C O S M I K D E B R I S A U G U S T , 1 9 9 7 - I S S U E # 2 7 ____________________________________________________________________________ - The Specialists - DJ Johnson.................Editor Shaun Dale.................Associate Editor Wayne Burke................HTML coLeSLaw...................Graphic Artist Lauren Marshall............Administrative Assistant Louise Johnson.............Administrative Assistant Sarah Sterley..............Research Assistant - The Cosmik Writers - Jeff Apter, Ann Arbor, coLeSLAw, Robert Cummings, Shaun Dale, Phil Dirt, DJ Johnson, Steven Leith, Steve Marshall, Rusty Pipes, Paul Remington, John Sekerka and David Walley. ____________________________________________________________________________ T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S SOUND CLIP INVENTORY: A list of the sound clips available on our website. EDITOR'S NOTES: Makin' noise! Real Audio and what it can mean to Cosmik's readers. IAN WHITCOMB - ROCK TO RAGTIME RENAISSANCE MAN: Since his brief fling as a rock and roll star in the mid 1960s, Ian Whitcomb has been even busier producing records, preserving historically important music, and taking on unusual side projects. This month, Rhino Records released a CD by The White Star Orchestra, Whitcomb's careful recreation of the Titanic's band and its music. In this interview, he tells Shaun Dale all about that project, his love for the period, and his other recent projects, and takes a look back at those crazy glory years of 1965 and 1966. OMEGA SPY - HANGING OUT WITH JONATHAN SIPES OF THE OMEGA MEN: I Imply Spy. But you won't find any shoe phones on an Omega Men stage. Jonathan Sipes and his bandmates know where to draw the line. The music is the thing, and that music is a wonderful brew of guitar & keyboard garage and mysterious surf. During the course of this interview, Jonathan discusses everything from Matchbox cars to Rickenbacker guitars to the spy's ultimate dream girl, the mighty fine Agent 99. Interview by DJ Johnson. BILLY BRAGG'S BIG ADVENTURE: Billy Bragg remains a striking figure in a genre all his own. His folk-influenced, punk-affected tunes leave a lasting impression on those of us lucky enough to have discovered him, much like the impression Woody Guthrie left on him. Now, Bragg takes on a task of major importance: putting music to never-before-heard Guthrie lyrics. Article by Jeff Apter. TAPE HISS INTERVIEWS - MARKY RAMONE & VICTORIA WILLIAMS: Life after The Ramones doesn't seem to be a letdown for Marky. Marky Ramone and the Intruders have arrived. Also, John talks to singer/songwriter Victoria Williams about her music and her battle with Multiple Sclerosis. Interviews by John Sekerka. TITANIC - A WALK THROUGH HISTORY WITH CYBERFLIX: In keeping with the spirit of the Ian Whitcomb interview, we decided it would be a shame not to take a look at an incredible Titanic simulation and adventure game, Titanic - Adventure Out Of Time. RECORD REVIEWS: Another huge box of CDs from many genres, including classical, punk, jazz, reggae, surf, lounge, electronic, blues, country, metal, and even show tunes. BETWEEN ZERO & ONE (Steven Leith): How to get ahead in American Politics? It's all about cashola, bub. PHIL'S GARAGE (Phil Dirt): Remembering Richard Berry, who wrote the song that made it all happen: "Louie, Louie." And just wait till you hear what "all" happened! STUFF I NOTICED (DJ Johnson): A stack o' stuff that seemed a bit odd, and a Sharp Pointed Stick award. CLOSET PHILOSOPHY (Rusty Pipes): Drugs of choice, choices of moderation, and Jerry Garcia. WIN AN OMEGA MEN CD!: All you have to do is enter your name and e-mail address. No fuss, no muss, no resulting junk-mail. Five lucky people will win copies of The Spy-Fi Sounds Of The Omega Men, their new CD on Musick Records. Garage, spy, surf, and rock & roll, baby! COSMIK CORRESPONDENCE: Some letters from our readers. WE'RE OVER HERE! SEND US MAIL!: How do you write to us? Here are some e-mail addresses to make it simpler. _____________________________________________________________________________ SOUND CLIP INVENTORY: A list of sound clips available at our website. As of this issue, all sound clips will be in Real Audio (.RA) format, which means those of you with Real Audio players can hear sound clips mere seconds after clicking on their links. No more waiting forever for downloads. We apologize to any of you who prefer WAV clips, but they take up far too much storage space, so it had to be one or the other. The benefits of Real Audio format outweigh the negatives by a longshot. Remember, the Real Player is free. Just go to http://www.real.com/ and download it. Plugs right into Netscape or Internet Explorer. CLIPS IN FEATURES: Ian Whitcomb interview includes 5 sound clips that span his 32 year career. Omega Men interview includes 5 sound clips as well. CLIPS IN REVIEW SECTION: Sound clips for the following artists: Eddie Angel Louis Armstrong The Articles John Barry (in the V/A: Mondo Hollywood and V/A TV Town reviews) Harry Belafonte Grace Braun Bruckner R.L. Burnside Chinese Millionaires John Fogerty Friends Of Dean Martinez Lida Husik Manhattan Transfer Carmen Miranda (in the V/A: Maracas, Marimbas and Mambos review) Mussorgsky Wayne Newton (in the V/A: Wild, Cool & Swingin review) Old 97s Lee "Scratch Perry (with Dieter Meier of Yello) T.S.R. (in the V/A: Sweet Mother review) Ben Webster & Oscar Petersen Ween Ian Whitcomb ___________________________________________________________________________ EDITOR'S NOTES By DJ Johnson We've been very lucky. We've received a lot of positive e-mail over the past two years, and very little negative e-mail. The ones that could be called complaints have usually fallen into one of two categories: they don't agree with a particular record review, or they don't want to wait three to five minutes for each sound clip to download. Can't do much about the former, but as of this month we have the sound clip thing covered. We now have a Real Audio server. Audio and video streaming technology has been around for a while now, and I'm guessing that most of you know all about it, but just in case, I'll give you the quick version. You need to pick up the free Real Audio player at www.real.com and install it. This is a plug-in for your Netscape or Internet Explorer. It allows you to start listening to a sound clip within seconds of clicking on it. Basically, it loads about 10 seconds of the clip and begins playing while it loads the next 10 seconds, and so on. "Streaming." A few of our readers will be unhappy with this, because we're scrapping the WAV files in favor of the new format. We have to. WAV files take far too much storage space. Real Audio (RA) format is highly compressed, making it possible for us to have 8 or 10 times the number of sound clips that we normally have. Most of you have the capability to play Real Audio files. The main requirements are a sound card and a 28.8 baud modem, though you can usually listen in at 14.4 if you use the Perfect Play feature of the Real Player. In the very near future, we plan to have hour long programs in RA format that you can listen to while reading Cosmik Debris. These programs will include some of the music we're featuring each month, and some we're not. The important thing is that it will echo the philosophy of diversity that Cosmik Debris stands for. Keep an eye out for it. Should be debuting within a few weeks. By the way, the other benefit of going to our own server is that our URL is easier now. Change your bookmarks to http://www.cosmik.com. Now all you have to do, if you have Netscape or IE, is type "cosmik" and hit enter and POOF! You're here. Enjoy the August issue, and listen to the clips! We have a ton of 'em. DJ ____________________________________________________________________________ IAN WHITCOMB: ROCK TO RAGTIME RENAISSANCE MAN Interviewed by Shaun Dale It's fitting that Ian Whitcomb credits viewing a James Brown show in the early sixties as a formative experience in his career, because he could certainly stake his own claim to the title "The Hardest Working Man In Show Business." When I caught up to him on a recent summer evening, he was: in the midst of writing his thirteenth book; shepherding two volumes in the Rhino Records series of recordings of MGM movie music (Whitcomb has production credits on the Jolson set and the new release of film noir themes); promoting "Titanic: Music As Heard On The Fateful Voyage" (which he conceived, produced, conducted and performed for Rhino), his new Varese Saraband release, "The Golden Age Of Lounge," and the recent Sundazed re-release of his rock n' roll album and his first foray into the ragtime and music hall songs that have occupied him for much of the last three decades; preparing to record another in his series of performances for "Books On Tape"; and compiling a lounge music set for his regular gig as the host of in-flight music programming for airlines. Roll in a career as a film actor (most recently seen in "Contact"), a voice-over performer for cartoons (see if you can spot his voice on "Where In The World Is Carmen San Diego?") and work as a radio announcer in the LA market, and you'll understand some of the reasons I was so flattered that he could squeeze in a chat with Cosmik Debris. Personally, I've followed Whitcomb's career since his earliest days as a performer in Seattle's Pioneer Square, where he attracted the attention of Northwest recording pioneer Jerry Dennon (of Sonics, Wailers and Kingsmen fame). In a short time, after a couple of near misses, he found himself in the Billboard Top Ten with "You Turn Me On," a frantic piece of novelty rock with an unforgettably orgasmic chorus. While that was the high point of Whitcomb's notoriety, his career has been non-stop. One of the premiere chroniclers of pop history, with a dozen books to his credit, and a musicologist who has preserved an invaluable treasury of ragtime, music hall and other popular music of the 20th century on an impressive string of recordings, Ian Whitcomb is truly a rock to ragtime renaissance man. After an unusually pleasant exchange of the usual pleasantries, we dove right into a discussion of his new Titanic project... - - - - - - - Cosmik Debris: I love the new Titanic album. It really does take you back to another time. Are the arrangements typical of the period? Ian Whitcomb: They are the authentic arrangements. Where they are not the actual stock arrangements we took the original sheet music of the period, say to a song like "Alexander's Ragtime Band," and I just gave it to the group and we worked out our parts from the actual sheet music. Which is probably what the band did at the time. On the very last night when they were playing while the first class passengers were assembling in the lounge to go out to the lifeboats, they didn't have their parts with them. They were probably improvising. We know that they were playing "Alexander's Ragtime Band," and it's not in the official White Star song book. Probably they played it because they knew it - it was a hit at the time - and they played it because they needed to play lively music. You know, the ship's going down, but you don't want panic. That's one of the reasons why the story of "Nearer My God To Thee" must be a myth, because if you're trying to avoid panic, which is why they assembled on deck, you would play lively music. You wouldn't play a hymn called "Nearer My God To Thee," telling the passengers they were going to their death. So it's most unlikely the band ever played that, but this myth has arisen because one passenger who was actually on a lifeboat, a woman, said she thought she heard them playing it, and the New York papers took this up because it was good copy. Also, the myth was helped by a Leadbelly song which talks about the band playing "Nearer My God To Thee," and it just makes for good copy. But it's not the truth. We know that they played things like "Alexander's Ragtime Band," we know they played "Oh, You Beautiful Doll," because survivors have said that and we know that they played "Songe d'Automne." The young man who was one of the last off the boat, Harold Bride, the Marconi radio operator, they called it the wireless then, he said they were playing "Autumn." He told that to the New York Times. I looked up the edition. He said they were not playing "Nearer My God To Thee," they were playing "Autumn." The American reporters thought he was referring to an American hymn called "Autumn," but we British know he must have been talking about "Songe d'Automne," because that was a big hit at the time. CD: I really enjoyed the notes and the way you used the voice of the conductor... Whitcomb: Well yes. I took a bit of liberty there but I just felt I wanted at the end to take off and soar. I just felt so strongly about this. I thought, well, if I just put dry prose its not going to convey it. I've often done that in my books as well, you know, just take off. But it's all based on fact. CD: Of course, before you move to that part, you quote him as saying that his favorite song was "Nearer My God To Thee," but that he was saving it for his own funeral... Whitcomb: Right. Exactly. He said that. Willis Hartley. He was a very good guy. The whole band were very good people. There was a kind of noblesse oblige - well, not noblesse oblige, because they weren't nobility - but a kind of altruistic action that was really typical of those days and was to a certain extent destroyed by World War I. I think that's one of the reasons why the Titanic so fascinates us. Because that society is completely gone. In one way, it's good that it's gone, because the class distinctions are gone, but on the other hand, there was a terrific sense of duty and of being good to your neighbor at that time which was destroyed by WWI because the old rules of gentlemanly behavior were thrown out because of the bloody machine gun coming in and just mowing down people. I mean, the whole idea of gallantry, you never hear the word today, but it was very common in the Edwardian days. You were gallant, you were gentle with ladies, you were a gentleman in sport, you played the game. You'd never get a thing like the Tyson affair in those days. Gentlemen shook hands before a boxing match and they shook hands at the end. And I think that civilized behavior, good manners, etiquette, whatever one calls it, has gone, and it started going with WW I, so I think the Titanic episode still grips us because we see that as the last gasp of civilized behavior in the face of a terrific tragedy. Of course, the Titanic was a microcosm of the world of that time. CD: The end of an era in many respects... Whitcomb: Yes, and it was, of course, the first major disaster of the 20th century, which has been a century of technological disasters. The Titanic was the first. The second was WWI, in the sense that it was the first war where machinery was more important than men - machine guns, tanks, airplanes and so forth, Then you had this whole litany of disasters - the Hindenburg and planes going down and ships catching fire and so on. Again, I think that's why the Titanic still holds us in thrall, because it was the first time that man was made to realize that you couldn't beat nature. That no matter how proud he was of his technological advances, nature could just destroy him in a few minutes, or, in the case of the Titanic, a couple of hours. And we still have that today, with the TWA flight and earthquakes and tornadoes - I mean, there's no way that we can beat nature or God or whatever you want to call it. No way. We're pathetic compared to what nature can do, and the Titanic is the first lesson of that. I think I said it better in the notes than I'm saying it now...."On that night of April 14, 1912, in a few seconds of legendary hubris, the unsinkable collided with the unthinkable, and the first lesson of the 20th century began." But of course, we didn't learn from that lesson. CD: You collected some wonderful illustrations to go along. There's a painting of a fellow in formal wear blowing a kiss to a woman as she gets into a lifeboat. It illustrates beautifully the attitude you're talking about. He stands there as if to say "Bye bye dear, I'm going to my death on the ship and you're going to safety and that's as it should be..." Whitcomb: That's a drawing I think from the Illustrated London News. You're absolutely right. I noted about a month ago when one of the Titanic survivors died she said - she was about five or six when she was on the Titanic, a little older perhaps - but she remembered being in the lifeboat with her mother and her father standing there in evening dress with a cigar in his hand and a drink saying "See you in New York, nothing to worry about." That kind of sang-froid, as they called it in France, is something that's gone. Today you get road rage and people pushing each other to get out first. This gallantry, this good manners, is gone. And I think it's very, very sad. But it's certainly exemplified in the behavior of the passengers on the Titanic. There were rumors that there was panic but there wasn't any panic at all. CD: Were you a Titanic buff before you came to this project. Whitcomb: Yes. Well, I wasn't always a buff, but doing this project fired me up again. I remember as a teenager, at school in the fifties, reading Walter Lord's "A Night To Remember." That was the first big Titanic book to come out, big documentary book anyway, non-fiction book. Then I saw the film "A Night To Remember," which was a wonderful film, the best film so far about the Titanic, though I haven't seen Cameron's film. Of course, I was slightly involved with James Cameron's film, in fact I still am. This whole project began because - I'm an actor as well, in fact I'm in the film "Contact," in a small part. I play a BBC announcer - but I was up for the part of the