Monday, July 19, 1999 - The Michigan Daily - 9 'Bizkit proves to be more than just a dull 'Nookie' By Ian Dyament For the Daily al from their current number one album "Significant Other." Some of the better songs The Phoenix Plaza Amphitheater welcomed played off of the album were "Trust," "Don't Limp Bizkit on one of the hottest days of summer Go Off Wondering" and current MTV staple is past weekend. As a clever promotion tie-in, "Nookie." modern rock radio station 89X held their Eighth Hardcore Limp Bizkit fans could distinguish Annual Birthday Bash at the concert. their melodic commercial sounding new mate- Billed as the "Limptropolis" tour, Limp Bizkit rial from their aggressive old material off of along with openers, Staind and Simon Says played their debut album. "Three Dollar Bill, Y'all." to a sold out crowd at the The highlights of the show was a heavy rendi- Amphitheater. The capacity tion of the Ministry classic, "Thieves," and a crowd of 8,000 jocks and rousing rendition of "Stuck." During this num- mall rats braved the hot teto- her, lead vocalist Fred Durst walked into the Limp Bizkit peratures and humidity to lawn section of the park and sang with the Phoenix Plaza show the band their love, fans. Amphitheater Sorely missing from the This current tour is a warm up for the second festivities was energetic annual "Family Values" festival, which Limp July 16, 1999 Detroit rapper Kid Rock, Bizkit is going to headline in the fall. The who was slated as an open- "Limptropolis" tour is Limp Bizkit's first ing act on the tour but due to major tour for "Significant Other" since their some undisclosed reason at slew of "guerilla-style" promotional shows this point was not present. that hit the 7th House in Pontiac last June. Simon Says kicked off With the Eighth Annual 89X Birthday Bash the show instead with its Limp Bizkit proved that they have what it takes to dose of watered down emo- lead a generation of vulnerable teenagers into the core music. Staind finished millenium and the bank. off the-opening duties with a tight set of frail and dotional songs from their debut album ysfunctional." In between set changes, some girls got on their boyfriend's shoulders and exposed them- selves to the crowd in a shameless attempt for a backstage passes which angered some con- cert goers. LSA junior, Harmony Tahy, lead the pack of angry patrons by throwing half-empty water bottles at the exhibitionists. Commenting on the event, Tahy said, "If people are that hard up for T&A they should have went to a topless With the nudity and opening acts out of the way, Florida's Limp Bizkit took to the stage that was decorated with an amazing array of [" lights and gothic stage props. To the opening chords of the group's first number "Just like This," the crowd whirled itself into a fit of aggression that didn't end until the closing chord of its last song, George Michael's "Faith." courtesy of terscope Records Limp Bizkit showcased most of the materi- iUmp Bizkit wants to help improve America's drains. The summer of bland fficks Courtesy of Warner Bros Why yes, that is Mike Patton of the now defunct Faith No More, posing here with his other band, Mr. Bungle. Mr. Bungle California Warner Bros ***I Mr. Bungle has again released an album to alienate their past fans. Their self-titled major label debut was aggressive; the follow up noisy and avant garde. "California" appeals to the Burt Bacharach lovers in the crowd. From the gentle opening gull cries and xylophone, the CD firmly recants the cacaphony of its Bungle forebears. Mike Patton really sings on this album, a skill he's rarely shown on the last half dozen projects he's been involved with: While there are punctuated moments of energy, like the hopping Raymond Scott-y "None of Them Knew They Were Robots," the recording is rather- soothing. "Retrovertigo" could almost be a '70s love song, if not for the sentiment of lines like "But I'm sheltered byyyy my channel surfing." And again with the xylophones! "The Air- Conditioned Nightmare" is a bizarre sonic apoth- eosis of the Beach Boys, and perhaps of the album's namesake. It begins with a layered percussion and vocal harmony section a la "Pet Sounds," but morphs into a faster, louder "Barbara Ann"-as-punk cho- rus. It's intriguing and complicated - and a quite mature bit of theft. "California" is thought pro- voking, but doesn't hang together as well as it could. Hey, it must be because they were trying as