ARTS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 26, 2004 -11 Futureheads primed for long-term success EVAN MCGARVEY By Lloyd Cargo Daily Arts Writer There's something about a great album that upon first listen seems familiar, yet totally new. The Future- heads combine the best of post-punk I remembe Upon first examination, the album cover appears to be nothing more than a small topographical map in white placed on a void-like black back- ground. For those of us who know, it's a visual that never fails to evoke combina- tions of excitement, dread and true awe. Late in my childhood, I'm not sure when, I heard the album on my father's stereo.'The drums sounded like they were hammering out pure force, the guitars weaved around each other like dual stars and the lead singer's voice wailed out with a drone I imagined could only come from a place pure midnight. My father sat in his chair by the stereo, his hands resting on his knees and closed his eyes as one song faded out and the next one began. When I started to ask him what was playing, all he said was, "It's Joy Division." I tucked the name away like other piec- es of random advice from my dad, and it'd be almost a decade until I finally saw the simple facts of his brief reply: It's Joy Division, and if you know them, you don't have to ask a lot of other questions. I bought Unknown Pleasures, the first Joy Division album, the album with famed black and white cover art, only two years ago. Each time I have a friend, usually a friend with blossoming rock taste, I have them listen to Unknown Pleasures. I usu- ally don't hear from them for a few days after. I'd like to think they're processing the churning rhythm section or ghostly tenor of lead singer Ian Curtis, but they're probably just avoiding a guy who'd make a friend listen to one of the most depress- ing albums ever made. The comforting thing is that as soon as they see me next, their usual line of conversation is about the record: How the riffs have lodged in their minds, how Cur- tis' voice is intertwined in their dreams1 and how the sheer gloom of it all has torn their world asunder. It's that kind of record. Even for those young music elitists+ who preach the virtues of indie-rock icons Velvet Underground, The Pixies, Pavement and The Smiths, Joy Divi-i sion is often a band skipped over. As more and more of our sage rock experts migrate into old age, are Unknown Plea- sures and its equally momentous follow up, Closer, doomed to be forgotten? Why are such musical achievements overlooked? r nothing They only released two proper studio albums, Unknown Pleasures in 1979 and Closer in 1981. Shortly after the release of Closer, Curtis hung himself in his ex-wife's kitchen. Curtis and his suicide have become not just personal tragedy, but myth. The remaining mem- bers of the band reformed into a synth- dance-punk group New Order, a great band in its own right. Joy Division died with Ian Curtis, and with its demise, all of its contributions dispersed into the music landscape. The heavy cloak of despair and pools of loneli- ness that erupted from the band became its most recognizable trait and, not sur- prisingly, every band since has attempted to emulate the ethereal sense of doom. Emo, heavy metal and even the introspec- tive moments in hip-hop all pull from their catalogue. Rock had sadness before Joy Division, but on nowhere near the level of universal despair. It is one thing for a band to impact musically, it is quite other to change the very face of an emo- tion in rock. Like Holden Caulfield, Unknown Pleasures is an anti-hero. Listeners tend to cluster in groups, sharing songs and moments only they understand. Once the opening guitar lines of "Disorder" kick in it's easy to see all the songs you've heard in your life that borrow so much from Joy Division. Though it may not render most of the other albums in your life irrelevant, it warps your perspective on every other. rock album you own. Today it's hard to fathom the suc- cess of bands like Interpol and The Stills without the trailblazing moves Joy Division made into the dark territory of rock. See that pouting punk boy wear- ing black on MTV and mourning about his position in the world? That's Joy Division. See the drummer in the indie- rock band slamming his kick drum and filling the void around him with waves of noise? That's Joy Division. Just last year I found the secret of Unknown Pleasures. That jagged map is a chart of the energy output of a star during a supernova. Just like the music within, it's frighteningly elegant and a source of near infinite power. - When Evan isn't listening to post- punk, he's getting his eagle on. E-mail him at evanbmcg@umich.edu and new wave with a gift for vocal harmonies and end up with one of the best albums of the year. The group draws from influences such as The Futureheads The Futureheads Sire long after, The Futureheads were signed by 679, releasing their debut album midway through this year in the United Kingdom and this week in the United States. The Futureheads is packed full of melodies and shifting arrangements, captured perfectly by