bandleader Wallace Hartley, which I almost got, but I didn't get it because I'm 55 and he was 33 when he died and he played the violin and I don't play the violin. So I thought to myself, well, I'll make this record because the music is what really interests me. So I've remained a buff. As a matter of fact, James Cameron, the director of the Titanic film, is a big Titanic buff. He's been researching this film for five years and last week he called me because he wanted another ragtime song for the film. I've already given him a copy of "Nearer My God To Thee," by the way, and I did say "You can have the music but they never played it." and he said "Never mind that, it's in the script." But he wanted a song called "Oh That Navajo Rag," so I sent him that and I guess it's going to be in the film. CD: "Oh That Navajo Rag." Sometimes I love the titles as much as the music. Whitcomb: Well, it's a very politically incorrect song because it says "All Indians look alike to me," but I think he's only going to have it as an instrumental. CD: Well, if you're going to deal with the era, you're going to deal with some political incorrectness, I suppose. Whitcomb: Yes, although I would rather have their good manners and their social correctness than the thing that we call political correctness today. I expect that if the gentlemen who were on the Titanic were around today and they opened a door for a liberated woman she would be shocked and say "Oh, you don't have to open a door for me," but that's the way they were in those days, and that's how I am still. I open doors for women, although they sometimes shrug and must think "Oh you poor fool." But I still do that. I was taught that as a child. In a train, if all the seats are taken and a woman gets in I get up and give my seat to her. I was taught that and always will do that. CD: We may be the last generation raised that way. Whitcomb: I think so, unfortunately. I've got another record out on Varese Sarabande which is kind of a companion to the Titanic one, which is called "The Golden Age Of Lounge." It follows up this salon music, what I call "palm court" music, and takes it into the twenties and thirties and forties. CD: Well, there are a lot of labels out there, and it seems that you've recorded for most of them. Whitcomb: Yes, well, all the rock n' roll stuff that I did for Jerry Dennon is out on Sundazed. It's my first two albums, from 1965 and 1966. It's all on one disc called "You Turn Me On." CD: Looking back, it seems that one day you were a student in Dublin, the next day you were playing clubs in Seattle and suddenly you were at the top of the pop charts... Whitcomb: It was rather sudden, that's true. The thing is, most people in this country only know me for "You Turn Me On." I mean, the majority of people do, but there's a bunch of people who know me now who don't even know that I was ever a rock n' roll star. I play a lot of the ragtime festivals throughout the country, and the ragtime fans and the old music fans know me as a musicologist and a performer of ragtime and vaudeville songs, and they're horrified when they hear that I was ever in rock n' roll. CD: You never slip "You Turn Me On" into the set? Whitcomb: Well, I might if I was drunk. As a matter of fact, I hardly get any call to sing that now. Occasionally there will be a revival show. It's not that I don't like the song, I think it's a very good slice of rock n' roll. As a matter of fact, I'm writing a book for Rhino on disco and I really think "You Turn Me On" was a prototype kind of disco song. I saw an article in Billboard that said that. It had the insistent beat and the catch phrase mentioned over and over again, as in a real discotheque dance record. CD: I could also see it done as a rockabilly song, for that matter. Whitcomb: It's got everything, really. CD: One thing that always struck me, though, was while that was a kind of novelty hit, put in the context of the album it was just one of many things, most of which were blues songs. Whitcomb: You're right. We started as a blues band. It was Ian Whitcomb and Bluesville. Bluesville was the band I formed at Trinity College in Dublin, and we were dedicated rhythm and blues guys. I just loved R&B and I loved blues as well, but I wanted to be more up to date. In 1963, when I first came to Seattle I went to see James Brown at the Armory. I really loved it, and went back to Dublin determined to try and play that stuff, but I knew that, being English and Irish, there was no point in our trying to copy it and that's when I had the first argument with the band. I felt we should have the spirit of rhythm and blues, but not try to pretend to be black. That's why I recorded "You Turn Me On" and things like that, because I knew I couldn't be a bona fide blues singer, but I could have that feeling and put my own personality on top of it. As a matter of fact, when I was touring on those Dick Clark Caravans in the sixties, I used to tour with a lot of black acts and they always respected me because they said "You know, you don't try to copy us. You don't try to sound like a black guy. You sound like you." They used to compare me to Screaming Jay Hawkins - a white Screaming Jay Hawkins. CD: Of course, even as early as the first album, you had songs like "Poor But Honest," which was really a music hall song. Whitcomb: That's right. That's an example of a mixture of rock n' roll, music hall and ragtime. I put a sort of a ragtime feeling in the piano. At that time I was just as much interested in ragtime as I was in rhythm and blues, and of course I was very interested in American country music as well, and still am. I haven't lost that love. In fact, right now, I think I prefer authentic country music to any other kind of American music. By that I mean I love western swing and the music of Ray Price and the honky tonk men - when it gets to the seventies I get less keen on it. The sort of stuff that Dwight Yoakam likes, I love. CD: Me too. Comes from growing up with 50's and 60's country music on my mom's kitchen radio all day, I suppose... Whitcomb: In Seattle? CD: Yeah. It was Country KAYO in those days. Whitcomb: Yes, I think I remember it. I'm terribly fond of Seattle because I had my first girlfriends there. I often wonder where they are now. But it was one of the Seattle girls who gave me the "You Turn Me On" phrase. I've forgotten her name, but was in '64, on my second trip, and we were on the sofa at her mother's house and she said "Your accent is really turning me on." I thought that was a wonderful phrase. So that's where I got the idea for "You Turn Me On." There was a girl, I'd love to know where she's gone, named Leslie Beetham, who was my regular girlfriend for many years. I think she got married and divorced - she's still up there in Seattle. CD: Well, if she's on the net, maybe she'll see this and we can put you in touch... Whitcomb: But we've gotten off the point a bit... CD: Yeah, but it's a nice digression. Anyway, as I was saying, the rag and music hall influences were already showing up on the very first album. But you were busy being a rock star. The first time I saw you onstage was at a Rolling Stones show at the Seattle Center, with Patty LaBelle and the Bluebells and a bunch of people. Whitcomb: Oh yes. I remember Jagger interviewing me, just grilling me, backstage. He was asking question after question trying to figure out where I came from and what I was and so forth. CD: And they were kind of the antithesis of what you were doing, in the sense that they were a white band that was quite deliberately trying to sound black. Whitcomb: Well, yes. I actually got very friendly with the pianist, Ian Stewart, who's dead now, but we became great friends. Ian had nothing but contempt for the Rolling Stones as a musical outfit, because he loved real blues and boogie and so forth, and he just thought they were ridiculous. I think they're ridiculous too. I mean, I can't understand why they're still popular. To me it's one of the sickening things about rock. I draw a distinction between rock 'n' roll and rock. Rock came in in the late sixties and I've never liked anything to do with rock, but I loved rock 'n' roll. By that I mean Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis Presley and so forth. And I still like that enormously. CD: "You Turn Me On" got you on those big rock shows, but it wasn't the first single. I think you started with "This Sporting Life"... Whitcomb: Actually, the first single was a number called "Soho," backed with "Boney Maroni," which was issued on the Jerden label, put out by Jerry Dennon. It only came out in Seattle. It's a very good record, actually. An instrumental. "This Sporting Life" originally came out on Jerden, then Tower Records, which was part of Capitol, heard about it. It was charting in Seattle, so they brought it out on Tower. CD: Then "You Turn Me On," then "Nervous" ... Whitcomb: Yes. Of course, "Nervous" the single is not the same as the one on the album. The album version is the original, but I said "If we're going to release this as a single, we should re-record it and make it more 'commercial'." So we recorded the single in Los Angeles, using session men. I used most of the session guys from Shindig, James Burton, who went on to play with Presley, and various other heavyweight players. So "Nervous" is not Bluesville. CD: And that was kind of the end of the rock n' roll phase of your career. Whitcomb: Well, I was losing interest and I never thought I was really a bona fide rocker. Because there were more things in life than that. I loved American music, and I didn't want to be confined to rock n' roll. Also, I don't think I have that kind of a voice. I have more of a crooner voice, and outside of that it was very hard for me to find a follow up to "You Turn Me On." But I did make an LP in 1967 or '68 which was actually the last of the sixties rock n' roll records that I made, and that was on Tower. I didn't forsake rock n'roll completely, though. In the seventies, in England, I had a contract with Warner Bros., and I make a couple of rock n' roll singles which came out on Warner Bros. but never came out in this country. One of them was called "When Rock n' Roll Was Young," which is a very nice record, a salute to the old rock n' rollers. Then in 1981 I did an album for another English label called Ace Records. That was called "The Boogie Woogie Jungle Snake" and it's all rock n' roll, mostly numbers that I wrote. Since then, I've created, I like to think, my own sound. The Ian Whitcomb sound. CD: That's true, because your approach to, say, ragtime, is not an academic one, as in the Joshua Rifkin sense. Whitcomb: Well, I've always played songs. I like the songs. Besides, I'm not an academic, I'm a vaudevillian. I mean, I'm not really a vaudevillian or a music hall performer. But the rock n' roll critics, well, if I'm in any of these rock n' roll reference books it's usually as a joke, as a novelty fluke or a one hit wonder. There's a new book out, about the west coast, the Los Angeles scene. Called something ."..In The Sun," I think. Anyway, the writer's English and the English have never liked me as a rock n' roller. He describes me as "a preposterous figure." Because I don't fit in their scheme of things. I don't fit into these various critics view of rock n' roll. They can't pigeon-hole me, so I've always been a burr under the saddle of British rock n' roll critics, who just can't stand me. CD: I've always thought that your music is just entertainment, whatever genre you're working in. After the rock things, I heard "Mod, Mod Music Hall" and I'd never heard anything like it. I bought it on your name, having no idea what it was. But I heard "Where Did Robinson Crusoe Go" and said "I've got to learn this song!" Whitcomb: Really? That one actually became a hit in Los Angeles and the west coast. It got into the top ten in Los Angeles. I'm really proud of that, because that was before Tiny Tim, and that was a ukulele record. I think it was 101 on the national charts, but it was really one of the first pop records of the rock era to feature the ukulele, and I'm very proud of that. It was in '66, which was a year or two before Tiny Tim, and he always acknowledged that I was one of the first to do it. There's a wonderful new book out, by the way, on the history of the ukulele. I've got two pages in there, and I think Tiny Tim has three. CD: And now there are so many aspects to your career. You do Books On Tape, and cartoon voiceovers and acting and in-flight hosting and record production and performance. Whitcomb: Yes, in fact I'm just getting ready to do an in-flight program on lounge music. CD: You're really a renaissance man of popular music. Whitcomb: Well, it's all linked together. It's all part of expressing my love for popular music. CD: Well, that's it. While we struggle to come up with the genre or label for what you do, it's really just popular music. I thought one of the interesting points you brought up in the notes to the Titanic disc was that whether it was a classical piece or a ragtime piece or a music hall piece, it was all just the popular music of the day. Whitcomb: Well, yes, and that was one of the good things about that period. The man in the street didn't differentiate between classical and popular, because he could be humming a Wagner tune, if that's possible, and also an Irving Berlin tune. At the same time, the classical composers wrote popular music. Sir Edward Elgar wrote "Pomp And Circumstance" and was one of the great classical composers of his time. But he also wrote popular music, like "Salut d'Amour," which is on the record. CD: Well, before we go, let me ask you about more contemporary things. The popular music of the first 60 years of this century is obviously something you love. Is there anything in the popular music of the last ten years of this century that's catching your ear? Whitcomb: Oh yes. I'm writing this music on disco, and I had no interest in disco at the time, in the seventies, but now I'm examining it and realize that some of it is very good. Especially Giorgio Moroder's music. The point is, the synthesizer has become a very important and legitimate part of popular music, and of serious music too. The legacy of disco is techno today, and I admit I like some of this techno enormously. I don't want to hear it for too long. It's like any popular music. It's all right for a bit, but you want variety. I certainly like some of the techno things. I like some rap things, not as music, but as sort of newspapers. Talking tabloids. But techno and rap really don't have much to do with music, and as far as new developments in music, which means harmony and melody, there haven't been any. I think we've reached the end of development in western music. It's all been done. All the chords have been done, all the melodies. But we have a wonderful pallet of paints. We can look at all these different styles, all these genres, and we as songwriters can say "I'll take a bit of reggae here, a bit of ragtime there..." and then superimpose one's personality on top of it. I mean, I never forget that I'm Ian Whitcomb from England. I can't be anything else. So there's still hope. I don't think we're going to see any new developments in music. I think we're just going to express ourselves through this great wide pallet of musical colors that we have. ___________________________________________________________________________ OMEGA SPY: Hanging Out With Jonathan Sipes Of The Omega Men Interview by DJ Johnson "International House Of Espionage and Dry Cleaning... How can I help you today?" This is the telephone greeting that signaled the beginning of my interview with Jonathan Sipes, lead singer and guitarist of The Omega Men. About half an hour into our conversation, I started to realize that this man actually lives the mod lifestyle that most people simply act out on weekends. Having never met such a person, I wasn't sure what to think. It tuns out some people really do wear 3-button suits and drink cocktails in front of the TV to unwind. Whoda thunkit? In preparing for this interview, I listened to The Omega Men's debut album, The Spy-Fi Sounds Of The Omega Men, over and over again until I could feel every chord and every change. Not exactly rough duty when it's music you love. The retro garage-slash-surf sound of this Lebanon, Pennsylvania band reminds me of nobody in particular, while the atmosphere they create reminds me of an entire era when it seemed that spies were around every corner and beautiful women in mini-skirts and boots drove men to distraction. On the surface, it's all about dancing, but it's the mystique that cements The Omega Men in your memory. We began by diving right into the spy culture thing. * * * Cosmik: What attracted you to the spy sound? Jonathan: Well, my father was a secret agent and my mother was a debutante, so I sort of grew up with it. There's a TV station where I grew up that played Man From Uncle reruns late at night, and Get Smart during prime time, and I had a huge crush on Barbara Feldon. Cosmik: Who didn't? Jonathan: Yeah, exactly. Do you remember the Exxon commercial she did? "Put a tiger in your tank... Prrrrrrr!" (Laughs) Cosmik: Yeah! I do remember that. How old are you? Jonathan: I'm 26. Cosmik: And you remember that!? Jonathan: Sure do. Cosmik: Man, I'm 38 and I barely remember that. Jonathan: Hallmark, a few years ago, was selling these Barbara Feldon birthday cards. It was a picture of her on the front, and on the inside it said "Happy birthday to someone who looks younger than 99." I bought like 20 of these things, and for two years, anyone who had a birthday got one of those. Cosmik: Were you a big Man From U.N.C.L.E. fan, too? Jonathan: Man From U.N.C.L.E. was just campy enough that it was entertaining, but it wasn't comedy. They had all