I cuticNight at the Pig! Come on down to the Blind Pig for an evening of great folk music. Contemporary folk artist Jo Serrapere and Detroit's Sister Seed will be sure to entertain your inner-folk-self to the utmost degree. The Pig's doors open at 9:30. For more information, call 996- 8555. Wednesday April 2, 1997 8 Evercicar's Alexakis to play solo in Detroit For those of you who haven't figured this one out already, Art Alexakis is no Billy Corgan. While both men write popular alternative rock anthems, Alexakis for Everclear and Corgan for The Smashing Pumpkins, there are more differ- ences than similarities when it comes to the rest of their musi- cal work. "I'm not a perfect guitar player or a perfect singer ... nor do I care to be;' the Everclear vocalist stated. "I Clute go by feeling and vibes so I Callt don't do as many takes as a lot of cats do. I hear Billy Corgan will do 20- something vocal takes of one song. I don't do that. I do about two or three takes." Instead, Alexakis would be more likely to compare himself with Neil Young. "(Young) is, like, Mr. One Take. 'Neil, that's a little bit off-key. I don't care, it feels good."' But, with that fact in mind, one would think that Everclear's upcoming album, "Pure White Evil," would be currently available in record stores. Of course, you'd be wrong. Despite Alexakis' feelings about multiple takes, the album is still a ways from being finished. At the time of Alexakis' interview with The Michigan Daily, "Pure White Evil" was still a little rough around the ntiac tomorrow. edges. "Right now we have two songs totally done and mixed. Then we have five more songs to finish up, last minute things here and there. Finally, we've got to mix another 12 or 13 songs," Alexakis sighed. Amazingly, the vocalist predicts the album should be out by the end of May. As Alexakis will glumly say himself, "I don't know what I was 'REVIEW Art Alexaki: Tomorrow at 7 p.m S rn. doing. I think I was trying to be Phil Spector." Currently, Alexakis has plenty to do with his time apart from sitting in the studio. Thursday night will see Everclear's front- man hitting Clutch Entry in Pontiac for a solo :ch Cargo's Mill Street Entry 810-333-2362 for more info Cargo's Mill Street acoustic show. But Everclear fans need not fear. Bassist Craig Montoya and drummer Greg Eklund are still an integral part of the band, even if they won't be hitting Michigan this time around. Interestingly, Alexakis didn't choose to fly solo for the money, but instead for the memo- ries. "I've got a bunch of new songs and I used to do this years ago. I used to bus it. I'd like to get back to that," Alexakis reminisced. "Strip all my songs down to a really basic place and see if I can pull it off. It's a challenge." Best of all, while fans might miss the band's absent members, the response to Alexakis' solo performance has been outstanding. "People seem to go crazy for it," the vocalist said happily. "It has gone great!" Even with a solo acoustic tour, don't expect an solo album anytime in the future. On this tour, the band's singer hopes instead to do primarily Everclear tunes along with a few more diverse pickings. "Right now I'm just writing for Everclear so those are the songs I'm doing;' Alexakis shared. "I'll play a couple of older songs. A couple of songs that haven't made the records. Some new songs, some covers, whatever I feel like playing." If Alexakis does indeed play some of his newer tunes, the audience should be in for a treat, given the surprisingly electronic nature of "Pure White Evil." Of the new album, the singer said that it is, "different from a production point of view as well as an arrangement point of view. It has a lot more acoustic guitars. There are four songs that don't have distorted guitars on them ... a first for Everclear! It's also got strings on some songs, some horns, and then loops, drum beats and samples all over it. It's a different sounding record." For Alexakis, this difference is something for which he has always strived with Everclear's recordings. "We wanted to do something different on the last album. But, we also< wanted to make 'Sparkle and Fade' a really consum- mate rock record," the vocalist shared. "With the new album, this is the stuff I've been listening to" Despite the change in certain elements of sound, Alexakis has once again managed to share elements of his life through his lyrics. Always frank with his audiences, Everclear's vocalist has been up front concerning his past experi- ences with drugs, making Alexakis with Everc many of his songs all the more heartfelt