4-- The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - Thursday, February 9, 1995 Biohazard deals steel-fisted love and kindness r -K1. By Kirk Miller Daily Arts Writer No sleep'til Brooklyn. Yeah, that and a quarter might buy you some attitude in New York. Fuck, Biohaz- ard has attitude in spades, real inner city pissed off, hard-core fist-first kind of swagger that towers over all other wannabe hard-core heroes. Ill com- munication indeed. "State of the World Address" is the latest fuck-you combo of aggro thrash riffing and rap-chanted lyrics BIOHAZARD (With Machine Headand Slayer) Where: State Theater, tonight, tomorrow Tickets: Sold out for Friday, but tickets are still available for tonight. Call 645-6666 for more info. pline," as well as two thumbs up from Beavis and Butt-Head, the band signed to Warner Brothers and released an extremely well-produced, versatile album that took hard-core to a new level, bringing in Sen Dog of Cypress Hill, sampled lines from "Reservoir Dogs" and even threw in several pretty acoustic breaks. Not all of which is met with open arms by the conserva- tive metal community. But, as 'hazard guitarist / co-vo- calist and man of ever-changing hair Billy Graziadei points out, he's not sure exactly who will show up at any given show. "We've had kids at our shows with Neo-Nazi stuff," he angrily dis- missed. "We talk to them, we say 'We stand strong against that shit, get the fuck out or stay and listen to our lyrics and maybe change your mind.' We used to stand up against these'kids physically, and we still will if we have to, but we realize you can't fight someone and beat someone. We talk to people and have a discussion. Some- times more than not you can make sense with people." As Graziadei pointed out during the phone interview, the band has a lot to say and many ways to say it. One type of different song on their new album (and included prominently on the inner sleeve photo). is "Re- member," an ode to Vietnam vets that was inspired by friends and family of the band members who served in the war. "It was misunderstood by a lot of European press," he lamented. "They thought it was a pro-war song or some crazy shit. We are definitely anti-war ... it's about growing up in a house- hold that's really fucked up because of war." Which might explain the album title of "State of the World Address," which goes behind just inner city life to explore tensions over the globe. "The world is more my concern," Graziadei claimed. "It's more of a generational thing. I look at the younger generation and I see things getting better. It seems that our gen- eration and the younger generation are willing to talk about things like racism, whereas for our parents that was taboo. It was 'Stay with your own, stick with them, don't go near them,' which is very fucked up but that's how it was." from the band that exudes anger so well. After a respectable showing for their previous work "Urban Disci- If ever there was a such thing as an angry band that was completely ap- proachable, then Biohazard would define it. Most legendary at their shows are the hundreds of people they geton stage to slam, stage dive or chant choruses in the background. Even as the band has had to put a stop to this during the larger tour dates with Slayer, they still occasionally miss the old times. "I dig bigger stadiums, where you can run around a lot more," he admit- ted. "But a smaller atmosphere you can smell everyone's sweat and kids knock into you. That's something we'll always love and miss and never get away from, even if we get to a point where we're too big to play there." Being on a major label has cer- tainly increased their popularity, in- cluding landing them on diverse pack- age tours with House of Pain, Cypress Hill, Fishbone, Pantera, Prong and currently Slayer, who have the most fickle fans in the world. However, response has been positive. "It was rumored that every band gets booed, but it's been great," he said. "We try to tour with different types of bands, fitting with bands that you might have nothing in common with. It's much more common in Eu- rope, but here it's only in Lollapalooza, once a year." New songs such as "Tales From the Hard Side" and especially the new single "Five Blocks to the Subway" will most likely have a tough time finding a home on radio and album rock radio, but the band fan ranks continue to swell from the under- ground. Already the band will be fea- tured in three upcoming movie soundtracks (including "The Crow II" soundtrack, which doesn't actu- ally have a film for the music yet) and received the daunting task of contrib- uting to the Black Sabbath tribute album. Their take on the pro-religion and rather out-of-the-ordinary Sab- bath tune "After Forever" was prob- ably the first time in history a band did a song better than Sabbath them- selves could have done. But that isn't the pinnacle of