8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 21, 2000 MARSHALL DELIVERS 'POWER' ON COVERS' Victory dishes semi- triumphant compilaton Back in high school, everyone had some sort of tie to a cover band. You might've played in one, or at the very least, knew one or two people that did. Whatever the case, the band always did its best to imitate contemporary rock hero's, did- n't it? Cat Power is the nom de plume of eccentric southern singer/songwriter Chan (pronounced Shaun) Marshall. On her latest release, ''The Covers Record,' Marshall performs 12 songs, I1 of which are covers. But none of them can be rightly termed imitations. This record is a far cry from the realization of the dreams of every cover band that ever lived. Instead of going the typical "look how much I can sound like the famous guy" route, Marshall, backed by only guitar and piano, has chosen to weave a rich musical tapestry scanti- Grade: A- ly based on the works of other well known and not so Cat Power well known artists. "The The Covers Record Covers Record" is a strik- Matador ingly original homage, not an imitation. Reviewed by The album opens with Daily Arts Editor what one major music net- Gabe Fajuri work recently voted the number one rock song of the last century, the Rolling Stones standard, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction." Not once during her version does Marshall actually sing the words that make up the song's title. And yet this version, though sounding nothing like the origi- nal, has been crafted into something extremely beautiful and serene. Beautiful and serene might not be what the Stones had in mind, but this ver- sion is just as good as the original. The rest of the record is much of the same - though only one track was written by Marshall ("In This Hole"), they all sound like the second coming of Cat Power, a semi-reprisal of 1998's acclaimed "Moon Pix." Each number, no matter who the writer, takes on the unique personality of the haunting musical mastermind that is Chan Marshall. As a matter of fact, the only song on the album that even slightly resembles a previ- ous incarnation is the traditional "Salty Dog," a tune I remember singing as a little kid. Marshall's treatment of the song elevates it from a traditional folk number to a delightful acoustic jangle. Unlike the aforementioned Stones track, the vast majority of the material Marshall covers on this record isn't nearly as well known. Though she dips into the catalogs of artists like Bob Dylan ("Paths of Victory" and his version of "Kingsport Town." another traditional), a major- ity of the record's space is devoted to artists like Michael Hurley, Smog and Phil Phillips, Which doesn't make a bit of difference when it comes to the stripped-down, emotionally raw nature of Marshall's performances. If this effort is any indication, she could cover Van Halen's "Hot for Teacher" and make it sound like uber-mellow indie folk-rock gold. The two best tracks on the disc are also the most weepy of the lot. "I Found a Reason" and "Wild is the Wind" are originally Velvet Underground and Nina Simone compositions, respectively. "Wild is the Wind," on a bad day, is poignant enough to make even the most cold- hearted soul bawl. As Marshall strikes one aston- ishingiy stark piano chord after the next, her per- fectly sculpted voice calls out "Love Me/Love Me/Say you Do/Let me Fly Away With You." She goes on, "You touch me/I hear the sound of man- dolins baby/you kiss me/with your kiss my life begins." And though it reads like pure sap on paper, those lyrics, with the full Cat Power treat- ment, are nothing short of heart-wrenching. With no orchestra or fancy production tricks to hide behind, Marshall bears it all to listeners, who will be well-rewarded listen after listen. Dripping with sadness and slow tempoed numbers, "The Covers Record" proves Marshall more than just a supremely talented songwriter. After all, she only wrote one of the tracks on the album. What the record proves is that Marshall is a gifted musical performer. The tracks that make up this release can be characterized as sonically sparse at best. But on her own, with nothing more than her naked voice and two of the most basic instruments to protect her, Marshall is at her strongest. Moby Grape's "Naked if I Want To," is a near sublime acoustic guitar ballad, yet could be played by most aspir- ing finger-pickers after only a couple of attempts. The same goes for the piano work on much of the record - I could play this stuff fair- ly easily even though I quit taking lessons after a few years. Complexity is not the issue here. "The Covers Record" makes clear the fact that Cat Power is about the performer and her gift for making captivatingly simple and poetic music that is hard to match in beauty or depth. That beauty reaches its pinnacle on the record's seventh track, "I Found a Reason." Marshall prac- tically weeps her way through the all-together too short song. And though its lyrics, like those on the rest of the record are not hers, Marshall makes perfect sense in sweetly singing "What comes is better/than what came before. And you better run/run run/run run/to me." "The Covers Record" is better than the release that came before it. I only hope it won't be too difficult to top the next time around. With its latest release in the "Victory Style" series, Victory Records presents a collection of 23 many new and unreleased, tracks from as many artists. This edition features some definite gems from the hardcore giant's