and personal to his listeners. "People think a lot of times that with 'Sparkle and Fade' I'm singing from a personal point of view because it's first person, even though it's not. And sometimes they think I'm not and I am. It's hard to tell where it starts and it begins," Alexakis commented. "It's more of the same on this record, but it's at a different level. It's not the same things as I was talking about before, but the next step from them. I just write what I'm thinking and feeling." When he's not thinking about songs, Alexakis said he's thinking about bands. One of the A&R representatives for Capitol Records, this singer has been spending much of his time singing the praises of other musicians. Though he isn't allowed to share any of the details of what bands have caught his eye, he admitted to "having a few irons in the fire." Fortunately, Alexakis was free to dish the dirt on this year's South By Southwest music showcase in Austin, Texas. After taking part in the South By Southv annual music showcase in Austin, Alexakis, a Portland, Oregonian, is looking forward to scout- ing bands in his own city, thanks to the newer North By Northwest showcase. Though right now Alexakis is reserving judgement; 'he hopes that the Portland showcase will meet ' success. "[North y Northwest] doesn't seem like it's going to fromthe first few years. But South >:.By Southwest didn't seem like it was going to become what it's become. They all have their time," Alexakis stated. ar. For now, Art Alexakis has his own time in t spotlight. With an album to be finished, a s acoustic tour and a challenging A&R job, Everclear's frontman will have to struggle to make time for his top priorities, his wife and daughter. But, through it all, this vocalist will keep his sense of humor and drive, whether head- ing up a major label or teaching popular litera- ture. Certainly, while the music might be pure white evil, Art Alexakis' future remains anything but ever clear. :le Everclear's Art Alexakis will perform solo in Pon All's not laughs for new 'Arsenjo' sit-com Animal rights record gathers good material Various Artists By Kiran Nandalur For the Daily Arsenio Hall should be considered the greatest magician in the world. In 1994, after "The Arsenio Hall Show" was squashed in the ratings by Leno and Letterman, he pulled a spectacu- lar disappearing act wherein he went from a popu- lar and novel talk show host to the unemployment line and anonymi- ty almostw work and marriage. Meanwhile, her freeloading brother, Matthew (Alimi Ballard), stays in their house and acts to lighten the tension. The problems with the show root from the fact that the characters and writing are simple and sappy. Atwood E. V I E Arsenio ABC Wednesdiays at 9:30 p.m. seems absurdly deferential towards his wife, and his supposed anger towards Matthew appears contrived and unemotional. overnight. Three years later, in a time when the public craves big name comebacks like that of Bill Cosby and Ted Danson, Hall somehow has been able to ride the trend and get his own sitcom, "Arsenio." Unfortunately, the show doesn't highlight his stand-up skills or his old "nasty" kind of humor. Rather, it is a corny, lame and boring African American version of "Mad About You". The new ABC sitcom rotates around Michael Atwood (Arsenio Hall), an Atlanta sportscaster, and his new wife Vivian (Vivica Fox of "Independence Day"), an ambitious law associate, as they try to balance In the pilot, when Vivian doesn't get promoted and becomes isolated, he whines and makes obsequious jokes about his frustration in understanding her. Then, a standard obligatory reassur- ance of love occurs and the world is at peace once again. Hallelujah! Fox accentuates the ineptitude with her poor delivery and once again proves that models are an embarrass- ment to the art of acting. For example, when facing the dilemma of losing credibility with her firm or propelling her husband's career, she seems to be smiling and content. In addition, in her physical scenes with Hall, Fox acts like she is under coercion, thus mak- Arsenio Hall has a new show with a brand spanking new look. The comedy "Arsenlo" co-stars Vivica A. Fox and airs Wednesdays on ABC. ing chemistry between them impossi- ble. The show also fails on. the grounds that it takes place in some kind of warped pseudo-reality. Vivian looks like she is 24, but she is up for a partnership in a presti- gious law firm. Matthew is suppos- edly a distinguished college gradu- ate but acts like a character from "Martin." Finally, a marriage between Michael and the beautiful