8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 17, 2003 ARTS BREAKING RECORDS REVIEWS OF THE MUSIC INDUSTRY'S NEW RELEASES SHINE ON YOU CRAZY DIAMONDS' INNOCENT CRIMINAL BEN HARPER RETURNS WITH NEW LP By Alex Wolsky Daily Arts Writer 'MusiC REVI EW He comes from a musical family, which explains why his sound is a unique mixture of old and new. Yet, after a four-year lapse from stu- dio recording, Ben Harper returns with his most eclectic release to date with Diamonds on the Inside. A heavy conglomeration of funk, soul, and reggae fused together with Harper's own By Joseph itman Daily Arts Writer MUSICREVIEW "I'm like the sun, I'm tryin' to shine on everybody," says R. Kelly during the opening of "Heaven I Need a Hug," his song of despair. Did he mean "shine" or "urinate?" Please pardon the cynicism, however, his latest album, Chocolate Factory, is difficult to regard as a serious work given the legal problems and material evidence that have haunted Kelly since last year. Precisely, it is not that he made the album which seems disingenuous, but rather, it's the record's content. 4 rock edge creates a stylish and introspective perform- ance spanning 14 tracks and decades of influence. On the album's best tracks, he seems like rock's social conscience and the heir apparent to the fusion of reg- Ben Harper Diamonds on the Inside Virgin Throughout most sings about pris- tine love, his appreciation of women and his desire to beauti- fully copulate. The topics are standard for Kelly of the LP, Kelly R. Kelly Chocolate Factory Jive Records gae, funk and rock championed by the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Bob Marley. The gospel-laden "When She Believes" and the reggae-powered "With My Own Two Hands" show Harper as a conscious reflector on the influences that have shaped his music over the years. In fact, the l entire album portrays itself as homage to the ar-tists that Harper built his unique sound around. However, the CD strays too far from the unique sound that has defined Harper. The usual- ly fragile and quaint vocal performance is over- simultaneously sink his own ship. He carries our amplified on Diamonds and the musicianship expectations as a burden and lets it drag him lacks any ingenuity that Harper brought to the around throughout Diamonds on the Inside. table on his last records. It just seems that he has When we take a closer inspection, we find set the bar too high and as a result my attention beneath the layer of influence and originality, an span depletes along with the albums credibility. artist who has never been commercially accepted Whether he was trying too hard to please a attempting to touch all bases. Altogether, there commercial audience on one side, or music's seems to be something missing this time around, What kind of elite on the other, the album is a grandiose which makes this album fall short of what Harp- pie do you example of how an artist's expectation can er is capable of creating. have? and most male R&B singers, however he no longer sounds like a credible source, his theoretically pure inten- tions and loving desires tempered (if not completely obliterated) by his alleged real-life transgressions. If one ignores those perhaps-real misdeeds when listening to Robert's message of love and passion, he or she will hear music that is mostly stale, for Chocolate Factory sounds a great deal like his previous works, notably TP-2. Com and R. Yet, what redeems this record, in part, is that Kelly remains unparalleled in his abil- ity to spruce up standard R&B with his genuinely soulful voice. Further- more, there are a few more daring tracks, like the remix of "Step in the Name of Love." These help illustrate that the musical mind that heard a chorus and orchestra for "I Believe I Can Fly" (in retrospect, it wasn't good that he was hanging out with kids while making that song) remains, though it seems preoccupied. Other notable tracks on the record include the remix for "Ignition," a pop hit, and the record's title track. The latter is repetitive - Kelly now con- sistently uses a mid-tempo, energetic track to open his records - but the formula remains successful, unlike most of the other retread tracks. Also worthy of note, though for the wrong reasons, is the annoying "Been Around the World," a duet with Ja Rule that challenges listeners to dis- cern who is regularly a singer while Ja intones his signature raspy grunts for much of the