roster. However, the problem is that there exists a huge contrast of styles evident on one recording. The album moves quickly from the fero- cious growls of Integrity 2000 and Buried Alive to the emo influenced Grade to the straight out skate punk of Grevarca. The lack of continuity works as a source of disruption but also as an affirmation of Victory Records' diversity. "Victory Style 4" presents new material from the highly anticipated releases of Earth f Crisis and Shelter. Earth Grade: C+ Crisis' "In the Victory Style 4 Wire" opens the Various Artists album with extremely tight Victory Records rhythms and sur- Reviewed by prisingly melodi- Daily Arts Writer ous guitar lines Andy Klein juxtapoaed against a quieter almost rapping section. Shelter's "When 20 Summers Pass" follows and opens with a straight forward yet com- pelling punk rhythm before breaking into a chorus of Ray Cappo's charac- teristic searching for unity. Snapease contribute "Typecast Modulator" from their recently released "Designs for Automotion." The song's lyrics of "don't give us safe interpretations, we want to know the ugly truth" is a perfect representation of the ban's urgings to find individual- ity and truth in a world of conformity. Another stellar contribution to the album is "Rookie" from Boy Sets Fire's forthcoming album "After the Eulogy." The song begins with p crescendoing guitar line that propels the pace of the song until the drums enter in full stride. As always Boy Sets. Fire offers heartfelt lyrics of striving and suffering like, "I used to be a lot like you, now I'm only m " One reason why this track sticks is that it is long enough for musical development and differentiation to occur. Despite these triumphs, the album has some less impressive material. Whether it is The Strike's "Shots Heard Round The World" which sounds a bit too much like The Ramone's "I Want to Be Sedated" under sedation or Integrity 2000's vocals that are impossible to decip r without a lyric sheet. NevertheI, "Victory Style 4" does not cease to have its high points. If the consistent level of gravity and purpose could only be paralleled by a consistent flow of music than "VS4" would be an exceptional album. All of the songs can stand on their own. It is just that they don't seem to fit togeth- er like the band's individual releases do. However, as a sampler of 0 Victory Records catalogue, "VS4" serves its duty well. $ Innerzone builds soulful 'house' Innerzone Orchestra's "Programmed" album was one of the most important releases of 1999. Its fusion of musical styles (jazz, electronic, hip hop) pushed boundaries and deconstructed rigid notions of genre, challenging listeners around the world. One of the stand out tracks on Grade: A- the album was a cover of the Innerzone Stylistics' "People Make the Orchestra World Go Round." The cover featured the vocals of Paul People Make.. Randolph (Muddpuppy) and Planet E Craig Taborn on keyboards, Reviewed by as well as flautist Alan Barnes Daily Arts Writer and Susan Schreiber (Detroit Joshua Taaffe Symphony Orchestra) on vio- lins. The inspiration for the cover was apparently Carl Craig's inability to find a copy of the version of the track which he fell in love with as a child. This 12" presents remixes of the track by Carl Craig and Moodymann (Kenny Dixon Jr.). Moodymann's KDJ mix discards much of the orig- inal material, opting instead to recreate the track in his own studio, employing the talents of Funkadelic members Bubs and Amp Fiddler on bass and key- boards and long-time collaborator Norma Jean Bell on Soprano Saxophone. The result is a soulful jam- session, anchored by the slow, plodding kick drum that has come to typify the Detroit "roots house" sound. The keyboards and sax build off of the central melody of the original track, sometimes wandering in and out of focus. Half way through the track sud- denly jumps tempo for a more forceful vibe. Moodymann trades in the vocals of Taborn opting for his own occasional spoken comments. This reconstruction gives the track a fundamentally dif- ferent aesthetic to the original. One of the most orig- inal remixes of late - worthy of the global excite- ment that it has caused. Carl Craig's Future mix immediately starts off with a different focus, Taborn's vocal and organic guitar sounds. Slowly an oscillating electronic frequency emerges and is soon joined by a violin and kick, hi-hat percussion. Much of the produc- tion juxtaposes the electronic and the organic, 2-disc set makes for listening 'Odyssey' playing off the tension between the two. The track eventually shifts into a syncopated jazzy drum work-out that strolls out of the tradition 4/4 terri- tory. A flute and a reverberating snare sound enter the mix to close out the track and again the lis- tener is met with a'radical re-working of the orig- inal; remixes that explore different territory and ideas. Destined to be one of the more memorable 12's of the year. Techno. Rave. House. Big Beat. Dance. Electronica. Each name repre- sents a subtle variation on the common theme of electronic dance music. The producers of "Machine Soul: An odyssey into electronic dance music," have attempted to unify the different subgenres into a coherent timeline docu- menting the evolution of the modern club scene. Admittedly a four-cd set trimmed down to two discs, "Machine Soul" is remarkable for the scope that it manages to cover in such a short compilation. Reaching back as far as 1977, the album follows the course of electronic dance music as it