8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 27, 2001 4 I'm Waking Up To Us, Belle and Sebastian; Matador/Jeepster It takes eight people to make the simple sound that is Belle and Sebastian. This Scot- tish wimp-pop band with the funny French name usually finds strength in numbers, but their new three song EP shows them getting down to business in under 13 minutes. The British (and Scottish, and Irish and miscella- neous U.K.-ish) kids already fancy Belle and Sebastian, as does a small cult of American college girls in thrift store cardigans and nouveau granny glasses - and you should too. If you don't know about Belle and Sebast- ian, you're rather behind the times (this album being something like their 12th offi- cial release), but hopefully now that you've found them, they aren't past their prime." Their first major release, 1996's If You're Feeling Sinister, cemented their place in the hearts of indie geek girls and brokenhearted boys, but Belle and Sebastian have yet to top that Burt-Bacharach-meets-Travis-with-a-lisp perfection found on Sinister. Though it's not for a lack of trying. The band has attempted to add electronic elements (drum loops, samples) and rotate lead vocal duties over their subsequent albums, giving them an expanded - and often uneven -- sound. Unfortunately, despite the band's size and willingness to experiment, their best songs combine sim- plicity and old-fashioned melodic quality, not electronic pseudo-innovation or vocal variety. Though all of the band's vocalists are talent- ed, primary lead singer/writer Stuart Mur- doch should act as the only lead singer/writer, as the band's past attempts at executive democracy have done nothing but detract from their overall quality. But Belle and Sebastian's new, and teasing- ly brief, EP I'm Waking Up To Us offers a return to fine form. The title single floats a soft, acoustindie ditty over a cloud of strings and brass. Though the instant catch of Sinis- ter has yet to be consistently recovered, each of Waking's tracks has something poppy going for it. "I Love My Car" drives along with a trifecta of brass, bass and drums sup- plying the power and the pop, while "Marx and Engels" lets snappy little guitar and vibes bits snake sleekly through the piano part. If they can keep this up for an entire album, Belle and Sebastian may be poised to make a comeback. A full-length sustentation of the song quality found on their recent sin- gles (like this summer's Jonathan David and this latest one) would definitely swing the Belle and Sebastian sound trajectory back in a positive direction. So, jump back on the Belle and Sebastian bandwagon before it regains much more musical momentum. The cardigan kids are on their way up again. Grade: B- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone: Original Motion Pic- ture Soundtrack, John Williams; Atlantic I My, my, what a surprise. "Harry Potter," one of the biggest films of the year, is finally upon us, and John Williams, of all people, provides the musical accompaniment. With nearly 80 film soundtracks under his belt, Williams has certainly become the most prolific film composer of the last 25 years. While the music from "Harry Potter" is further proof of Williams' supremacy, it fails to break any new ground for the composer and take on a life apart from the film. Movie critics have lauded director Chris Columbus for making "Harry Potter" so faithful to the book, and likewise, Williams' score is remarkably well-tailored for the film. In typical Williams fashion, the opening track begins with a har- rowing yet playful xylophone theme that carries throughout the score. This theme, which transfers over to the strings and brass in later tracks, sets the tone for the world of Harry Pot- ter. Williams' orchestration is adept at conveying the dark undertones of Potter's adventures, shrouding the film in a low, lyrical cello and mellow flute. You might leave the theater humming "Hedwig's Theme," but may also ask yourself if you've heard it before. Williams does quite a bit of recycling from previous scores, most notably "Jurassic Park," "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Angela's Ashes." Considerable trumpet fanfare is almost a given in a Williams soundtrack and you'll find plenty of it on tracks such as "Harry's Wonderous World." These brass themes instantly remind one of the closing scenes to "Jurassic Park," flying above a dinosaur-infested island in a helicopter. The audience has left Isla Nublar - but Williams has failed 0 On the other hand, Williams often blesses his score with tracks such as "The Quidditch Match," which perfectly cap- tures the frenzy of the fast-paced game. Here, the whirling, flying athletes onscreen are matched by Williams' scurrying violins and schizophrenic brass choir. But on the whole, Williams seems to want to play it safe; the soundtrack to "Harry Potter" is remarkably tame and lacks the emotional fire needs to become a classic. Grade: B Cocky, Kid Rock; Atlantic By Rob Brode Daily Arts Writer One of the many mouths of Detroit is back motoring again. The