ARTS- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 10, 2004 - 9 Incubus fail to mature with fifth installment Hill's Picture Show plays perfectly for VH1 set By Laurence J. Freedman Daily Arts Writer M USI C R EV IE W ** Before 2001, Incubus was more often associated with thrashing rap-metal than with any other strain of rock music. Fusing fuzzy noise with roaring guitars and electronic elements, the Cal- ifornia quintet was certainly traversing familiar late-'90s hard rock territory This description ceased to make much sense after the massive suc- Incubus A Crow Left of the Murder Epic power ballads such as "Iris" after the random success of 1995's "Name." Some might call such a change taking a bold new artistic direction. Most of those familiar with their older music (admittedly few) would simply say they sold out. Refreshingly, Incubus frontman Brandon Boyd fails to take his band closer to Matchbox Twenty territory on their latest record A Crow Left of the Murder. Instead, Crow is a satisfy- ingly consistent alternative-metal album that will likely please Incubus fans both new and old. This is an album that sounds better and better with each listen. The comparisons to other bands, however, are impossible to avoid. Besides an ability to churn out some- what inventive riffs and hooks, their music is devoid of any uniqueness or originality. Upon arriving on the California scene, Incubus was celebrated and criticized for clinging closely to the thrash-funk of the earlier Red Hot Chili Peppers. On this newest record, they owe more to the guitar-driven sound of the most recent Chili Pep- major acts as Jason Mraz. Though the heavy touring expanded their fan base, they left their Southern roots on the road. On June's Picture Show, the homogeneous sound varies from dull to duller. An injection of coun- try - or anything, for that matter - would serve to jump start their music. June's Picture Show does contain sev- eral solid songs. "Captain" is a heartfelt ballad that sets the tone for the entire album. "The Day Your Luck Runs Out" demonstrates Phil Bogard's competent guitar stylings and Justin Moore's melodic voice. After a while though, they seem to merely regurgitate the songs of their equally bland peers: "She's so perfect" is eerily similar to Matchbox Twenty's radio hit "3 a.m." This mediocrity is their undoing, as they have no signature tone to call their own. On the other hand, 30-somethings need their dose of rock rebellion too. At the very least, Ingram Hill is not as oblivious to the aging process as their pseudo-adolescent contemporaries. VH1 junkies will hail Ingram Hill and praise their lyrical and musical capabilities. Although June's Picture Show is a solid album, Ingram Hill play it safe in a tried and true paradigm instead of striving for something original. cess of their single "Drive" and the release of Morning View that year. "Drive" was incredibly mellow, fea- turing a soaring chorus and a guitar part that Dave Matthews could have written. Coupled with the release of the ballad- filled Morning View, it seemed as though Incubus might have been head- ed towards Goo Goo Dolls territory. The Goo Goo's completely switched their focus from raunchy punk and messy hard rock to writing pers music or the jagged intensity of Rage Against the Machine than any- thing else. To say that Incubus lack the cre- ativity of either band would be an understatement. Nothing on Crow is as wonderfully breezy or as catharti- cally rebellious as the latest material those two bands have recently released. Instead, what Incubus delivers on Crow lies somewhere blandly in between. This should guarantee them a fair amount of success and populari- ty with the mainstream teenage audi- ence. Boyd's lyrics flirt with social commentary, but there's nothing par- ticularly insightful here. "Since when did what we pay for colored cloth gauge our gravity?" he asks in "Zee Deveel." Boyd should certainly have better questions than this at age 28. But then again, maybe not, as two songs later, Boyd confesses he "Understands why they say 'high school never ends.' " that immediately come to mind. On their sophomore album, June's Picture Show, Ingram Hill prove that they harbor the same musical capabilities as their peers but lack that enigmatic "it" quality that sets a band apart. There was a time when Ingram Hill had its own identity. Their first album, Until Now, was released on Traveler Records and created a mild ripple in the alt-country underground of Nashville, Tenn. Disappointed by a lukewarm response, the band set forth on a gruel- ing tour schedule opening for such +wr