ART S The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 24, 2002 - 7 BREAKING RECORDS REVIEWS OF THE MUSIC INDUSTRY'S NEW RELEASES DOUG MARTSCH Now You KNow WARNER RECORDS By Scott Serilla Daily Music Editor On his solo debut, Built to Spill frontman Doug Martsch drops the kaleidoscopic indie guitar textures that have been his band's hallmark in favor of bringing the blues back to its original home of ... Boise? Yes the pride of the remote Idaho rock scene is going back to the Delta with Now You Know, a collec- tion acoustic blues songs built around Martsch's new found love of slide guitar. Taking a cue from the likes of Blind Willie Johnson and Mississippi Fred McDow- ell, Martsch manages to put together a record of decep- tively simple blues tunes that if nothing else steers clear of being overly imitative or condescending. We always knew Martsch was a rarely talented musician, but the relentlessly inventive tones and angular melodies that defined Built to Spill's best work on '94s There's Nothing Wrong With Love and '97s Perfect From Now On sometimes obscured just how good he can be. On "Window" and the appropri- ately titled "Instrumental" Martsch delivers easily some of the most beautiful and unadorned licks of his career, especially when matched with the subtle string work that underpins parts of the record. As always, Martsch's Neil Young-like whine is bit jarring at first, but begins to slowly grow on the lis- tener. His lyrics also follow his playing, moving towards more straightforward material as opposed to more complex and intricate stories made classics like "Twin Falls" and "Fling." The only real problem with disc? So much slide gets old kinda quick. Since Jack White has made blues influenced rock once again fashionable, there is bound to be a wave of crappy white boys trying to play the blues, instead of causing them. Martsch is absolved of those charges, but this record comes across more as a little to similar sounding filler, a way to buy time in between Built to Spill releases. Anyways he'll never be a real bluesman until he gets a cool blues name. My votes are going to either Blind Potato Martsch or Little Douglas-Marsh. RATING: *** DIsco BISCUITS SENOR BOOMBOX MEGAFORCE By Laurence J. Freedman For the Daily BREAKING RECORDS STAR SYSTEM Known for putting on a memo- rable live show, The Disco Biscuits have been leaving concert-goers exhausted since 1996. Their full-on assault of jam-rock tinged with driv- ing often quirky electronica, an incredibly satisfying fix for those who enjoy both genres of music. Rarely though has the band recorded anything in the studio that is up to par with their live work. 2001 brought the computer-pro- duced They Missed The Perfume was a trippy electronic record that earned accolades from many facets of the musical community, but was less accessible to the rock fans and too con- ceptual to encourage laid-back listen- ing. As the Biscuits' repertoire has expanded .to include more beautiful music along with sinister and fist- pumping tunes, a studio album reflect- ing this evolution has finally been released. On their fourth LP Senor Boombox, the Disco Biscuits have succeed in reworking their live tunes to fit the restraints of a studio record while recreating the sounds that epitomize what a Biscuits show is all about. One of the standout tracks "Jigsaw Earth" starts with Jon Gutwillig's sweet guitar dancing on top of lazy funk but soon breaks down into a synthesizer and bass drum-driven jam. "The Tunnel" takes listeners past Trey-like licks, easy-going acoustic guitar, and anthemic choruses to an ambient jam that brings trance and groove fans to * * ** CLASSIC * * * iGREAT *** AFAIR * * SUB-PAR * WORTHLESS DISTURBED BELIEVE WARNER RECORDS By Joel M. Hoard Daily Arts Writer - If you missed a week of BREAKING RECORDS, check the archives at www.michigandaily.com ARE YOU A HUGE Goo GooDoLLs FAN? WE ALL LOVETH E Goos. JOIN DAILY ARTS, WE WON'T TELL. ished and overproduced. Disturbed have lost touch with their roots, choosing clean production over the reckless abandon of their punk/metal predecessors. Believe's first 11 cuts feature