10 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 27, 1995 RECORDS Continued from page 10 hear other instruments. Still, on such numbers as the title track or on "Cara- van," one wishes that the rhythm section could be a little more force- ful, especially when Carter hits the peak of each of his solos. Congratu- lations should go to Craig Taborn, former University student now play- ing piano for Carter on this debut release. And as for James Carter, we can all expect to hear much more from him in the near future. - David Cook Pitch Shifter The Remix War Earache Records Most remix albums are nothing more than long-winded musical or- gies; sure, it's really exciting and dif- ferent at first, but by the end it's kind of repetitive and pungent, and you'll be lucky if leave with the right clothes and few unusual stains. Not with Pitch Shifter. Once in- side the tasty sugar walls of their infectious industrial / metal dance machine and all caution slips away. Along with the band's own four over- hauls of songs from their last album, members of Therapy?, Biohazard and Gunshot give each a song an extended tryst, all extremely gratifying. Therapy? adds athumpin' techno edge to "Diable" and Gunshot pumps up "Triad" as the great lost hip-hop record Helmet never made. Granted, this isn't music to deeply penetrate your mind. "Diable," has just two lyrics, one a spoken word sample of a man screaming "Hail Satan!" and the other vocalist J.S. Clayden growl- ing, "Hands up who wants to die?" But why be long and meaningful if you can be quick and nasty? Edgy, butt-shakin', groovy and hard. I'm spent. - Kirk Miller Greg Brown The Poet Game Red House There is something about Greg Brown's voice, a gruff and tender instrument that can convey decades of experience and emotion in a single phrase, that gives even his few weak moments a depth and range of feeling that most songwriters cannot sum- mon up in their best songs. His rich, textured baritone is everywhere on his latest, "The Poet Game," working its magic through the tables-are-turned story of "Sadness," the autobiographi- cal folk of the title track and the blues of "Ballingall Hotel." When he turns it to a slow number, like "Lately," it is all that is needed to tell the rest of the story that the three verses only lightly sketch while in "Lord I Have Made You a Place in My Heart," it gives the lines "Oh Lord, why does the fall get colder each year?" the believability they need. Brown's writing is good but his singing is absolutely wonderful and "The Poet Game" showcases it well. - Dirk Schulze Jaz B. Lat'n Street Gamins Fader Records The newest shift in rap music has been from the standard, repetitive beats to more variety. Jaz B. Lat'n, rap's newest sizzling group, are mas- ters of background variety, and this is why their debut, six-cut release is so phat. Some of these beats may take some getting used to. Each of the songs use so many changing beats, it's hard to tell where one song ends and another begins. This is part of the excitement they bring. Their rapping is a mix between the old school and a ghetto Kid and Play/Pharcyde sound. Weird explanation? Weird CD. The biggest shortfall of this CD is the pitifully few number of cuts. But, these guys have potential for much bigger and better things. - Eugene Bowen Morphine yes Rykodisc "Sharks patrol these waters / Don't let your fingers dangle in the water / swim!" advises Morphine frontman and bassist Mark Sandman on his band's third LP "yes." He's right. Sharks do patrol Morphine's waters - pool sharks, that is, in seedy, smoky backwater nightclubs overflowing with booze and pickup lines and preferably located in close proximity to a cheap hotel. But while Sandman's lyrical fo- cus in the 12 songs offered on this album is most definitely sex, the mu- sic is anchored by sax. While their widely acclaimed sophomore effort "Cure for Pain" showcased Sandman's slurred, string-bending, stereo-rattling 2-string slide bass, "yes" finds saxophonist Dana Colley stepping to the forefront of Mor- phine. Utilizing both baritone and tenor saxes (and sometimes both at once in a way cool trick that you must see performed), Colley somehow elic- its the power of a distorted electric guitar and the reediness of a human voice along with sweet soulful sounds from his saxophones. Colley adds jazzy improvisation, chordal sounds and virtuoso solos, to the heavily swinging single "Honey White," the tense, rumbling "Radar" and the ap- propriately energetic "Super Sex." On their debut "Good" and "Cure for Pain," Morphine's one fault was Sandman's rather flat and unimagi- native vocal technique. Perhaps the fire pictured on the album cover was lit under his ass, because his, vocals here smolder and burn their way through his lyrics just as they should. With drummer Billy Conway I Daily Tonight, the qt everyone's minds "Forrest Gump" o That's right, tonigl lywood salutes itse annual Academy emony, hosted by will be broadcast o at 9 p.m. To assist ing, the