8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 29, 1997 Charlatans UK rock Ponti ac By Brian Cohen Daily Arts Writer Throughout the last seven years, The Charlatans UK has run into more than its share of roadblocks on the long and winding road to and from success. In fact, when you consider the outrageous amounts of mis- fortune and tragedy that the Manchester group has had to sift through and endure, it really is a wonder that the group is still together at all, let alone one of the year's biggest-selling acts abroad. The problems didn't start until after its 1990 debut album "Some Friendly" reached the elusive No. 1 spot in the U.K. But then things quickly plummeted when original guitarist John Baker quit the band, and shortly thereafter, bassist Martin Blunt had to be hospitalized for a nervous breakdown. Then the British press destroyed the band's second and third albums "Between 10th and 11th" and "Up To Our Hips'" but not before keyboardist Rob Collins was thrown in jail for four months for aiding and abetting in an armed robbery. But wait there's more. Things started to pick up in the months following its return-to-No. 1-spot release R "The Charlatans," and after a short breakR the band was ready to start recording its N fifth album. But after leaving the studio Te one day from one of those sessions, In Collins was killed in a car crash. T "The (new) LP was 80 percent written when Rob died," Charlatans drummer John Brookes said in a recent interview with The Michigan Daily. "We'd recorded most of the stuff in some form. We already had a good idea of what the LP was gonna sound like, so we didn't want to med- dle with it or start adding or taking away." Rather than completely change the direction of the band musically or physically, The Charlatans appeared determined to continue with the same intensity that it had displayed in years past. "Although we had to deal with Rob passing on, which was hard enough in itself, we had one lucky bonus that the record was done and we had something to focus on. We didn't want to write a lot of songs and depress everybody." Sure enough, this emotional period in The Charlatans' career was not the painful end that many fans and critics had expected. "We were stopped in the middle of working, and we took a break to contemplate a lot of things, and we decided to come back and finished what we started," Brookes added. "And with that sort of attitude, we've sort of bounced back.' And bounce back it has indeed. The new album "Tellin' Stories" triumphantly emerged with a two-week reign at No. I in the U.K. Since then, stand-in keyboardist Tony Rodgers became an official Charlatan, and the band launched a world- wide tour including the tremendous T In The Park and Phoenix festivals in England. The band's latest American tour is now underway, and Brookes was confident about his band's chances. "We've been coming out for six years, so we've always felt comfort- Dyson to read at Shaman tonight 1 i r z The Charlatans UK played industry in Pontiac last week. able in America, and this time is no exception, in fact this time we feel there's a sense of huge optimism. We think that we're really starting to get somewhere. We feel like our roots are starting to branch out a little bit more." On Thursday, The Charlatans brought its catchy brand of straight-ahead pop to The Industry in Pontiac. After much waiting and cheering, the band walked onto the club's ridicu- lously small stage and ignited into "With No Shows," the first song off "Tellin' Stories." The brash rocker had the crowd involved from the get go, and segued nicely into the album's bouncy second single "North Country Boy." Frontman Tim Burgess was a volatile mixture of unkempt stubble and cigarette smoke as he sneered out most of the mate- rial from "Tellin' Stories." His overly Bob Dylan-esque vocals wore thin on "Get On It," as did his wildly talented single-note harmonica contribution. But his performance on the new album's stellar title track was nothing short of inspirational. The band's largest hit to date, "One To Another," poured from the speakers and had the crowd pogo-ing with delight. The die-hards continued to jumped up E V I E W and down to earlier singles "Can't Get Out Of Bed," "Weirdo;" and "Just When Charlatans UK You're Thinking Things Over." During a keyboard-laden "You're A Big ndustry, Pontiac Girl Now" Burgess pranced around stage, hursday, Sept. 25, 1997 feigning boredom during the solos, and mouthed