ARTS - ... m *t a Ihe Michigan Uaily Friday, March 22, 1991 Guess who's coming to wah-wah? ........ Page_5 by Forrest Green I1 Attitude, influences, brains and hair; for all the right reasons, Big Chief is one of a tenuous number of rock bands that matter today. The group traces its irresistible grooves from jazz saxophonist Pharoah Sanders' Tauhid album, studied by the quintessential rock influence Iggy and the Stooges, who would in turn be emulated by a struggling "colored, freak rock band" helmed by George Clinton. Big Chief's mem- bers then noted the dark, erotic and anguished frenzy of Funkadelic guitarists Eddie Hazel and Tawl Ross. Actually, Big Chief vocalist Barry Henssler is quick to dismiss what seems like a very timely influ- ence to cite in all musical circles nowadays. "It's like what Kristin Palm said that... they talked way too much about our hair," Henssler says. "I also agree that that's true, but they also talked too much about this funk influence. Because it's there, you know, you go through my records and there they are. You know, I listen to James Brown and ... blah blah blah, but I listen to Black Flag and I listen to Alice Cooper. Stuff that, to me, isn't even remotely funk." One of Big Chief's strengths is actually the way that it integrates its influences. The band often renders the Funkadelic classic "Friday Night, August 14th" with passion and a much-deserved reverence, but not without some reinterpretation. Rather than attempting to replicate Hazel's and Ross' time-bound, acerbic guitar tones, guitarists Phil Durr and Mark Dancey reinterpret the funk by displacing the structure of their guitar playing in a way that is in there sometimes, but it's not like that at all... They were also asking us, 'What do you think about all these Manchester bands, influenced by this-and-that?' We're like, look man, this is like a Phil Durr generic quote to those questions: 'Look, there's no such thing as a funky Brit."' As well as noting that funk and rap are, inherently, American stan- dards, Henssler acknowledges that the turntable and the sampler are cur- rently the two greatest innovations in popular music. Obscure samples turned up in the first two singles, "Get Down And Double Check" and "Super Stupid." The latter song, a Funkadelic cover about scoring dope in Detroit, ends with a snippet of the Last Poets' "Jones Comin' Down." The former song exemplifies Henssler's approach to lyrics - ambiguity - with only six words being repeated throughout: "Get down and double check, ba-a-a-beee." The metallic mettle of "Double Check" is underlined by a Stoogesque intricacy, and the band's newer material promises to be even more complicated and multifaceted than the Drive It Off album. I asked Henssler his personal opinion of Big Chief's context in rock; whether he feels as much as I do that the bastard approach under- mines the elitism of critics ignoring the power of a tragically underrated rock album like Free Your Mind And Your Ass Will Follow. "Yeah, my ego would like to make me believe that, too," Henssler said. "When I think about it, any really good rock has that sort of funky backbeat." BIG CHIEF headlines at St. An- drew's Hall on Saturday, with the BUCK PETS opening. Tickets are $5.50 at TicketMaster (plus the evil service charge). Yeah, they share the name of a mescaline brand and a Professor Long- hair song and a kind of sugar, but this Big Chief ain't too sweet, bobba. rhythmic and urgent, but still their Like Primus?" says Henssler. own. "'Cause over in Europe, the new "Another weird thing is, in burgeoning thing was like, white Europe, people would be like, you boys playing kind of funky music," 'Look, there's no such thing as a funky Brit' - Big Chief vocalist Barry Henssler, quoting Big Chief guitarist Phil Durr, on the 'Manchester scene' Robin Holcomb, blender of styles On her previous album, Larks, They Crazy, Robin Holcomb performed her own experimental jazz compositions, backed by a killer band who superbly complemented Holcomb's talent. On her newest, eponymous album, Holcomb melds her sparsely-worded poetry to slightly more accessible music, music that blends elements of avant-garde jazz, rock and folk. Holcomb brings her somber music and her ace musician friends (including bassist/tuba player Dave Hofstra and Naked City keyboardist Wayne Horvitz) to Alvin's (5756 Cass in Detroit) at 8 p.m. on Saturday. Tickets are $10.00 in advance, available at TicketMaster. know, you're funk influenced and you have long hair, and you're also a rock band. Do you feel similar to, like, Faith No More? You know what I mean, like that kind of shit? he continues. "We're like, look, we're not a part of that at all. That's definitely not our thing, out there: 'All right!' (imitates the sound of a bass guitar being slapped silly). It's * Holland mixes musical styles by Peter Shapiro A fter playing jazz of the most experimental strain in the early '70s, Dave Holland has settled down. When he arrived in New York in 1968, Holland came under the sway of alto saxophonist Anthony Brax- ton and the Eric Dolphy-influenced multi-instrumentalist Sam Rivers. His rhythm work, usually paired with drummer Barry Altschul, re-in- troduced a swinging sense of melodi- cism into avant garde jazz. As com- pared to the sparse and stark style of Malachi Favors, Fred Hopkins or the furious Bartokian intellectualism of Buell Neidlinger, Holland's bass playing on the 1972 album Confer- ence of the Birds, for example, sounded like the re-birth of Mingus' gospel-funk period of the late '50s. Since then, though, Holland has gone mainstream, or maybe the mainstream has caught up with him. Holland doesn't indulge in the fash- ionable neo-classicism of the Marsalis', though, instead participat- ing in the post-fusion experimenta- tion of guitarist Kevin Eubanks and M-BASErs Steve Coleman and Mar- vin "Smitty" Smith. All of the mu- sicians in the current Dave Holland Quartet are concerned with linking the age-old traditions of the blues continuum with a distinctly modern and accessible music. This conscious effort can be most obviously seen on Steve Coleman's latest record, Rhythm People: The Resurrection of Creative Black Civilization, on which all the mem- bers of Holland's group play. 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