The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 11, 1996 - 7 YECORDS Continued from Page 6 Machinery Hall Inness Wicked Disc The latest entry in the post-grunge itar-rock sweepstakes, Machinery all is a passably functional, if thor- oughly mediocre, band who can't seem to crystallize their ambitions into any- thing especially memorable. "Inness" chugs along for more than an hour, all the while seemingly grasp- ing for emotions they never quite reach. These guys are obviously competent musicians, but the dark, fuzz-box jangle that dominates "Inness" drones on and with little attention to memorable oks or effective dynamics; most of the tracks are barely discernible from each other. The grim musical vision Machinery Hall is going for is obvious, but the poor execution renders it almost wholly ineffective. This basis doesn't cut a lot of slack to lead vocalist and lyricist Mark Nelson to salvage "Inness," a burden he's clear- ly unable to bear. His vocals are a hope- ly generic grumble, lost somewhere tween the faux-soul of Darius Rucker and the tossed-off snarl of Mark Lanegan; yet, the vague, throw-away depression of the lyrics make Nelson's lazy mumble an unlikely blessing. The lyric sheet reveals rough attempts at some sort of world-encom- passing angst, too impersonal to feel sincere and too sloppy to connect with even the rawest of nerves. On the unin- nired textbook rocker "Myth," Nelson *rs, "Waiting for your will to fall / dragging you under / welcome to our world today!"; this sort of retread mus- ing is par for "Inness." The disc's attempt at a epic closer, "Suffer and Live", is graced with the chorus "I just want to be known / I just want to be known for once / we're the joke of the century." This pretty well sums up "Inness.' You can telegraph Machinery Hall's blind stabs at grandeur and meaning, and just as easi- ly notice how very short they fall. - Dave Snyder The Joykiller Static Epitaph Songs about isolation and love gone wrong is what this is. But not like coun- try albums are, no sirree, jack. These individuals have that loud Epitaph sound of straight ahead rocki- tude and a whole lot of bad attitude. Fourteen songs of the stuff in about 30 minutes, in fact. The album opens with "Hate" a ditty about hating every- one around you and wishing it would all go away. The second track is about wanting to live alone, and the irony of still want- ing the married life. The next is about obsessive love, and so on. "Static" is a bunch of sturdily con- structed songs that are comfortably familiar musically, and amusingly down in thematics. There's even a beautifully illustrated love meter in the jacket, with categories such as wicked, hateful and vengeful, and those are the three nicest ones on it. It's really almost a concept band. You wouldn't want to be living their songs, but it's fun to listen to. - Ted Watts Various Artists "Brain Candy" Soundtrack Matador V 'Blue Leaves' kicks off Basement Arts'-season It's no surprise that most movie soundtracks are mediocre collections of "rare" or "previously unreleased" tracks mushed together to squeeze the last bit of cash from hapless music fans. However, considering the people involved with the music for the Kids in the Hall's movie"Brain Candy,' it's also no surprise that the soundtrack is one of the best in recent memory. Artists like Pavement, Stereolab and Pell Mell, Matador Records and the Kids themselves combine to make "Brain Candy" a more than palatable combination of music and movies. Death Lurks, (Bruce McCulloch and his band) performs the songs by the movie's gloomy rockers The Suicide Club, turn in the hilarious "Some Days It's Dark" and "Happiness Pie." "Some Days It's Dark" reflects the bone-crushing, angry music The Suicide Club makes before they take the antidepressant Gleemonex, while "Happiness Pie" is the kind of music they make after: A musical smiley-face sticker - mindlessly, stupidly happy. Along with Scott Thompson's parody of ridiculous- ly theatrical musical numbers, "I'm Gay," these songs show that the Kids are just as capable of making you laugh while listening to your CD player as they are while you're watching them on TV. The rest of the songs on "Brain Candy" are for the most part just as good as those by the Kids, if not as funny. Pavement's excellent "Painted Soldiers" and Matthew Sweet's "Happiness" provide a back-to-back blast of jangly, catchy pop, while Pell Mell's "Swoon," the Tragically Hip's "Butts Wigglin" and Yo La Tengo's "Pablo and Andrea" lend a moody air to the soundtrack. Guided By Voices, Cibo Matto and Pizzicato Five all turn in winners, and They Might Be Giants' "Spiralling Shape" is the best song they've written in years. Stereolab's "How to Play Your Internal Organs Overnight," "Brain Candy"'s love theme, is perhaps the best song on the album, managing to be beautiful, senti- mental and goofy all at once. While "Brain Candy" has almost no mediocre songs on -it, the ones that do exist stand out even more from being surrounded by quality. Liz Phair's limp "Six Dick Pimp" continues the slump she's been in since 1994's "Whip- Smart," and the Odds' "Eat My Brain" Stereolab is heads. and Paul Bellini's "Long Dark Twenties" are nothing more than by- the-book college rock, despite the inter- esting titles. Even so, "Brain Candy" is considerably tastier than most other soundtracks. And, it won't rot your teeth or your mind. - Heather Phares Various Artists "Supercop" Soundtrack Interscope What we have here