Gang of Four's Andy Gill. The band's angular guitar and drum interplay are impressive, but the true centerpiece is their vocals that venture into four-part-harmony territory but never go over the top, even with "Danger of the Water," a foray into a cappella. Taking a cue from late-'70s post- punk heroes Wire, the band throws conventional song structure out the window, instead going for multi-sec- tion pieces that make the 14 tracks and 33 minutes seem effortless. Among the highlights are the call- and-response hooks of "A to B," the killer riffs of "Decent Days and Nights," and the anthemic "Carnival Kids." Hyde certainly has a gift for melody, but he also has a way with words. The songs bask in the notion of less is more, exchanging quantity for quality. "Robot," a song about XTC, The Clash and The Jam, while sounding just as exciting and fresh as current newcomers Franz Ferdinand. The group got their start in Sun- derland, England when vocalist/ guitarist Barry Hyde and drummer Pete Brewis were tutors at a lottery- funded organization called the Sun- derland City Detached Youth Project. The project's goal was to get kids off the street by having them play music together, and it was there that the rest of the band formed. Not too Courtesy of Sire Is that Ben Gibbard? how great it is to be a robot, fea- tures lines like "the best thing is our lifespan, we last 900 years." The only time his wit backfires is with the bratty "Stupid and Shallow," the only weak track on the album. Literally two-thirds of the songs on this album are potential singles. It doesn't take much to imagine The Futureheads joining Modest Mouse and Franz Ferdinand's indie inva- sion of mainstream America. These are the kinds of songs that grab you instantly and only reveal more with each repeated listening. The Futureheads' gift for melody and their refusal to repeat them- selves not only make this album a classic but also make them seem primed for long-term success. The Used take emo to new levels on 'Death' By Jerry Gordinler Daily Arts Writer The Used hears your pain. When Bert McCracken (vocals), Quinn Allman (guitar), Jeph Howard (bass) and Branden Steineck- ert (drums) formed The Used in their heavily reli- gious hometown of Orem, Utah, they were rebels. With a band history steeped in impoverishment, homelessness and drug addiction, they too The Used needed a way out. In Love and Death Their self-titled debut pro- Reprise vided just that, selling more than a million copies. With their new release on Reprise, In Love and Death, they attempt again to inject originality into the played-out screamo genre and cry their way into new musical territory. Death's first track, "Take it Away," opens with a spoken diatribe by an unnamed evangelist. This short, comical introduction is abruptly cut short by a shotgun cock, followed by a furious rising elec- tric guitar riff. Feeling a bit rebellious, privileged and bitter, the listener will all at once forget what they're listening to and ... feel slightly punk. That is, until the screaming begins. "Get Down / Woooooo! / Get Down" McCracken cries out. All at once the potentially powerful music becomes less fierce and more farce. Attempting to amplify light / Take take, take, take, take, take it away." Though much of the disc follows this predict- able cut-and-paste screamo formula, there are some saving graces that save it from being pigeon- holed. The interwoven guitar lines are the most notable attributes of the record, always urgent and passionate. The band digresses for a moment and moves close to pop with "Cut up Angels," taking an almost comical look at suicide and the afterlife. When McCracken takes a break from crying, he shows a serious vocal maturity, reminiscent of his mainstream hits "Blue and Yellow" and "Taste of Ink" off the self-titled debut. The album's 11th track, "Lunacy Fringe," has undeniable rhythm produced by a standing bass line that skips rather than walks. Accompaniment in the form of minimalist acoustic work and brush- ings on the drum walk along with the line to form an undeniable hit. Though a little over-produced, it is the small aspects that contribute to a fuller sound, and originality. This is the philosophy of the album as a whole. Though the omnipresent pseudo-emotion and rebelliousness inherent in the genre can leave the listener feeling patronized, and the migraine that comes with a triple-layered scream won't be going away anytime soon, there is something spe- cial about In Love and Death. The punks won't think it's punk enough, the emo kids will need a double box of tissue and the indie-elitists aren't paying attention, but there's something fuller about this sound. court esy Hprise Hmm ... Maybe I should take a shower. the emotion at various times with to-fi illusion and screaming overlays, expensive production only serves to intensify the terrible. This production can do nothing to save the always awful lyrics, McCracken commanding, "Burn the sun / Burn the THIS IS A PAID ADVERTISEMENT THE MIDDLE EAST STRUGGLE ISy NOT ABOUT RIGHT AGAINST RIGHT... 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