unintelligible comments to the audience. In fact, throughout the entire night, Burgess did nothing on stage that Liam Gallagher doesn't do 100 times better. The audience had to wait until the encore to hear The Charlatan's best song, but finally the powerful single "How High" was delivered with a thick and brawny punch of guitar and bass. If The Charlatans are going to make any serious waves in the United States, then this is the song that can do it for them. The small Industry crowd was certainly a bit of a change for a group used to playing to far greater audiences abroad. Yet Brookes said that adjusting to the differences between the types of gigs was not hugely problematic. "If we get the feel- ing like (American crowds) have gone away with the same sort of buzz that we can create for 30,000 people in Britain, than that'll do us fine?' The band is starting to turn some American heads. And for- get about those old Stone Roses comparisons. "The Charlatans have always had to be original," Brookes added. "We've had our periods where people couldn't give a shit about us, so all that we could have done was just to be our- selves. We've found that's been the best policy. We're not that commercially oriented or commercially smart." No matter what the future holds for the Manchester quin- tet, they seem poised to do things strictly on their own terms. "We've never been the sort of band that's felt we've got to sell ourselves to anybody, and if we've got to start making oprselves look stupid, then fuck it - we're not interested. We're certainly not gonna be anybody's dancing fool" By Cara Spindler For the Daily Michigan's Eight Mile Road can be conceived of as a color line, as an eco- nomic line, as a cultural line between the economically suffering core of an industrial city and one of the richest P R counties in the U.S.; it is a micro- Michai cosm of the nation. In a simi- lar way, during and following the O.J. Simpson trial, there were distinct lines such as race and class that were pushed to the spotlight. These are some of the multiple forms of divisions that Michael Dyson's "Race Rules" inter- prets. Dyson is a visiting professor at Columbia's Institute for Research in African-American Studies, an ordained Baptist minister and, in his own words, "a Detroit homeboy." In "Race Rules: Navigating the Color Line;" Dyson offers a collection of essays that argue we, as a nation, are not as colorblind as some would like to believe. "The tragedy of our condition is that we have a Supreme Court, and many other Americans, who have ignored the rules of race, how race continues to shape American life," said Dyson. Dyson highlights both the blatant and the subtle ways that race continues to shape our lives in an engaging and multi-sourced view of black culture, white culture, youth culture and reli- gious culture, to name a few. Throughout the book, Dyson cites history to explain the how-and-why of the present. Although he is an academ- ic, his explication of historical events is never dry: Anyone that juxtaposes Ralph Ellison with Snoop and Dr. Dre's rap "Nothin' But a G Thang" at a Princeton conference is not scared of mixing elements. And his ability to pull EVIEW el Eric Dyson Tonight at 8 p.m. Shaman Drum Free decision. What history into the present makes events like the O.J. case into a coherent whole. Dyson can take parts and coagulate them into meaning. In "Race Rules," Dyson begins with an interpretation of what the infamous Simpson case means in terms of America's fasci- nation with it, and the social meaning surrounding the racially divided out- come of the jury's he terms "the most ugly racial spectacle to hit America in decades" is placed in a context that makes us understand, if not like, part of the media's (and our own) fascina- tion with the case. Through Simpson, he offers an interpretation of the divi- sions surrounding the case and how they formed. In an incredible chapter on "Black Youth, Pop Culture and the Politics of Nostalgia; Dyson reflects on Hip-Hop and its historical relation to black musi- cal style - the black oral culture, blues, jazz, rock 'n' roll, soul music and blax- plotation flicks. In the argument of where hip-hop originated, South or West Bronx, Dyson pulls in its relation to Jamaican ska, which itself is a hybrid. From music, Dyson creates a picture of black youth culture today. Dyson takes a standpoint on a variet* of things - like the black churches responsibility toward educating its mem- bers (particularly its youth) about sex; Louis Farrahkan's and Colin Powell's leadership roles; the Million Man March and black womens' reactions to it. This collection of essays carries the topic of divisions and lines within groups of people throughout, but it seems that there should be some over- whelming commentary to pull it aIJk together. The lack of a big, easy sum mation was hard on me, because race and all its baggage can be a hard topic. Don't miss Dyson read from "Race Dyson, author of "Race Rules" will read from his work tonight at Shaman Drum. Promise Ring's latest offers everything 'Good' The Promise Ring Nothing Feels Good Jade Tree Records "Nothing Feels Good" is totally wrong when you listen to the new Promise Ring record. The fact is, every- thing about this record feels absolutely marvelous. Starting right where it left off with last year's gem "30 Degrees Everywhere," and this past summer's release of the singles compilation EP "The Horse Latitudes;" the youngsters in Wisconsin's own Promise Ring have taken the imperfections of those record- ings and come up with something more beautiful and desirable. This time, "Nothing Feels Good" blends the colors of Von Bohlen's voice so well with the vibrant melodies of the rest of the band that the palette is bound to deliver a masterpiece, and it does. The Promise Ring takes its ultra-pop experience one step further on "Nothing Feels Good," and leaves some of the draggier tempos of past songs like "My Firetower Flame" and "Saturday" behind. The album is quick, yet intricate and accurate. "Is This Thing On" starts the album off in a hurry, and blends nicely into "Perfect Lines" another catchy pop gem. "A Broken Tenor" and "A Raspberry Rush" lend a few surprises, as does the rest of the disc, with the addition of some new instrumentation like the mellotron, and something that sounds like a violin. It seems like the Promise Ring has taken a more straight-for- ward stance on timing for "Nothing Feels Good" as well, as the off-kilter tempos of "30 Degrees Everywhere" are replaced with sweet, punchy, pop- punk. Now that Texas Is The Reason is no longer with us, it looks as if the Promise Ring stands to conquer the world, and what better way than with a full-blown American tour. All you swooning girls and sensitive boys should get your butts to the Club Soda in Kalamazoo tonight to watch Von Bohlen and the boys croon away and play their little hearts out. The show starts at 7 p.m., and it's all ages, so what have you got to lose? - Colin Bartos Voted Best Record Store in 1997 4" -Michigan Daily Readership Poll AIndependent is better T I trebl ohir"are" an -ee she fla~w" I Pickup the new Patti Smith "Peace and Noise" Available Tuesday 9/30 CD $12n89 Enter to win a signed Patti Smith lithograph TrebIe Charger 'The 're Superb; Just Be Care ul Not to Overdose" CD $1189 Free Treble Charger T-shirt with puchase while supplies last, Olive '"Extra Virgin CD $12x89 If you think you're pregnanL. call us-we listen, we care. PROW..EM PREGNANCY KELP 975-4357.. Any time,.any day, 24 hours. Fully confidentaL. Serving %tudents sne1970. 0 College sophomores and juniors are invited to apply for the CIA's Student Programs for Summer 1998. The programs are designed to give promising undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to gain practical work experience to complement their academic studies. While earning competitive incomes, students will participate in meaningful work assignments commensurate with 6 'ts se their academic training. Housing assistance is provided. Other work programs for students are also available. DESIRED MAJORS: Electrical engineering, computer engineering, computer science, mathematics, economics, physics, remote sensing, languages, international studies, logistics/supply/procurement, business administration, geography, accounting and finance. REQUIRED: US citizenship, a minimum 2.75 GPA following freshman year and successful comple- tion of a medical examination, a polygraph interview and an extensive background investigation. LOCATION: Washington, DC/Northern Virginia area. TQ APPLY: Complete and return the Interest Form below with your resume no later than October 9, 1997. Prompt response is required to ensure consideration for summer 1998 employment. \- - - - - - - - - - - - - Free Olive T-shirt with purchase of "Extra Virgin" while supplies last. Chris Duarte Group Tai.lspinHad a : * CD $12m89 CIA INTEREST FORM Name: Phone: __ Current Address: I