is an interesting mix of knock-you-on-your-butt covers performed the way the new songs on this comp are. Would you believe Devo covering Nine Inch Nails' "Head Like a Hole" as if they were partaking of a "Weird" Al medley? That's right, Virginia, it is one of the signs of the apocalypse, especially when combined with Warren G covering Tina Turner's "What's Love Got to do With It?". Tom Jones and Ruby teaming up to make a smoothed out version of "Kung Fu Fighting," and some sorta fem techno version of the Bee Gee's "Stayin' Alive." Are you bleeding from your eyes and nose with glee yet? This has to be the single most bizarre sound- track ever assembled. Adding to this is the new (or newish) music. Black Grape performs a hiccup- py beaten track of their post-'80s dance pop two tracks before 2Pac offers a mellow paced bitter rap, which itself is one track before a track by the Sepultura-ish Dimebag Darrell. The rest of the songs are more of the same sort of thing. All this and a new song by Devo, too. Even after the novelty of the bizarre covers has worn off some, it's still a very listenable five-inch disc of plastic. But it would still probably be best if you liked someone on it before just buying it. * - Ted Watts By Tyler Patterson Daily Theater Editor As the audience trickled into the the- ater and before most people could take their seats, the student-run Basement Arts program began their season. Sitting front stage and playing guitar, Arthur Shaughnessy (Ian Lawler) drew from his vast repertoire of 30-second songs in an attempt to dazzle the crowd. As was consistent with the play, Mr. Shaughnessy turned no heads and was met basically with indifference by an audience that had no idea the play had begun. The Basement T Arts production of I "The House of Blue Leaves," written by John Guare, however, was certainly a noteworthy perfor- mance. Playing in a packed house with the temperature slightly above the com- fort level, the company was ripe for a let-down. This was avoided, however, as evidenced in the frequent laughter from the audience. The story begins on the day of the Pope's visit to New York. Shaughnessy is a zoo keeper who dreams of making it as a songwriter. He is married to a crazy, yet insightful, woman named, appropiately enough, Bananas (Laura Heisler). Living in the apartment below the two of them is Bunny, played by Stacy Mayer, and she serves as Shaughnessy's mistress who keeps him dreaming of things bigger and better. Ian Lawler as Arthur Shaughnessy had just the right persona for the part. Playing in his first lead-role, Lawler gave Arthur a nervousness and frustrat- ed tenderness that worked smoothly with the other more melodramatic char- acters. Bunny, Arthur's mistress played by Stacy Mayer, was one such character. From the moment she stepped on the stage declaring that Arthur had no sense of history till she darted off it on her way to Australia, Mayer had a com- manding presence. Obnoxious, loud, brash, arrogant and cruel - Mayer was in touch with all of these with great comic effect. Laura Heisler gave a gutty and heart- warming performance as Bananas, the crazy and victimized wife of Arthur. Heisler immediately demanded sympa- thy then laughter as she delicately brought her character back and forth from insanity to insightfulness. What really set Heisler's perfor- mance apart was something completely unscripted. Toward the end of the sec- ond act in somewhat of a freak mis- judgement of timing, Heisler's hand got crushed by the piano. Her ability to just go on with the show prevented anyone from the audience to notice her injury until after the final bows when she emerged from the dressing room with a bag of ice. The direction EVIE W he House of Blue Leaves Arena Theater Sept. 7.1996 with odds and and stage design by Jonathan Berry was, with few exceptions, excel- lent. For all intents and purposes the set looked con- vincingly enough like a Queens, N.Y., apartment ends hapharzardly placed around the set. The only problems came in the sec- ond act when Corrina (Dana Dancho) was revealed to be wearing transistors to aid her hearing. In a scene where she is meant to be looking for them, she scrambles on the floor. As she tries to hide them from the rest of the charac- ters, she eventually puts them in a bot- tle of pills, which in turn gets swal- lowed. However, in the performance there were a few times when there was no clear reason why she could not have just put them back in. Indeed, at times Dancho seemed to be waiting for her next cue and just holding them in her hands. All in all, the supporting perfor- mances were solid. Lauren Miller brought the right amount of twisted dorkish appeal to Arthur's son, Ronnie. Especially good was Mark Gmazel as Billy Einhorn, internation- ally acclaimed director and childhood friend of Arthur. Gmazel balanced the seemingly contradictory directions of incessant crying and emotional disas- sociation. With a well-rounded cast and excel- lent lighting (David Plevan), this diffi- cult play was given a thoroughly enjoy- able performance. Much credit is due to Berry for fleshing out the meaty the- matic issues of the text - the price of the American Dream and success, in general. Hardly an easy topic to tackle in this day and age of sound bite and rhetoric, and despite the laughter and the cheers, the audience could not help but leave the theater on Saturday night with nervous sense of sobriety. 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