You've been flirting again The Flirtations, a gay andlesbian a capella group;-play the Ark tonight at 8 p.m. Tickets for the concert are $13.50 in advance at Schoolkids' Records; call 763-8587 for more information. Page 8 Tuesday, November 14, 1995 . ., 0 Ben Harper fights with his music By Jennifer Buckley ,Daily Weekend Editor When Ben Harper opened for P.J. Harvey at the State Theater last month, he sat in darkness for most of his set, shouting from the shadows, alternat- ,ing between acoustic strumming and fierce, squalling electric slide. The stage lights caught Harper's thin 'braids whipping from side to side as he sang ofoppression, ignorance, rac- ism and Rodney King to a theater full of white people anxious to hear the British diva howl "Me-Jane." From the audience, the brief but ferocious set seemed deliberately confrontational, powerful and an- gry, an attempt make sure that while his music might go in one ear and ,out the other, his message would hit the gray matter in between. It sounded like a wake-up call. But it wasn't. "Nope," said Harper when asked if the had chosen his angriest songs for those reasons. "You know, 45 min- utes is the amount of time it takes to get warmed up to play another hour and 15 minutes ... set lists are sci- ence. We just kick into a groove." And a mighty groove it is. In con- cert and on his latest record "Fight for Your Mind," Harper and the Innocent Criminals deliver a particularly funky, forceful blend of rock, folk, reggae and gospel powered by both acoustic guitar and soulful slide playing. BEN HARPER AND THE INNOCENT CRIMINALS Where: Blind Pig When: Tonight. Doors 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $11.75 in advance. his 1993 debut "Welcome to the Cruel World") Harper sang of a "legal lynch mob/Like the days strung up from the tree/the LAPD." Harper's songs celebrate love and denounce hatred with equal convic- tion and passion, revealing a deep personal strength and a profound spiri- tuality. "I believe in a few things/God and the devil and love/'cause I've looked up from the bottom/and I've stared down from above," he sings on the album's first single "Ground on Down." Harper also believes in "the power of music," he said. He spent his child- hood surrounded by it, learning folk and blues acoustic and slide guitar playing. "There was so much acoustic music in my family growing up, I was always picking (guitars) up as a kid," he remembered. He's become something of a rare instrument collector as well. "The Weissenborn guitar that I play was made in the late 'teens, early '20s. They're rare and I look out for them wherever I go." He also learned that music can de- liver powerful social and political messages. On "Like a King," (from His lyrics on his latest album also dwell on issues of racism and repres- sion. "Oppression/to divide and con- quer is your goal ... you may have the dollar on your side ... but the gospel truth you cannot hide," he sings on the rumbling, bass-heavy opener "Op- pression." On his albums and in performance, Harper stands as a strong black man, proud, intelligent and sensitive. The music, he maintained, is his form of political and personal activism. "Every time I sing, I'm active. There's a lot of unactive activism going on. These words are my words, and my words are the foundations for my actions as a man," Harper stated. But "Fight for Your Mind" also reveals a softer side of Harper, bal- ancing politically-oriented songs like "Excuse Me Mr." and the title track with the sweet, grooving love song "Gold to Me" and deeply spiritual ballads like "God Fearing Man" and "Power of the Gospel." Harper, however, refuses to align himself with any one religion. "Orga- nized religion is a sin," he insisted. "My belief is in the spirit, and the spirit is what I believe moves us all and has brought us to where we are and who we are." He also draws inspiration from such artists as Bob Marley (Harper's "Burn One Down" recalls Marley's solo acoustic work, and the Innocent Criminals sometimes work "Get Up Stand Up" into their live set) and Jimi Hendrix (Harper included a wild but soulful electric slide cover of "Voo- doo Child" at the State Theater show). "I love Jimi and Bob so much, be- cause I always come back to their music and hear and feel new things," he said. But Harper's musical interests don't end in rock, folk and reggae. "I love Middle Eastern and Turkish folk mu- sic," he said. "Music brings you to more music, you know." "I like classical a lot. I don't like huge symphonies; that interests me very little. I believe that sections of one instrument weakens the power of the individual instrument," Harper stated. "I'm interested in the smaller con- figurations, quintets and quartets. I like Mahler, Mahler's Ninth, espe- cially. I like Beethoven. I very much like Bach ... and Vivaldi." Harper tried his own hand at classi- cal music on "Fight for Your Mind," composing for and conducting a string quartet on "Power of the Gospel." "Music is ... emotion. I just commu- nicated with them and conducted them to how it felt," he said. After a three-week stint with I. , *1 Ben Hamer: A man and his music. Harvey Harper began yet another leg of the eternal tour that began with "Welcone to the Cruel World." "I've been on the road for over two years now," Harper said wearily. It hasn't been easy, he admitted. "Any- thing that's going to bring you growth is going to be tough. But it's not because I get to play music almost every night. "That's what I need, like breath, like water." Eskimo Der Shrimpkin Prawn Song In a perfect world, Eskimo would be the kings of the music industry. They would sit in high thrones atop Mount Olympus, coming up with laws and what not, eating yam fries and swigging Yoo-Hoo Chocolate Drink. "And the people would see this, and it would be good. This album is incredible. Released on Les Claypool's label, one can see adefinite Primus influence, along with Frank Zappa, the Residents, Captain 'Beefheart, and anyone else who has ever been described as indescribable. The theme of the album is non-stop fun, which Eskimo has in spades. VBesides, how could a band not be great with song titles like "Count Rock(u-ass)ula" and "(The Assassi- nation