in his English accent. "We d to stop in New Jersey. We might ve to take a train. It could be bad." When the horrors of Amtrak are not worrying Broadrick, he fronts the acclaimed noise band Godflesh, who have earned a strong underground audience in the U.S. with their unique form of minimalist industrial hard rock. After several years on the inde- pendent label Earache the band signed a deal with Columbia, joining such *ainstream roster acts like Alice in Chains. For Broadrick, it was time to move on. "They gave us money to buy a bigger studio," he explained. "Mil- lion times better promotion, more money for videos, and more money to get ourselves over to people more professionally, which is great." With the major label signing has o come more pressure, as the label viously hopes to turn the band into a money-maker. But Broadrick real- izes his angry, confrontational and completely undanceable form of mu- sic is not the stuff of superstars. "Godflesh is a rock band, but it's not commercially oriented as an aver- age rock band," he said. "It's obvious we're never going to be a million ler, but we can get to amuch bigger el than we are. We're never going to be Guns 'N' Roses or anything ... that's not the idea, anyway." Anotherreason for the move might have been the limitations of being on Earache, a wonderful but narrow- minded label specializing in death metal bands like Napalm Death. Godflesh worked with many of their labelmates, but also stood out rather *ominently. "We sort of outlived some of the stuff," he said. "We advanced our music to some extent. The Earache thing has been a bit of a stigma in the long run. In England the media's re- ally fashion-oriented, and Earache is seen as unfashionable. Which is fine, because the English music scene gen- erally sucks." Although Broadrick laughed at the last statement, he has several horror stories about the treatment he has received from both the press and En- glish audiences in the past. "If we were applauded heavily in England, we would think there was something wrong," he laughed. "America's got it much more sorted out and is open to something more decent, as opposed to England where you have to play some stupid little ballgame and be fashionable. You have to live in London ... it's a lot of bullshit." However, Broadrick is quick to list fellow Earache band mates as a 'We don't always think reality is absolutely necessary. Our music deals with half extreme reality and half extreme fantasy. We're saying there's a way out to some extent.' -Justin Broadrick, guitarist of Godflesh musical and political inspiration. "When Napalm Death started off, it was an anarchy punk thing," he explained. "I hold some of the same ideals now as when I was in anarchy. Now we've gone beyond that; we're resigned to 'people are what they are' and 'the world is what it is,' things are very black and very screwed up. We got out of the dogma years ago, but it's still very personal." As Godflesh rails against control and conformity they have also in- spired their share ofcontroversy. Their video for the latest single "Crush My Soul" (off of the brilliant "Selfless" album) was directed by Andres Serrano, a photoartist that single- handedly pissed off artistic ubermensch Jesse Helms a few years ago with his "Piss Christ" exhibit. The band had used a very similar photo on their "Streetcleaner" album a few years back and were very inter- ested in having the controversial art- ist work with them. "We knew he never made a video before," Broadrick admitted. "But we knew how he put stuff together, and if he could make a video it would be great. I think it's going to have prob- lems with MTV. It makes a few state- ments that might make some people uncomfortable, which is what 'Piss Christ' was about. That's the sort of statement we make as a band." Growing up in a restrictive En- glish society has had its effect on Broadrick. "England is a very limit- ing society," he said. "That's what a lot of our stuff deals with. It makes us angry to see people filed away like sheep. We just say to people, 'Use drugs and stuff.' We say some dan- gerous things sometimes, we say things to escape everyday existence. We don't always think reality is abso- lutely necessary. Ourmusic deals with half extreme reality and half extreme fantasy. We're saying there's a way out to some extent." Another influence from growing up in Birmingham was the legendary music scene that came from the bleak industrial town. "We're huge early Black Sabbath fans ... they're from the same area literally, brought up a mile away from where we were," Broadrick explained. "It's a cultural thing. Led Zeppelin came from there, Napalm Death is from there." "It breeds individuality," he laughed. "It's a working class area. We say it's the Detroit of England, like the hard-core bits of Detroit." As the band nears the end of its successful tour with Danzig and Type O Negative, plans are already in the works to come back in March with the godfathers of industrial, Ministry. Unlike the huge shows that Al Jourgensen and company put on, Godflesh is using only its two band members, a drum machine and a live drummer to recreate the dense sound of their records live. "Musically it's the exact same," he explained. "People think there is something there that they can't put their finger on with our music. I guess that's our secret, not that there is any real secret to our music." Broadrick sees the appeal of the band to be much more basic. "I think it's because we have an abstract way of approaching rock music," he said, later adding, "People just want to be con- trolled, begging for it. We feel the op- posite way about life, and we're willing to scream at people about being an individual and making a choice." GODPLESH is opening with Type O Negative for Danzig at the State Theatre in Detroit tonight. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. for metal-heads of all ages. Call (313) 961-5450. Everyone felt groovy on Saturday night with MUSKET's production of "Hair." Peace, man. TONYA BROAD/Daily A 'Hair'i-raising eXperience MUSKET took a 'trip' with the tribal rock musical By JESSIE HALLADAY On a psychedelic cloud of marijuana haze, MUSKET's production of "Hair" hit the Power Center this weekend. For cast and audience members it was a time warp back to the '60s. Even before the show began, it was clear that the cast members were really into their - 'parts. They ai walked among the audience Power Center members, hand- December 3, 1994 ing out daisies and inviting ev- eryone to the "Be in." This pre-show mingling worked well to get people thinking in a different frame of mind. Clearly the strong point of the show was the cast. Members of the "tribe" brought realism to their hippie characters and each created their own individual persona. The featured actors were basically strong in their parts. Yet, amongst this strong cast, scene stealers still emerged in Benjamin Cherry (Claude) and David Burtka (Berger). These two were perfectly cast in the leading roles. Burtka had an excellent sense of comedic timing, while also being able to be serious when his part dictated. Cherry was incredibly moving as the tortured Claude who is forced to choose between life as a hippie and serving his country in Vietnam. Both Burtka and Cherry had strong, unwavering voices which carried of the songs well. These performances were especially impressive when you real- ize that Burtka and Cherry are both sophomores. It will be great to see them in other shows in the future. The other standouts in the production were first-year students Elveria Buford (Hud) and Nicholas Sattinger (Woof). Both were consistently funny with strong vocals. Sattinger's ecstasy over his Mick Jagger poster was one of the funniest parts of the show. The songs are definitely the cornerstone of any pro- duction of "Hair." While there is a throughline which relates Claude's story, it is fairly weak. Director Tammy Jacobs made a good effort to try to accentuate the story, but the nature of the show makes this difficult. No matter how closely you watched the story of the show, you still left the theater singing "Let the Sunshine In." The music definitely steals the show. And this cast carried the music off with minimal sour notes. The sound in the theater did not always do the music or singersjustice. Several of the cast members were wearing body mikes but were still difficult to hear, especially when the entire cast sang. It was also somewhat distracting to see the mikes on the performers. Choreographer Ronit Mitzner did a wonderful job bringing the cast together in large dance numbers. How- ever, by the end of the show, the numbers began to look a bit repetitive. There seemed to be only so many different types of hippie moves which could be done in a cast of 29. The set, designed by Marcus Sakey, was very basic. With ramps and platforms for the tribe to move along, space was utilized very well to give the impression of a free and easy life-style which was not confined to struc- ture. The players frequently walked out into the audience space which gave the show more of a community feeling, as if all of the audience were members of the tribe. MUSKET successfully staged a production of "Hair" which left people dancing up the aisles and whistling on the way out. The Power Center became a "trip" back in time which left nostalgia ringing in the ears. 'Gothadelic' Type 0 Negative tells the truth, whether you want to hear it or not By KIRK MILLER After three years of doing things their own way Type O Negative, the self-described "four assholes from Brooklyn wearing our psyches on our yes," is finally enjoying success. t artistic freedom and frighteningly honest viewpoints have also occasion- ally swallowed up the band and their music, putting them on the defensive. "At one point we were called Na- zis," keyboardist/co-producer Josh Silver explained over the phone from Providence. "I'm Jewish. Ithink that's pretty fucking funny." Part of the problem comes from lead singer Peter Steele's rather moody and candid subject matter, which involves a lot of personal grief and failed relationships. Titles such as "I Know You're Fucking Someone Else" and their current single "Chris- tian Woman" (an attack on the Catho- lic Church and inhibited sexual ex- pression) at one time provoked self- righteous critics, who now have to sit back and watch the band get signifi- cant airplay and critical accolades. "The songs are 99% about deep emotion, which everyone has, so how could you disagree with that?" Silver wondered. The songs on their latest release "Bloody Kisses" continue to explore inner pain, sometimes taking over 10 minutes per song. Each track encom- passes the best of thrash, goth, and even '60s psychedelia that surpris- ingly has found a home in the era of Southern California pop punk and Sabbath grunge. "It's not like we said 'Let's go commercial and do 12-minute songs,"' Silver said. "We do what we want, and we can't be concerned with sales. Type O Negative tells the truth, and people don't like to hear it." The success of the band has placed it on several mainstream tours, in- cluding such odd pairings as Nine Inch Nails, the current Danzig show and in the future Pantera. But the self- described "gothadelic" band has no qualms with their tour mates, includ- ing this past summer's bizarre stint with Motley Crue; in the end that tour with the bad boys of '80s metal was not all girls, girls, girls. "Middle America audiences are the same kids that go out to see Mot- ley Crue go out to see Nine Inch Nails," Silver said. "I mean, there's nothing to do in middle America, if there's a show coming through it's something to do. Motley Crue treated us great, and it was a lot of fun." While Type 0 Negative has a lot in common with the introspection of Trent Reznor, they also seem to share a subtle but dark sense of humor. Recently they covered the old Seals and Croft hippie love anthem "Sum- mer Breeze" (also the soundtrack to a nice feminine hygiene commercial), recrafting it into a bizarre psyche- delic epic with a killer guitar riff. "Actually the first version we did completely different lyrics, because the lyrics were dated and rather mean- ingless," Silver explained. "I mean, 'paper on the sidewalk'? What the fuck is this?" Unfortunately, with age the soft pop duo had become rather crotchety and demanded they go back in and use the original dated free love prose. See NEGATIVE, Page 8 Don't Pank!! If you think you're pregnant... call us-we listen, we care. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP 769-7283 Any time, any day, 24 hours. Fully confidential. Serving Students since 1970. University of Michigan Director of Housing Search Advisory Committee invites , the University community to attend public presentations of the remaining two candidates we are bringing to campus. These sessions will provide an excellent opportunity to meet the individuals. Type 0 Negative plays with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir tonight in Detroit. GMAT, GRE, MCAT, & LSAT. A1.1ka . I