the gadgets to keep up with Batman, and they were a little more over the top than James Bond, but not as silly as Get Smart. Cosmik: Of course, Maxwell Smart brought us the Shoe Phone, so we can't really discount him... Jonathan: You know, there have been certain people within our fold that feel we should play up the spy thing more, and someone actually suggested shoe phones on stage, but I really draw the line there. Cosmik: (Laughs) Shoe Phone microphone? Jonathan: Yeah. You know, I wear a turtleneck and a three-button suit, and that's good enough. Cosmik: Just who is the mysterious Custom XKE mentioned in the liner notes? Jonathan: I was in a band with two women, and the band was called Custom XKE, which was my favorite toy when I was younger. The girls, because they're females, sort of wanted to be highlighted, so they were calling themselves something like The Beautiful Spinning Wheels, so we were called Custom XKE featuring The Beautiful Spinning Wheels. So everyone just sort of assumed that I was Custom XKE. For a while people were calling me that. Initially, I think, we all toyed with the idea of having code names, but again, with the spy thing, we decided that would be a little bit too over-the-top. I was doing a lot of the band business, and people were asking for Custom XKE. Now Custom XKE is a little bit of all of us, though some people still do call me Custom XKE. Cosmik: And it has such a cool connection, being a great car... Jonathan: Yeah, like I said, when I was growing up, my favorite toy was my Custom XKE car by the Johnny Lightning Company. (Laughs) Cosmik: (Laughs) Wow, I just had all that Matchbox stuff. Jonathan: Hey, there were a lot of cool Matchbox cars. Cosmik: Oh yeah, and Hot Wheels, too. Remember the Beatnik Bandit? Jonathan: Yeah! I actually gave Mark [Ebeling], our guitar player, a reissue of the Beatnik Bandit for his birthday or Christmas a few years back. I just saw a Beatnik Bandit T-Shirt the other day, but it was 15 dollars, which is more than I care to spend on a T-Shirt. Cosmik: Are there any Omega Men T-Shirts out there? Jonathan: Yeah. I think we may be sold out of them. We did those real early on, before we had any music product to sell. We were watching friends of ours make more money off of merchandise than they were off the gig itself. Cosmik: That's the norm these days. Jonathan: We just figured we don't have to be anybody to make T-Shirts, so we'd make a couple dozen and if they don't sell, they'd just be dust rags, or we'd wear them around the house, or whatever. Wasn't too expensive. The company we did the shirts with went out of business, and our screen went with them, so now we're just trying to decide if we want to keep the same design or go with something different. It's kind of funny. There's more money coming in than there ever has been for The Omega Men, but there's even more going out. Cosmik: That's because you're at that place kind of in between now, where you're not just a bar band anymore, you're recording artists. Jonathan: Yeah, we are in between. We're not a band that can just breeze into any town and get our guarantee with no problem. We're still having to really really work for everything. Cosmik: And yet, word of mouth is spreading, largely due to the Internet, and people at least know ABOUT you, even in other countries. Jonathan: I find that really amazing. The album's been out since May. We didn't really have anything before that except a track on a compilation [Instrumental Fire - MuSick Records], but we get letters from kids in California trying to find our disc, and we find out there are stores in other places that sell it, and it's just... crazy. It's a wacky business. Cosmik: I reviewed Instrumental Fire, and I got e-mail about it from places like Taiwan and New Zealand. Jonathan: I don't know what it is about the United States, but in Japan, for instance, there's a huge instrumental scene. Always has been. I think, maybe, because most pop music tends to be Anglo-based. English speaking countries. When it comes to instrumental stuff, there's no language barrier. I think that's why the Japanese went so crazy over The Ventures. They didn't have to try to figure out what the words were. Cosmik: And they caught on to the surf and spy thing, and the Link Wray thing. The whole spy genre, music and film, is pretty sexist, but Omega MEN have Susan Mackey on keyboards, and she's got a commanding stage presence. It's an interesting twist. Any intentional irony there? Jonathan: Um... Well, I'll say that we're all big fans of irony, and we're all big Twilight Zone fans. Anything Richard Madison wrote was usually chock-full of irony. I won't say that it was intentional. I will say that we didn't really care that there was a woman in our band and yet we named our band after a man. Cosmik: Do you know how Susan feels about the sexism of the genre? Jonathan: I think we all view it as somewhat humorous. To us, viewing it now, it almost seems tongue-in-cheek. We all collect spy paperbacks, and my joke is that I refuse to read a paperback that doesn't describe the sound a woman's legs make climbing out of a car. (Laughs) That's how I judge how good it is. If it's a page about nylons rubbing together, shit, that's non-stop reading. If it doesn't feature that scene, you know, I could take it or leave it. (Laughs) But you know, there's that bachelor pad renaissance going on, and I think that it's all very tongue-in-cheek. When we entertain, my girlfriend cooks and wears her little dress and brings drinks out, but that's not what goes on day to day. It's fun. We play it up, and it's fun. We don't treat Susan as if she's just some sort of underling. She's just as important as anyone else in the band. I consider her our ace in the hole. I'm not saying that we would be lousy without her, but... Cosmik: But she sure has a huge part of that sound, you know? That swirl. Jonathan: It wouldn't be The Omega Men without her. To be quite honest, I could say I could leave the band and it would still be The Omega Men, but I wouldn't say that about anybody else in the band. Cosmik: I don't know. A band like The Omega Men is what it is because of chemistry. Break it up and it can never be the same. Jonathan: I guess my tagline on the subject is that everybody in the band is perfect for The Omega Men. I wouldn't want to play with a different drummer and do the same kind of music. Mark is our rhythm guitar player, and he is THE perfect rhythm guitar player. Ed... you know, bass players don't play like that anymore, and it's the same for our drummer, Eric. Eric doesn't play like a kid who learned to play drums in the 80s. Cosmik: Susan, Mark and Eric were in The Cellar Dwellers, correct? Jonathan: Correct. Cosmik: Were you a fan of that band? Jonathan: I was a HUGE fan of that band. I knew Mark and Susan for quite a bit longer than I knew the rest of the band, but... especially at our first practice, I was a bit star struck. I kept to myself. Very quiet. I was positive that, you know, "they're gonna see through me and I'll be out of this band after this practice." (Laughs) Cosmik: Like they're going to think you're an autograph seeker or something. Jonathan: Yeah. You know, I practically licked the bottoms of Susan's shoes the day I met her. I'd just gone to see those guys play, and they were really knocking it out. Cosmik: I'm on the wrong coast so I never got to see them, but I've heard they really put on a show. Jonathan: Yeah, I used to see them in DC. It was really a big surprise for me to find out that they only lived 20 minutes away from me, because I was seeing them an hour and a half or two hours away from me. Cosmik: How did you get together with them to play music? Jonathan: Well, I had been in bands in the area, and I was making home recordings that were jazzy with just a tinge of psychedelia. I'm a frustrated organ player, so when I met Susan I was telling her about this. Susan's a huge jazz fan, so she was instantly intrigued. This is going back a few years, and at that time it didn't seem to us that there were a lot of people our age listening to the amount of jazz that we were. At least in this area. So I said that I was trying to play organ, but I just wasn't good enough to play what I was hearing in my head, and I asked her if she would think about doing it. And she was very much into it. Later in that same conversation I found out that they weren't playing in a band anymore but really wanted to, and I just mustered up all my courage and asked them if they wanted to start a band with me, and they were into it. At the time, I had a wall of Vox amps I was performing with, and I think they were kind of into that. I already had the right equipment. Cosmik: Are we talkin' some old AC-30s? Jonathan: Yeah, I had some AC-30s and some other models, but all I really use is an AC-30. Before Susan had the Hammond, she was using a Vox organ through an AC-30, and Mark was using an AC-30, and so was I, so we had quite the imposing equipment presence on stage. Cosmik: I look over at my little Crate amp and I feel depressed. Vox envy. Jonathan: I've owned a lot more than I own now. I have one amp that I really use, and I have one amp at the house, which is also a Vox, but at one time I just had rooms full of stuff. But it came time that I had to move and I said "screw this, I'm not lugging all this around." Cosmik: How did you arrive at the style of music you're playing now. You were talking about doing jazz beforehand. Jonathan: You know, people were telling us that we had a unique sound before we really realized it. We all have separate interests that, I guess, intersect. We did surf stuff kind of early. Writing a good surf song is difficult. Writing *A* surf song isn't that hard. They're typically 12 bars and just 1-4-5 for just a very mediocre surf song. Cosmik: Cookie cutter... Jonathan: Yeah. And like I said, it's very difficult to write a very GOOD surf song. But you take a band like... well, I guess a lot of people don't consider The Shadows to be surf, but I sort of do. Their songs are brilliant. So we did that stuff, and we were all very interested in Memphis soul, like Booker T. and the MG's, The Mar-Keys, that sort of thing. So we worked a few of those numbers in. 60s garage punk, you know, we're all into that, or a few people in the band who aren't so much into that now had their periods where they were very much into that. Cosmik: That whole Memphis Stax/Volt thing, that's a pretty lofty standard to try to live up to. Jonathan: Yeah, you know, on the covers that we do, I purposely do not try to do what Steve Cropper was doing, because I know what notes he was playing, but nobody can do it like he could. So I change the notes around just to avoid the comparison. (Laughs) Someone might say "I like the Steve Cropper version better, but they can't say "you're lousy at being Steve Cropper." Cosmik: It's like Teisco Del Rey says, "I know what he's playing, but those notes aren't on MY guitar!" Jonathan: Yeah, that's exactly right. I could play those notes he's playing, but it's really going to sound pitiful coming from this lilly-white guy with no soul. (Laughs) Cosmik: (Laughs) Yeah, compared to that lilly-white guy with lots of soul. Jonathan: Exactly. He's just chock full o' soul. Cosmik: He and Duck. Jonathan: Yeah, and Louis Steinberg before Duck. Cosmik: You know your stuff. Jonathan: (Laughs) I didn't have any friends growing up, so... Cosmik: Too busy listening to music? Jonathan: Well no, sort of the other way around. I didn't have many friends SO I listened to music. Cosmik: Do you have a healthy garage collection? Jonathan: It's kind of strange... The guys in the band that were in The Cellar Dwellers were all involved in this little scene, but I grew up in a small town, and I didn't really have the resources, or didn't know about them. It's kind of funny, because I have things in my record collection that these guys who have been collecting records for 20 years have never heard of. And good stuff. But then there are these really pedestrian things that I don't have because I didn't know that I was supposed to go out and buy those. It's strange, though, when I talk to people that have knowledge about this kind of music, and they'll say "oh, it's very derivative of such and such by so and so," and I'll say "oh gee, I've never heard that." Cosmik: "I've never heard that, so I could care less that it's derivative." Jonathan: You know, a lot of people think that those tags, "derivative" or "retro," are really bad words, but let's face it, we sound like something that came out of yesteryear. Or at least I like to think so. When someone says we sound authentic, I look at that as one of the nicest things anyone could say. I think if we'd had more resources, we could have done an even better job in the production process. There were a lot of time constraints. One thing I think is really ironic is spending a whole lot of money on trying to make it sound like you didn't spend a lot of money on your album. (Laughs.) Which is almost what you're faced with now, unless you can find an 8-track, all tube, all analogue studio, it just costs so much to do that. Tape stock alone, if we'd done 2-inch analogue, would have been more than our budget. Cosmik: So everybody's trying to make digital sound analogue, and it doesn't usually work. It sounds okay, but the I think warmth is usually lacking. Jonathan: So do I. And we knew that going in. When we recorded the track for Instrumental Fire ("My Favorite Dean Martian"), we were really happy with the way it turned out. We were just kind of assuming we'd get to do the album there. Then the deadline got close, and we gave the guy a call only to find out that he was no longer recording people. After that, it was really difficult for us to find a place that professional and... You know, a lot of these analogue studios we were calling, the people were telling us things like "we can't fit you all in one room because we're doing this in my bedroom at my parents house," and "somebody's gonna have to go downstairs," and that kind of stuff. It really was frustrating. Although I'm very pleased with the final product. Cosmik: How do you like the red vinyl release? Jonathan: I'm very happy with it. I wish they would have pressed more. Cosmik: How many did they do? Jonathan: Only 500. I think we took 20 to our first show and sold them right away. I just have this feeling I'm going to end up selling my own copies of it because someone's going to pester me. Cosmik: No you won't. (Laughs) Jonathan: When I make tapes for people, I do it off the vinyl because I think it sounds a lot better. Cosmik: Warmer. It's that analogue thing again. Jonathan: Yeah, exactly. It's just one more step. We did some things to try to warm up the record. It was successful to an extent in that it's not as cold sounding as it was right off the DAT, but it's not what it could be. And the record is just one step closer. It's an analogue source going through analogue equipment, i.e. your turntable. Cosmik: I like to undermine my credibility once in a while by swearing that colored vinyl sounds better. (Laughs) Jonathan: (Laughs) I wish we could have had them pressed on the half centimeter thick vinyl that they used way back when, you know? Vinyl that didn't bend. I also would have loved to engineer cracks and pops. Cosmik: A lot of bands have been doing that lately. Jonathan: Yeah, I know. A lot of bands have also been putting in one track of white noise, and it sort of gives you the same feel. But that's a little too hi-tech for us. Cosmik: I got a review copy of something like that recently, but I thought it was too distracting. It didn't really work out like what they were going for. Jonathan: The Phantom Surfers had an album, one of my favorites, that had the wear ring built into the cover, and it said "This record belongs to Suzy," or something like that, on the cover in what looked like ballpoint pen. Cosmik: I love that. There's a Charlie Parker box that just came out (Rhino Records' "Yardbird Suite") that has the rings on the individual CD covers. Jonathan: Oh, cool. I love that ring. It's been said since the beginning of the CD culture, but people miss having this big thing they can look at. I think they just miss every little nuance about records. Cosmik: What's the writing process within the band? Jonathan: Well, there's a couple different things... Primarily, though, somebody comes up with a part of a song, like a verse or a chorus, and then the rest of the band sort of figures out what they're going to do, and usually the band as a whole figures out the bridge. Usually, it's very much a collaboration with everybody in the band. Cosmik: So there's no main songwriter. Jonathan: Well... Susan, Mark, and I seem to come up with the bulk of the stuff, but I wouldn't say that any one of us is more instrumental than the rest of the band, because Ed and Eric are so maniacal that they give the songs the feel. And I think that's every bit as important as writing the notes. Since I'm singing, I tend to write the words, but it's very rare that someone comes in and says "okay, you play this." That does happen, but it seemed to happen a lot more in the early stages of the band. Right now, everybody seems to be contributing equally. Cosmik: What about the guitar? The liner notes make it sound like "if it's fuzzy, it's Jonathan, and if it's clean and jangly, it's Mark. Is it that simple? Jonathan: Ummm... no, it's not that simple, but it's close enough. Mark doesn't have a fuzz box that he'll use, so if it's fuzz it's me. Mark has the real tasteful, very beautiful tone. I don't have that kind of restraint. Cosmik: More down and dirty? Jonathan: Yeah. Yeah, my amp doesn't know how to be set clean. I haven't figured out how to play as loud as Mark and be clean. I think he has a magic