The Michigan Daily - Wlu4r, e . - Thursday,September 14, 1995 - 78 Rusted Root's underground success Pittsburgh band's easygoing attitude wins grass-roots following By Karl Jones Weekend, etc. Editor A man crouches on a rock at Pine Knob music theater, hand painted Rusted Root t-shirt on his back and wooden sign with the same name at his feet. No commercial band gear, just shiny, gold lettering that it must've taken him hours to paint. "Man," he sighs with a slow grin. "I've loved Rusted Root since the first time I ever heard them play." That's it. One show, one discovery and you're hooked. With minimal ra- dio play for their latest album "When I Woke" and a video that has not yet been sucked into regular rotation on MTV, Rusted Root is like an object in a dark room. You don't know it's there until you trip over it on your way to the light. According to Patrick Norman (bass, electric guitar, vocals), the band was even an entity that its own members stumbled over unexpectedly. Mike Glabicki (lead vocals, acoustic guitar), Jim Donovan (set drums, percussion, guitar), and Liz Berlin (vocals and percussion) were what Norman refers to as the "gen- esis of Rusted Root." The three got together with another bassist in 1990 to make a demo tape for a rock competition in their hometown of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The tape was selected out of around 200 other entries, and the band moved on to the live performance part of the competition. "Things didn't work out with their original bassist, and Jim (a friend from high school) asked me if I would play bass with him for the show in a couple days," Norman said. "I had actually never played bass before, but I said 'Uh... sure, I'll do it!' I figured I would fake my way through it." Norman's "poser bass" certainly fooled the audience, and the band placed second in the competition. Around that time, John Buynak (gui- tar, flute, vocals) and Jenn Wertz (former background volalist) stumbled across Rusted Root as well. "They were actually out taking pictures of us one day, and we said, 'Hey, you want to join the band, too?"' Norman laughs, like recruit- ing photographers is the world's most natural occurence. "They said yeah, so we recorded an album to- gether (Cruel Sun, 1993). We asked Jim Dispirito (percussion) to join the band after a while, and that's just basically it." That's basically it... except for that tiny part about moving from their indie Blue Duck label to Mer- cury Records. And those times they toured with a few little bands like, oh, Page and Plant, the Grateful Dead, and Toad the Wet Sprocket. And the fact that sales for their in- dependent -release "Cruel Sun" are currently near 350,000. But that's life with Rusted Root. Things happen, bands form, record deals are signed, and the world keeps turning. No big deal. "We really didn't shop our stuff very hard to record companies," Norman insists. "We were surprised (when Mercury approached us), but... they weren't the typical record weasels you always hear about, so we decided to take the leap of faith and sign." Rusted Root spent most of the past year touring in support of their Mercury debut album "When I Woke." One stop even brought them to Ann Arbor's Tower Records for an acoustic show during Hash Bash in April. "I was shocked at how large of a turn-out there was just for that festi- val. People were pretty peaceful, but I guess with the nature of Hash Bash, they're going to be peaceful," Norman laughed. This summer, the band toured mainly with the Allman Brothers, but also did a few shows with Page and Plant and the Grateful Dead. With so many members playing so many in- struments, Rusted Root's arena shows have become studies in motion. Band members dash between basses and bongos, guitars and pennywhistles, never missing a beat or diminishing the intensity of their magical, earthy, hip-shaking sound. Connecting with the crowd is im- portant to Norman, so at every arena show, he tries to pick out at least one person he can see and concentrate on their reaction to the music. "A huge part of what we are is to be interactive with the audience and kind of make the energy a cyclical effect," Norman said. "We give out energy, the audience returns it, and in return, we give it back out again. It's a very personal thing." Rusted Root, a surprising success with independet releases selling over 350,000 copies. Norman is not the only band mem- ber concerned with the flow of en- ergy. Singer Michael Glabicki's vocals, while haunting and power- ful, are occasionally difficult to understand. No, Norman says, Glabicki is not singing in a differ- ent language. He is simply moving where the musical energy leads him. "They're just vocalizations," Norman said. "Tones are energy waves, and they hit different parts