song. R. Kelly has always been able to say things like "I'm gonna take my key and stick it in your ignition," - as he does on this album - while maintaining the veneer of a soulful lover interested in some bumpin' and grindin', yet mostly looking for true love. He may have lost that ability and this album's trite lyrics and unimagi- native beats condemn it to mediocrity. By Joseph Litman Daily Arts Writer By Devon Thomas Daily Arts Writer Producer 9th Wonder's Gods Stepson, a remix album featuring his beats and Nas' rhymes, is currently burning up the underground, proving that successfully rehashing material is possible if the proj- ect is approached with enough originali- ty. Lil' Kim seems to have missed that memo on La Bella Mafia, a derivative ittord of other people's ideas." *" Kim should get credit for smartly choosing those who she emulates, inter- polates,, or alto- gether pillages; fans of the Beastie Boys, Notorious B.I.G., and R. Kelly will all enjoy hearing their Li' Kim La Bella Mafia Atlantic Records favorite artists invoked on Mafia. When she isn't using a Beastie beat, a Biggie verse, or an entire Kelly song, Kim instead joins the contemporary-hip-hop fray, exploiting obscure Indian music and teaming up with 50 Cent. So is La Bella Mafia any good? Is there anything original on the whole LP? The answer to both questions is "yes." Even though, and actually because, Kim's third LP sounds like other peo- ple's music, it is an enjoyable record, easy to put on and devoid of completely discardable tracks. The songs that liber- ally employ past efforts, like "Hold It Now" and "This Is a Warning," are pleasant though inferior remakes, and other standard songs, like lead single "The Jump Off," suffice. The discrimi- nating fans and those engaged by the ical pro essi of Co n won't e La Bella a ia, ut there are plenty of "hip-hop fans" who will readily approve of this album. The record's limited originality comes from Kim's rhyming. Having already established herself as an unembarrassed sex-fiend, the Queen Bee reaffirms this distinction with a bevy of graphic and laughable rhymes. The record's first flow hears the female Too Short brag, "I even gave y'all tips for riding cock as well" while later verses provide the MC with a platform from which she boasts of her sexual talents. Unfortunately, Kim has little else to say and the record's lyrics rarely deviate from the graphically licen- tious or boringly material. The record's best song, "Came Back for You," comes from Kanye West, who is quickly distinguishing himself as cur- rent hip-hop's finest, most-consistent producer. How good is the track? The beat overcomes the deficiencies of its accompanying rhyming, and reinvigo- rates what, by the end, is a tired record. In the midst of an urban music scene fixated on Moet and misogyny surfaces Ms. Dynamite. The 21-year-old British bombshell, already a household name in the UK and a luminary in its vibrant Garage scene, lands stateside with A Little Deep- er. Her debut is a captivating mixture of grit and an honestly raw snapshot of the multiethnic London streets. The English MC t1ies to make-v e 'of a web of poverty, crime and hopelessness - amidst, displaying a refreshing level of positivity. In "Watch Over Them," Dyna- mite ias the outlook of artists twiceberTiT age - "The same gunmen that cry 'bout suppression of the white man and his racist oppression / Have gun in his pocket and crack in possession" - also the clever rhyme play of "It Takes More" displays her sharp lyrical virtuosity in where she denounces the trappings of urban material- ism ("If it's not too complex, tell me how many Africans died for the baguettes on your Rolex?"). Here's a female MC who would much rather trade wits than fawn over the latest Bulgari. Collaborating with Salaam Remi (Nas, Fugees) to vet- eran reggae duo Tony and Dave Kelly, the album is alive with the rhythms of the African diaspora, infusing dance- hall, reggae, hip hop and soul into one delectable mix. While selectively poignant, Deeper is also carefree. The head-nodders "Dy- Na-Mi-Tee" and "Sick Mrs. 