12A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 22, 1996 Canada's Junkies shoot up a stylish sound Toronto band brings its impressive emotional range to Ann Arbor By Karl Jones Daily Weekend Editor Somewhere between mourning and rejoicing, between ecstasy and pain, in a place where hard feelings melt away into peace, lies the essence of the Cowboy Junkies' sound. The Toronto- based band has always expressed emotional dichotomy through vocalist Margo Timmins' whispers and wails, but on their latest album, "Lay it Down," the Junkies have also COWBOY pulled out some new guns AN ... or should we say "gui- D VIC tars." Where: Michiga "With every album we sort When: Tuesday, ofmake a decision as to what Tickets are sold we want to do differently j C n A o' just to keep it interesting for us, just to experiment a little bit," guitarist Michael Timmins said in an interview last month with The Michigan Daily. "With this record, the conscious side of it was that we wanted to focus more on the four members of the band and that dynamic - how we play together as a unit." The tight, to the point feel of "Lay it Down" strikes the listener from the very first notes of "Something More Besides You," a vocally cere- bral and musically jarring track, featuring the excellent guitar work of Michael Timmins. "Something More ..." is the first of many spare songs on the Junkies' latest album. The lyrics are not quite as epic and the music not quite as full as it was on previous albums like 1993's "Pale Sun, Crescent Moon," but that does not mean the overall sound has lost any of its emo- tional intensity. It just means that when the instruments do kick in, every note counts. "For the past three records, we've had a lot of outside musicians come in and we worked with them," Timmins explained. "It was a lot of fun, but on this album we wanted to just focus on the four of us." Perhaps you've noticed that the name Timmins pops up a few times in the roll call for "the four of us." Michael, Margo and drummer Peter are three of six Timmins siblings, raised by parents who did not play instruments, but definitely fostered a deep apprecia- tion for music in theirchil- UNKIES dren. "Everyone is a music HESTNUT fan in the family," Michael Theater Timmins explained. prii 23. "There was always music ut. playing in the house, you know. We didn't sit around and jam or anything, but there was always an appreciation for music." When asked how a band from Toronto ac- quired such a bluesy, country feel to its music, Timmins insisted that band members did not sit around pining away for Elvis Presley or Hank 'Williams during their formative years. In fact, the Cowboy Junkies may have originally sunk their roots deeper into mainstream America than they did into the blues / country scene. "When we were growing up, I think the music we listened to was much more mainstream - I mean mainstream as far as rock 'n' roll is con- cerned," Timmins explained."We listened to Neil Young, the Velvet Underground, Lou Reed ... you know, that style of rock music. The blues influ- ences and the country influences really didn't come for me until later on as I sort of grew up and got more interested in music and was introduced to different styles. Then I began to focus on other styles, like jazz and blues and country." For self-taught musician Timmins (all band members are self-taught), finding a sound he wanted to stick with was simply the result of experimentation with different styles. "The first band I was in was called Hunger Project, and that was formed in 1979. That was more reflective of the style of music that was being played then by bands coming out of En- gland, sort oflike Siouxsie andthe Banshees-ish type music and sort of punk related. The second band was called Germinal and that was very anti-pop music. It was instrumental and impro- visational - what I would call a noise band. It was pretty intense, but very non-commercial. And then from those bands grew Cowboy Junk- ies," Timmins said. When Michael, Peter and childhood friend Alan Anton (bass) did finally gel into the Cow- boy Junkies, it was not originally apparent that Margo was the obvious choice to sing lead. In fact, Timmins was not sure that his sister had what it took to be a singer at all. "I knew she had a voice just from school plays and things like that.... Whether she could actually SING, I didn't know because singing and having a good voice are two different things, as far as I'm concerned. You know, singing means being able to express emotion and be able to phrase inteiest- ingly and being able to sink into the rhythm of music that is going on around you." Five albums later, Margo's haunting vocals have certainly proven her an excellent and emo- tional "singer" as well as a "good voice." And the Cowboy Junkies have found some interest- ing ways to showcase their unique vocal and musical sound, including two albums recorded with nothing more than a single microphone and a two-track recorder. Their debut album "Whites off Earth Now" and 1988's "The Trinity Ses- sion" were recorded in this manner- the former The Cowboy Junkies hit the Michigan Theater in a sold-out show on Tuesday. in the band's rehearsal space and the latter in a church in Toronto. "There was no mixing," Timmins said of "The Trinity Session." "It's all just two-track recording. What you hear is what was going on in the church that day. There's nothing added or taken away." "The Trinity Session" was home to one of the Cowboy Junkies' most well-known tunes to date, a cover of the Velvet Underground's "Sweet Jane" (featured in Oliver Stone's film "Natural Born Killers"). While miles away from the song's origi- nal rock stylings, Timmins said that Lou Reed had nothing but positive things to say about the cover. "He really liked it a lot. We've met him a few times, and he thought it was great," Timmins said. Through all the musical territory the Cowboy Junkies have covered in their career, however, one thing has remained constant: The closenes between members of the band. "To us (touring with family) makes it easier," Timmins said. "You know, no matter who you're on tour with, you're going to be close with them in a physical way because you're just in the same space all the time. So if you know them and you understand their personalities, it just makes it that much easier because you know how to deal with each other and how to relate to each other." And with conflicts aside and the focus on music, the Cowboy Junkies have found it that much easier to lay it down. a F- _OPPORTUNTES ARE HEATING UP ;--- --AT WEATH ERVAN E WINDOW Look what we can offer: - Full or Part Time Work - $6.75 an hour plus, $200 Bonu$ - FREE 1996 Metro Park Pass - Convenient Access to 1-96 and Kensington Metro park - FREE Training - Clean & Safe Work Environmeit GOOD JOBS!." GOOD PAY!- GOOD COMPANY! APPLY TODAY! WEATHERVANE WINDOW, INC. (810) 227-4900 ext.108 - HUMAN RESOURCES - BRIGHTON, MI -2 MIN. SOUTH OF KENSINGTON METRO PARK SENIORS: LEAVE YOUR STAMP ON MICHIGAN E The Survey of Graduating Seniors is an opportunity to tell the university about the student experience. Have your say--Fill It Out! All expected May graduates were mailed a survey. Didn't get one? Contact Graduates.survey@umich.edu MAMET Continued from Page iA may be unforgiving, his indictment of men is much more prominent and se- vere. The appeal to Mamet, then, may be his honesty. Mamet offers what a lot of theater and cinema seem to ignore with its melodramatic portrayals of life and love. The effect of Mamet's down-to- earth style is refreshing. It is hard to sit through a Mamet play and not be en- gaged by his hard visions of how we love. As this weekend marks not only the end of the semester, it also marks t" end of the yearlong student run produc- tions in the Basement. "Sexual Perve- sity in Chicago" promises to be a we come break from studying, with all o its humor and honesty wrapped in i neat little 50-minute package. Givcv the price, at this point in the year, you cannot ask for more. RETURNING THIS SUMMER. MAY S. f 01 statpage p~e 9 41o J~~ 01 thing? Maybe we ought to rephrase What do you use to launch your 01 online adventures? If you had MSN's Custom Start "-.Page, all the suff you like best and all the things you need most would be right there, right in front I