! .'O WO ATMICHIGAN Ewan McGregor, star of 'Trainspotting' and 'Brassed Off,' co-stars with Vivian Wu in 'The Pillow Book' at the Michigan Theater through July 30. I Ts Wednesday July 23, 1997 7 James rocks indifferent crowd at Lollapalooza show By Aaron Rennie Daily Arts Editor At last Tuesday's Lollapalooza stop a Pine Knob in Clarkston, the achester, England, sextet James played an impressive 10-song, 45- minute set of compelling rock 'n' roll. Unfortunately, very few people wit- nessed James' performance or applaud- ed the group's efforts, in all likelihood due to an overwhelming number of fans going to the show to see hard rockers Korn and Tool, both of whom followed James on the bill. Despite the less-than-ideal back- und for its forma n c e, James neverthe- less played with much enthusi- asm, determined to win over the Lollapaloo chees e - fried minds of the Korn fans who heckled them. James commenced its set with "Five-0," an ate song off of James' landmark l 3 album, "Laid." Sporting a shiny, metallic disco-ball shirt, black cowboy hat and sunglasses, lead singer Tim Booth joked, "Hi, we're James. We're from Las Vegas." When the song ended, a stagehand assisted Booth with fixing a microphone box attached to his back. Booth then muttered, "He gets to fiddle with me for free" before violinist/gui- tarist Saul Davies deadpanned, "The rest of us have to pay." #fter a sweet version of "Waltzing Along," the next single from James' new album, "Whiplash," the group played its biggest U.S. hit to date, the title track off "Laid." The rather silent crowd - with the exception of a hand- ful of diehards wearing James' flowery T-shirts - finally came to life during "Laid," trying unsuccessfully to match Booth's inimitable falsetto. ooth surprised just about everyone ng "Say Something," yet another hit off "Laid," when he left the stage, walked slowly through the pavilion seats and onto the grass, all the while singing perfectly in tune. Numerous teenyboppers in the crowd suddenly affected adoration for the band, trying desperately to touch Booth. He then made his way back down the pavilion and back onto the stage for the rest of the set. ames followed by moving away its more pop-influenced songs to a couple of more adventurous - and less well-received - ones, the little-known "Jam J" and "Honest Joe," both of which can be found on the group's free- form 1994 release, "Wah Wah." Both had traces of techno in them, and were solidly executed. Perhaps sensing, though, that the crowd's attention had diverted somewhat, James returned to trademark three-minute gems. 'Lost A Friend," from "Whiplash," was quite winning, but the fans were more appreciative of James' next song, "Sit Down," a huge international hit in )[ 1991 that inexplicably didn't get played much at all stateside. Booth explained to the crowd, "This is English rock, a different species, but from the same tribe," which brilliantly summed up the less-than-harmonious cultural divide between the band and the Lollapalooza audience. Nevertheless, the group earned respectable applause by many meatheads on the lawn who found the song catchy. The penultimate song, "Tomorrow," the intro track to "Whiplash" (and ini- tially found in a more skeletal and raw format on "Wah Wah"), was simply stunning. James ended its set with the VIE W keyboard-heavy "Come Home," an James older song found on the band's 1990 za, Pine Knob album, "Gold Jly 15, 1997 Mother." When the group left the stage, many people were clapping, but sadly, an even greater number of unenlight- ened audience members were cheering that James had left and that Korn was about to come on. In an interview with The Michigan Daily after their set, Booth, Davies and bassist Jim Glennie were partially sad- dened that the majority of the people in the crowd were ignoring them. "We're the only tuneful band out there," Booth said. Still, in addition to spending a great deal of time hanging out with fel- low Brits Orbital, who were headlining the first part of the tour, the group does feel thankful that itsis playing to a larg- er audience than if it just played to its fans in clubs. Furthermore, the band is lucky to be playing at all, given what happened to Booth earlier in the year. Following the second date of James' U.S. tour, Booth felt tremendous pain in his neck. He was diagnosed with a lateral disc pro- trusion in his neck and right shoulder, which produced pressure on his nerve root. He remained "on (his) back for three weeks" in San Francisco, and the band had to cancel the rest of its tour, including a May date at Clutch Cargo's in Pontiac. Once