Monday July 9, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com artspage@michigandaily.com 734-763-0379 American music' that never gets old The healing powers of soul. A tamer Cat A little Memphis soul renews the Power By MATT RONEY ing their solo records, that is. Daily Arts Writer Their fans are better off for it. "Blister in the Sun," the lead single A lot of bands have a hard time from the Femmes's 1982 self-titled realizing when they have a good debut, remains one of the few songs thing going. The thatcan get an entire party clapping past several'years The Vioent and twitching on cue. And songslike have seen a num- Femmes "Add It Up" find new homes in the ber of lackluster hearts of angsty youth with quirky releases from leg- July12 senses of humor every day. endary bands - DOOSopenat If you're thinking that that's even the Stooges, 7:00 p.m. some pretty impressive staying the pride of Ann $27.50 -$49.50 power for songs that are pushing Arbor, have put twenty-five years old, you're right. out a record disap- Atthe Royal Oak The Femmes's music is timeless in pointing enough to Music Theater the best sense of the word - their mar their catalog jittery, frenetic rants on high-school in the minds of many of their fans. alienation and unrequited love have Not so the Violent Femmes. After a multigenerational appeal. the less-than-stellar reaction to the The core of the Femmes's sound band's last album, Freak Magnet, is the acoustic bass guitar of Brian the Femmes decided to say goodbye Ritchie. Ritchie's bass lines are to the studio. Now they play the part groovy and intricate, propel- of international troubadours, end- ling the music forward like a jet lessly touring their tried-and-true engine. Of course, Victor DeLo- favorites - when they're not record- renzo's ultra-barebones drum- ming can't be overlooked. He has played since 1981 on a snare drum and a homemade "tranceaphone" - a steel bushel basket overturned on a five-dollar tom-tom. And, unlike most drummers, his habit of playing standing up allows him to be the kinetic centerpiece of the show as he hops around behind his stripped-down kit., But it's Gordon Gano's distinc- tive vocals that make the Violent Femmes's music instantly recog- nizable. His biting, sarcastic lyrics brim with innuendo, and his voice often sounds like he is sobbing and sneering at the same time. His scream of "Everything! Every- thing! Everything!" at the climax of "Kiss Off" is one of the most cathartic moments in rock. Plus, any Violent Femmes show comes with the added bonus of the Horns of Dilemma, the Femmes's touring horn section. The Dilemmas See FEMMES, Page 10 The of the the i scene, times a fall fr( can rei musicia best Even Cat (Chan! first stunni intrigu its min experin billows what s recent Win Music went t weeks Januar veneer the 3' found Medic and ps rious f drunke shall h very d at deat in a 20 York T How medica for Th re-rele and re for bot By ANNA ASH reinvented approachto performing Associate Arts Editor (gone are the days of mooning the audience and shouting obscenities badass pedestal may be one at the techies) weren't hampered most lionized positions in by the delay. ndie-rock The new Cat Power still balanc- but some- Cat Power es her ostensible melancholy upon sobering and Dirty smoked vocals and sparse chords. om grace On The Greatest, though, with the invent a Delta BlUeS addition of veteran soul musicians an in the Mabon "Teeny" Hodges, his broth- of ways. J:lyp3, er Leroy Hodges and Steve Potts, though 8 Cat Power's music is laced with a Power's $20 bit of gingham twang and spiced Marshall) with a subdued shuffle. But even life was At The Majestic with a heady fix of Memphis soul ng and Theater, Detroit backing her up, Marshall retains ing with that element of heartbroken, for- imalist instrumentation and orn despondence that made her mental excursions, it merely such a hit in the black-lined eyes of .in the prevailing winds of the indie-rock crowd. he has done since her most Although this album and Mar- album The Greatest. shall's subsequent breakdown ner of the 2006 Shortlist didn't initiate her rebirth as a Prize, The Greatest under- soul musician, it, and her tour- wo album releases. Just two ing with the Memphis Rhythm before its initial release in Band and now the Dirty Delta y 2006, Marshall's badass Blues, have undone the hems of began to deteriorate and her self-imposed and off-putting 4-year-old southern belle public persona. The entertain- herself at Mount Sinai ment factor of a fucked-up rock al Center for alcohol abuse star can only go so far, and con- .ychiatric treatment. Noto- cert reviews from the past year for her unpredictable and have taken note of Marshall's en behavior on stage, Mar- transformation on stage. ad unfortunately reached a This Friday there may still be ismal place. "I was looking a few awkward moments of overt h, I wanted to die," she said casualness, but the chances of 06 interview with The New Marshall abandoning the Majestic imes. Theater mid-song are significantly cever, though Marshall's lower than what they were a few 1 issues postponed her tour years ago. And instead of break- e Greatest and instigated a ing off into a tangent of rage after a ase of the album, the success mistake, the chances that Marshall cognition she has received willjust smile, apologize and move th the album itself and her on are thankfully quite high. II