guitar or something. Cosmik: Wasn't it Ted Nugent who said "this guitar simply refuses to play sweet shit"? (Laughs) Jonathan: (Laughs) Yeah. Good God, I'm being likened to Ted Nugent! Cosmik: Oh, no! Jonathan: Did you ever read the thing where he swears a pigeon exploded in front of his speakers? (Laughs) Cosmik: Yeah! That was in Guitar Player way back when. And the funny thing is people wrote angry letters saying that was cruelty to animals! Jonathan: (Laughs) Yeah! A) Like that really happened! And B)... Like that really happened! Cosmik: Oh man. Amazing. What kind of gear are you guys using? Is everything vintage? Jonathan: Well, let's see. Mark is using a new AC-30. I'm not using a 60s AC-30, but it's not a new one, and I'm using a new Telecaster a good bit of the time. That's a guitar that, you know, I'll wedge it under the tire of the van to keep it from rolling, pull it from under there, and it'll still play. I'd say we're ninety percent vintage equipment. We use new Fender reverb units because they sound, to my ears, as good as an original one, and they're a lot less expensive. There's a lot of equipment we have that was on the album that we're just not gonna take to play in some little club. Occasionally I'll take my '59 Rickenbacker out, but just the thought of maybe walking out of there without it... It's a guitar I looked for for about five or six years. It took me that long to find one. Cosmik: I don't think I'd take it out with me. Jonathan: Sometimes I'll do it if I'm just feeling like I want it there. My Telecaster is a gift from my girlfriend, and I'll always own that. My '59 Rickenbacker is just something I always wanted, and I finally got one, and I love it. I'll never get rid of that. Everything else, it's just like... if someone offers me 10 times what it's worth, it's gone. Cosmik: Is the solo in "My Favorite Dean Martian" you? Jonathan: Yeah. Cosmik: That's some killer tone. Doesn't sound like anybody I can quite recognize, but I know it ain't Steve Cropper. Who were you listening to early on that might influence that style? Jonathan: Someone who I don't think I sound anything like, who made me want to be a fuzz maven, was Davie Allan. We're really excited because we're doing this Shadows tribute album, and Davie's on it. Just for that reason, I didn't use fuzz on our track, because instead of being the cool band with the Hammond, we'd be the cool band that had fuzz that wasn't as cool as Davie Allan. (Laughs) There's no way I could compete with The King. So that, and any number of one-hit 60s garage bands. The fuzz tone in Count Five's "Psychotic Reaction" was always a favorite of mine. The soundtrack to the movie "Trip," you know, Mike Bloomfield's fuzz is another big one for me. Cosmik: I loved that part of your album. That solo in "Dean Martian." The feel around it... Jonathan: Thanks. If I might brag; we had no overdubs on that at all. That's just the way we play it live. On the whole album, aside from vocals, and maracas on one song, there are only two overdubs, and that's an extra 12-string guitar during the freakout on "You'll Never Miss Me," which I think is the last vocal song on the album... Cosmik: Which gave it a real thick sound... Jonathan: Yeah, we left the original guitar I wanted on there. I wanted 12-string for the freakout, but I didn't want to play the rest of the song on 12-string, so I had to be a big baby and do that. And there's one other song where my guitar went out of tune, so I overdubbed two chords at the very end of the song. But basically I play that solo the same way almost every time, so I didn't need to do 50 takes. We'd played it enough. Cosmik: So it's almost a live album. Jonathan: It was very close to being one. We actually recorded the vocals as we did the songs, but I figured if I was going to mess up something, I didn't want to mess up the guitar. Because I didn't want to punch in and do all that stuff. So we ended up scrapping the vocals I did live because I was hitting bum notes. I'd kind of step back from the mic, or whatever. Live, it's okay if you hit one or two bad notes when you're singing, but on your record, you can't. I sang the songs on the album very differently than I sing them live. I scream them live, and I have no control of my voice when I do that. (Laughs) Cosmik: You all really have the look down. On your front cover it looks like you all just came from a casting call for "Blow Up." Jonathan: (Laughs) That's perfect! Cosmik: How did you get into the mod scene? Jonathan: Well I can really only speak for myself, but when I was younger and I was going to punk clubs, I was really very impressionable. I'd see these big guys in their leathers and their studs and stuff, and it was like the fear that maybe one of these guys would beat me up. But, you know, in a few days I'd be fine. Then seeing these 60s kind of Chocolate Watch Band looking guys that just looked so cool with their beautiful girlfriends that looked like Agent 99. They were ALWAYS gonna be cooler than I was, and I wasn't going to recover from that. I dreamed of one day being that guy. I've yet to get there. I just thought that those guys looked so cool and so sinister. You don't know what to expect when you're in some filthy punk rock club when you see some guy in a tailored suit and tie. You don't know if that guy's crazy or if that guy is just some kind of freak, or what. So it was that, and it got to a point with people wearing filth that it was just ludicrous, so I wanted to distance myself as far away from that as possible. Cosmik: So it was a reaction. Jonathan: Yeah. My joke is--but it's the honest to God truth--that I'm the only person I know who goes to work wearing jeans and a T-shirt and comes home and puts a coat and a tie on to relax in front of the TV. I feel comfortable that way. Cosmik: So this isn't a weekend kick. Jonathan: No, this isn't just something we do for the band. It's really... Cosmik: ...who you are. Jonathan: Yeah. It really is. I was in a lot of bands where I was the 60s element, but it wasn't the real deal. In this band, we just said "okay, we're going to do everything the way WE want to do it. We don't care about selling records." And I think we've all been more successful in this band than anywhere else. Because we didn't make any compromises. Cosmik: People can feel it when it's real. Jonathan: Yeah, I agree. There are certain bands out there that are pure shtick, and you can TELL that it's shtick. My house looks like it's right out of the 50s, with the exception of my TV. In our living room, our main source of light is two color wheels. Cosmik: Since this is how you actually live every day, do you find it natural to blend in with the people in the mod scene? Or does it feel like they're posing? Jonathan: Because we're an instrumental band, a lot of people lump us into the surf scene, but I've never really felt an affinity with that. I've always felt more comfortable with what you would call the mod scene. Cosmik: Do you ride a scooter? Jonathan: I was never a scooter kid, but we know quite a few. I never wanted to get oil on my suit. (Laughs) Cosmik: What kind of reaction does a real life Mod get from co-workers? Jonathan: Well lately, a lot of Austin Powers comments. I'm the one in the glasses and red hair. It's really funny because I was the first person to have said that. Nobody said it to me. I was kind of joking like "good God, I AM Austin Powers." Then it got to a point where everywhere I went somebody said "Austin Powers!" Cosmik: So by now it's gettin' old. Jonathan: Yeah, like "never heard THAT before..." Cosmik: I wanted to ask about the song "G Marks The Spot." I hear that wasn't the original title of the song. Can you talk about that? Jonathan: Sure, that's no problem at all. I actually talked about that at the last show we played. The song was censored. We find it really ironic because it's an instrumental. The original title was "Theme From Porno Movie." The record label felt that might be offensive to some people, so we changed it to the MUCH less offensive "G Marks The Spot." (Laughs) Cosmik: (Laughs) You're kidding. They accepted that title without batting an eye? Jonathan: I think because some of the other ones were... We were naming the song after some pretty disgusting things, and he (Art Bourasseau of MuSick Records) figured he'd better stop us now. Cosmik: Did this piss off the band, or cause any resentment? Jonathan: No, I didn't feel any anger. It's just that it had been "Theme From Porno Movie" for so long. That was actually something I was playing before The Omega Men. It's just this silly Wah Wah thing. Originally, what were going to do was sort of play this song in 5 second blurbs throughout the disc. Just sort of cut it up. Some other bands we dig did similar things, and we thought it would be a nice little nod... Cosmik: Almost like a 60s soundtrack thing. Jonathan: Right, exactly. And then we just got taken up with doing other things in the recording process and we just didn't do it. Cosmik: I love this picture of Susan Mackey with the pistol. What kind of gun is that? Jonathan: It's the Man From U.N.C.L.E. gun. It's a TV prop. Cosmik: Authentic? Jeez, where'd you get ahold of that? Jonathan: Ah, you know. (Laughs) We collect things. Mark is actually holding a tricorder from the original Star Trek series in his picture on the album. Cosmik: Oh.... Yeah, here it is! Are these authentic? I mean are they things you bought at conventions, or did somebody actually raid the TV sets? Jonathan: To tell you the truth, I don't really know. I know the tricorder is one of his prized possessions, though. Cosmik: Wow. These pictures on the album are funny. I love the one of Eric laying in a chalk outline. Jonathan: Did you notice what magazine Ed is reading? Because the magazine he's reading makes it my favorite picture. Cosmik: Hmmm... SOVIET LIFE! (Laughs) And he's got the fur hat and everything! That's hysterical. Jonathan: Yeah, that's my favorite one. Cosmik: By the way, I love your version of "Beat Girl." Seems like a lot of bands have covered that, but just about everyone gives it something new. Jonathan: We stayed pretty true to the original. There's a couple versions of it on the Beat Girl soundtrack. There's a vocal version, but the words are just so silly we couldn't bring ourselves to do it. We hadn't heard any covers of it until after it was already an integral part of our set. Cosmik: Have you heard many since? Jonathan: Yeah. Cosmik: Have you heard The Brood's version? Jonathan: Yeah, The Brood was actually the first that I knew of. Of all the ones I've heard, Satan's Pilgrim's might be my favorite. Cosmik: I have an obscure EP of The Damned where they do a very ethereal version of that song. Jonathan: Really? When was that? Cosmik: 1986, I think. Jonathan: Boy, they get points in my book, then. Cosmik: "Beat Girl" is perfect for your sound. Jonathan: John Barry, aside from the soundtrack work, had a band called The John Barry Seven, and there's not a weak link in that band. The songs they played were great songs. They played with some great guitar players. Vic Flick is one of my favorite guitar players. If I could fuse Cropper and Vic Flick together, I'd die a happy man, but I have no hope of doing that so I'm going to die bitter and unfulfilled. (Laughs) Cosmik: (Laughs) It'll be on your tombstone... "Couldn't get that sound." What else is out there that you could cover that would be as perfect for your sound as "Beat Girl?" Jonathan: We're doing one right now that I think is perfect for us. It's called "Bring Down The Birds," which is a Herbie Hancock song from the movie Blow-Up. We're doing that in our live set, and we're having a blast with it. It's not really a fast song, but it just makes you want to dance. So many of our songs, especially live, are such high energy heel stompers that it's really nice to do this one that's danceable but isn't a thousand miles an hour. Cosmik: "My Favorite Dean Martian" was the first thing I heard by you guys, and that was on the Instrumental Fire comp. That one's sure danceable. Did that comp have a positive effect on your fan base? Are more people recognizing you now? Jonathan: Oh yeah. We played a show before our album was out, and we always finish our set with "My Favorite Dean Martian," and when I said "alright, we're going to do one off Instrumental Fire, a track called 'My Favorite Dean Martian,'" and people started screaming. I didn't know if one person yelled something and everyone followed suit or what... Cosmik: That had to feel good. Jonathan: Yeah. It always surprises me, you know? I don't know if I ever would have HEARD of Omega Men if I wasn't in the band. Cosmik: Well, I've heard a lot about Omega Men lately, on the Internet, and just in conversations about rock and roll in general. Hell, I know a few people who call you their favorite band. Two of those people just sent me e-mail saying your last show was a major cooker. Jonathan: Well thanks. Actually, I think we're better live, because live I'm not going to play it safe. On the record, I didn't want to fuck anything up and be responsible for us having to do a whole new take because I tried to do something I couldn't do. Plus, we play about five times faster live. Not that faster equals better, but there's so much more energy, and we're a dance band. Sometimes, live, I feel like I can barely control myself. Like I just wanna shake right out of my skin. Sometimes we try. Susan's been known to dance on top of the organ. We just go out and have a blast. I think I have more fun playing than anyone in the audience has watching me. Cosmik: All of that makes the crowd hyper. Jonathan: I've noticed that if we play a packed small club and there are people there enjoying themselves, we play a lot better than if we're in some cavernous huge club and there are four people there that don't give a shit. We play lousy. Cosmik: Because there's no energy. Jonathan: Exactly. And the more energy we put out, the more the audience does, and the more they do, the more we do. It's a snowball. Next thing we know, everyone's sweaty and the ties are loosened. Cosmik: A lot of people feel that even if the huge cavernous hall is packed, it's not as great as playing in a small club where you're all shoulder to shoulder on the stage. Jonathan: Our favorite club doesn't actually have a stage. It's just a little niche in the wall that we play in. It's called The Funhouse, in Bethlehem, PA. A lot of great bands have played through there. Cosmik: Is that your hometown? Jonathan: No, it's about an hour and a half or two hours away from us. We're in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Cosmik: Hey, you mentioned the Shadows tribute album coming up on MuSick Records. Which tune are you covering? Jonathan: It's called "Main Theme," which is off of Rhythm & Greens. Cosmik: I can't wait to hear that comp. Jonathan: Yeah, there was another Shadows tribute that was all modern artists sounding very modern. I think people that dig The Shadows are going to hear that one and think "well, it's not as good as The Shadows," whereas people who are big Shadows fans are probably fans of our type of music to begin with, so they're really going to like to hear the various bands on there. Cosmik: Do you know who else is going to be on the record? Jonathan: Davie Allan, The Space Cossacks, The Fathoms... Cosmik: I love the Fathoms. It always sounds like the whole band is in the reverb tank. I'm a big fan of reverb. Jonathan: Oh, me too. I can't get enough of it. I got my reverb unit started for like surf reverb songs, and then I like it so much I just leave it on for the rest of the set. And then when it comes time for more surf songs, I just turn it up a little more and then leave it on THAT setting. I know that some of the stuff we do should probably have a dryer sound, but I just love that boingy wet sound so much. Cosmik: A little bit of mystique and ethereal sound... Jonathan: Yeah. I can't even say what it is. It's just "it." Cosmik: Your girlfriend, Jezebel, used to play with The Friggs, right? Jonathan: Yeah. She was the guitar player and singer. Cosmik: And she has a new thing going? Jonathan: Yeah, we're going to be playing with them tomorrow night in Philadelphia. She's playing drums now. Cosmik: What's the name of the band? Jonathan: The Mysterons. As in Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons, which was super-marianation at its finest. Captain Scarlet was really cool because, like Supercar and The Thunderbirds, those puppets had really big heads and didn't look like real people, whereas Captain Scarlet's puppets were proportioned correctly, so it's even stranger. Cosmik: What kind of music are they doing? Jonathan: It's pretty much straight forward surf. They're a three-piece. This woman named Fran is playing guitar. She also makes my fuzz pedals for me. She has a company called Frantone. They've been reviewed in Guitar Player Magazine. They're really great. Cosmik: Do you have any side things happening? I know you're really into jazz. Cosmik: That's kind of on hold right now. Jezebel and I always say we're going to play, but we're both kind of busy. So right now there's nothing in the works. The Omega Men is really my top priority right now. The Omega Men is what I want from a band. * * * The Omega Men's LP/CD, The Spy-Fi Sounds Of The Omega Men, is available from MuSick Recordings 202 W. Essex Avenue, Lansdowne, PA 19050. Sound clips are available in Real Audio format at the Cosmik Debris website, located at http://www.cosmik.com. ___________________________________________________________________________ BILLY BRAGG'S BIG ADVENTURE By Jeff Apter Stand-up socialist Billy Bragg was feeling especially optimistic, both personally and professionally, when I cornered him backstage at New York's Fleadh music marathon in June. In no special order, you can hold Tony Blair, reborn English sporting teams, and Bragg's infant son, Jack, responsible for Bragg's buoyant mood. "With the new Labour government, we Brits are now living in a world of possibilities," the lanky Bragg told me, with a sizable, sunburnt grin. He'd just been dazzling the Guinness-swigging festival crowd with his typically roughshod songs of freedom ("Sexuality") and fascism ("Accident Waiting To Happen"). His garrulous on-stage mood continued when we spoke; he even revealed his secret love for shopping. It's true - though you would think this furiously materialistic American obsession is the last thing Bragg would praise, he is a confessed mall addict. "I love shopping in America. Shopping is American culture at its highest; to come to this country and not shop is like slapping these people in the face. Shopping here is comparable to Bondi and Sydney, rain and Britain. And it's the best way to meet people and understand the country." Not that Bragg has too much time to wander American shopping malls on this visit. When I caught up with him he was at the starting point of a new musical adventure, plowing through the Woody Guthrie Archives in New York, adding melodies to a selection of never-before-heard Guthrie lyrics. To help record these "new" Guthrie tunes, Bragg has roped in Wilco as his very own house band, while Natalie Merchant is another possible contributor. An album should appear before the end of the year, with a tour a future possibility. Bragg's initial involvement with the Guthrie people was at the September 1996 "Hard Travelin'" concert and exhibit at Cleveland's Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame, which proved to be a wildly successful fundraiser for the Guthrie Archives. Nine months on, Bragg was understandably excited about the project, but not daunted by his task. "I would be if there were only five or six songs there, but there's over 300," he explained. "Most people at this festival could make their own album out of what's there and it'd still be good." To Bragg, Guthrie's a misunderstood figure in his own country, recognized as an icon, "when in fact he was an iconoclast. While I'm not trying to contemporise him as such, I am hoping to bring him into post-war American culture, where he belongs. Woody Guthrie heard the Beatles, he doesn't belong in the dustbowl." So what makes the Barking Bard the right man for the job? 