suc- cess for Biohazard. "If we sold ten more albums than we had family members that's suc- cessful to me," Graziadei claimed. "We want to reach as many people as possible, but if we don't we don't." 01 Machine Head is for real By Kirk Miller Daily Arts Writer Religion, mind control and para- noia have a lot in common, and one listen to the debut album "Burn My Eyes" by new thrash gods Machine Head will definitely make you think twice about going to church. Skip to the second-to-last track "Real Eyes, Realize, Real Lies" and you'll hear several different sampled voices of hate, ignorance and intoler- ance. And it's all too real, according to lead singer / guitarist Robb Flynn. "We got that stuff from really ob- scure cable access shows," the native Oakland man explained during a phone interview. "In Oakland the Nation of Islam has a lot of power. If you watch the TV show you see the whole 'White man is the devil.' Then you turn on another show and it's another religion doing the same thing, but reversed. And to me it's absurd. I was never raised to be religious, let alone when I see these fucking people MACHINE HEAD (With Biohazard and Slayer). Where: State Theater, tonight, tomorrow Tickets: Sold out for Friday. but tickets are still available for tonight. Call 645-6666 for more info. said. "Fromhard-core hip-hop to hard- core punk to extreme death metal to alternative bands. We definitely tried to keep the Bay Area sound (home to such thrash legends as Metallica, Death Angel and Exodus), though expand on it. That sound for a long time was one of the things that was fresh and always pushing boundaries." He added music has agreater purpose. "I think music should intimidate people, scare you a little bit," he laughed. However, the band stays clear of tour mates' Slayer domain of evil and death, preferring to shock in a more noticeable manner. "Obviously we write about reality," he said."But I never preach. I never want to tell someone that 'this is the way you have to be, this is the way to think.' My job first and foremost is to entertain you, so I'm going to tell you a story. If my story's a little harsher it's because I've seen some harsher things in life. It's like violent poetry." One of the songs that is frequently misunderstood is the standout first single "Davidian," which is not about the Waco incident specifically. "The name 'Davidian' has actu- ally been around for a long time," he explained. "It originally meant. until three years ago someone who takes the pain, hate and poverty around them and turns it into something posi- tive. But then three years ago this fucking dickhead made it revered for- ever as this fucked-up cult that killed people. I was inspired to write the song at the time because I just found that out and thought, 'I bet nobody knows that.' They'll freak out about it but oh well. I wanted to make a point and see who grasped it." Just so you don't think Machine Head and Flynn are all serious, he is more than willing to go on about how cool it is to open for Slayer ("loved them forever" he admitted), some new industrial remixes of songs by a mem- ber of Front Line Assembly that was just finished ("they came out phat, man ... very trippy industrial ... mu- sic to kill people by") and the joys of playing "Doom" on the Sega 32X attachment. He also was "hella drunk" on Super Bowl Sunday. As he men- tioned, they're just out to have fun. "Live we'realotmore loose," he said. "We're far less concerned with playing everything perfect and more concerned that everyone has a good time." Don't forget who's watching you. be militant about it." Before anyone accuses Flynn of sacrilege, he made an addendum. "I think religion can be helpful for a person," he admitted. "But I also think people who use religion today, like evangelists, take adv*ptage of people. But any problems you over- come in life are because you over- came them, from what's inside you." The phrase "an open mind with a closed fist" is on the ads for the band, and never has the statement meant more. Machine Head started two years ago out of the ashes of several lesser Bay Area thrash bands, scored a deal with Roadrunner Records and almost immediately began to pull in incred- ible reviews for their starkly realistic and powerful blend of technical riffing and stark rage; essentially this is the best thrash album since Sepultura's "Chaos A.D." and the most diverse. "Musically we listen to an unbe- lievably vast amount of music," Flynn / Ann A Lunch Special 11 :3O-3pim 1 Ann Arbor's Biggest Modern Rock & Alternative Dance Party Gyros & Fries on a homemade pita $4.95 $1.00 off Black & Tan (Guiness & Bass) 9pm-Close Em 338 S. State 996-9191 sail: Ashleys@msen.com 2750 Jackson Ave.Hours: 7am-llpm Daily 761-1889 I COIN f " LAUNDRY U 1 Come clean up your act with us?: II ----r----------- a ANN ARBOR CD and RECORD 4 S I/ ,, 11 .. . :.....e r.. T .......,. . 3I I