of your body. If you hear a low bass throbbing, you'll feel it in a differ- ent place than you feel a high guitar scream. Rhythmically, things work like that as well. When you're cre- ating lyrics, that might come up as just a chant because you don't have a word for it yet, and sometimes those mantras work better than any word would." The summer tour is over now, and days of cramming ten people onto one bus are long gone for Rusted Root. No more traveling so long that one town blurs into an- other, and you forget where you are. Alas, the band is moving on to other projects while the energy is still high. "We're planning on covering Carlos Santana's 'Evil Ways' for a Jodie Foster movie called 'Home for the Holidays"' Norman said, Foster, apparently a fan, was the one who approached the group about recording a song for the film, which will star Holly Hunter and Robert Downey Jr. "I'm flattered because I'm a big fan of hers," said Norman. "I think she's an amazing person." Beyond that, Rusted Root just plans to stick to their zen philosophy and go where the energy flow takes them. ° "More playing,just keeping the cre- ativity open and flowing. That's my plan for the future of this band," Norman explained. "Wherever that leads us... that's fine with me." Natalie Merchant Tigerlily t Elektra When singer Natalie Merchant left 10,000 Maniacs two years ago, the band was enjoying its critical and commercial peak after years of limited success. Her decision came as a surprise to some, but over the course of five albums of the Mani- acs' quirky, lovely pop-folk, Mer- chant had quietly assumed leader- ship of the group. Merchant joined the Maniacs at age 16 and literally grew up with the band. By 1992's much-lauded "Our Time in Eden," the singer was writing all of the band's music and lyrics. She had shed her stage-frightened, frumpy, flower-child image and matured into a delightful frontwoman and a confi- dent performer. After playing several environ- mental and political benefits, in- cluding a stint with pal Michael Stipe at Clinton's inaugural ball, Merchant finally delivered "Tigerlily," her long-anticipated solo debut. Merchant distinguishes her solo sound from the Maniacs' immedi- ately, dispensing with her old band's jangly, richly textured, layered acoustic sound in favor of simpler arrangements of her piano, organ and vibraphone, Jennifer Turner's guitar, Barrie Maguire's bass and Peter Yanowitz' percussion. And the results are definitely mixed. "San Andreas Fault" dis- plays Merchant's honeyed alto at its sweetest as she draws a caution- ary picture of the "jet-set life" of Hollywood's "promised land." In the beautiful, sobering "Seven Years," Merchant sings as a wronged lover, hiding a quiet vio- lence in her voice as she sings, "Damn you betrayer / how you lied / but for seven years / you were loved." Merchant returns to the subject of fame in "River" as she eulogizes dead actor River Phoenix. Unfortu- nately, the song suffers from an uncharacteristic lyrical heavy-hand- edness ("Let the youth of America mourn / include him in their prayers ... it's nothing but a tragedy"). But Merchant has always been at her finest when telling other people's tales, and here "Tigerlily" succeeds. The pretty "Beloved Wife" shows a man mourning the loss of his partner of 50 years. Mer- chant sings simply, "My love is gone / she suffered long /in hours of pain ... I can't believe I've lost the very best of me." The sweet, and sour story "Cowboy Romance" works despite a too-slow tempo thanks to Jay Unger's violin. The summer single "Carnival" at first intrigues but quickly disap- points, and the unrequited love story "Jealousy" and the somber "The Letter" both lack the musical and. lyrical richness and complexity of Merchant's Maniacs work. Overall, though, it's a graceful; assured debut by a singer finally at, the forefront. -Jennifer Buckley . See RECORDS, page 8 READ DAILY ~ ARKfTS.- _ _ _. __ Natalie Merchant is more tiger lily than shrinking violet. ack to SbO1 --r- I' a~wuo "66t"PakagSa An affordable system for writing cr aprs or letters to Mom.-nldsaclrmntr mouse, oDOS and Windows 3MSX 4MB RAM 1iOMB Hard Drive Keyboard & MouSe 14" VGA Monitor only $549 "MUltimedia" Package Not only can you type pape rs it IB sserhitouica use its 2X CD-RoM to enhanlce YoureachWtit tax/modem. you can get yo a 4MB RAM 21OMS hard Drive 2 CD-ROM, SOUearddv speakers FaxModem 14" SVGA Monitor only $999 II f TahOal ADVENTURE FOOTWEAR COMPANY"' AIRWALK YUKON AN EXCELLENTLY STYLED y SHOE THAT PROJECTS r A RUGGED LOOK X WITH ITS STURDY PESIGN. r ring this coupon to Track 'n Trail and SAVE $ 5.00 OF any purchase of regular priced merchandise. Discount will only be honored upon presentation of this coupon. 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