many ways as possible to get a radio single. If you don't get that joke, don't buy the album. Ted Watts A Tribute to The Pixies Where is my mind? Glue Factory Few bands have had a greater influence on the sound of rock and roll in the past decade than The Pixies. For instance, Nirvana is know to have admitted that "Smells Like Teen Spirit" was acon- scious attempt to make a Pixies-style song. 15 different bands cover songs from all five Pixies albums. There aren't many big name acts on the album, the most recognizable being Weezer. There are several one "Buzz Clip" wonders such as Eve 6, Superdrag and Nada Surf. The rest of the album is made up of bands like The Get-up Kids, Braid and Weston who aren't well known outside of the indie rock scene. It was inevitable that some of the bands would the make the mistake, common to tribute albums, of trying too hard to replicate the original. Luckily, not all of the bands fall into that trap. Sense Field performs a hauntingly beautiful ver- sion of "Caribou" The highlight of the album is Reel Big Fish's low-fi techno rendition of "Gigantic." The tracks by Far, Teen Heroes and The Siren Six! are all solid. With almost half of the songs taken from "Doolittle," the tribute may disappoint fans of the otheralbums. Itwould have also been nice if more of the bands had tried harder to let there own style come across on the CD. Andrew Schlegel Mortician Chainsaw Dismemberment Relapse Records ****, or no stars The two sets of stars chosen to represent this album is fully justified after one listen to Mortician's new gore opus, "Chainsawr Dismemberment." Through 27 tracks, with a time average of one and a half minutes a track, Mortician ceaselessly pounds the listener with its no-holds-barred death metal. The songs are furiously paced to the group's drum machine playing inhumanly fast-blast and double pedal beats while the guitars have been apparently tuned down three more steps than its last album (this means they are tuned well below Korn's overhyped "A" tuning). The bass consequently is so low that what is sup- posed to be a bassline resembles more of that sound you hear driving next to someone listening to rap music in their car with the bass cranked to the point of fuzz. Vocals for the album are pure subterraneap guttural barks that sound like cookie monster's voice slowed down and recorded under water. If you think the group's detuned musical ethics is as low as this group goes, Mortician sinks even lower once you notice its song titles, lyrics and art- work. "Drowned In Your Blood," "Mauled Beyond Recognition," "Final Bloodbath" and "Silent Night, Bloody Night" are among the delightful numbers on "Chainsaw Dismemberment," which get their respective points across via lyrics such as, "Endless slaughter/ eviscerated/ throats will be slit, cut, chopped and hacked." There are also plenty of obscure horror movie samples placed in between songs to add to the mood of the album. To top this all off, the band has' adorned its album cover with a picture of a woman with a dismembered leg tied up helplessly to a stake. Despite all of its songs sounding amazingly sim- ilar to each other, hardly any note definition in its riffing and its tasteless lyrics about mutilation and See MUSICREVIEWS, Page 11- By Ed Sholinsky Daily Arts Editor So, you're going to the movie and you realize that there's nothing worth seeing. And you think back to this e last year, where there ejust a ton of good movies in the multiplexes and art houses. By the end of the summer last year most of the 1998's 15 best movies has already come out - "Saving Private Ryan," "Out of Sight," "Zero Effect," "The Big Lebowski," "The Truman Show," "Bulworth," '" " Smoke Signals," "idtng Doors" and "The Big One" - and the summer had been been the best in years. Though the summer might be turninga around with the',release Courtesy of t',aWorks Pctues It looks like things got a little scary for UII Taylor In "The Haunting." of "Eyes Wide Shut" and the to break new ground like upcoming "Drop Dead "SPR," "Out of Sight," "The Gorgeous" and "Blair Witch Truman Show," "Bulworth," Project," for the most part this "Pi" and "Smoke Signals." summer has just been a bore. When you go to theaters this Even "Star War: Episode I - summer you've had the choice The Phantom Menace," which between "Wild Wild West," has been the season's best, is -t Lake Placid," "Tarzan"or old hat and has done nothing See SUMMER MOVIES, Page I