Monday, June 29, 1998 - The Michigan Daily - 13 Hotinued from Page 11 "We got better at song writing,' Clayden said. There was no pres- sure on this LP. We had no label, we had no money, we didn't even know if the LP would ever get released. So we just went into our garage studio - does this make us a garage band? - and experiment- ed and enjoyed ourselves. * "We sampled double bass gui- tars, ripping up magazines, bees, pissing in the cups, us shouting at each other and even us spray paint- ing graffiti on the studio wall." The band first appeared back in 1991 with its debut album "Industrial" on Peaceville Records. Since then, none of its early fury or passion has dissipated. So what has been the band's secret to keeping its convictions from sounding pre- Pntious? "Have you turned on the TV or been outside lately?" Clayden said. Western life is a crock of shite. We all happily trundle along safe in the knowledge that we are not responsible or accountable for anything. "For example, my UK tax money goes from my pocket to the gsndonesian government's pocket. hen they buy tanks and planes from us with it and kill everyone in East Timor. "I don't want my tax money to go to that cause, and I'm sure there are a lot of people who don't either. But they never get to find these things out. Do we see news about it? "'Welcome to the BBC news at six. Today it was revealed that our *overninetit is apending your tax money on genocide in East Timor. Keep putting in the overtime folks, they need every tax pound they can muster to help the Indonesians mur- der more defenseless civilians. more at 10.' I don't think it's ever going to happen, is it?' On a lighter note, Clayden dis- cussed his college life in England. "I went to school for four years S> study graphic design and illustra- tion," said Clayden. Halfway through however, he realized that the lecturers teaching were there more for the money than sincerity. "I found it hard being told that someone 'wasn't drawing right.' How can you attach any kind of merit system of hierarchy to art anyway? Isn't it all subjective?" Clayden said. "I just think educa- n needs a good kick up the arse and not another million pound review board to assess what's wrong in education today." Fueled by Clayden's head strong convictions, it's easy to see why Pitchshifter still remains one of the elite in electronic-based heavy music. So it is unlikely that the band mill let up its momentum any time on. Just as its music on "www.pitchshifter.com" is infec- tious and crushing, so is the band's refreshingly ssr fighttf~rs rd out- look on life. Prodigy pleases diverse group of fans By Adlin Rosh Daily Arts Writer Without a doubt, the place to be last Wednesday was The State Theater in Detroit. The brash sight-and-sound specta- cle known as The Prodigy was in town, and everyone was there. The rave fans, the punk kids, the preppy club hoppers, the steroid pumping jocks and even the petite, shy girl next door were in atten- The Prodigy dance to show their support for he State Theater Liam, Keith, Leeroy and June 24, 19pa Maxim. Superficial cat- egorizations were f', apparently left at home Wednesday night for the sold- out show. "Prodigy's music is for everyone," Maxim said in an interview with The Daily. "It's not for any single one person. You can't just associate it with just one group of people. Prodigy music is just Prodigy music. It comes through. Be it you're black, white ... whatever. No matter what you're into, it's always fine to be into Prodigy music." Having good ties with fans and keep- ing its grassroots mentality have always been among the main objectives of the group. "The important thing is that people understand what we're about, and that means a great deal to us," Maxim said. "As far as hype, we've been made up to be something that we're completely not. People expect to see other people flying around when they come to our shows. That's not what we're about. We're not about selling records. We're here to provide a good concert, and hopefully people who come to our shows will pass it on to their friends. That's the way we want to get known. We don't hype ourselves on TV or any- thing like that." Complete with a live drummer and guitar player, The Prodigy managed to recreate its studio composition live in a very organic and exciting manner. "In a way, you can't bring the studio to the stage," Maxim said. "Basically what we do is that we perceive the basic beats and songs as a carcass of music that we play from. "But the majority of it is live and the carcass serves as the foundation for the piece. Liam's got the beats, and we got guitars playing along as well as the drummer while myself, I freestyle the lyrics here and there. We're not too rigid about what we're going to do, so we just jam basically." Frontmen Maxim, Keith and Leeroy took turns enticing the crowd and tak- ing center stage during different songs. Each brought his own unique personal- ity and flair to the performance. Maxim, having the rock star swag- ger down to an art, kept a menacing presence and maintained the crowd's attention and enthusiasm throughout the set. Keith was by no means outdone by Maxim. He pranced around with a menacing look while generously offered handshakes to the front row. Leeroy danced onstage all night while Liam remained behind his rig, grooving along. Highlights of the show included Keith and Maxim trading macho lines during the crowd favorite "Breath," and Keith handling solo performance moments during "Firestarter." The audience under the State Theater's roof was on fire. The ener- getic atmosphere was incredible. Maxim exclaimed at one point between songs, "It seems Detroit is the place to be!" The Detroit crowd resounded with a loud roar of approval. The Prodigy ended its set with a rousing rendition of "Fuel my fire" and The boys of The Prodigy don't look so scary just hanging out. But once they suit up and get on stage all hell breaks loose, as happened last Wednesday at The State Theater. thanked the adrenaline-rushed Detroit crowd. It was a rock show. It was a rave show. No, it was both. Whatever you want to call it, don't call it an "elec- tronica show" Maxim spoke disap- provingly of that term. "'Electronica' is just a man-made word," MAxim said. "It's just a cate- gory used to label music in the American music industry just to bring the British acts to make them sound like them." The Prodigy would rather not be pigeon-holed into any category at all. "We started out in the rave scene but slowly progressed-though several pro- gressions and that allowed us to incor- porate a lot of different influences like hip hop, R & B, rap, rock and all that," MAxim said. But as far as falling with- in a category, we fall into a category all onto ourselves. You can't put us into any category with any other groups." Nor was last Wednesday night the typical concert experience. The Prodigy's perforiance destroyed all boundaries. r_ n *Ann Arbor's only Body Piercer with expert consultation and after-care checkups -Ornamental piercing only (no genital or mouth piercing) * Piercings available with gold jewelry + Hand-made crafts, Body jewelry and much more 109 S. Fourth Ave. Ann Arbor, MI Phone: (734) 669-0900 Drink specials all night. LOLLEGE NIGHT $1.50 longnecks & pitchers all night. No cover w/student ID 21+ ORDER TOUR