The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc.- Thursday, September 15, 1994 - 7 The Jesus Lizard will walk on water, cure lepers and play some music I1 By TED WATTS The Jesus Lizard is a Chicago band. Like many other Chicago bands they are on Touch and Go Records. Like many other Touch and Go bands they are a rockin' type of guitar/bass/ drums/vocals band. They are argu- ably one of the biggest influences on I the other Touch and Go bands. So, ne might think that it would be use- ful to examine them in depth, espe- cially in light of their imminent ar- rival. The bands from which the Jesus Lizard stem include Rapeman, Cargo Cult and Scratch Acid. Scratch Acid, which included Lizard vocalist David Yow and bassist David Sims, had a handful ofreleases and is usually cited Es the most obvious musical precur- sor to the Jesus Lizard. Ultimately Sims, Yow and guitarist Duane Dennison got together to make the Lizard's first EP, "Pure." With the rapid addition of drummer Mac McNeilly, the band assumed a form entirely recognizable to even the most recent fan. Oddly enough, some of the most *centfans have been theBritish music press. "Right now, they seem to like us better than ever," said Dennison. "In the past I think Melody Maker always really liked us and NME was kind of aloof, but now they both re- ally seem to like us. It's crazy. Trends tend to come and go really fast over there, yet I don't think we've ever been part of anything over here." Nonetheless, the Jesus Lizard has steadily risen in the ranks. In the past they've played at the Heidelberg here in Ann Arbor (not that odd consider- ing Dennison was born here, grew up in Plymouth and went to college at EMU), and are now big enough to headline at St. Andrew's. "I think there are some things about the Jesus Lizard that are pretty basic and there are things that are unique," explained Dennison. "Obviously, with guitar, drums, bass and vocals there's only so much you can do, but at the same time the guitar sound is fairly clean and the bass usually fairly dis- torted, which is exactly the opposite of what most bands sound like. And people really like Dave Yow - sort of an Iggy Pop meets Nick Cave kind of character." Yow has become almost a folk hero in England. All kinds of people support his stage antics, from club owners applauding his destructive tendencies to the press printing head- lines like "Yow Totally Mad" in a loving way. His on-stage chaos spills over into his lyrics as well, resulting in indecipherable odd compositions much of the time. "The music is pretty well struc- tured," Dennison said. "What will usually happen is myself or David Sims will come up with a riff or chord sequence or something, take it to prac- tice and run it by everyone to see how it goes. Sometimes we work differ- ently. Like 'Mistletoe' on 'Down' was built off a drum beat that Mac came up with. In general, someone starts something that we all add to. We don't just 'get high and jam,' although there's nothing wrong with that. It's just not what's best for us." The energy of a Jesus Lizard show can often make one mistake the mu- sic as unstructured. But even the show itself has some underpinning patterns, explained Dennison: "We try to grab people right away, to get the momentum rolling. Then there are some slow songs in the middle of the set so that Mac on drums and David on vocals can get a rest. It's also hard to keep people's attention if you keep hammering all the time. Then we try to peak out again at the end. It's kind of sexual, don't you think?" The Jesus Lizard is interesting in its packaging as well. The last two albums and some recent singles have been graced with the beautiful sur- real art of one Malcolm Bucknall. The father of a friend of David Sims, Bucknall has graciously allowed the band to use his wonderful art, like the falling dog on the cover of the current album, free of charge. There is also the oddity of all of their al- bums being four letters. "It makes it easier to decide on a title," remarked Dennison. "So many albums have either a sentence or are like a movie title or a book title. This way we can avoid that and provide continuity. There is no hidden agenda." The Jesus Lizard has indeed pro- vided continuity with their changes over the last five or so years. Now that all of the members of the band are over thirty, they show no signs of relenting musically, in spite of Dennison's profession to listening to more jazz. But the band tends to move outside of the normal structures. Dennison's words convey this clearly: "We're not grungesters. We're not slackers. I think we've effectively avoided being part of anything." They're their own thing. The Jesus Lizard will be playing St. Andrew's Hall this Saturday with Pegboy and Stanford Prison Experiment. Tix are a reasonable $8.50, but it's18 and up only. Doors open at 9p.m. Above we see the Jesus Lizard at rest. Below, we see the selfsame organism at play. A fascinating dichotomy, F I Thursday Black and Tan Night $1.00 off pints of Black and Tans (1/2 Guinness and 1/2 Bass Ale) 338 S. State 996-9191 I The Jesus Lizard Down Touch and Go Thirteen tracks of genuine interest here. The previously seen on 7" "Fly on the Wall" starts off this it o' plastic with some finely bangin' rock and tuff. Because of personality conflicts, "Down" is to be the last Steve Albini collaboration with the Lizard, as well as probably the best sounding one so far. The odd thing is that all the songs are really hard to remember. While hardly lacking in diversity, there is something wholly difficult in remem- bering what tune goes with what name. 'Hey, was that 'Din' or 'The Best Parts?"' But hey, it doesn't really matter when they all sound good. Examine "Destroy Before Read- ing." First, it's pronounced "reeding" Wz, and not "redding," so it refers to the act related to words, not the British rock festival. But there is nothing in the song related to anything like read- ing. The chorus is "I found my paddle/ I found my paddle around midnight," so no clues there. There really doesn't seem to be much of anything that the song is talking about. Here is probably the essential clue to why the songs are impossible to mark: they aren't really about any- thing. No meaning, no connection. But the sound is almost like the Cramps in a less '50s kinda way. Albini's drum recording style is great on "Mistletoe" as well as most of the other tracks. It's a good, good sound. 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