bland metal tunes complete with huge bull- shit Def Leppard choruses and Draiman's standard-metal-singer yowl. After that 44-minute assault, the tranquil and introspective "Dark- ness" is tacked on to the end. Featur- ing some hilariously out-of-place acoustic guitar and cello, "Darkness" provides much needed, if uninten- tional, comic relief. David Draiman thanks God for the gift of music in Believe's liner notes, which is ironic because God sure as hell wouldn't associate Himself with such an awful album. If Heaven really isn't hot enough for Disturbed, I can't see the Almighty turning up the ther- mostat for these guys anytime soon. RATING: * - the triumphant heights they aim to reach. The Biscuits' vocals are still very far from melodious, however, and a couple of tracks like "Sound One" should have stayed strictly in the live reper- toire. Nonetheless, the Disco Biscuits have made one of the best jam-band studio albums of recent RAT I N G:* *i * * OF MONTREAL ALDHILS ARBORETUM KiN DE RCORE By Gina Pensiero Daily Arts Writer J L Disturbed's David Draiman is one angry young man. Sure every Ameri- can youth experiences some angst now and then, but most of us tend to outgrow it. Unfortunately Draiman is wallowing in it long after his teen years are over. He's the kind of per- son who thinks the, shit poetry he wrote in high school is still good ten howls, "I years later and feels an unquenchable Burn me need to bitch about how religion could ha fucked him up for life. isn't hot Despite their aspiration to "bring tripe per back the majesty of metal" (did it of the du ever have any?) on Believe, Dis- Produ turbed deliver nothing more than for- mixer A gettable, angst-filled pap. Draiman's of met angry-white-boy lyrics sure don't Believe. help any. On opener "Prayer" he loudness the michigan daily SCOREK QUALIFIED STUDENTS TO TEACH. Avail. Floormen positions for indiv. that totally love small chil- ings. Bring dren. Infants, young tots and preschool classes day at 310 need you! Small group ratios make positions Books Dow extremely desirable. Early elementary students or CDA candidate with 40-60 early childhood SEEKING credits need to apply. Full or Part time we will For 20hrs/ job share with the right candidates. Mon - Fri. have driver $7-7.75/hr depending on scheduling. Call STOCK I 734-998-0180. U4nM wa "Nothing! We're doing nothing!," are the first lyrics and the extremely repetitive chorus on the first song of Aldhils Arboretum, the sixth album by ultra-happy indeed-poppers Of Montreal. The mantra, it seems, is pretty appropriate. Of Montreal, part of the second wave of the Elephant 6 collective, have a bright and shiny sound. The songs are laden with lots of treble and singer Kevin Barnbs provides equally happy-go-lucky tenor vocals. The songs on the album veer towards the light-heart- ed and silly. "Isn't it Nice?" is basically a song about having weird hick neighbors. "The Blank Husband," is about "Auntie Eleanor's ... very unhappy husband." "Pancakes for One," tackles the dillema of a sad lonely morning, "because eating breakfast with you was such fun!" Despite the deliberate corniness, Aldhills Arboretum is a solid album. There really isn't a poorly done track on the disk. All the songs are produced well, arranged in a very beatlesque manor and strongly reminiscent of better-known indie-pop, like Apples in Stereo, as well as the classic Byrds. Living just isn't hard enough / e alive inside." First listen I ye sworn I heard "Heaven just enough." Regardless, such -meates Believe, making it one llest records of the year. cer Johnny K. and veteran ndy Wallace continue one al's stranger trends on While the album has the s requisite of metal, it's pol- Probably what makes the Of Montreal sound work is the unpretentiousness of the band: The songs are ridiculous and downright whimsical, they know that and they are proud of that. Sure, they're not a deep or extremely meaningful band, but it's refreshing to listen to a group that doesn't fancy themselves the newest prolific artists on the recently crashing wave of indie-pop. 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