'N' Tired" are radio- Dynamite ready bangers. In addi- A Little tion, "All I Ever" is the Deeper peak of the album's sensual erotica, breath- Interscope Records ing with lush brass instrumentation. Vocally, Dynamite's charisma and fresh approach sparkle the record; from her amber-smoked soprano to its notable guests: Barrington Levy to prophet seed Kymani Marley. A Little Deeper is an ambitious and accomplished offering that's by turns moving, elegiac and beautiful. With a refreshing approach at tackling contemporary black music, it proves to be one of the more worthy excavations of 2003 and its starlet nothing short of a gem. By Andrew M. Gaerig Daily Arts Writer By Graham Kelly Daily Arts Writer Music RE~VIEw This is what electro-pop should be. Richard Warren, going under the name Echoboy for the third time, has teamed up with gifted producer Flood (U2, Smashing Pump- _ kins) to create I Giraffe, just over Echoboy 50 minutes of Giraffe techno-inspired pop music. This Mute skinny, small white man from England creates lush sound- scapes or barren musical deserts with such precision and skill that sometimes you might get a belly of butterflies waiting to hear what comes next. Giraffe finds Echoboy commenting on modern society, his love of electrici- ty and expressing relationship griev- ances. His variance in song topics is matched by the differences in styles. Some tracks drip with slow beats with Warren crooning in a falsetto; on others he runs his voice through a processor to make it sound deep and mechanical. The true genius of the work comes out when Echoboy slowly layers each song, builds it to the crescendo and then tears it back down piece by piece to show the listener every possibility of the song. This is Moby on drugs, swapping song titles like "God Moving Over the Face of the Waters" for "Lately Lone- ly" and "Don't Destroy Me". Echoboy works hard to fight the boredom that can easily set in while listening to electronic music; he changes his beats, IMUs ICREVI EW For anyone mired in underground music circles, the Postal Service is big news: Death Cab for Cutie mouthpiece Benjamin Gibbard and Dntel master- mind Jimmy Tamborello's contribution to Dntel's last full-length was consid- ered a masterstroke for both artists. "(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan" seemed The Postal like the perfect Service one-off collabora- Give Up tion - the piece sounded effortless, Sup Pop Records as Gibbon's sweet- ly nostalgic lyrics swam perfectly amongst Tamborello's glitch foam. Would the duo be able to recreate the natural chemistry over the course of a full album? The Postal Service sounds much like expected: Tamborello lays down noisy, if uncomplicated, techno as Gibbard, who has a penchant for writing lyrics in grammatically correct sentences, spins stories. Because Gibbard is often so morose, and much of Tamborello's work is so down tempo, there was a real dan- ger that Give Up would be a long, hushed dirge, so it's refreshing that Tam- borello is able to keep things moving at a mostly upbeat pace. The duo shows an unabashed love for '80s synth-pop: songs like "Such Great Heights" and "Nothing Better" employ keyboard flourishes and shame- less "ooh ooh" melodies. Frequent female guest spots, like the enchanting duet on "Nothing Better," and wrench- ing moments like "This Place Is a Prison" provide enough variety to keep things interesting. If I had to complain, I'd tell you that Gibbard's lyrics aren't always up to his standards, and that nothing quite approaches the genius of "Evan and Chan," though that was as expected as it was inevitable. Those would almost be petty complaints, however, about a thor- oughly enjoyable and creative collabora- tion between such disparate sources. his repetitions of phrase and his synth backdrops quickly and frequently. Just when you realize you want the heavy bass to go away on "Fun In You", everything stops, leaving only the sim- ple acoustic guitar riff on which the song was built. When you start to crave the darkness of the music to accompany his urgent singing, all the pieces fall right back into place. Giraffe is an intense listen that only gets better with time. Warren has truly taken his art to a new level. a 6 Pas ... Teacher K Job Fair Saturday, March 29 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Sports and Expo Center Macomb Community College South Campus 12 Mile Road and Hayes, Warren The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is currently offering research study for facial acne. If you are over the age of 12 and are in good general health, you may be eligible to participate in a research program for facial acne. Office visits and study agent are provided free of charge to eligible participants. You may also receive compensation fQr your participation! I