incorporates new technology Vue and Gunga Din deliver dark debuts On his band's self-titled debut, Vue singer Rex Shelverton screeches, howls and screams like a man possessed. We're not, sure exactly what he's so pissed about (lost love? sexual frustra- tion? that there is no god?) but he's def- initely trying to purge his soul of some- thing or other, and when his caterwaul- ing combines with his bandmates' dark and raucous grooves, it makes for a powerful - and intelligent - brand of angst-rock, something like Alanis Morrissette gone indie. Songs like "One White Traffic" and "Nothing Left But You" show off Vue's main stock-in-trade: Spacey and distort- ed guitars, loping bass lines, tom-tom- heavy drum beats, Shelverton's embit- tered lyrics. "The Shame" sounds like the Replacements' Paul Westerberg backed by the Buzzcocks, with Shelverton ominously chanting "That's right!/(I'm) fallin' down with you" - an epithet that's either grating or emotional- ly-charged, depending on your ability to tolerate howling front men. Though the band turns down the vol- ume on "Her Moods," a soothing Grade: The Gunga Gliterati Jetset Records Reviewed by Daily Arts Writer christian Hoard Grade: B Vue Vue Sub Pop (though still dark) instrumental, "Vue" is for the most part a record wrought with anger, passion and ferocity. But don't mistake these San Franciscans for a bunch of neo- punks set on sonic nihilism: They're loud, yes, but they're also metic- ulous, and their attention to detail as instrumental- ists keeps things interesting - even if you can't quite "Gliteratti," the Din's debut record, bears only a little of Vue's in-your-face rage, instead alternating between hard- driving rockers and slower, ominous numbers that come complete with deli- cately-brushed percussion and horror- movie organ swells. One of the group's great strengths is singer Siobhan Duffy's voice: Deep and sultry, it sizzles on lines like "Don't trv to make me laugh / My wounds they'll split / And you can only say / 'Everyone feels this way' / I can only disagree." Amid the fat basslines and chiming gui- tars of "Let's Play a Game," she turns the tale of a lover's sinfulness into a series of sing-songish rhymes: "Pain, pain / Your loss is my gain / Revenge is the only way / To wash down the drain / All the lies that you tell." On the down side, there is a certain blandness which pervades several of "Glitterati"'s tracks, as if, in the midst of its shadowy eccentricity, the Gunga Din is afraid to write tunes that are catchy and inviting. This minor gripe aside, "Glitterati" is nonetheless a more than promising first effort, chan- Grade: B+ Machine Soul: An Odyssey into Electronic Dance Music Rhino Reviewed by Daily Arts Writer David Reamer and techniques. As sampling, drum machines, and new synthe- sizing effects enter the music on the discs, the lin- ear notes describe the design and impact of the new procedures. For anyone intrigued by these notes, the compilation also comes with a suggest- ed reading list of music histories. The set's first disc is dedicated to the early evolution of electronic dance music. Covering material from 1977- 1987, the disc is comprised of familiar and obscure samples from that period. Recently covered tracks like Gary Numan's "Cars" and "Blue Monday" by New Order are placed alongside works by electronic pioneers Kraftwerk and Afrika Bambaataa & the Soul Sonic Force, blurring distinctions of time. One of the more visible inclusions is Donna Summer's "I Feel Love," a piece that rides the borderline between disco/pop and modern electronic dance. The second disc focuses mainly on the music of the 90s, arguably the peak of electronic dance. Among the notable tracks on the disc are the Depeche Mode hit "Enjoy the Silence," "Pump up the Volume" by M/A/R/R/S, and Moby's "Go" Also included are early tracks from The Prodigy and The Chemical Brothers, taken from their respective debut albums in the United Kingd The disc and the compilation end A Godspeed's "BT," released in 1999, which represents the current state of electronic dance music. As a musical compilation, the set has its highs and lows. Although the anthol- ogy advertises itself as "a great party album," it has several conspicuous lulls in intensity. A number of the songs included are musical experiments, an fair amount of those experimentsAW not totally successful. As technology improves, though, so does the music's appeal, and by the third or fourth song the collection establishes a relatively solid groove. The second disc in particu- lar is consistent in terms of quality. "Machine Soul" is a pleasing collec- tion of dance tracks, but it is even more important as a history of dance music as it has evolved over the past twenty-five years. As monstrous as that undertaki sounds in the context of a two disc , "Machine Soul" does an admirable job, and is worth a listen. feel Shelverton's pain. Like their West Coast counterparts, New York's the Gunga Din specialize in the sort of stylized darkness practiced by the Doors and Joy Division. But unlike Shelverton and company, this quintet prefers to sound subtly cryptic rather than noisily pissed-off. neling Jim Morrisson's dark spirit and manipulating it in exciting new ways. And, along with "Vue;" it announces the arrival of two bands that will.hope- fully stick around for a while, whether gloominess becomes their trademark or just proves a passing phase. T We're looking for 25 recent college grads for a unique, career-building opportunity in mortgage banking. A m i