'In England, Guthrie's not in the culture, you have to find him', Bragg replied. "So I'm not just a generation away, I'm an ocean away. I can approach the project a bit more objectively." Nora Guthrie told me how she was every bit as thrilled as Bragg by the project. Nora is the silent partner in Bragg's big adventure; she also happens to be Woody Guthrie's daughter and the leading light of the Guthrie Foundation and the Guthrie Archives. "This album's really going to bridge the gap between generations, especially with a band such as Wilco involved. And Billy's the perfect person to pull it all together. He's just like my father," she added, "the same sense of humor and energy and dedication." The Guthrie Archive, capably managed by archivist George Aravelo, is a treasure-trove of artwork, song lyrics, scrapbooks, photos and diaries, with its collection of 20,000-plus Guthrie-related and Guthrie-created items. Not surprisingly, the Bragg-Wilco tribute album is just the first in a series of Guthrie tributes using material from the archive. During 1998, a children's book using his illustrations will be published, as well as a traveling Smithsonian exhibit named "This Land Is Your Land." There'll even be a Woody Guthrie stamp, the true mark of posthumous glory. Bragg admits there's a little Woody Guthrie in his folk-punk stance. "I'm also a folk singer - I'm in the Guthrie tradition, but not of the tradition," he explained to me. "Although I was born of punk rock, the urge to communicate and talk to people about left-wing politics makes me part of folk music, and I'm happy with that. It's a great tradition, a powerful tradition, and one that has to come with us into the 21st century. I plan to make sure that's the case." Given Bragg's expertise at mixing pop and politics, that shouldn't be a problem. (C) 1997 - Jeff Apter ___________________________________________________________________________ TAPE HISS By John Sekerka [The following interviews are transcribed from John Sekerka's radio show, Tape Hiss, which runs on CHUO FM in Ottawa, Canada. Each month, Cosmik Debris will present a pair of Tape Hiss interviews. This month, we're proud to present interviews with Marky Ramone, formerly of The Ramones and now with Marky Ramone and the Intruders, and singer/songwriter Victoria Williams.] * * * M A R K Y R A M O N E With a thick Brooklyn accent, Marky Ramone answers rapid fire questions over the phone from a Buffalo club, where his Intruders are opening for The Misfits. I'm listening to "Telephone Love" from the new album when the call comes in... John: "Telephone Love" is kinda apropos for this situation doncha think Marky? Marky: What, between me and you? John: Yeah. Marky: I don't think so. John: You don't swing that way? Marky: Naw. John: Gee, don't tell me the tabloids are lying? Marky: [laughing] John: What is the official status of The Ramones? Is the band kaput? Marky: After Lollapalooza last year, we decided to call it quits. That's why I formed my own band, wrote and produced my own album, cuz I'm younger than them. I still have the energy to do it, and I love doing it, and the kids like it. The kids are the ones that matter. I'll continue as long as they come to the shows. John: What are the others doing? Marky: Johnny's retired. Joey might do the Tiny Tim story, as an actor. Tiny Tim did "Tiptoe Through the Tulips." I have no idea what CJ's doing. I just did an album with DD called The Remains. John: Does Johnny have seasons tickets to the New York Mets? Marky: Yeah probably. He loves sports, that's his retirement hobby. John: Are you the youngest of the remaining Ramones? Marky: I was until CJ joined. John: Exactly when did you join the band? Marky: In early '78, right after playing with Richard Hell and the Voidoids. John: It's an amazing coincidence: to find players with the same last name. Exactly how does one become a Ramone? Marky: It's like a gang, a unit. Once you join, you become a Ramone for life. There have been some honorary Ramones along the way: Homer Simpson, Stephen King... John: Wait a minute, Stephen King is an honorary Ramone? Marky: We did the song for Pet Cemetery. He always writes about us in his books. He's a big Ramones fan. So we made him an honorary member. He's a cool guy. John: Are the Intruders your main project? Marky: Oh yeah. We're gonna try and play 175 shows a year. John: Every other day. Marky: That's correct. John: Where'd you dig up that singer: Skinny Bones? Marky: He wrote some stuff for The Ramones on the last two studio albums. He's a friend who came to me through Johnny Thunders - uh, when he was alive. The other guys are from the New York area, from other bands, that I wanted. John: Who is Mark Newman - he's all over the record, but doesn't appear to be an official Intruder? Marky: Mark Newman was in Sheer Terror. He was gonna be in the band, but he got Carpal Tunnel on his hand. It's a disease that stiffens your muscles. John: Will this New York punk style ever go out of fashion? Marky: Naw it won't. New York: it's the attitude, the craziness. It's a non-stop city. Constant movement. You feel it in the air, so you write about it... the gangs, the violence. John: How do the Intruders compare with The Ramones on stage? Marky: We zoom right through our songs, except now we have two guitar players. Everybody sings, and it's a younger band. John: Do you stay behind the drum kit for the whole show? Marky: Oh yeah, I only sing one song on the album. I don't think drummers should sing live - it doesn't look good. John: "Anxiety" is a killer Ramones-like tune... Marky: Thank you. The Ramones wanted it for Mondo Bizarro and then I re-recorded it for this record. Skinny Bones' voice is angrier and raspier than Joey's. And I wanted that. John: Are there any new bands out there carrying on the Ramones legacy? Marky: There are a lot of bands imitating the Ramones, like The Queers. Any punk band you hear today has some Ramones or Sex Pistols in it. John: Are you listening to the new stuff? Marky: I listen to everything. I think the best representation of what an original punk band is today, is Rancid. They're good friends. We have a side project going - me, Tim and Boz - called No Brain. John: What was a typical day in the life of a Ramone? Marky: A lot of touring, in-store autographs, videos, soundchecks, hotels, flying, interviews - constantly. John: When you weren't doing music, what were you doing? Marky: I was always making records, ever since I was 16 years old. When I was in high school I made my first album with a band called Dust. John: What's your favourite poison? Marky: My favourite poison was 151 - Baccardi Rum. But I'm a good boy now. If I didn't stop fooling around I wouldn't be able to keep playing. That's more important. John: Can you remember those times of excess? Marky: Yeah, I'm gonna write a book. I have 185 Hi-8 tapes I recorded on my camera going back to 1986. I'm gonna put out a cool video: backstage, fooling around - things that a lot of kids didn't see. John: You must get a lot of requests for old Ramones material. How do you handle that? Marky: I really don't get requests for the old stuff. The only things I do is the stuff I wrote, and I throw in a DD song called 'Outsider'. John: You cover The Kinks on the new album. Why are you dipping back to that era? Marky: I wanted the album to end on a positive note. John: Let's go way, way back. Was there a turning point in your life, when you realized rock'n'roll was in your blood? Marky: Yeah, my mother bought me the first Beatles album when I was 6 or 7. I thought it was like the Chipmunks, and I loved the Chipmunks. Then I started to like the Beatles, and wanted to play the drums. I saved up my newspaper delivery money and got a Japanese drum kit. That's how I learned. John: Has it been a dream come true? Marky: Pretty much, but I had to work hard. There's so much competition. John: Where exactly are you from? Marky: I'm from Brooklyn, near Ocean Parkway, Ocean Avenue. I grew up there. Then I moved to New York for about 5 or 6 years, but I hadda move back cuz it was too crazy there: kids coming to my door wanting to party with me. John: I've always wondered about the long black mop top Ramone hair. Is that real? Marky: Not Joey's.... naw, I'm only kiddin'. John: I can't imagine Joey without that hair. Marky: Me either [laughing]. ..tape hiss V I C T O R I A W I L L I A M S Victoria Williams is a musical treasure. Armed with a bewitching, crackly voice, she is an original writer with a magical flare. Five years ago she was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis, but with the aid of Sweet Relief, she continues with her musical career. Just before a tour of North America, I called her desert digs, out in Joshua Tree, California, where Victoria was busy taking care of a lizard. John: Are lizard problems an everyday occurrence down there? Victoria: These particular lizards, the California iguanas have spots and change colour, and they like super hot days. I see a pair of 'em regularly. The littler one got caught by a dog today. He's pretty bloody. We put him in the aquarium. John: How many dogs do you have? Victoria: I have several. Molly, who usually goes on tour with me, she had nine puppies. We kept one of them, Solo, and then we adopted Molly's older brother. He's a wonderful big ol' dog. John: On the cover of This Moment, Live in Toronto, you have a picture of a dog. Victoria: That's Molly. She was on stage in Toronto, yes she was. John: What does Molly do on stage: listen or howl along? Victoria: She's a pack dog, so she considers herself one of the band. She comes out with the group and faces the audience and lays there for the entire show, never moving. John: For me, your songs evoke a simpler time, maybe a farm life, childhood memories. What do you draw on for your songwriting? Victoria: Nature, animals, people, circumstances, sometimes just an emotion or a feeling. John: I get the feeling from the quality of your songs that you are a prolific writer. Do you write all the time? Victoria: Pretty much. For the new record there was a list of 93 songs. I hope I put the right ones on. John: Wow, you could release a box set of new material! Victoria: Yeah but you know publishers will only pay you for ten songs on a record no matter how many you have. For instance if you have 16 songs on a record, and 6 are covers, you only get paid for 4 songs. John: Really? That's one lousy deal. I imagine that you have a very loose structure when you play live. I have this picture of the McGarriggle Sisters in my head. They drag family, friends and a slew of instruments on stage and see what happens. Victoria: That's so lovely. That's similar to what happens with us. John: Who is in your band these days? Victoria: My husband Mark Olson, who used to be in the Jayhawks, and Raz Russel, a fiddle player who played with Joe Henry. John: So that is you on the Jayhawks' song "Miss Williams' Guitar." Victoria: Yeah, I was honoured. John: How long have you known Mark? Victoria: Hmmm, oh boy, 13 years? 14 years? 13 years. John: A friend said he saw you perform a long time ago at the Winnipeg Folk Festival with Peter Case. Victoria: Hah! I was married to him. John: That was news to me. Was that when he was with The Plimsouls? Victoria: Naw, way after that. John: How long were you married? Victoria: Way too long. Six years, but it really wasn't a marriage after the first two. John: So you're going from musician to musician? Victoria: I actually knew Mark before - we were going out, but then he moved to Minnesota. John: You appear on Giant Sand's Glum album, on which there's an ode to Pappy Allen. You also mention him on your Loose record. Who was Pappy Allen? Victoria: He was a wonderful liver of life. He was a desert man, and we all loved him. We took him to Europe, Giant Sand, Pappy and me. He would treat everyone with the same respect no matter where they came from. There were so many people at his wake. I met someone who was in prison and managed to turn his life around thanks to Pappy. He was just a good old guy. He sang with his wife Harriet. They had a club up in Pioneer Town called "Pappy & Harriet's." You oughta go up there sometime. John: I love his version of "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" on Glum. Was that the last thing he recorded? Victoria: No I recorded him for a compilation record in Germany. I recorded him and his wife Harriet at my house. About 3 days later he fell ill, and about 5 days later he died. John: How is your health by the way? Victoria: I'm doin' pretty good. I have to take these shots everyday. They hurt. It's a new drug, supposedly you have fewer exacerbations. An exacerbation is when in MS you're not doing so good. John: Were you the first performer to benefit from Sweet Relief? Victoria: Yes. John: Can you outline what Sweet Relief does? Victoria: Sure. Basically we don't have health care, and musicians are left out of the loop. Even if you are signed to a record company, they don't cover you for insurance. You're worth more dead, really. They make you sign a life insurance policy. I had been in hospitals with them not knowing what was wrong with me, and had acquired quite a bill. When I got out there was a concert benefit with T-Bone Burnett, The Jayhawks, Maria McKee... I thought it would be great if there was an organization, and at the same time there was a group of people in New York who wanted to do a record of people doing my songs. So we got together and put together Sweet Relief as a charity, and then we were able to start helping people. There's a chorus in my song "Opelousas" which is "Sweet Relief" - that's where the title came from. John: Vic Chesnutt was the next recipient of a benefit record. Victoria: I wish his record would've got better publicity cuz it's a great one. John: You sing a song with Vic on that one. Victoria: Yeah, and finally there's gonna be a video for it. A fella shot a comet going overhead frame by frame. It's beautiful. John: You should tour as the Two Vics! Victoria: Hah! We will. We love each other so much. John: When I spoke to Vic, he revealed that he doesn't have a huge fan base, but the people who do like him are quite enamoured and devoted. His songs manage to strike a chord. Is that the same case with you? Victoria: Yeah, I have beautiful fans. They write me and send me art. I try and write back, but sometimes I'm not so good about it. Yeah, it's not a huge, huge thing, but the people that get it, they really get it. John: What is it like to hear Lou Reed sing one of your songs? Victoria: Whoah-yeah! It's wonderful. I got to play with Lou quite a bit after Sweet Relief. John: Oh yeah? He has a nasty reputation. Victoria: I know, but he's never been unfriendly to me. I have seen him be unfriendly though... not good. John: Another fave of mine, Lucinda Williams is on Sweet Relief. Victoria: Oh I love her. We used to play shows together as Millions of Williams. John: You have a very unique voice, one that takes a while to get accustomed to. Did you find that a hindrance trying to get started in the music industry? Victoria: Oh yes, it was really rough, cuz there weren't many girl singers. But now there are a lot of girl singers so I think it's not as hard to listen to my voice any more. ...tape hiss ____________________________________________________________________________ CD ROM REVIEW: TITANIC - ADVENTURE