The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 9, 1994 - 11 Some bands become dignified with age. Others, like Love & Rockets, suck. RECORDS Continued from page 10 up with a singer whose vocal abilities hover somewhere around mediocrity. It's bad, Dude, it's bad. - Kari Jones Love and Rockets Hot Trip To Heaven American Recordings A few weeks ago, a forgotten ac- quaintance approached me in a cafe to expound upon the joys of LSD and raves. She readily burst forth with the exciting details ofher trips and "trips." Well, this news, I'm afraid, fell on 0 deaf ears. What? What? What? I can't hear you. Because, really, when an insignifi- cant memory from the past brings glad tidings of blissful ambiance debauched from computerized backwash, I laugh. Techno and all its ilk could and will disappear under the wall of fads and fashion, forever forgotten. In a related story, Love and Rock- 0 ets returns after a four-year absence, embracing the UK house (bowel) movement, ignoring their best fuzzed out, pop-rock efforts of previous re- leases like "Express" and "Love and Rockets" and delivering somewhat catchy but extremely featherweight mood music. What? Speak a little louder boys - we can't hear you. They lose, we snooze. - Matt Carlson * Plastikman Musik Novamute Records Detroit Techno Goodwill Ambas- sador Richie Hawtin is back again to mess with your head. From the instant "Musik" begins, you have to release any control you have over your own reality and be transported into the Acid realm of Hawtin's mind. "Musik" picks up where his other albums ended, creating a triptych of techno madness. Slower than past efforts, "Musik" loses none of the intensity Hawtin's followers have come to expect from the hobgoblin icon that is Plastikman. The multiple layers of wall-of-sound texturing creates an infinitely thick sound that reveals new angles with each subsequent listen. "Konception" is an aptly titled beginning track, introducing the listener into the overall tenor of the album. The background vocals on "Plastique" (which is a refracted voice saying "Plaaaaaaastik") give the song an eerie, other-worldly feel _ that is juxtaposed against a familiar Hawtin theme. The ending of "Plastique" is one of the most disturbing sound-montages on the entire album. "Fuk" is just that: a hard, bass-driven mind "Fuk" that violates any sense of techno propri- ety. "Marbles" is an extended jam that could only be realized by Hawtin. Each song is a microcosm of the entire album, composed of rising action, climaxes and denouements that are internally coherent and still fit within the larger framework of the album. "Musik" spans a full range of emotion and intensity with effects an altogether cathartic experience. "Musik" is a techno tour-de-force that hits you in the mouth with a handful of razors and leaves both your ears and mind bloodied from the experience ... yet still masochistically craving more. - Ben Ewy Public Enemy M\jf n 'irL.k\J--Inur A/fMIS A gp since their hayday music-making ca- reer. "Aintnuttin Buttersong" is a sad waste. Listening to Flava Flav through- out "Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age," He's always been crazy, but at least in the past his being crazy was just an act (maybe). I can't help but accept the fact that the brotha needs some help. The "Public Enemy Sermons" are still available for all willing to lend an ear. These guys do say some deep stuff. Want an example? I thought so. "Five hundred years ago one man claimed to have discovered a New World. Fivecenturies later wethepeople are forced to celebrate a Black Holo- caust. How can you call a takeover a discovery," is an excerpt from "Hitler's Day." Other similarly powerful lyrics can be found throughout the CD. "Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age" is not a shabby CD; it's also not Public Enemy's greatest work. Some of the beats could have been a little better, some of the raps a little more solid. All in all, and especially when compared to the weak stuff out there now, this CD isn't abad choice. It's frank, honest and in some respects, very uplifiting. These are the undercurrents which truly drive Public Enemy. - Eugene Bowen Vic Chestnut Drunk Texas Hotel Vic Chestnut's records, gener- ally recorded with the help of gen- erous quantities of alcohol, are true treasures of the south: hot, humid and ultimately quite beautiful in spite of themselves. His latest, "Drunk" is no exception. Recorded on a farm in South Georgia in the midst of a three day party, the album is full of Chestnut's characteristicly convoluted wordplay, skewed per- ceptions and, most prominently, that voice - a dry and wonderful voice just as capable of rocking out dur- ing "Sleeping Man" as scraping and howling through "Supernatural." He is backed primarily by acous- tic guitars and the occasional ukelele, offering him a perfect can- vas upon which he can paint his portraits of misfits, losers, freaks and lost souls. If his characters are not flying around on intravenous Demerol or "starting to wig," they are soul-searching and finding only a "rusty mass of medications." Though at times his lyrics do defy interpretation, ("Your hoity haiku lip curls / The onion papers drain / Constantinople"), elsewhere he keenly examines disintegrating rela- tionships and, with all of his wit in- tact, moans, "I'm so sorry you had to kick my ass." "Drunk" is not the work of a man seeking mass commercial acceptance, but it is a fully-realized and wonderful record that, for those who chance to find it, will not fail to please. - Dirk Schulze Korn Korn Immortal/Epic Name aside, Korn is one evil bad- ass, pissed-off, cool-as-shit motherfucker of an album to come along since Pantera released "Cow- boys From Hell." And there's a rea- son behind that reference; there is no way this band would exist if it wasn't for the angry thrash riffing of Pantera. Lead vocalist Jonathan Davis takes a