Vivian is as mismatched as one between Sharon Stone and Cheech Marn. Overall, Arsenio Hall should have either stayed out of the limelight or made a comeback on the stand-up cir- cuit. Because as a sit-com actor on a major network, he is unable to deliver the satirical sexual and racial jokes that once made him popular. Otherwise, Hall should have at least become part of a show with a better premise than "Arsenio:' Then again, considering where he was a year ago, he probably didn't have much of a choice. In Defense of Animals 2 Caroline Records Benefit compilations face a double- edged sword in that quality and cause both vie for attention. While the cause of a benefit compilation may certainly deserve merit, the quality of bands and/ or songs may not match the cause or vice versa. However, "In Defense of Animals 2" succeeds because of its worthy cause and the mostly unreleased tracks or remixes. Also, the bands fea- tured represent the whole gamut of today's music scene, such as punk-pop (Elastica), hard rock (White Zombie), and laid-back electronica (the Orb). Other notable acts included are Bjork, Chemical Brothers, PJ.. Harvey, Beastie Boys and Morphine. The compilation starts off with the Elastica b-side, "Brighton Rock" which offers one of their best tunes that, doesn't steal from either The Fall or Wire. The song ends with drummer Justin Welsh gracing us with his lovely vomit- like intonations. The Beastie Boys contribute "Son of Neckbone a track off of "The In Sound From Way Out," EP that demonstrates their talents extend beyond old-school rap and hardcore punk. White Zombie offers a surprisingly entertaining remix of "Electric Head" that is an exclusive on the compilation. This version seems much more darker and spookier than the original. The now- defunct Belly offer an exclusive track, "Spaceman," that exhibits the countri- fied vocals of Tanya Donelly backed by an acoustic guitar. Massive Attack vs. the Mad Professor's "Cosmic Dub (Sly)," and the Orb's "Slug Dub (The Lettuce Version)," slow down the pace of the compilation with their respective trip-hop and ambient feel. Meat Beat Manifesto's exclusive track, "We've Done It Again" aptly samples news reports of animal rights injustices with the counter of "We've Done It Again." Each track on this stellar compilation deserves mention and the variety of acts featured enable this compilation to stand on its own through the material itself. However, the cause (animal rights) presents itself constantly through the realization that artists such as Jack Dangers (Meat Beat ceed. The inlay offers enlightening lit- erature on what can be done to protect the rights of animals while the Seitan and Hummus wrap recipe by Mike* of the Beastie Boys provides food for your enlightened thought. - Philip Son' Robert Palmer The Very Best of Robert Palmer Guardian Records As the end of the decade nears,-the time for the '80s nostalgia albums has come, and Robert Palmer, having gone of the most memorable '80s videos, must have felt it to be his turn to press one. It's hard to forget Palmer and-his popular "Addicted to Love" video, featuring the singer and a chorus line:d mutant six-foo' female clones in tight black dresses with .......: slicked-back hair. Besides "Addicted to Love" the disc also includes 16 other Palmer hits, including "Bad Case of Loving You" and "Simply Irresistible." The Palmer-ites among you may now be saying to yc selves, "I've already got those songs in my extensive Robert Palmer album col- lection. Why should I buy this album?" Apparently Palmer asked himself the same question and solved this common predicament by adding "Addicted to Love '97" to the disc. You'll be hard- pressed to notice any major difference though. Other than a slightly slower beat and a deeper bass line, "Addicted '97" is identical to the original. The rest of the album abounds cheesiness with song titles like "I Didn't Mean to Turn You On," "Some Guys Have All the Luck" and "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight." This disc is so pop it hurts. Although rock 'n' roll is still relative- ly young, it has managed to develop a few of its own traditions. The greatest hits album is one. "The Very Best of Robert Palmer" is another disc that fol- lows in this tradition, and will pro be available at gas stations, truck sto s and convenience stores as well as the local record store. If you have a burning desire to recreate the '80s, buy the disc, but ifyou're just looking for a little nos- talgia, go see Star Wars. I hear it's ptet- We've got some notes youl'l be happy to take. i