Daily fil following guide to what should win ti BEST PICTUI Who will win: "Ordinary Peopl Bull." "Dances w "Goodfellas." Gum please rise for thej Who we wantt tion" (6 votes), "F "Gump" may win "Fiction" is a perr the American film BEST DIREC Who will win: finm critics predict uestion that is on Spielberg will enjoy presenting his will be answered: lackey the award for best computer, r "Pulp Fiction?" er, film director. ht is the night Hol- Who we want: Quentin Tarantino elf - it's the 67th (6), Krzysztof Kieslowski (1), Robert Awards; the cer- Zemeckis (1). "Pulp Fiction" was the David Letterman, best film of the year and Tarantino is n ABC (channel 7) most clearly responsible for its suc- you in your view- cess. n critics offer the what will win and BEST ACTOR: he Oscars tonight. Who will win: Paul Newman. To award Tom Hanks a second Oscar, let RE: alone consecutively, when Paul "Forrest Gump." Newman has but one performance- e" over "Raging based award would be sacreligious. ith Wolves" over Comeback kid Travolta may com- ip will happen, now plete the circle with an acceptance national anthem. speech tonight. to win: "Pulp Fic- Who we want to win: Morgan oeto win: " P 2, Freeman (4), John Travolta (2), Paul orrest Gunp' (2). Newman (2). Where is Tim Robbins? nanent addition to Co-star Freeman was solid but Holly- wood owes Robbins. canon. TOR: BEST ACTRESS: Robert Zemeckis. Whowill win: JessicaLange. She's a Hollywood standard and she's never won a Best Actress award. Kid won- der Winona Ryder - who was slighted last year - could upset. Who we want to win: Anyone but Jodie Foster. The year's best female performance, given by Linda mey white -it's buena, buena. pitching in on drums, Morphine rocks so mightily on "yes" that the absence of guitar (on all tracks but the pretty acoustic closer "Gone for Good") appears their greatest virtue. Yeah, sharks patrol these waters, but let yourself succumb to Morphine's booming, bass-heavy sound. Dive, baby, dive. -Jennifer Buckley the Oscars. Fiorentino in "The Last Seduction," was ineligible. This left a weak cat- egory that inspires only indiffer- ence. BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Who will win: Diane Wiest. She was classy, campy and over-the-top. She has swept all the critics' awards. However, Tarantino-sympathizers may give it to Uma Thurman. Who we want: Diane Wiest (4), Uma Thurman (3), Helen Mirren (1). Another snoozer. Hopefully these nominees will open Hollywood's eyes to the outrageous possibility that fe- male characters can be both well- rounded and meaningful. BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR: Who will win: Martin Landau. A career-crowning performance.A char- acter sketch of an actor who loves his craft. All voters can relate. Despite being part of the most qualified group of nominees, he just may deserve it. Who we want: Samuel L. Jackson (6), Martin Landau (2). Jackson should have been nominated for "Jungle Fe- ver." He and "Pulp Fiction" deserve the acknowledgment. each other in an attempt to win the title of the greatest car raeer in the galaxy. Players choose their character from. anumber of aliens and humans, includ- ing one who has the big ugly and de- formed face of everybody's favorite trash romance novel model, yes, you guessed it, Fabio! With racing an- nouncer Larry "Supermouth" Huffman on the mic, and cheezy instrumentals of George Thorogood's "Bad to the Bone," Black Sabbath's "Paranoid" (also a Molsoncommercial-God, these guys must need money), the ground-break@ ing Golden Earring classic "Radar Love," and much, much more, "Rock N' Roll Racing" tries alittle too hard to be hip. Some of the features include giving players a chance to modify cars be- tween theraces, andevenbuy anewcar. However, theracingsequences arefairly typical, and don't offer much in the category of originality that Interplay is. usually pretty keen to. If you like blowing up other racers, hearing digitized classic rock, and see- ing Fabio in a video game, be sure to give "Rock N' Roll Racing" a shot. - Brian A. Gnatt have won the remix warl Good thing, too - we weren't able to sleep nights while L Lond~iF $289 Paris $335 Frankfurt $269 Madrid $309 Rome $365 Fesa acw outm~D~basedoridb~pchse. Resfrktkmns apy tus not (nck*d and fas aI*ct to chng.Saw $50.00 on ConddciHoIdas Tours tpwdwhed byMarch 31 t. !kdry frohudwkid dtMC.da 1220 S. University, Suite 208 (Above McDonaids) 99890200 Rock N' Roll Racing Interplay Sega Genesis When video game designers decide to team up and create a game that com- bines two very different-themes such as rock 'n' roll and car racing, it's hard to find a happy medium that will satisfy fans in both areas. And that's the prob- lem with Interplay's latest car racing adventure, "Rock N' Roll Racing." In a game that is almost the same as the Nintendo classic "R.C. Pro-Am," digitized rock classics play in the back- ground as cars jump, crash and shoot HEY! Let me see your resume buddy! , 4 t a.... .. _ . 4W-!fA~a