Booth was in suitable condition to tour, James promptly decided to sign on to do Lollapalooza, a move that, it was hoped, would help the band crack America. Unfortunately, James has had to miss a prime slot at last month's ven- erable Glastonbury Festival in England. "It was hard (missing Glastonbury)," said Booth, "but there was a terrible deluge and they almost had to cancel it, so we weren't so upset" But by doing Lollapalooza, the band is essentially nixing the chance that it will honor its club dates in the near future. "No, this is it," laments Booth. James fans shouldn't fret, though, for the group is going back into the studio in the fall (after playing at the United Kingdom's Reading Festival in late August). Glennie said the album should be ready "by the early part of next year" and that the band wants to "keep movin' to make up for lost time this year. It is imperative that James rebuilds its momentum, for the group has encountered numerous stumbling blocks in addition to Booth's severe injury. First, founding James member and slide guitarist Larry Gott told the remaining band members that he was leaving the group prior to the making of "Whiplash." Gott "had to choose between staying with his wife or us and chose her," Glennie said. The same "black" day that James was informed of Gott's decision, the band found out it owed hundreds of thousands of pounds in back taxes. In addition, Booth had decided that he needed to go off on his own for a little while, which resulted in his collaboration with "Twin Peaks" composer Angelo Badalamenti, "Booth and the Bad Angel" Nevertheless, James got back togeth- er and recorded the excellent "Whiplash," which you wouldn't know about if you listened to radio or watched MTV. Neither "Tomorrow" nor the album's first single, "She's A Star," has received much airtime or video spins. As such, it seems quite apparent why the band is itching to get back in the studio and come up with an even better album. And despite the fact that "She's A Star" is quite possibly the most catchy song on "Whiplash," James didn't play it at Pine Knob. When asked why the song wasn't performed, given that one would think the band would try to pro- mote its latest album as much as possi- ble, Booth said, "We're trying out dif- ferent setlists (at every show), and this is what we played today." Booth did note a change, however, in James' approach to determining what to play before each concert. "We used to always change (the setlist), but now we try to get more stable for our sound guys and ourselves." Part of this new- found stability can be witnessed in Booth's ritual of leaving the stage (he no 'longer needs a neck brace or a wheelchair) and wandering into the audience on the "grassy knoll." "We've done it about twice before (and we plan to keep the tradition)," Booth said. "It breaks the ice." The bandmembers had plenty of interesting insight into some of their British musical contemporaries. When asked if fellow Mancunians the Stone Roses could've been as big as Oasis in America if the band put more effort into touring - the Roses had sold-out gigs at Madison Square Garden in New York City and another in L.A. before pulling out at the last minute and never fulfill- ing them- Booth said, "No. Ian Brown (lead singer of the now-disbanded Stone Roses) can't sing in tune and Liam (Gallagher of Oasis) can. You can't tour the States with an F-you attitude." Davies also has a critical opinion of a current U.K. music giant, Radiohead. Despite the fact that Oxford's James' singer Tim Booth resembles Bono (above) and prances the stage in a disco ball shirt (below). Radiohead has garnered critical adula- tion for its third record, "OK Computer," Davies feels it is "self- indulgent shite." Booth, on the other hand, was impressed with the success of the Prodigy, a techno band whose new album, "The Fat of the Land," debuted at No. I in the U.S. two weeks ago. "By number of first-week sales, Prodigy is bigger than Oasis and will (eventually) be bigger than the Spice Girls;' Booth said. As for James, perhaps it is not realis- tic that the group will sell as many albums as the aforementioned artists, but its members have a positive attitude and are putting lots of effort into expanding the band's popularity in the States. Don't count them out, for a year or two down, the line, James may well be headlining shows at venues like Pine Knob. When is the best time to 4 begin martial arts training? Summer special call today (313)994-0400 RICHARDSON'S Student discounts on eye exams and eyeglasses Great Brands ... Polo TommyHilfiger calvi Klei