The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com {the b-side} Thursday, January r11 2007 - 5B CARGO From page 1B doing a similar thing, much more trustworthy because of a more singular/policed voice, will emerge and be the bible." Who knows when that will happen, or from where that voice will come, but my guess is it won't come print-media or music critics per se. Rather, the staggering possibilities of the music genome project and Pandora. com will allow consumers to be recommended music finely tailored to their unique taste, effectively cutting out all the crap we don't want to hear. Music criticism will never die; it'll just become less rel- evant to the casual music fan. All of this may sound glum, but really the music industry is going through a fascinating transitional era that, in the end, will most likely benefit music. Lefsetz may only be stating the obvious, but it's something that those stubborn music executives seem to have lost sight of "Give people something that touches their souls for a fair price and they'll give you ALL their money. Rip them off with shit and they'll tell everybody they know and decimate your enterprise." - Cargo needs more constructive dialogue in his life. E-mail him at lhcargo@umich.edu. REISSUES From page 1B able as he switches effortless between oud and electric guitar. At the time of the recording, Bull had just released his third album, a hazy masterpiece titled E Pluribus Unum, and its two pulsating guitar compo- sitions stand as true highlights of the Valen- tine's Day show. This is the first release of any Sandy Bull live material and the Water records label graciously packaged it with an additional set of songs from an April 5th show of the same year. Hopefully this will get the ball rolling for the future reissue of his seminal Vanguard records of the '60s. Though folk received an impressive array of reissues in 2006, it was post-punk that may have been the most richly rediscov- ered genre. There was the long-overdue re-mastering of Wire's first three albums - whose scope and influence are pervasive in nearly all aspects of modern indie rock -, the rediscovery of Josef K with Entimology and a box-set of the full Talking Heads cata- logue. The Fall got their sinister debut Live at the Witch Trials re-released with a full bonus album of Peel Sessions, capturing the band in its embryonic first stage. The gui- tars and drums are played with primitive passion as riffs build endlessly under Mark E. Smith's nihilistic wail. Finally, those in the know celebrated the treatment lavished upon the less heralded, but equally essential Comsat Angels by UK label Renascent. 2006 was also agreatyear forthosewith a taste for obscure foreign music. Jean Claude Vannier's soundtrack, L'Enfant Des Assasins Des Mouches got it's first domestic release and fans of Serge Gainsbourg's classic His- toire De Melody Nelson got a great glimpse at where the arranger of some of Gainsbourg's best work did on his own time. Another soundtrack, Vampyros Lesbos sounds gar- nered considerable attention and praise for sounding exactly like you'd expect '70s Ital- ian vampire lesbian porn music to sound. Brazilian music, specifically from the late '60s, was given a boost by Soul Jazz's excel- lent compilation, Tropicalia: A Brazilian Revolution in Sound. That reissue, as well as Os Mutantes's reunion appearances in the US, seemed to set off a'revived interest in Caetano Veloso, Tim Maia and Gilberto Gil, but the wave also exposed great bands on the fringe of that movement. Som Imagi- nario were the backing band of Milton Nas- cimento, but their self-titled LP is just now beginning to get its due, thanks to a Rev-Ola reissue. Labels can't describe the sound but imagine bossa nova meets British psych far out enough to attract praise from then-cut- ting-edge Herbie Hancock. As if world music wasn't enough, 2006 was blessed with a man that must have come from another planet. "I'm the church and I've come /To claim you with my iron drum" proclaimed John Cale in his definitive pop statement, 1973's Paris 1919. With carefully constructed story-songs ' and whimsical orchestration, Cale turned another corner in his eclectic career, proving to be a master pop auteur capable of melodic work every bit as inventive as his legendary noise experi- ments with The Velvet Underground. The music accurately depicts the dichotomous nature of its performer, with Cale playing John Cale: more like New York City 2007 than Paris 1919. both the indoctrinating clergyman -- sitting high on a pulpit of bombastic horns and gui- tar - or the humble priest - quietly intro- spective and wisely prophetic. 2006 saw Rhino reissue the classic album with a set of previously unreleased bonus tracks for the first time. There's more too, plenty of jazz, blues, soul, hip-hop - more than enough for this newspaper to handle. We're just thankful for the opportunity to hear the music most of us missed the first time around. 0