OUT OF TIME (Cyberflix) Reviewed by DJ Johnson The original plan was to make a good adventure game set aboard the ill fated White Star ship, R.M.S. Titanic. At that, they succeeded admirably enough. What Cyberflix actually created, however, was much more than a computer game. As the game was being developed, the graphic simulation of the ship took on more and more authenticity until it eventually became a Titanic buff's dream: a chance to walk the decks and corridors of the ship they've studied and loved. Though Adventure Out Of Time is now a year old, we felt it should be reviewed in this issue because A) our interview with Ian Whitcomb contains a great deal of discussion about The Titanic, and B) this is a wonderful game and it deserves attention. After all, the attention Cyberflix gave the game was nothing short of fanatical devotion. The company spent nearly a million dollars producing the game. How important was accuracy? At one point, when an old Titanic photograph made it clear the artists had made a few mistakes on the glass dome above the grand staircase, the entire dome was deleted and restarted from scratch, resulting in major costs and a time loss of several days. When Cyberflix realized that they were actually creating an accurate virtual Titanic, they decided to add a feature that allows the player to tour the ship outside of the game structure. "Tour guides" pop up in various locations and explain what you are seeing. On my version of the game CDs, there were only a few tour guides, but a visit to the Cyberflix website solved that problem. Several new guides can be downloaded free of charge and plugged right into the game directory on your hard drive. The website also houses a bulletin board for Titanic players to use to pass along tips and ask questions, which are often answered by the creators themselves. The game itself is a wonderful bit of intrigue that actually begins in a London apartment in 1942. There you learn some hard facts about your past. It seems you were an agent of the British Secret Service until you botched an important assignment aboard The Titanic way back in 1912. Now, through strange circumstances, you have the opportunity to relive that April evening and set things right. In order to win the game it is necessary to visit many parts of the ship and "talk" to many passengers and crewmen. As a lifelong Titanic freak, I found that I frequently lost track of the details of my mission after entering a room, hopelessly distracted by the thrill of exploring. Details had been attended to, from the cherubs surrounding the clock in the grand staircase to the patterns on the china. Elevators were located where they belonged, the minutia on the deck was fairly accurate, and even the 3rd class cabins were correctly arranged and decorated. The 3-D graphics and 360-degree environment make this game something very special, thanks to a graphics authoring system known as DreamFactory, developed by Cyberflix founder Bill Appleton. DreamFactory allows the designers to create adventures in much the same way that directors create movies, using sets, lighting, props and "actors" intuitively rather than mathematically. As a result, Cyberflix games are instantly recognizable and preferable to the competition. I've made a little discovery that I'd like to pass along. With all due respect to the excellent soundtrack of Adventure Out Of Time, I've found that the authenticity of this time trip is greatly enhanced by simultaneously listening to Ian Whitcomb's latest project CD, The White Star Orchestra. (Reviewed elsewhere in this issue of Cosmik Debris.) He has put together a replica of the Titanic's famous band, and this CD contains music they played on the voyage, performed exactly as it would have been in that time and place. Because the characters in the game talk to you, it's often necessary to turn the volume up again, but the combined effect of the game and the Whitcomb CD is well worth the effort. Because I am the worlds most inept adventure game player, I have yet to solve the exciting mystery of Adventure Out Of Time. In fact, I haven't even made it to the iceberg. But I have logged many hours of exploration and admiration, and as for the game itself, I'm not about to give up. I may be slow, but I have decoded a few messages, I've met a few beautiful ladies who had messages for me, and I've even pissed off a stoker in one of the boiler rooms. He wants to beat me up. Never thought I'd make an enemy on the Titanic. But then I never thought I'd get to explore her, either. * * * The Cyberflix website is located at www.cyberflix.com and it contains much information about this and other Cyberflix games. ============================================================================ [[[[[[[[ [[[[[[ [[ [[ [[[[[ [[[[[[ [[ [[ [[[[[[ [[ [[ [ [[ [[ [ [ [[ [ [[ [[ [[[[[[[[ [[[[[[ [[ [[ [ [[[[[[ [[ [ [[ [[[[[ [[ [[ [ [[[ [ [ [[[ [[[ [[ [[ [[ [[[[[[ [ [[[[[ [[[[[[ [[ [[ [[[[[[ ============================================================================ EDDIE ANGEL: Guitar Party (Musick) Reviewed by DJ Johnson In 1993, A few years before hooking up with Danny Amis and forming Los Straitjackets, Eddie Angel made this straight forward garage rock record at London's Toe Rag Studio. Until now, this has only been available in the UK. Several of the originals on this album showed up later in new versions by Los Straitjackets, sounding all reverby and rich, which isn't a bad thing at all. But there's a lot to be said for buck naked rock and roll, and this is definitely that. 10 of the 15 tunes are Angel originals, and if you know Eddie you know there ain't a dog in the bunch. "Caveman," "Itchy Chicken," and "Brawl" are already being played by cover bands, a sure sign that Angel has that rare knack for making simple tunes stick. The covers include The Frantics' "Werewolf" and The Gentles' "Take It Off," and they fit in perfectly with the originals. Best of all, it sounds like Eddie and his British co-horts had almost as much fun making Guitar Party as I had listening to it. (Musick Records: 202 W. Essex Avenue, Lansdowne, PA 19050. Phone: (610) 623-8467. Fax: (610) 623-8547) LOUIS ARMSTRONG: Now You Has Jazz (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun Dale One of the seminal players in the world of jazz in particular and American popular music in general, Louis Armstrong's engaging and effusive personality also made him a natural for the world of film, musical and otherwise. This disc presents selections culled from five films Louis did for MGM between 1943 and 1965. Actually, some of the music here never appeared on screen. There are several outtakes and alternate versions presented that are valuable additions to the Armstrong canon. One track in particular, "Ain't It The Truth," from Cabin In The Sky, was recorded to be Armstrong's only musical feature in the film. It was left on the cutting room floor, and Louis Armstrong appeared in the film as a featured player in the dramatic rather than the musical sense. The eleven selections recorded for The Strip include classic performances of "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "A Kiss To Build A Dream On" as well as some great instrumental work by Louis Armstrong and His All Stars. And All Stars they were. His working band, which did the film with him, included Jack Teagarden (vocals & trombone), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Earl "Fatha" Hines (piano), Arvell Shaw (bass) and Cozy Cole (drums). Cole's drum parts were recorded for Mickey Rooney, who played a drummer in the film, to mimic on screen. Shaw was replaced onscreen by a white actor for unexplained reasons. 1952's Glory Alley brought back the Allstars with Teagarden in the role of leader, since Louis had a featured acting role in addition to his musical assignments. Louis' five musical numbers from the film are accompanied here by an outtake of "It's A Most Unusual Day." In 1956, High Society, with a cast featuring Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly and a score by Cole Porter, brought a new lineup of the All Stars to film. Arvell Shaw is still on hand, with Edmond Hall (clarinet), Trummy Young (trombone), Billy Kyle (piano) and drummer Barrett Deems. Centered around the Newport Jazz Festival (then in its third year), Armstrong managed to squeeze out two solo numbers with the All Stars - a vocal take on "High Society Calypso" and the instrumental "I Love You, Samantha." He appears here on three more numbers teamed with Bing Crosby, including "Now You Has Jazz" which gives a featured spot to the entire band. Armstrong returned to MGM in 1965 to contribute two numbers to the Connie Francis vehicle, When The Boys Meet The Girls. Whether "Throw It Out Of Your Mind" and "I Got Rhythm" alone justified the film may be debatable, but if you're a Louis Armstrong fan, you'll find their inclusion here fully justified. The same effusiveness of personality that made Louis Armstrong an attractive personality for Hollywood would later lead to some criticism among the purist sectors of the jazz community. Mugging to the audience in an effort to entertain was seen as beneath the dignity of what was being presented as "serious" music by "serious" musicians. One can't help but wonder, though, how many of the jazz fans in those "serious" artists' audiences came to love jazz through a Louis Armstrong film appearance. There's sure plenty to love on this disc. Track List: Ain't Misbehavin' * One O'Clock Jump * Ole Miss Blues * Basin Street Blues * I'm Coming, Virginia * A Kiss To Build A Dream On * Medley: Shadrack/When The Saints Go Marchin' In * That's A Plenty * Ain' It The Truth * Hine's Retreat * Fatha's Time * J.T. Jive * That's What The Man Said * Glory Alley * Oh Didn't He Ramble * South Rampart Street Parade * Flee As A Bird * It's A Most Unusual Day * High Society Calypso * Little One * I Love You, Samantha * Now You Has Jazz * Throw It Out Of Your Mind * I Got Rhythm THE ARTICLES: Flip F'real (Moon Ska) Reviewed by DJ Johnson This one stands out. There are more bands on the ska scene at this moment than at any time in history, and while a lot of them are fun, powerful and talent-heavy, very few of them have a corner of the scene all to themselves. The Articles approach ska from the jazz side in much the same way as their idols, The Skatalites, did way back in the 60s. The instrumental ska on Flip F'real is highly seductive and, as the album goes on, increasingly diverse, drawing on jazz, reggae, dub, funk, and psychedelia. The seven members of this band are loaded with talent and style, not to mention taste. They choose their cover tunes carefully, paying homage to greats like Charlie Parker ("Scrapple From The Apple"), Thelonious Monk ("Blue Monk" and "Well, You Needn't"), The Skatalites ("Spred Satin"), and the great Laurel Aitken ("Ska's The Limit"), but it's the originals that ultimately separates The Articles from the pack. Derek and Paul Phelps (trumpet and guitar, respectively) collaborate on five tunes, Dan Margulis (drums) wrote one and co-wrote one with Derek, and Mike Rehfus (alto sax) contributed the final track, a stormin' number called "Mingus The Merciless/An Incantation." Like all their originals, "Mingus" moves in several directions at once: jungle drums, a street funk undercurrent, an exotic solo or two, horn section parts that are just slightly askew, and inspired chants that say only "Mingus," but say it like they're trying to raise his spirit. I don't know much about the Detroit ska scene, but I'll wager just about anything these gents are the top of the heap. I think it'd be the same in any city they moved to. It would be interesting to see them go head to head with their only real rivals, The New York Ska-Jazz Ensemble, a supergroup made up of members of other great NYC ska bands (including bassist Victor Rice, who produced this album). I'm a big fan of NYSJE, but right now I'd have to give the nod to The Articles because of their unique creativity. Still, that would be a showdown worth filming, wouldn't it? (Call Moon Ska at 212-673-3359 to order.) JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH: Motets (BWV 225-230) Rene' Jacobs Director with RIAS-Kammerchor and the Akademie fur Alte Musik Berlin Harmonia Mundi 901589 Reviewed by Paul Remington Perhaps the most curious works composed by J. S. Bach are his motets; brief polyphonic choral compositions based on Latin text, usually sung unaccompanied, and written for church performance. These short works differ from his sacred cantatas, which, along with his Passions and oratorios, were written while he worked as the Cantor of St. Thomas. Each motet was composed by commission for specific occasions. The quantity of motets Bach left behind is unparalleled. Once thought to have been composed in his early Leipzig period through the mid-1730s, researcher and writer Daniel Melamed has recently revealed in "J. S. Bach and the German Motet" that some of these motets were actually written much earlier than previously believed. One of these early motets appears on this CD; Furchte dich nicht (Fear thou not). While the vocal motet was considered an outdated form in Bach's day (superseded by the cantata form), it remained a standard liturgical vehicle that continued to be used throughout Bach's lifetime. The church records at St. Thomas reveal Bach used some of the early 17th century motets while at St. Thomas. Those same motets continued to be performed in Leipzig long after Bach's death. While the popular use of the motet form had since passed, there continued to be a place for the form in liturgical settings. The motet is a functional and independent element, not linked with a cycle of music, such as the sonata or cantata. These pieces are singularly independent. As a result, they stand out as a unique collection of material in Bach's catalog. The vocal lines are quite different from that of Bach's other vocal works. In the Passions, cantatas and oratorios, obbligato instrumentation is a part of the form. The motet style is historically less colorful in the use of instrumentation, yet flourishes in terms of vocal parts. Historical records reveal Bach added to the motet form by doubling instrumental parts with vocal parts. This allowed a continuo group to add obbligato instrumental parts, much as he was composing in his own cantatas. Bach's inventive mind applied a unique approach to a form that, even then, was considered antiquated. So, we have discussed what a motet is, how it differs from other styles, when it was popular, and how Bach approached and used the form. The historical significance of these works is clear, and leaves no question as to why Harmonia Mundi would record and release them. What is left undiscussed is the interpretation of the works; that is, how the director, Rene' Jacobs, approached the performance for a 20th century concert audience. To begin, the performance of a collection of motets in a concert fashion immediately extracts the pieces from their native presentation: as independent liturgical works and not part of a song cycle. Remember, each motet was commissioned for a specific event, making it an independent entity. For the purposes of this recording, it was decided to present these works in a concert form, stripping each motet from its functional framework. In addition, a mixed choir was added, which provides a rich presentation with the supporting instrumentation. In Bach's time, these motets would probably be performed by solo vocalists. The decision to add mixed choir in this performance was for added color in concert presentation. The polyphonic aspect of each motet can be exploited with the use of a mixed choir, choral parts can be alternated, and the use of dynamics enhanced. The deviation from what was commonly accepted in Bach's day should be viewed as colorful additions designed to suit the performance requirements of the day. Much as Bach added to the motet form in his day, the interpretation of Bach's motets has been updated for the late 20th century concert audience. The results are glorious! This CD archives a revitalized and moving performance set within a sacred subject, spawned by Bach's devotion to the church, and the Almighty through which he devoted his life and talent. This performance is a gem and the recording stupendous. Rene' Jacobs' insightful approach to these works results in a remarkable and rewarding aural experience. The performance of the RIAS-Kammerchor and the Akademie fur Alte Musik Berlin more than satisfies the technical and interpretive requirements of these works. Rich and affecting, beautiful and timeless, these works will be around for centuries to come. This release stands apart from others in that it takes a focused interpretive approach while recognizing the historical element of the original works. Although a few things may be different, nothing is lost. Bach's music is fresh and alive, and this performance survives as a historic digital record, making it equally timeless. CECILIA BARTOLI: Chant d'amour (London 452 667-2) Reviewed by Paul Remington Mezzo soprano, Cecilia Bartoli, widens her repertoire with a collection of duets composed by five French composers: Georges Bizet, Leo Delibes, Pauline Viardot, Hector Berlioz, and Maurice Ravel. These duets find Bartoli accompanied by pianist Myung-Whun Chung. This release is a true French delight. Witty, prayerful, wispy, and at times angry, the selection of material covers the entire spectrum of emotional content with an emphasis on beauty. All music is set against the popular nineteenth century writers of the time: Victor Hugo, Alphonse de Lamartine, Louis Delatre, Edouard Pailleron, and Alfred de Musset, to name a few. One must not forget William Shakespeare, whose material had an enormous effect on the French Romantic movement. Berlioz' La Mort d'Ophelie (The Death