The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 24, 1991 =-Page 15 Mudd Puppies mean no harm by Annette Petruso "We just throw everything into our music" -Ben Reynolds of the Jickasaw Mudd Puppies The Chickasaw Mudd Puppies do -what many bands would like to: make "real music," humor-filled with hand-picked, wish-list guests, such as Willie Dixon, who wrote a song for them, played on their tecords and co-produced it. Dixon's presence adds an extra dollop of blues to the rock/blues/etc. hybrid. "It's definitely got some of the blues in it. It's real stomping mu- sic," says Reynolds. Spice this with the driving rhythms of that found percussion and other sounds, plus guithr and Brant Slay's hiccupy vo- cals, and you have ideal Mudd Puppies music. "Whatever we see that makes a good sound we use. We did a radio show the other day in Atlanta and we had a drummer sit in with us and he just turned over a plastic trash can and played that and it sounded great," Reynolds ex- plains. With two excellent records, White Dirt and 8 Track Stomp, under thpir belts, the Puppies prove they're no one-hit-wonders or nov- elties (like They Might Be Giants), 0reven a cheap gimmick by a band to get attention, to be distinctive from the rest of the bands on the al- terna/college-circuit. While Dirt kept up the beat and the weirdness with more percussion, Stomp has more experimentation with rhythms and tempo. The words throughout both of their albums are a hodge-podge of Slay's images and Reynold's relatively straightfor- ward songs. "A lot of the stuff is Southern simply because that's where we're from," says Reynolds. Because they are from the South, their music has some distinct re- gional touches, more than just their lyrics, for which they could easily be pigeon-holed. They are from Athens, Georgia and Michael Stipe from R.E.M. co-produced both records. "I think there are some pre- RECORDS Continued from page 13 gle and funereal swells of mandolin and strings - waits for the sun with a bitter rebuke of Old Testament God. And on "The Sly Persuaders," a triumphant swagger of Rat Pack-era Vegas swing, Crime and the City Solution shows how its '60s-lizard sense for hip - aided by the free jazz capabilities of bassist Thomas Stern and keyboardist Chrislo Haas and the tragic swings of Bronwyn Adams's violin - manages never to slink into parody nor peddle the de- signer retro-psychedelia of outfits like the new Bunnymen or Charlatans U.K.: Bonney & Co. don't ply a particular style so much as they inhabit it in the space of a song, stretching the maximum pos- sibility out of a single movement. That's because CCS's unpre- dictable sound - masterminded by percussionist Harvey, who moon- lights on guitar in the Bad Seeds - crests and falls like a soundtrack to Bonney's rambling narratives. The expressionistic third part of "The Last Dictator," indeed, makes use of the same eerie circus steam- organ found in Cave's "The Carny," from Wenders' Wings. Like Cave's, Bonney's lyrics are heady, allegori- cal stuff: you tell me w h a t Bonney's referring to in "The Sly Persuaders" when he sings of "Foreign Saviours/ Violin players/ Tax evaders/ Soothsayers/ The door- to-door pest," and "the permanent guest." Whatever it means, Paradise Discotheque is the haunt of Berlin's coolest permanent guests since Bowie lodged the Ku'damm - in days when there was still a Wall to make the prospect of new doors compelling. - Michael Paul Fischer Skatenigs "Chemical Imbalance" (CD single) Wax Trax! The Skatenigs are probably the most obnoxious band ever. The most memorable part of their stage show is when lead singer Phil "Phildo" Owen straps on a giant plastic penis filled with whipped cream, strokes it, and yells, "Every ejaculation increases the death toll/ I'm on a roll!" Family entertainment they aren't. Nonetheless, by virtue of the fact that the band knows techno- wizard Alain Jourgensen, they found themselves in the opening slot on last summer's Revolting Cocks tour and are now signed to Chicago's Wax Trax! records, with producer Hypo Luxa (Jourgensen's pseudonym). But the Skatenigs don't fit the typical Wax Trax! profile -- they don't use any electronics. Instead, they are a punk band through and through, which means that the music is equally as obnoxious as the stage show. Both of the songs here, "Chemical Imbalance" and "Dam- age 43," are odes to rudeness. As the former song says: "Skatenigs! Mortal but invincible/ Skatenigs! Making life liveable!" Well, I don't know about that, but they are having a good time as they do it. -Mike Molitor Uue to technical