The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 25, 1995 - 11 Thedirt By athoer Phases Dair9 Arts Editor "Oh :God, there's the phone again! Hang qn just a moment," groaned Mary Fjnimny, the brains behind the feminist/ ;r ' nk band Helium, after what seemed be the umpteenth click of the call vaiting on her telephone. 1r4tunately for Timony, Ma Bell's the ony)thing that's got her down. After reialing one of the best albums of the $'trf"The Dirt of Luck," and doing a $econd-stage stint on this summer's Lollapalooza, something would be seri- ogsty awry ifherphone wasn't ringing off (he3iook. At a successful spring and summer, Tiiy gets to end a great year for her bdnd by living one of her dreams: Tour- miywith legendaryart-punks Sonic Youth. WXlien asked if she's excited about the tourTimony responded incredulously, "Who wouldn't enjoy touring with Sonic Ybtdh! I'm sure it'll be great 'cause I Featly love them." The unique enthusiasm that Timony brings to her conversation and her music has its origins in her Washington, D.C. adoiescence. Even then there were signs that Timony had a decidedly artistic bent. rWhen I was in eighth grade I got into being really different from the kids and wearing funny things and getting into the whole new wave scene," she remem- bered. "Iguess I was alittle bit ofa freak when I was in eighth and ninth grade. I felt I had toexpress myselfthrough wearing strange things. I used to cut up strawberry cartons andpin them on my shirt, put paint in my hair, and safety pins all over my dresses. I went to a Catholic girls' school, so that's probably why!" Timony added with a wry, laugh. Certainly Timony's iconoclastic iden- tity was apparent even back then, but it took anentirelydifferentkind ofschool to MCORDS Continued from page 10 AC/DC Ballbreaker EastWest Records The screaming hard rock riffs of Australia's finest export (no, not Silverchair) have returned once again to flood your stereo with some high rockin' energy. Yes, the oldie yet goodie AC/DC is back with "Ballbreaker," the band's latest al- bum of politically incorrect messages about women, body oil, and more on Helium's luck HELIUM Where: At the State theater withSonic Youth and the Amps When: Tonight Tickets: Available at the Union Ticketmaster outlet Show starts at 7:30 p.m. polish her musical training. Timony ex- plains: "I transferred to the Duke Ellington High School for the Performing Arts. It's this really cool school in D.C. where the music program was mostly jazz. They had all these musicians coming in to talk to the kids, like Wynton Marsalis and Dionne Warwick - all these people - even the Jacksons came! It was really amazing; I feel really lucky to have gone to this school. It was a really great leam- ing experience." After high school and college, Timony was in the seminal girl-punk Autoclave. After that group broke up, the other mem- bers formed the now-defunct Slant 6 - and Timony was left high and dry musi- cally, but not for long. "I actually wasn't going to start a band, but I had all these songs I'd been writing by myself and Brian and Shawn - he's the old bass player- heard them and they were like 'Oh, we'll play in a band with you,' and I was like 'OK! I think I suck, but if you want to play with me that's fine.' I didn't really plan it out," she said. Helium's witty, poetic, confrontational lyrics reflect Timony's individualism and commitment to feminism. Lines like "I'll be your movie, your tiny little floozie/ll be your TV but you could never please me," illustrate Timony's vivid images and lucid anger. When asked about how feminism influences her lyrics, she said, "I think at times I have had a manifesto. It hasn't been communicated directly, but I think the songs, the lyrics, are all feminist. That's not the only point to them, but I don't mind people seeing them as femi- nist works. "The most important thing I can say in a private place is something about women's issues or something feminist because other women are going to hear it," she added. The lyrics to Timony's songs, while political, aren't polemical. They're also just plain interesting. Many of the songs refer to monsters, witches and plants, most explicitly in songs like "Flower of the Apocalypse" from "The Dirt of Luck" and "I Am a Witch" from the group's recently released "Superball" EP. "They're images that I like, and they're female images," Timony explained. "I think it's cool when people reclaim de- rogatory terms and use them in an honor- able way, like 'witch.' In the song 'Skel- eton,' the monster is something that the character in the song is turning into. The character is totally angry and the anger is turning them into a monster. "The song has to do with my anger about how I'm supposed to act in differ- ent feminine roles, and the roles aren't fitting, and inside I'm mutating and be- coming this horrible monster-creature. It's kind ofajokethough; I'm makingfun of myself for feeling like that." About the characters in her songs, Timony had this to say: "I guess they're all connected. In 'Skeleton' I'm becom- ing this horrible medusa, and in the song 'Medusa' I'm singing to that character, to have her come take me away. In 'Trixie's Star' the character is a downtrodden, ev- eryday person - probably me in my old apartment watching TV," she said with a laugh, "or ausedand abused female. That person is singing to this bird up in the sky; it's probably some weird religious thing." However, Timony is quick to add, "It's not a concept album. 