Primal Scream returns to trippy form on 'Vanishing Point' Wednesday. August 6. 1997 - The Michigan Daily - 11 ,. .... .,.,...a...., , ,...b ,.... vt .a.vv r . ... : rv Sat vu J ....+. Primal Scream Vanishing Point Reprise/Time Warner Primal Scream has the right idea. The group's latest album, "Vanishing Point," radiates subconscious aesthet- ics like a cerebral mood ring implant- ed in your fifth vertebrae. When Primal Scream hits the right note (and this occurs often) you tingle and want to mingle. Unlike Primal Scream's last rock-infected effort, "Give Out But Don't Give Up," "Vanishing Point" is the kind of album that sits down next to you and offers you a smoke. It appears that Primal Scream has decided to pick up where its excellent 1991 album, "Screamadelica," left off. "Vanishing Point" ° is loungy, electric, tripnotic and mellow to the max. Mop- topped and waifish Bobby Gillespie whispers through *hissing electronics and samples on the first sin- gle, "Kowalski," like the subliminal voice of your con- science. With soundcuts from the 1970s Cleavon J. Little film, "Vanishing Point," and eerie sonic snakes slithering and shaking their way into your secret places, "Kowalski" is iiber-kool and menacing for a first single. "Vanishing Point" is a delicious pot- *pourri of soul, dub, trip-hop and rock. On tracks like "Get Duffy" and "Star," one finds a more soulful side of Primal Scream, with saxophones, trumpets, tablas and melodicas criss-crossing over Gillespie's reverberating vocals. On other tracks like "If They Move, Kill 'Em" and "Stuka," one can almost taste the trip-hop dripping from these juicy, rhythm-stuffed songs. "If They Move, Kill 'Em" sounds like the bas- tard child of Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and Isaac Hayes' "Shaft." Many tracks are a mix of all these styles. "Out Of The Void" has a soulful skin but an electronic spine. "Stuka" is a great track that beats you with thrumming bass and tribal drums sim- ilar to underground jungle music in the after-hours dance clubs of Britain. Gillespie's vocals sound like your Speak 'n' Spell toy with a tracheotomy. He electrically gurgles lines like "If you play with fire / You're gonna get burned / Some of my friends are gonna die young / I've got original sin." Jazzy horns and whirring sounds click and split their way into your darker thoughts like circuitous insects programmed to please you. "Motorhead," on the 9 upshot, is a gritty, rock-roid little ditty which riffs and slams around while being stacked up and backed up by a drum machine and sampler. Cheese metal go home! This track easily declares that heavy rock can exist minus the cheddar and swiss. Another great track on "Vanishing Point" is the song "Trainspotting" from the 1996 movie, "Trainspotting," based on Irvine Welsh's wonderful novel bearing the same name. (Coincidentally, Irvine Welsh wrote the script for the "Kowalski" video). "Trainspotting" is an indication of where music is headed. It breathes down your neck with echoing drums, slowed-down samples of moog-master Jean Jacques Perrey, jazzy Wes Montgomery-esque guitar parts and thick bumpin' bass lines. "Trainspotting" is the musical equiva- lent of fog slowly rolling down a mountain at dusk. You can feel the flu- idity. This is an all-around excellent album. Primal Scream puts down the perfect album for late night driving, clubbing, dancing or hanging out with friends. "Vanishing Point" is the only thing worth looking for on the horizon. Pick it up and you will be saved from your bad music demons. -Chris /elax Fatso Dittohead Splatt Records The gigantic image of an angry Rush Limbaugh on the cover does not adaquately suggest what is on this CD. Yes, the anti-Rush theme is pre- sent oil the disc but I didn't think that someone could write a whole LP of Rush-bashing songs - that is, until I listened to "Dittohead." To categorize these tracks as music is misleading - itsis much more than that. It is a combination of spoken word, background music and speech samples taken from who knows where mixed with the occasional brief singing. The disc is amusing at times, annoying at others and just plain stu- pid quite often. The title track, in all 4 remixes, is a rock-esque song with a spoken word verse. The chorus vocals sound like Sting after swal- lowing the Chipmunks. In the remix- es, Fatso adds a barage of sampled voices overlayed on top of the back- ground beat. Interspersed amongst the tracks are three spoken conversations - one of which involves two people who just saw OJ while smoking mar- ijuana. The remaining "songs" sound like many things, all of them Primal Scream has abducted ex-Stone Roses bassist Mani (second from right) for its latest album, the psychedelic "Vanishing Point." ambiguous. "You Give Me a Rush"'s beat sounds like a stripped-down version of Michael Jackson's "Thriller." The seventh track gives us the phrase "Let's give Rush the bum's rush / He wants to funk us up" to the tune of Parliament's "P-Funk." And the hidden track - announced loudly on the back cover - con- tains people speaking backwards and the only intrumental solo of the whole disc - a guitar riff of 4 sec- onds. The LP is brutal to Limbaugh and is more of a political commentary than anything. Among other things said of him are that he is full of "hot gas." Also, Fatso states to his nemesis, "You call yourself the mainstream but you're really the extreme." I am not entirely convinced this disc was created by humans. It is pos- sible that somewhere in America there is a mixing board with a radio receiv- er near a zoo with some very creative monkeys - on crack. While the disc is amusing, after a couple tracks the constant berating of Rush, no matter how much you hate him, gets tiresome. If you're looking for a truly unique, strange, musical (and political) exerience, you've got one here - just don't play it at par- ties. - Jack Schillaci Supergrass In It For The Money Capitol Records Supergrass, a power-pop trio from Oxford, England, has delivered a mar- velous sophomore album with the cheekily titled "In It For The Money." The release showcases the band's hav- ing improved its chops and control of tempo from its 1995 debut, "I Should Coco," but without sacrificing any of its youthful confidence or charms. Guitarist and singer Gaz Coombes - whose facial features and impres- sive sideburns would make him the perfect candidate for a starring role in a remake of "Planet Of The Apes" - synchronizes magnificently with bassist Micky Quinn and drummer Danny Goffey throughout the album. Quinn and Goffey add several more dimensions of skill than they did on the more simple and direct "Coco,' even serving up a mean amount of funk on the first single, "Cheapskate." Other highlights include the title track, which cuts off suddenly into the explosive "Richard III;" the extreme- ly catchy, joyous "Tonight;" the hit- ting-on-all-cylanders stomp of "Sun Hits The Sky;" and the organ-driven fun of "Going Out." -Aaron Rennie * Two & Three bedroom Apartments with two bathrooms " Washerldryer hook-up * Private entry ® Starting at $675 Bring in this ad and a University of Michigan ID and receive a 10% DISCOUNT ,- k OAK RIDGE APARTMENTS <\, - 1260 Holmes * Apartment 5 Ypsilanti, MI 48197 APARTMENTS 480-6020 °, AIV& /