lot from Phil Anselmo, from the guttural mutterings to the bad boy macho stance of the lyrics. But Davis also plays bagpipes, adding a unique touch to songs like "Shoots and Lad- ders." Davis is mad, and sometimes it's chillingly effective. "Daddy" is a 17- minute epic told from the point of view of an abused child, complete with sobs and screams. This pretty much gets the "Schindler's List" award for cheery subject matter, but it's also quite jarring. On the other hand, "Faget" (their spelling) is either extremely homophobic or uncommonly sensi- tive; the lyrics are too muddled and the point-of-view shifts too much to discern the real content. It doesn't help that the chorus sounds too much like "I'm a baguette," effectively destroying whatever content Davis started out with. But I digress. This is not your parents' thrash; Korn has taken bits of Rage Against the Machine hip-hop metal, Barkmarket-style distortion and Biohazard anger to create the best debut album of the last five years. It's the kind of album that can annoy, anger and provoke your sexually re- pressed, Gin Blossoms-loving, col- lege power-pop obsessed, culturally elitist, politically correct friends enough to make 'em run screaming in horror. What a thrill it is. - Kirk Miller Red Hot Chili Peppers Out In L.A. EMI Well, if it isn't the Chili Pep- pers' second new album in a row that doesn't have anything new on it. Well, at least this one has some stuff that people might not have, unlike "What Hits?" (lovingly known as "What's This Shit?") with its collection of songs easily taped off of a fan's collection. Instead, "Out In L.A." starts off with remixes of "Higher Ground," "Hollywood," "If You Want Me To Stay" and "Behind the Sun." Not the hardest to find (or most desir- able) choices, but at least they're not just from the albums. Next are some slightly more in- teresting live tracks that showed up originally on the B-sides of some 12-inch singles. The Peppers serve up some different versions of "Castles In the Sand" and "Special Secret Song Inside" from the stage as well as the rare track "F.U." Things get even better with six demo versions of songs that later appeared cleaned up, a bit less funky and a bit more rockin' on the offi- cial albums. "Green Heaven" espe- cially sounds as if it was made in a funk chamber, while "Police Heli- copter" sounds as if it might have been recorded on Anthony Kiedis' boom box. Well, the lyrics on some of the tracks are much more intelligible (but less fun-sounding) than their finished counterparts. It adds a bit when you realize "Nevermind" is talk- ing about things like Culture Club and the Gap Band. A few other songs aren't listed as demos but clearly evolved into familiar Chili Pepper songs. It doesn't take much imagina- tion to see the connection between "You Always Sing the Same" and "You Always Sing." Finally come some early tracks that haven't shown up anywhere else. The over-funkified feel of these early recordings find a voice in tie smooth "Blues For Meister." Prince could sing over this music. Of course then there's the odd "Flea Fly" that seems kind of like scat, but in retrospect also sounds a bit like Japanoise. The recording ends with an awful (and fortunately short) version of "Deck the Halls" and Kiedis saying "Goodnight Detroit." This album is just for our general community, I guess. We must be cool. - Ted Watts Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth The Main Ingredient Elektra "It's not hard to the core, it's not sex on the beach, It's just another kaI plateau brothers have yet to reach" is how C.L. sums up "The Main Ingre- dient." Indeed, it is something differ- ent, and a powerful second release from the duo. Aspects of the formula include Pete Rock's floating jazz, basslines that ease along - almost always making one familiar key change per song -and staccato beats that absolutely require the listener to commence to head-noddin'. - Since the release of the group's first album, "Mecca and The Soul Brother," Pete Rock has produced as many rappers as he hasn't. It seems as though almost everyone in the business, from big guys like Run D.M.C. and House of Pain to little knowns like A.D.O.R., has had a song produced or remixed by Rock. His distinctive style pervades throughout his production jobs, but with C.L. he is clearly at home. The nonchalant but penetrating voice of C.L. contrast the laid-back tracks perfectly. This album is an exten- sion of their first EP and debut al- bum, with a little more space be- tween the samples and the basslines, and little more emphasis on ro- mance. The album is a meeting of influ- ences that quietly overtake the lis- tener. The jazz styles give the al- bum a- sophisticated feel, but the bumpin' beats let you know that it's down to earth. Pete Rock's voice is constantly in the background guid- ing you through the album with melodramatic expressions of "Oooh," and "Ah, yeah" while C.L. and the guest rappers come off with no pretenses. Finally, coupled with some of the most highly-produced tracks in hip-hop, there is a cut from Biz Markie's classic album "Goin' Off" in nearly every track (it's fresh PR, but you must have other records up in the crib!). All in all, the album is about balance. It is distinctive but famil- iar, super-produced but rough, jazzy but slammin', laid-back but excit- ing. It's also 76 minutes long (so was their first); add some flavor to your collection and pick up "The Main Ingredient." - Dustin Howes Bruce Dickinson Balls To Picasso Polygram Records Two word review: Shit Sandwich. -Mott C'arlson Damn, they're smooth! C.L. Smooth and Pete Rock are trying to find that elusive "Nancy Sinatra - Country" album. FREE 32 OZ. KVFILLSI1 Coca-Cola, Beverage * * PURCHASE ANY LARGE SANDWICH AND GET A 32 ounce Coca-Cola. Beverage FREE! Not valid with any other offer. No coupon necessary. Offer ends 12/22/94. a FIGHT FINM EXAM FE FA TI U)~ MWAAVA + ° < <.a +