The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 10, 1994 - 11 RECORDS Continued from page 9 For those of us who have never heard Oakenfold live, these albums will have to do. These albums capture the club atmosphere that Oakenfold frequents and the listener can almost see him mixing. On the Music Unites album, Oakenfold begins with aHousey feeling and ends with a deep trance mix that is mindboggling. It is not just the music that is great, Oakenfold as DJ, turns into composer as well through his intricatemixing and engineering. Some of the best mixing can be heard be- tween the house anthem of "Future Groove" byJoey Beltram and the world music of Yothu Yindi's "Timeless Land." The Moonshine Records album is just as wonderful, but has obviously been made for a more American audi- ence. Moonshine is known for taking European DJs and introducing them to the US, and this album will do just that for Oakenfold. There are many tracks on this album that are also on the Euro- pean release, making it only necessary to buy one of the two albums. If re- mixed music by U2 and the Shamen "interests you then the Moonshine Records album is the one you should own. Because both albums are mixed by Oakenfold, they are both incredible. However, the album on Music Unites is perhaps more experimental. Regard- less, one can not go wrong with either album. Pop one in and have an instant dance party. -Ben Ewy Incognito Positivity Talkin' Loud/Verve/Forecast Somethin' smooth for those late nights and early mornings - some- thing to relax you and inspire you ... As if their time has come, Incognito has easily incorporated the deep bass lines and sampling flavor of the hip-hop/ jazz wave ever so slightly into their grooves. Although vocally driven, the album is almost never lacking in soul. The tracks fit so well together that despite its clearly commercial feel, it is really difficult to find moments of fluff on the album. If you don't like synthe- sized jazz, you won't like this, but the key choices about where to synthesize, whereto sample and where to insert the live breaks are invariably well made. The voices, instrumentation and mix- ing are all top notch. Check this out. -Dustin E. Howes Melvin Riley Ghetto Love MCA Records 1 Melvin Riley, perhaps best known as lead singer for Ready for the World, has returned, two pretty disappointing albums later, attempting to finally make it solo. "Ghetto Love" is the fruit of his work, and what a ripe fruit it is. "Ghetto Love" is a handsomely pro- duced, 15-cut LP. Riley hasn't changed much since his time with Ready for the World, and throughout the CD, you will hear sounds similar to those of the group that wooed us not too long ago. The CD does have a good mix of fast and slow cuts as well as decent variation amongdifferent songs. "Goin' Thru A Thang" is one such faster- paced song. "Whose Is It" and "I'm All In" are good examples of slow, sensu- ous melodies correlating perfectly with the sex-laden lyrics which pour from t Riley's lips throughout the song. "Ghetto Love" has it's bad points, like "Little Somethin' Somethin"' which sticks out like sore thumb. How- ever, the album's positives far outstrip its negatives. The LP's title track, "Ghetto Love" aptly deserves its position as it is with- out a doubt the musical summit of a mountainously spectacular CD. - Eugene Bowen Mad Flava from the ground unda Priority Records Here's something that should have happened two years ago. With the suc- cess of House of Pain, it would seen inevitable that a slew of sound-a-likes would come about. With screechy samples and cut and dry lyrical flow, Mad Flavasounds nice-and familiar. The message is pretty much straight forward braggadocio with a touch of that blunt puffin', 40-drinkin' attitude that sells so well. The music is slammin' for most of the album; the beats are not too fast and not too slow, and there is Manu Dibango Wakafrika Giant Records There's one thing I can say about "Wakafrika." It has an amazing cover. On it, Manu Dibango is posing. How- ever, he is standing in such a way so that he looks like the continent of Af- rica. It is without a doubt the smoothest pose I've ever seen. Is the stuff on the CDs inside as smooth as the pose on the outside? Well ... not quite. "Wakafrika" does have its moments. "Biko," sung in honor of the late, great Steven Biko of South Afrika, is perhaps the