of) Principal Poop?" From the opening drum/marimba -beat of "Bones of the Saints," it's r-obvious that Eskimo's ready to have a good time. The music ranges from slow lounge to crazed polyrhythmic :jazz, often within the space of the same song. "Dado Peru," with its non- sense word sing-along chorus, de- serves to be blasted at every frat party from now until the next Eskimo al- bum comes along. "Young Mr. Plum" is downright scary, in an Elvira hor- ror-flick sort of way. By the time the Latvian folk of "Pumpkins" chimes in, one asks themselves if there's any thing this band can't do. Although about half the songs on the album are strictly instrumental, when Eskimo sings, they do it right. The lyrics are mostly brilliant gibber- ish, like "Anytime you dig a hole/eat your favorite marble/check the house for mice and then/make Junior read his bible." I get the feeling that these guys could sing "The Declaration of Independance" and make it danceable. The two covers on the album - The Residents' "Kill the Great Raven" and Duke Ellington's "Blue Pepper (Far East of the Blues)" showcase their wide range of influences, and both end up sounding like Eskimo songs. This is the first time I've heard a Duke Ellington cover sandwiched between a thrash tune and a surf song, and I love it. By the time the last song, "Electric Acid Pancake House" rolls around, a ditty about Elvis in the jungle in which Eskimo proclaims "The King lives, and kills without remorse," you're ready to start the disc over and hear it all over again. But not so fast - after 3 minutes of silence, the song goes on for another 10 minutes, ending with a rockabilly tune that declares "When that last taco rolls off the line/When that last taco rolls, I will cry." Buy this disc for yourself. Grab a couple of copies for your friends and parents. And while you're at it, don't forget to pick up some Yoo-Hoo for the boys in the band. - Jeffrey Dinsmore Souls of Mischief No Man 's Land Jive Records Let's start by giving a brief history of Souls of Mischief. They came out on one of the dopest cuts of the time - the Del B-sides, and had everyone jonesin' for the record. In 1993 The Souls of Mischief released their fist album, the revolutionary "'93 To Infinity." It was a solid album that was perfectly under- rated and blew minds. Those who found it bumped it daily, and some heads still do. That was a good time for hip-hop: Pharcyde came out, and Tribe and Del La Soul dropped there latest albums. Hip-Hop was thriving with creativity and innovation, and some seriously dope beats apd rhymes. Then there was a calm, and all true hip-hop fans hoped it was merely the eye of the storm, that these great masterminds were hiding out rigorously working on their new mind-blowing projects. Maybe they were meticulously devising plans to take the tired stated of hip-hop and give it new life. So when there was talk of a new Souls ofMischiefalbum there was hope that they would come straight out of the lab with anothermagical spell that keeps hip-hop heads nodding. Well, although "No Man's Land" will definitely make heads bob, it's certainly not of the caliber of their last album. Had this album been released by anyone else it would have been great, but S.O.M. had "'93 To infinity" and they didn't even approach it. First ofall, kill theengineer. Why do they sound like they're in a tin can? The unisci vocals sound like a flimsy wafer of sound. Throughout the whole record tho y ruin vocals that should be in your face by making them distant. On the first album they had a for- mula for bleats. It was simple and re- petitive, but the shit was super clever. I don't kncov what they're shooting for on this record. Leave the "Oakland Funk" to Too Short. They definitely win the seriously wack award for"most inappropriate use of Q-Tip's drum kit" - yo, the snare should be lower in the mix than the vocals, kid. If you've heard their last album, you know that S.O.M. can pack more rhymes into one verse then most MCs. This album ils no different. Their lyri- cal style has a sense of clarity and proci- sion. But their content has gotten a little boring. They traded being fresh for be- ing "real," whatever that means. As harsh as this might sound, I wbuld say that this album is an important part of your collection. Just don't expect to bring back the past. - Kimberly Howitt Def Leppard Vault Mercury Records "Pour some sugar on me/In the name of love/Pour some sugar on me." Does life really get any cooler than Def Leppard? I can still hear the thun- derous electronic drums of Lep's 19g7 classic "Pour Some Sugar On Me" rat- tling the walls of the gym at my junior high prom. Def Leppard's greatest hits package "Vault" compiles all the band's great cheesy-but-great classics into onebright and shiny thrilling disc. With songs like "Pour Some Sugar On Me," "Photo- graph", and "Rocket," it's easy to think back 10 or so years and remember when a great music video was a video chock full of pyrotechnics and scantily clad women. Have we progressed or re- gressed? Nevertheless, "Vault"throws together 14 Def classics and one new track to make a good retrospect of the band's 18 year history. The album is overflowing with songs from 1987's "Hysteria,!' but rightfully so, with its status being one of the best selling albums of all-time, Six "Hysteria" tracks and a couple from each of their other albums make up the collection of Lep's beefy chorus and electronic sounding songs. "Vault" includes "Let's Get Rocked," "Love Bites" "Hysteria" and lots more tunes with all the same drum beats. The ballads "Two Steps Behind," "Have You Ever Needed Someone So Bad" and Fa- Fa-Fa-"Foolin"' are all here too. The greatest thing about this collec- tion is that all the Lep you ever need is on one disc. Throw those old and worn out tapes and records into a box and go out and buy the CD. So get in the car, roll down them windows, and blast "Arma- geddon It" louder than Mom everiet you in her car. - Brian A. Gnatt 1 IQ ra .'S. 7 S Complete Meals for under $5 Student Special includes- salad, entree, starch and pop or coffee Ilsrael &Judaism rexperience them together! r-. ti w & I In a perfect world, Eskimo would be the musical kings of the universe. See RECORDS,,page 9 1