of Ophelia) sets a passionate and vividly melodic composition to Shakespeare-inspired text by dramatist Ernest Legouve. Berlioz' great respect and love for Shakespeare's work far exceeded many of the French opinions of the time. Shakespeare was seen as a barbarian who destroyed the established rules of classical drama. Berlioz, like Victor Hugo, saw Shakespeare as a brilliant liberator. No writer had a more affecting impact on Berlioz than Shakespeare. The blend of colorful text with clever and sensitive compositions displays each composers' ability to communicate his own feelings through music. Although the compositions may be great and the text brilliant, it can easily be destroyed with a performance lacking sensitivity and exceptional technical ability. Bartoli's advanced and uniquely developed coloratura has proven her to be one of the best vocal talents around. She scales seemingly sadistic Rossini passages with a playful touch. Her approach to Mozart is equally impressive; both unique and sensitive. These French compositions from the nineteenth century sound as though they were written for her. Korean pianist Myung-Whun Chung's accompaniment is superb. There's a clear chemistry between Bartoli and Chung that comes through in the performance. Bartoli's flow is followed splendidly by Chung, who has made as much a career for himself performing piano as he has as a conductor. After moving to Europe in 1980, he conducted many orchestras, including both the Berlin and Vienna Philharmonic. From 1989 to 1994 he served as Music Director of the Paris Opera. His solid conducting and performance background gives him a special approach when interpreting the performance of these works. "Chant d'amour" was recorded over a period of six days in the Henry Wood Hall in London. Relaxed and in a bright mood, Bartoli sang beside the piano, with two mikes before her. Myung-Whun Chung was equally relaxed and jovial. As Bartoli's mother (who's also her vocal teacher) sits only a few feet away, you can see her reciting every word her daughter sings, as if singing with her, pulling for her, coaching her. This loose and flowing atmosphere forms the basis of a timeless performance; a performance that is both creative and unique--something one comes to expect from any Bartoli recital. The performance of both Bartoli and Chung bring these compositions to life. Follow the text as you listen to the music. While the music stands on it's own quite well, applying the text to the emotional content of each piece enhances the experience. After listening to the CD, you may find yourself doing what I did: acquiring Bartoli's tour schedule. Two speakers are fine, but a talent like this must be experienced live. Bartoli tours the world. If need be, she's worth the trip. After listening to the disk, you'll see what I mean. HARRY BELAFONTE: Jump Up Calypso (DCC 24k Gold CD) Reviewed by DJ Johnson You knoe, it;s REALLU haed to typr when yoou[re dancimg yoyr ass off! There... Had to turn this one off long enough to review it because it's just about impossible to hold still while it's playing. Recorded in 1961, Jump Up Calypso was Harry Belafonte's return to his roots after several years of recording a somewhat watered down brand of calypso for RCA. Working with producer Bob Bollard and a handful of excellent calypso musicians (including the wonderful Trinidad Steel Band), Belafonte made a record for the ages. Even if you think you don't know about calypso, you probably do. Ever see Beetlejuice? Well, this record was playing in the background through about sixty percent of the flick. The best remembered tune from that soundtrack is "Jump In The Line" (you know... the tune at the end of the film that Wynona Ryder got to levitate and dance to), and it, too, is from Jump Up Calypso. The quality of that recording is phenomenal. Belafonte's voice booms out from a perfectly defined reverb space that adds an amazing amount of depth to the overall sound of the track. This is the rule for the entire album: happy dancing steel drums, guitars and flutes to the left and right, and Belafonte's voice, huge and impressive, dead center. No murk, no obvious limitations. Just a little bit of hiss and noise here and there because Steve Hoffman, DCC's remastering engineer, decided against noise reduction in favor of preserving fidelity. The songs are memorable, and in fact that's been proven, as they have all survived the test of 36 years time. "Sweetheart From Venezuela," "Monkey," "Go Down Emanuel Road," "Gloria," "Angelina," "Jump In The Line," and "Goin' Down Jordan" are the fast steppers, each one guaranteed to melt any icy mood. "Bally Mena," "The Baby Boy," "Land Of The Sea And Sun," "These Are The Times" and the classic "Kingston Market" are beautiful, emotional ballads, and after all, you DO need to slow dance some of the time or you're gonna drop. What a great album. I recommend paying the extra bucks for this 24k gold version so it'll still be in prime shape in 20 years, because you're going to be playing it a lot. (DCC can be reached by telephone at 1-800-301-MUSIC.) GRACE BRAUN: It Won't Hurt (Slow River/Rykodisc) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Grace Braun is best known for the garage/punk music she made with DQE, but the country/folk roots of Kentucky were calling her home. With her debut solo album, It Won't Hurt, Grace takes the best elements of that tradition and infuses them with an easy and natural warmth like I haven't heard in years. As it turns out, Grace is a substantially talented songwriter with a flair for melody and an delivery that makes each song feel like a heart to heart with someone you truly care about. Having recently spent quite a bit of time singing in her church choir, Grace was able to bring that fine sound to a few tracks, most notably "What Wondrous Love Is This," and all of the songs seem to radiate a kind of spiritual strength and confidence without ever once bringing religion into it. If radio programmers pay attention to It Won't Hurt, there could be some bona fide country hits here, starting with the title track. And believe me, the country scene could use this breath of fresh air. Whether she's delivering hot country stompers or introspective folk tunes, Grace Braun delivers honesty. LLOYD BREVETT & THE SKATALITES: African Roots (Moon Ska) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Hoo boy! African riddims, old school ska and a touch of King Tubby dub featuring the original and unmatched Skatalites! This is the first stateside CD release of Lloyd Brevett's 1975 solo debut, which turned into the first Skatalite reunion after their 1965 breakup. If you're intrigued at all by the current ska boom and wonder where this music came from, the answer is here. If you haven't got the word yet and you're looking for a good place to begin, this is a ska lesson by the undisputed ska masters. Since their days as the house band at Kingston's Studio One, backing everybody from the Maytals and Wailers to long forgotten one hit wonders (whose hits owed a ton to the masterful backup band), the Skatalites have defined the genre. When Brevett went in search of the best players he could find to cut an album with he realized that they were none other than his old bandmates. The result was one of the classic albums not only of ska, but of Jamaican music in general. A special highlight are the three tracks that none other than King Tubby gave his deft dub touch to. Another is found in the four bonus tracks that Moon Ska has thoughtfully provided - a quartet of tunes the Skatalites recorded for Duke Reid's Treasure Isle in their original early sixties incarnation. For new fans and old alike, this disc is a gem. Track List: Stream In The Meadow * Rock Bottom * Candle Light * Candle Light Dub * Fugitive * Fugitive Dub * Jumbo Malt * Seven Seal * African Roots * Herb Challis Bonus Tracks: Just Cool (Cornerstone) * Japan Special * Space Light * Rock With Me Baby BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 3 (Original Version, 1873; Novak ed.) London Classical Players conducted by Roger Norrington. EMI CLASSICS CDC 72435-56167-2 2 [DDD] 57:25 Reviewed by Robert Cummings Roger Norrington has been a controversial figure in the music world because of his rather individual (some would say "dogmatic") approach in the "historic instruments" movement. Overall, though, he must be regarded as a major figure in this realm in both his musicianship and in his influence. Still, it's hard to imagine extending this method to include the music of Bruckner: in the first place, the difference in the sound between instruments indigenous to late nineteenth century orchestras and those of today is hardly consequential; and where it is perceptibly different, the modern ensemble arguably has the edge. In addition, Norrington here, perhaps reflexively governed by his urge to seek the original soul of the music, serves up the original version of this piece, which has been rarely performed and was recorded but once before (by Inbal on Teldec). This version is perhaps 10% longer than the two commonly performed later ones, the 1878 (officially the first) and the 1888-89 (the second). This might all sound like a recipe for failure, especially when you add Norrington's consistently brisk tempos into the equation. Surprisingly, however, this recording scores a decided success. From the brisk opening, you sense you're in a world of Bruckner dominated by kinetic impetus and muscle, rather than by the majestic and ponderous elements so typical of traditional approaches. Not that Norrington misses or eschews the grandiose side of Bruckner; it's just that he seeks out many facets of the music to produce a more kaleidoscopic kind of yield. Throughout the first movement he is alert to the score's subtleties, always phrasing intelligently, always finding the proper instrumental balances, and always deriving fine playing from the orchestra, especially from the reeds and brass. The second movement soars with passion, even if it is rendered with a greater febrile urgency than most listeners are used to. The music builds, then subsides, then repeats the process again and again, until at 12:21 (track 2) the main theme builds up to reach a magnificent climax beginning at 13:02. After yet another outburst by the brass the movement ends quietly. This Adagio sounds nearly as animated as an Allegro in Norrington's hands, and for Bruckner that's highly unusual and quite effective here. The ensuing Scherzo is weighty and colorful, full of energy and sunlight, mischief and muscle. High spirits abound in the finale, though tension emerges toward the middle that leads to some truly hair-raising outbursts by the brass beginning at 7:46 (track 4). The playing here is so well executed and conceived that one can hardly imagine it more finely wrought. The movement builds to an appropriately powerful close in a typically stop-and-start, loud-soft Brucknerian manner. This is truly thrilling playing. EMI offers splendid sound and intelligent notes by Norrington on performance practices, orchestral size, and other matters relating to historic performance issues. While many may prefer one of the two later versions of this symphony to this early one, I can't say there's a substantial superiority in either of them. There have been many fine performances of this work by Jochum, Haitink, Schuricht and others. This one can stand with the best in any version. R.L. BURNSIDE: Mr. Wizard (Fat Possum/Epitaph) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Just a few bars into R.L. Burnside's plaintive slide work on "Over The Hill" I started feeling the palpable sensation of Mississippi mud between my toes. A Delta legend, Burnside is overdue the wider audience that the blues revival of the sixties offered to his compatriots like Fred McDowell and Robert Nighthawk. Hopefully this disc will capture that attention before it's too late. Three years in the making, recorded with three lineups in jukejoints and living rooms from Oxford, Mississippi to Hollywood, California, this is the real deal. Moaning Delta blues, pounding boogie blues, scorching electric blues...the genuine article from start to finish. You can call him Rule or you can call him the Reverend or you can call him Mr. Wizard - you doesn't have to call him R.L. But if you want to feel those low down blues and that soothing Mississippi mud, you better call on your local purveyor of fine recordings and order this one up. Track List: Over The Hill * Alice Mae * Georgia Women * Snake Drive * Rollin' & Tumblin' * Out On The Road * Highway 7 * Tribute To Fred * You Gotta Move CHINESE MILLIONAIRES: This Is The Criminal Element 4 song 7" EP (Demolition Derby) Reviewed by DJ Johnson This EP is more about structured covers than the other Chinese Millionaires EP reviewed in this issue. The Sex Pistols' "Did You No Wrong" gets a good workout, and there's still plenty of thump and primal grind. The feedback comes barging in about halfway through the tune as the band attempts to blow up the transformers and throw East Lansing into brownout. As if to make my day, they close this EP with an unrecognizable slaughtering of The Stones' "Stupid Girl" that rocks till it crumbles, chucking structure back out the window in favor good ol' fashioned primitive chest thumpin' guts. The way it oughta be. (Demolition Derby/Nitro: C/O Kris Verreth, Tervuusestwg 217, 1820 Perk, Belgium. demderby@tornado.be) CHINESE MILLIONAIRES: White Collar Criminals 7" EP (Demolition Derby/Nitro) Reviewed by DJ Johnson DIY garage punk from a quartet of Michigan kamikaze's with amps as big as all outdoors. These four tracks run the skill range from primitive ("Door-To-Door Maniac" and "Glendora") to primitive but getting ready to discover the wheel ("Turncoat" and "Reggae Reggae"). I hope they never really do discover it, though. It would seem a shame to hear this band being subtle. It feels great just like it is. Bandsaw guitars, relentless drums, and a throbbing headache of a bass sound make the hysterical vocal approach absolutely necessary. Extra points scored for taking a song like "Glendora," which demands subtlety and finesse, and beating the everloving crap out of it. Did I mention primitive? (Demolition Derby/Nitro: C/O Kris Verreth, Tervuusestwg 217, 1820 Perk, Belgium. demderby@tornado.be) DICK DALE: Better Shred Than Dead (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun (No Relation - My Loss) Dale This new 2-disc compilation from Rhino chronicles Dick Dale's music from his earliest Del-Fi singles through his 1996 version of the Hendrix song "Third Stone From The Sun" and "Surf Beat '97" from the CD-ROM game Rocket Jockey. Along the way you get great live performances of Dick Dale classics like "King Of The Surf Guitar" and "Jessie Pearl," the landmark "Pipeline" duet with Stevie Ray Vaughn, and just about as much hard drivin', quick pickin', wave ridin', ear splittin' surf guitar as the King can deliver. I say "just about" because Dick Dale ain't done yet. With a recording career that's pushing toward its 40th year, Dale continues to work on the road and in the studio, with a seemingly inexhaustible ability to find a new dimension of the music he seemed to have established the definitive dimension of years ago. With 39 tracks spread across the two discs, it's pointless to try and catalog them here, or to pick favorites. My advice is to buy it. And if you don't have understanding neighbors and good speakers, pick up some quality headphones at the same time. Once you get this one on, there's an undeniable urge to TURN IT UP! I recommend giving in to the urge, frequently. Track List: Disc One: Ooh-Whee Marie * Stop Teasing * Jessie Pearl * Let's Go Trippin' * Del-Tone Rock * Shake-N-Stomp * Miserlou * Surf Beat * Peppermint Man * Miserlou Twist * A Run For Life * Take It Off * King Of The Surf Guitar * Hava Nagila * Riders In The Sky * Secret Surfin' Spot * The Wedge * Night Rider * Mag Wheels * Mr. Eliminator * Flashing Eyes * Banzai Washout * Tidal Wave * Spanish Kiss * Angry Generation * Ramblin' Man Disc Two: Firing Up (live) * King Of The Surf Guitar (live) * Jessie Pearl (live) * One Double One Oh! * Pipeline (with Stevie Ray Vaughn) * Nitro * Shredded Heat * Terra Dictyl * Unknown Territory * Niterider 6 * Bandito * Third Stone From The Sun * In Liner (Surf Beat '97) DOCTOR EXPLOSION: Maximum Rhythm & Shit (Demolition Derby) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Doctor Explosion, a three piece garage/punk band from Spain, spits out primitive sounding music like they freakin' well MEAN it. That, of course, is an invitation to dance around and generally go nuts, and I'm taking 'em up on it. The song structures are interesting and not particularly predictable, and the performance is, at very least, sincere. This four song seven incher starts off just fine with "Hunger" and "Fart" on side one, but it really takes off on side two. "A Greedy Girl Like You" and "Chicago" are prime examples of the kind of energy and devil-may-care bravado that makes for great garage rawk. The humor doesn't hurt, either. Note the cover photo in which the guys are dressed as nuns. Gotta love it. (Demolition Derby: C/O Kris Verreth, Tervuursestwg 217, 1820 Perk, Belgium. E-mail demderby@tornado.be. Web site at http://www.tornado.be/~demderby/ ) JOHN FOGERTY: Blue Moon Swamp (Warner Bros) Reviewed by DJ Johnson More than a decade has passed since Eye Of The Zombie, but there doesn't seem to be a bit of rust on ol' John. Blue Moon Swamp is an instantly likeable country rock album with big scoops of blues, gospel, and that certain swampy-tonk sound that only John Fogerty can brew. The majority of this music is bright, catchy and countrified. "Southern Streamline," which opens the album, fools the listener into thinking he's in for a "Bad Moon Rising" retread, but