best song on "Wakafrika." It's an impressive (to say the least) song which will have you humming the refrain, "Oh, Biko," to yourself and wondering where you heard it. "Homeless" is abeautiful slow song detailing a very sad, disturbing fact of life for many, and the music of "Lady" is the standard by which all jazz musi- cians should be measured. However, not all is rosy in "Wakafrika." The song "Wakafrika" sounds like asax-led remake of a James Bond theme song. "Emma" had poten- tial, but you can only go so far with a song where all but about 15 of the words are "Emma." Overall, "Wakafrika" isn't a bad CD (especially if you count the cover picture). Do I recommend it. Yes, I do ... hesitantly. -Eugene Bowen Great White Sail Away Zoo Entertainment Do you really need to hear why this album is dreadful? I could merely say sloppy wankaramaby a bunch of cocky third-rate Bon Jovi wannabes, playing for the studly dudes in their '84 red Camaros, but that wouldn't be quite enough. All popular music travels in cycles really. And by this, it doesn't only mean that fads come and go and come again. Every five years or so, there happens to be one or maybe two inno- vators who come along and say "every- thing you're hearing on the radio right now sucks -now eat this." Then they deliver music that really is new, fresh and exciting to listeners cherry ear- drums. Chuck Berry, The Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, the Ramones, Black Sabbath, the Sex Pistols, Napalm Death and Nirvana are the major innovators in popular rock and roll. These artists set the trends that popular music fol- lowed. Once these innovators became household names however, it never fails that recordcompanies will vacuum up any and all artists who resemble the innovators. It also never fails that, from the new crop, the majority will be wa- tered-down, flaky garbage with half of the soul of the innovators. Great White is one of the groups that sprouted in the '80s whose major influence was the innovator of hard rock, Led Zeppelin. To say that Great White, Whitesnake, White Lion, Cinderella, Poison, Warrant, Ratt and Motley Crue were crappy, third-rate Zepsters - devoid of any originality or emotion or soul - would be an understatement. These days, with the innovator of the current trend rock, Nirvana, dead and buried, second-string "alternative" groups like Candlebox, Stone Temple Four years after their big hit, why doesn't Great White just sail away into the sunset? Pilots and Collective Soul (three bands that sound more like radio friendly Pearl Jam than Nirvana an way) are the popular rockers of the moment -just as devoid of meaning as the Greatsnake Crue. So why is Great White still breath- ing? Would someone please just take a dull, rusty stake and drive it through each band member's heart. But don't stop there. There are way too many Z- Rock grunge retread bands popping up - annhilate them all. Death to hokey music! But you know what? Without the shit, there would be nothing to react against.No new innovators wouldcome out and say fuck that shit! Bad music is a necessary evil. Except for Great White - they're completely unnecessary. - Matt Carlson Joe Public Easy Come, Easy Go Columbia Records When Joe Public came out in 1992 with their debut, self-entitled LP, and when songs like "Live and Learn" and "I Miss You" hit pretty big, it looked like these guys were on their way up. But, just as fast as popularity came for these guys, it left. Joe Public was doomed to go down in history as a group that should have made it but didn't. Columbia Records didn't give up on Joe Public, though, and now the group is back with "Easy Come, Easy Go" trying to gain the notoriety it de- served, arguably, back in '92. But, is this CD good enough to warrant Joe Public's return? Nah. "Easy Come, Easy Go" is a fair CD, but it will almost certainly not propel them to what little fame they had two years ago, let alone place them among musical successes. The CD's title track is a nice song, as is "This Time," but they're no Bill- : board Top 10 contenders. Sadder still, the other songs on this 10-cut CD are even less notable. See RECORDS, Page 12 > ] aU -uusan wrtr ho N r muta aysb tuh -5- 0 0 O C 'C p should I ntot maintain proper concern?" CONFUCIUS "The first point of courtesy must always be truth,' EMERSON "A zero dialer is a zeoide: POLITENESSMAN ~rrflII/ I III