w 12B - The Michigan Daily - Weekend Magazine - Thursday, January 16, 2003 Dinosaur Jr. debut a synthesized classic By Scott Serilla Daily Music Editor By the middle of the '80s, the first wave of American underground music was already start- ing to ebb. West coast punk stalwarts Black Flag and The Minutemen were breaking up and taking hardcore down with them. Indie's own Minnesota twins, Husker D6 and The Replacements, were packing their bags for the big leagues of major labels (and in the process making their own demises inevitable). So we enter act two, in which a new group of young heroes fight to keep' rock and roll alive and give smart malcontents everywhere something worth listening to instead of LA hair-metal and New Wave's plastic synth-pop. These were the chil- dren of '70s, kids who hadn't known punk as a fledgling revolution or a new experiment, but as a well-established institution. For them alt-rock was already a given. An offhanded comment by Kurt Cobain 10 years ago about ripping off Black Francis insured The Pixies would get the credit they deserved for laying the foundation for Nirvana and their peers. He then gave props to The Meatpuppets by covering their tunes during their "Unplugged" set on MTV And Sonic Youth ... well they're still around and can fend for them- selves for all I care. It's way too easy though to forget that the Grunge explosion and the resulting break- through of '90s alternative in general wouldn't have been possible without a threesome of proto- slackers from Massachusetts, who decided that there was more to great rock then crunching out three chords at hyperspeed and screaming pseu- do-radical slogans. Out of the ashes of the little later hardcore out- fit Deep Wound came the sonic fury of Dinosaur Jr., a contradic- tion of a band who loved early the punk and classic rock equally :ault (because punk was already classic to them, a linear part of the past instead of a reaction against). Guitarist/vocalist/main songwriter J. Mascis, bassist Lou Barlow and drummer Murph were three freaks who didn't fit into the conventional punk world. Together they fused a blunt-ended force of hardcore, the guilty pleas- ure of old school heavy metal, the arty white noise of Sonic Youth and Neil Young's melodic grunge rock, complete with country and folk tinges. Their 1987 classic "You're Living All Over Me", their debut for legendary label SST, is remarkable for two enduring reasons. First, it is the synthesis of almost everything that came before, the whole history of rock. Sixteen years later you still can't label it. Greatness always defies classification and standing above genres. The second reason is that Mascis single-hand- edly saves the guitar solo for the indie masses. The album is packed from start to finish with jaw-dropping, cathartic explosions that re-intro- duced obsolete effects like the wah-wah pedal to alt-lingo. Famously un-communicative and cata- tonic everywhere but on stage, J made ear-bleed- ingly loud explosions of riffs that made a gener- ation of players feel pathetic and inferior by comparison. The scathing opening of pre-grunge masterpiece "Sludgefest" and the sudden break- down in the middle of "Raisans" revealing Mascis as a genius of his instrument. Barlow and Murph meanwhile locked into furious, extra-tight punk rhythms a la Husker Du, carrying their share of the melodic weight on the surprisingly pop "In a Jar" and literally slashing out to be heard. over Mascis' assault on the Barlow penned "Lose." Dinosaur Jr. was one of the most internally conflicted groups in rock history. Barlow grew to hate Mascis for the control he held over him and Murph. Their feud boiled over eventually and Barlow left to form Sebadoh and Folk Implosion, both of which are in the vain of his "Poledo," a mix of bedroom folk and a "Revolutionary #9"- Courtesy of SST Records ish experimental collage. But the key track on "You're Living All Over Me" is the brilliant, half-tongue-in-cheek Peter Frampton cover "Show Me The Way." There couldn't be a more uncool choice for an indie band; but Dinosaur Jr. finds something deeper than pure kitsch laughs in the track. Mascis whines out the lyrics of the '70s suburban touchstone like they might actual hold meaning for him. For reasons that are beyond explana- tion, they somehow do. I x SECRETS OF THE PROS Lisa Bee, co-owner of Sweetwaters Cafe presents ... SWEETWATERS CAFE'S WHITE CHOCOLATE MOCHA WANT TO WRITE FOR WEEKEND? 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Washington Hours: Monday-Friday 7 a.m.- midnight, Saturday 8a.m.-mid- night and Sunday 8:30a.m.- 11p.m. FOOD FOR THOUGHT Protestors Senator Dang Quang Minh of the National Liberation Front, North Vietnam's ambas- sador to the Soviet Union and a member of the Politburo, described his feelings about American Vietnam War protes- tors: "When a person is not good for his own country, he is useless for the universe." Page 255, A Thousand Tears Falling. Gary Lillie & Assoc., Realtors www.garylillie.com RYAN WEINER/Daily Sweetwaters offers warm drinks to ease the cold. i cold as possible. Heat stove to a low a whisk, stir milk flame. Using slowly and A look at the underside of U of M www.universitysecrets.com I : , r .. 4 4 F I 1 'f 3 w j r -p, w . c -~ c; _ ; . .- _ . ..-._... .. . ,.K