'Pirate Prude' (the group's first EP) was a concept in itself, with reclaiming the word prude. Helium is a gas! Huh-Huh. We said gas. She's this figure, like a female super- hero. But 'The Dirt of Luck' is just songs. A 'concept album' seems like something where you sit down and say, 'This album is going to be about sports,' andyouwrite all thesongs about sports," she sighed. Although the group's recent fame in the indie-rock world (Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore names them as his cur- rent fave) has rendered Timony too busy to write as much as she'd like, she's not too worried. "I go through phases where I don't write songs, and then I go through phases where I write a song a day. I wouldn't want to force myself to write because then I'd be writing the same song over and over again," she explained. However, it looks like Timony will be getting more help in the songwriting de- partment from Helium bassist Ash Bowie, who also plays in the group Polvo. "Ash and I wrote 'Baby's Going Underground' (one ofTimony's favorite songs) together and anothersong that we've been playing live that I really like. It's really great playing with Ash 'cause he's got all these great ideas, he's really creative," Timony said happily. Once again, Timony's independent nature shows up on "The Dirt of Luck": Not only did Timony do all ofthe guitar and vocal tracks but also a fair portion of the bass and drum tracks as well This was one time where her artistic freedom became a hindrance. "I ended up doing a lot of stuff on the record by myself because at the time there was only Shawn and me in the band," shi sighed. "That wasn't fun 'cause I needed help and I couldn't get it from anyone. That was horrible, but it turned out OK." As always, Timony's character- istic optimism carried the day-such is the luck of Helium. After 20 years of the same old crunchy blues riffs and throat-pierc- ing vocals, AC/DC still has a bit of creative juice left. Ax-master An- gus Young's scorching guitar is as fluent as ever, but after 15 years of screaming (replacing original vo- calist Bon Scott after a rock'n'roll vomit accident), vocalist Brian Johnson's voice is strained almost beyond repair. Nevertheless, the songs on "Ballbreaker" continue on in the same vein as every other AC/DC album. With a few less catchy cho- ruses and a repetitive sound throughout the album, the disc is an AC/DC disc. Enough said. If you're a fan, it's great, and if not, well, then it's not. The songs are still as potent as ever. From the same people who brought you "Big Balls," there are new clas- sics like "Cover You In Oil." Johnson sings: "Pull on the zip / She give good lip service / It's nothing for the show / I just pay to see her go / She make you hot / You spray your lot / Comin' in honey / We're headin' to the top." What a masterpiece! - Brian A. Gnatt Various Artists Hempilation Capricorn Hempilation should be a really good compilation album. A bunch of mostly cool rock stars getting together in a loose format and do- ing covers of classic tunes all about everyone's favorite illegal sub- stance. Unfortunately, the blown- out hippies at NORML (the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) decided to throw together a half-assed, immature col- lection of campy crap. The album starts off with its two best tracks, The Black Crowes cover- ing Dylan's "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35," and Blues Traveler doing Sly Stone's classic "I Want To Take You Higher." These tracks are decent, but somehow just don't satisfy. The con- cept of those bands doing those tunes is great, but they don't seem to put much into it and the recordings are bad. The Cypress Hill track, "I Wanna Get High," is a decent live version of an old tune of theirs, but the opening minute or so of "who wants to get high? Anybody wanna get high?" stage babble is too annoying to get through. "I Like Marijuana" by David Peel and the 360's is too stupid to even get into. 311 's cover of the old Bad Brains' song "Who's Got The Herb?" is a pretty good, relaxing track. Surpris- ingly, metal band Sacred Reich does a pretty rockin' version of Black Sabbath's "Sweet Leaf." Also, the Ziggy Marley and the Melody Mak- ers song "In The Flow" is fairly decent. Other than that, Hempilation doesn't have much to offer. The rest of tracks just qualify as stupid hippie fodder, especially Widespread Panic's horrible version of the Van Morrison classic "And It Stoned Me." NORML has got to learn that there is a line between righteous pot smoker and stupid hippie. Pretty much anybody who has a liberal bone in their body can agree that hemp shouldbe legal, but these songs certainly don't do anything to advance the cause. If anything, they just enforce the stupid stoner image that they seem to want to shed so badly. - Mark Carlson Please see RECORDS, page 12 I. T E C QQ EIN ElNE TNi. El i You could instantly win one of over a thousand entertainment prizes. CALL (810) 443-COIN (2646) From Any Ameritech Pay Phone. Grand Prize: An incredible home entertainment system worth $6,300. ejltiech First Prize: A state-of-the-art home computer system or Sega'" Video Game System. 1,000 Other Prizes: Free movie passes, free Domino's Pizza® and a video rental, free compact discs, and free 5-minute prepaid phone cards. P3 I - ~ I