ditticulties beyond this reporter's control, this story aa not include such gems as Ben Reynold's (left) opinion of the southern image as expressed in The Dukes of Hazard, the demise of 8-track tapes at the evil hand of the music industry in favor of CD's and his rave of fellow Athenian artist Vic Chestnutt. of the Chickasaw Mudd Puppies. conceived notions ... I guess it's the whole thing like Manchester is now from what I'm hearing. I can't worry about it. I just don't worry about it," says Reynolds. "We don't sound like R.E.M.... it's a real fash- ionable thing sometimes to put down those that are around you that are popular, I don't know if that happens everywhere but it does around musicians.... I am grateful for everything that R.E.M.'s done for us." On other southern popular bands, most of which do not sound much like the Mudd Puppies, Reynolds has very distinct opinions. "I think ZZ Top is cool. I don't know any- thing about their new music. I mean if I started naming ZZ Top songs, I'd start naming 'La Grange' ... stuff like that from ten or fifteen Brant Slay, at left, is the other-half years ago.. There's something about the way they meshed blues with rock and roll," Reynolds says. "They're in music for music's sake." But when asked for his opinion of the Black Crowes, he quickly asked, "Can we change the subject?" More importantly, the Mudd Puppies make distinctive, complex- sounding, yet simply elemental mu- sic. How to label it? "Musicians don't need to classify music," says Reynolds. GIET THRE IFACTS GEC'THE DAILY r r/ J/! t r r r/// r F t r r t/ l 4'4'4r4r/ '4'4'4'4r4r4t/4I4t/'f ' 4 f / /4' f'41 l4'4'f ' 411// f / t ! 44'/ t 1 1\% \% \ L \ \\\ %%% hh \ A A h A F !f /1 !/ I F/f ! ! ! / ! ! l1 r J / I ! / f / f A \ L\ \\ \ A'.\ \ \ 1i\ %\ \ AAA UsaGreNr;r !! r /-- 4'--- l~Cyndi P\ A§t .&A X A / rl/ r / lI/-J '-r 4'l/s/ " r ! r ! / J-,r ! 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Why would anyone want to turn on the television, our comfortable medium of escape, to find mindless babbling and cultural and sexual stereotypes and see sup- posedly whiny, thin people kvetch about their clogged drains? For me, it's knowing that I have an ally in being genuinely upset when a little trauma disturbs the exactitude of my existence (and don't tell me that you don't do the same thing, because I know you do.) It's also being able to laugh at ourselves and understand each other. "That's the road to hap- piness? Self-induced schizophre- nia?" Michael asks Elliot, who replies, "You want to have a life right here, today? Then pick your battles and learn how to compro- mise. Now, where do you want to have lunch." The writers pinpoint the elements that demonstrate peo- ple's humor, pain and weirdness; in short, life. thirtysomething Stories is about making choices. In the characters' cases, the choice might be in taking a career risk, having a second child or following an artistic dream. While we twentysomethings are making choices in different circumstances, the difficulties and the fears are not CHICKASAW MUDD PUPPIES open for the FEELIES at the Blind Pig on Monday, May 6. Doors open at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $9 in advance at TicketMaster (p.e.s.c) The Puppies will perform an acoustic set at Schoolkid's on the day of the show at 4 p.m. age-specific. Those decisions are made by all of us, and thirtysome- thing reflects that. Melissa may say it best for many of thirtysome- thing's non-viewers: "I think reality is overrated." But for those of us who need a partner in misery, thir- tysomething Stories is the perfect companion. -Elizabeth Lenhard Write for summer artst If you have some back- ground or Interest In a form of self-expression -related to the arts, call 763-0379 find out how you too can express yourself. S Peple"Kii gonydw" anaoue rwerry "*I Rasbery" Wtemeln.4Baan f, 3 t 4 E t { i i f t f { i I. f I i i , 1 f 9 I' t f i 3 r I f i f i f tAINBOW YOGURT +plus in the food court NOOPEN Custom-made frozen yogurts mixed with your choice of fresh fruits! " Yogurt Shakes (all fruit flavors) " Power Drinks (all fruit flavors) Freshly squeezed juices " Hot muffins with frozen yogurt 1214 South University Street, Ann Arbor 741-9234 SAVE 10% ON OUR VACATION SPOTS. tot., 3 'h Daytona Beach it ain't. But stop- ping at Shurgard on your way home this summer is a lot more fun than hauling your bundt cake pans and lime- green Barcalounger all over the coun- try and back. Plus with the 10 percent student discount, you get to see for yourself how higher mathematics can indeed be applied to real life situations.