brash brava- do that is Kid Rock is back once more to share tales of carnal conquest, copi- ous cocaine consumption, the delights of drinking and his trademark self-aggrandizement. Cockv is the follow up to 1998's Devil Without a Cause. While it is a successor, it is not a sequel. Three years on the road and hobnob- bing with his former idols, now cohorts i.e. Aerosmith, ZZ Top and Lynyrd Skynyrd has taught the Kid a little more about Rock. The engine that drove Devil Without a Cause to its multi-platinum status is lodged deep within Cock's frame but the fixtures around the trailer are differ- ent this time around. Public domain metal riffs a la "Bawitdaba" roar in the first half of the CD, most prominently on the album's first single "Forever." The album's title track "Cocky" is the epitome of what Rock fans have come to expect, with big drums in the verse before the onslaught of fuzz blade gui- tars carrying Kid Rock's swaggering vocals like a high tide as he sings "They Say I'm Cocky/and I say what?/it ain't bragging motherfucker if you back it up." Classic Rock gives way to the new, two parts "Only God Knows Why" to every part "American Badass." "Lonely Road of Faith" unveils the new coun- try/folk sound layered with acoustic guitars and plaintive pianos mixed with a dash of falsetto harmonies. To ease the listener into the new sound, "Lonely Road" changes pace halfway through, morphing into another rap/rock combo. But bluegrass boogie bubbles up again on "Midnight Train to Memphis" but is yet again quelled by the Kid's urge to rock halfway through. The plangent melody of "I've lost another good one/she's on the midnight train to Mem- phis" turns into the pimp's proverb of "fuck a bitch, fuck a bitch, fuck a bitch." Rock's inability to commit to a style is both jarring and disappointing, ruining a perfectly good bluegrass tune with rap or vice versa. Rock makes gallant strides forward away from the limiting and dying genre of rap/rock, distancing himself from acts like P.O.D. and Limp Bizkit, who are content with living within the cramping confines of rapcore. Using his voice for singing instead of just rapping and taking his hands off his crotch long enough to lay down some dirty south blues on the guitar distinguishes Kid Rock from to the one- dimensional artists littered all over the Billboard charts. Growth is apparent, but so are growing pains. Bi-polar disor- der compromises the continu- ity of too many of the tracks, derailing solid songs into dis- array. Cocky has a bunch of good but ill-fitted ideas, but if Rock decides to pursue his heart's musical desires and .:""k continues to learn from the rock icons he now calls friends, he will truly have something to be cocky about Grade: C- Genesis, Busta Rhymes; J Records By Dustin J. Seibert Daily Arts Writer Great googaly-moogaly ... where to start? It's like watching The Detroit Lions play on a big-screen television with a Steven Seagal movie on the pic- ture-in-a-picture feature, while eating a bowl of Special K with a Tom Jones/Engelbert Humperdinck album playing at full volume. It's like a grown man being circumcised with no anes- thesia shortly after watching Halle Berry's topless scene in "Swordfish." It's like your husband leaving you and your nine children for an airline stew- ardess because he feels that you are getting a little "chunky around the edges." It's like being tied to a chair with your eyelids clamped open, arms tied around your back, butt-naked packed in a mound of snow being forced to watch the last two minutes of the Michigan/Michigan State football over and'over. The "Battlefield Earth" of hip-hop albums, Genesis reads as a blueprint to end one's otherwise luxurious career. How Busta Rhymes has the unmitigated gall to give his devout fans such a poor record escapes me. While his 1996 mag- num opus, The Cioming, can be consid- ered one of the few innovative albums in 'ie history of hip-hop, each of his fol- lowing albums are increasingly lacklus- ter in quality; with this his fifth solo I turn, he has outdone his own deplorable levels of despicable music making, evi- denced in his 2000 atomic bomb Anar- chy. Never has this reviewer desired his $15 back so much. Jerry Falwell could squat and take a shit on a CD-R and produce something more aurally pleas- ing than this filth. Not even his producers could help revive the listener from this sleep-induc- ing album. Dr. Dre is supposed to be the big-deal producer for this album, but he must have been hung over when he pro- duced the pitiful "Holla" and the sub- par first single "Break Ya Neck." Relative unknown Yogi had the nerve to sample a Curtis Mayfield classic and completely botch it. Even superior pro- ducers Jay Dee and Diamond D went to the bottom of their bag of beats for Busta. The only halfway decent track that saves the album from total failure and obscurity is "Shut Em Down 2002," the Pete Rock-produced remake of the original Public Enemy jam ... even still, P.E. did it better. Plain and simple, Busta is just boring I 6 C1 efSM - ~ I hbet ; cites the m lek Comi~ie "l amm P