it's just a little sleight of hand. Fogerty peppers Blue Moon Swamp with such brief moments, each one evaporating into something completely fresh. "Hot Rod Heart," an uptempo valentine to the good ol' days of cruising and carousing, contains some of Fogerty's most powerful and biting guitar riffs since his years with CCR. It's such a pleasure and a kick to hear this master turn the simplest riff into something unique that nobody else could lay claim to. This is just one of the many things that makes John Fogerty a national treasure. The most powerful track, surprisingly, is a slow blues. "A Hundred And Ten In The Shade" mixes blues and backwoods country to perfection, with Fogerty pulling off some sweet Dobro slide behind the amazing gospel backing vocals of the Fairfield Four. This is a great track that should be added to the list for future "best of" consideration. Settling comfortably into his 50s, Fogerty seems to have it all together, a fact crystallized in "Joy Of My Life," a love song for his wife, Julie. In rock and roll, contentment is often the death of creativity. Here, it's the spark. Not surprisingly, Blue Moon Swamp is an uplifting record, and a pure joy to listen to. FOO FIGHTERS: The Colour and the Shape (Capitol) DAVID GROHL: Music from the Motion Picture Touch (Capitol) Reviewed by Jeff Apter Ringo, Ginger Baker, Nirvana's David Grohl - pity the poor drummer, stuck out the back of every mega-band, kept away from the spotlight. But in Grohl's case, rather than disappear when Kurt Cobain bit the bullet (literally), he's let his nascent songwriting talent run wild, both as a bandleader (Foo Fighters) and as a scorer of soundtracks (the Hollywood flop 'Touch'). Whereas the Foos' first album was Grohl alone, he's now recruited a proper band, although lanky Dave still writes all the tunes, smashes drums, thrashes guitars and screams till his lungs bleed. And whether he's wailing about (I guess) Kurt, as in "My Hero," or his recent roadcrash of a marriage ("Monkey Wrench," "Walking After You"), Grohl blends his punk spirit with a finely-tuned melodic ear: "Hey, Johnny Park!," especially, has all the power and passion you could possibly want from a rock toon. "Touch," meanwhile, is really just Grohl doodling in the studio, either swinging on the "Bill Hill Theme," dabbling with moody instrumentals and female voices (the downbeat main theme, the Twin-Peaksy "Saints In Love"), or joining forces with LA icon John Doe, formerly of X, on the quietly smoldering "This Loving Thing." This cut-and-paste soundtrack and the powerhouse 'Colour and the Shape' proves there truly is life after Nirvana. THE FOREMEN: What's Left? (Reprise) Reviewed by Rusty Pipes You know something's really good when you're still listening to it ten months after its release. Actually 2 years if you count Folk Heroes, The Foremen's first CD. What's Left came out just before last year's election and it only strengthens their position as a huge favorite of mine. So what sort of music do The Foremen make actually? I once described them to a friend as the Kingston Trio meets Lenny Bruce. Like the Trio, the tracks are often simple folksy acoustic ditties but many times The Foremen get into more involved arrangements with keyboards, strings and horns that draw from the traditions of Simon & Garfunkle, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Mamas & Papas and others. Onstage I'm sure they rely on banjo, acoustic guitar and stand-up bass in tradition folk style like Woody Guthrie or Pete Seeger times four. Will Durst times four and singing? Perhaps it's more accurate to say they have the voices of the Kingston Trio, the witty lyrics of Tom Lehrer and the politics of Neil Young. Maybe I should call this new old-fashioned folk protest music with a liberal dose of comedy. No, it's more, it's a Libertarian dose of comedy, no it's... well, it's about as Left as you can get. Republicans need not apply. Most Democrats need not apply, too. But even Neil Young doesn't do social commentary every song. The Foremen do, and moreover they make sure you have some good belly laughs while getting indoctrinated. Roy Zimmerman, songwriter and lyricist for the group, plays banjo and guitars. Doug Whitney supplies guitar and trumpet, Andy Corwin is stand-up bass and Kenny Rhodes is lead vocals. All four sing and their harmonies are exceptional, but as good as the singing and playing is, the lyrics definitely star here. Even Tom Lehrer, famous in the early 60's for wonderfully comic songs employing his signature clever homonyms, commends Roy for bringing back the art of rhyme to comedy music on their first CD. With his formidable word-smithing skills Roy grinds a very fine edge onto his satire. On the first album there's the delightful "Do the Clinton," which presents the President's many position shifts as a new dance step. There's also the hilarious "My Conservative Girlfriend," a right-wing love song with lines like "She doesn't like big government so it's no surprise, I can be her lover as long as I downsize" and "From the day I checked her out from front to back, I knew her private sector could take up the slack." Searching for that missing song about Jocelyn Elders? (Isn't everybody?) Try "(You Can't Come in Cause They're) Firing the Surgeon General," which has one of the longest strings of sexual puns I've ever heard. Roy also twits all the old hippies who lost their idealism in "Ain't No Liberal." and "Peace Is Out." There's even an anthem, "Everyman (For Himself)" that qualifies as the Anti-"Bridge Over Troubled Water" that conservatives seem to be marching to. But I'm supposed to be writing about the newer CD, am I not? On What's Left Roy gives us songs commemorating the Republican and Democratic National Conventions last year. "San Diego" seems to be based on "Are You Going to San Francisco" and "Chicago" is a deft mashing of musical motifs from "Mrs. Robinson" and "Our House." Even slightly dated now, both send darts straight to the target. I hope Governor Wilson takes to heart the poignant "California Couldn't Pay Our Education" and anyone interested in preserving some of the best governmental projects ever, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting will relate to "Who Needs Art?" and "Privateers of the Public Airwaves." There's even a send-up of beat poetry, "Black," that's the only thing on either album that doesn't sport a political angle, just angst. My favorites on What's Left are "My School Prayer" and "Hidden Agenda." "Prayer" addresses that religious right hot button issue in a lullaby loaded with irony: Peace on earth, Thy kingdom come, Into my curriculum, Make my head a hollow drum, Strike me dumb, Except to mum---ble, My School Prayer. Roy loves to lead with one idea and pull a switch in the next phrase. He outdoes himself with four in a row in "Hidden Agenda," dedicated to Newt's Republican Revolution: Feed the hungry----to the dogs, Help the homeless----aerospace executives, Save the schools----for those who can afford them, Make this nation one----big country club! Of course there are a few groups that make a living with musical satire. Public broadcasting aficionados are familiar with Mark Russell and The Capitol Steps, but they should not mistake their bland (sorry) brand of humor for the Foremen's. Their work, while reliably droll, doesn't have much bite to it. Even groups noted for wry wordplay like They Might be Giants are just gumming around without any teeth in their stuff. (Oh all right, a big exception to that is "Your Racist Friend." I'll give TMBG some credit.) Other groups using styles like rap or punk may have a lot to say too, but most of it is simply lost in a torrent of big bass beat or distorted guitars. The Foremen's words are made to be heard. So is a sociology degree required to appreciate these songs? No, but an awareness of current issues certainly helps. The David Horowitzs and Ariana Huffingtons of the world will quickly write off the Foremen as a throwback to misguided Sixties revolutionary fervor. These same people would love it if you would not listen to any of these funny, incendiary little songs. Just roll over and go back to sleep, please! Like Jerry Brown's uncompromising rhetoric, The Foremen's music is really a call to arms to fight the banal and greedy forces that have become so ubiquitous. Will it work? Well, every movement's got to have marching songs, so it's a start. Track List: (The Foremen -- What's Left? Reprise 46426-2) Scorched Earth Day * San Diego * What Did You Do On Election Day? * California Couldn't Pay Our Education * My School Prayer * Three Strikes and You're Out * Uncle Sam's Lament * Who Needs Art? * Black * Hidden Agenda * Privateers of the Public Airwaves * Dear Parking Offender (The Foremen -- Folk Heroes Reprise 45993-2) No Shoes * Ain't No Liberal * Hell Froze Over * Don't Pity Me * Ollie Ollie Off Scott Free * Building For The Future * Peace Is Out * Do the Clinton * Send 'Em Back * My Conservative Girlfriend * Russian Limbaugh * Firing The Surgeon General * Everyman (For Himself) FRIENDS OF DEAN MARTINEZ: Retrograde (Sub Pop) Reviewed by John Sekerka Bill Elm and his slide guitar carry on in an exquisite musically journey throughout the hot and dusty South. These lazy, melancholy mood setters almost get out of their rockers on the swinging 'Monte Carlo.' It is but a brief burst of insane energy that punctuates another solid, yet low key record. Bill's Friends play some of the sweetest tunes you'll ever hear, but their penchant for instrumentation (vibes, theremin, church organ) leaves most folks scratchin' their heads. Some think it loungy, some think it country. I just think it mighty fine, and leave it at that. THE GERALDINE FIBBERS: Butch (Virgin) Reviewed by Jeff Apter If you could picture a collision between Patti Smith's punk-poet rage, the anti-everything snarl of the Dead Kennedys, and Sonic Youth-styled sonic explorations, then The Geraldine Fibbers make a lot of sense. 'Butch' has way too much savage excitement for the more sensitive souls of the world: banshee frontperson Carla Bozulich wails and howls about abortion, death and gut-level suffering, her lyrics hitting home with all the graphic detail of an x-ray. Fortunately, with a broad arsenal at its disposal, as adept with powerhouse rockers as they are making arty noise, the Fibbers - especially string-bender Jessy Greene - have sufficient range to make Bozulich's most turgid tale listenable. Yet they're deceptive: even when the band takes a lighter turn, as they do on the twangy backporch ramble of "Folks Like Me," you soon discover that a devastating tale of heartbreak lurks underneath the swinging lap steel, Bozulich bemoaning how "a fugitive lover's what I become." As vicariously thrilling as a car wreck, these are brilliant, raw emotions, but like your drug of choice, it's best to handle 'Butch' with caution. STAN GETZ & CHARLIE BYRD: Jazz Samba (Verve) Reviewed by Shaun Dale By the early sixties, guitarist Charlie Byrd was becoming increasingly disaffected with the contemporary jazz scene. He had largely abandoned electric guitar work in favor of a classical instrument, and had begun developing a classical repertoire to go with it. While touring South America, though, he experienced a musical epiphany. While in Brazil, he found a new music, bossa nova, which blended cool jazz with traditional samba. Largely the work of the Brazilian composer/performers Antonio Carlos Jobim and Joao Gilberto, he took the music back to the United States with a new mission - to extend the bossa nova across the border and into the musical consciousness of America. His accomplice in that task was tenor sax master Stan Getz, and their vehicle of attack was an album titled "Jazz Samba." "Jazz Samba" has been reissued in an attractive new package as part of the Verve Master Edition series. The new notes, photos and faithful reproduction of the original cover art are all welcome, as is the inclusion of the version of "Desafiando" that was released as a single, one of the first and one of the rare jazz tracks to become a legitimate hit single. But it is the seven original tracks of "Jazz Samba" from which a legend has grown and a movement was begun. Great songs, great improvisations and great artists combined in a truly great album. This album is one of the essential ingredients any collection of jazz discs. If you don't own it, this is the version to get. If you do, this is the version to replace the version you have with. Track List: Desafinado * Samba Dees Days * O Pato * Samba Triste * Samba de Uma Nota So * E Luxo So * Bahia (aka "Baia") * Desafinado (45 rpm issue) STAN GETZ & JOAO GILBERTO: Getz/Gilberto (Verve) Reviewed by Shaun Dale After his breakthrough bossa nova duets with Charlie Byrd on the immortal "Jazz Samba" set off the American craze for bossa nova, there was one way that Stan Getz was sure to stay at the head of the pack of bossa nova wannabes. A session was arranged with singer/guitarist/ composer Joao Gilberto, accompanied by the other central figure in the Brazilian genre, Antonio Carlos Jobin, on piano. With that lineup, backed by Tommy Williams on bass and drummer Milton Banana, great music was assured. When Gilberto's wife Astrud was lured into the studio to contribute her distinctive touch, history was made. Astrud Gilberto's attractively flat, ethereal voice drove Jobim's "The Girl From Ipanema" to the top of the charts and insured that "Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars) would hold a permanent place in the bossa nova repertoire. Both the original album cuts and the single release edits of the two songs are included on this new Verve Master Edition reissue. Combined with "Jazz Samba," it constitutes a great starting point for understanding bossa nova, a penetrating look at one of Getz' most impressive periods and an essential element of a jazz collection. Track List: The Girl From Ipanema * Doralice * Para Machuchar Meu Coracao * Desafinado (Off Key) * Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars) * So Danco Samba * O Grande Amor * Vivo Sonhando (Dreamer) * The Girl From Ipanema (45 rpm issue) * Corcovado (Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars) (45 rpm issue) GUTTERMOUTH: Musical Monkey (Nitro Records) Reviewed by Shaun Dale On "Musical Monkey," Guttermouth takes the unwary listener on a musical tour of the, ummm, less wholesome side of life. Among the seamy scenes they explore are Tijuana donkey shows, confused sexuality, teenage blow job queens, dating vegans and American politics. Clearly not for the squeamish. But definitely for anyone with an ear for thrash and a sense of humor. Take "Corpses Rotting In Hell," for instance. Well, maybe that's not the best example. Digging deep in the musical trough, the boys come up with spot on punk, Goth, power pop - whatever it takes to sell their unique vision. A vision that finds humor in maternal relations with members of the equine family, aging metal musicians, and the travails the Doors faced in the effort to replace Jim Morrison with the B-52's Fred Schnider. Is this getting a little hard to imagine? Then stop imagining, go get this disc and have more fun than a barrel of musical monkeys. Track List: What's The Big Deal * Lucky The Donkey * Big Pink Dress * Do The Hustle * Good Friday * Bakers Dozen * Abort Mission * Corpse Rotting In Hell * Lipstick * When Hell Freezes Over * S.D.F.B. * What If? * Perfect World * Gold * Musical Monkey BERNARD HERRMANN: Music From Great Film Classics: Jane Eyre; The Snows of Kilimanjaro; Citizen Kane; The Devil and Daniel Webster. London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Bernard Herrmann. MOBILE FIDELITY SOUND LAB UDCD 701 [AAD] 42:13 Reviewed by Robert Cummings A few months back I reviewed the recent Salonen-led Herrmann disc on Sony, which contained music from the latter part of the composer's career, and all but two of the eight scores on it were composed for films directed by Alfred Hitchcock. This MFSL issue offers music from his early years, specifically from the 1940's and `50's. On the whole it is a superior assemblage to that contained on the Salonen disc, and is conducted with greater authority. I say "with greater authority" rather than "with greater skill" because it is the composer himself who is on the podium, and since no point of comparison can be made between the two recordings, in that neither shares a single work in common, it is difficult to arrive at a definitive verdict. Let me simply say that Salonen is undoubtedly compelling, beyond meaningful cavil; but Herrmann sounds absolutely convincing, almost as if there can be no other way to hear this music. This offering was originally issued on London in 1971 as part of its "Phase Four" line, which was a sort of audiophile series whose main feature was the use of many microphones during recording. Typical of this process was sound of extreme close-up clarity and vivid imaging. Some critics didn't like Phase Four, complaining the sound stage wasn't realistic, but, more egregious, charging the listener heard too much. Yes, you could hear things the composer didn't necessarily want you to hear, they claimed. Well, I won't resurrect the arguments any further on this long-dead but still technologically influential process, but suffice it to say that the sound on this recording is vivid and quite competitive with the some of the better efforts from today's engineers. My one quibble is the dry brass sound, most noticeable in the delightful Ragtime from Citizen Kane. The two selections from The Snows of Kilimanjaro, "Interlude" and The "Memory Waltz," show a Herrmann with more feeling, more lyricism, than you'll find in anything in the Hitchcock scores. True, North by Northwest featured a love theme (which was not included on the Salonen disc), but it bordered on the saccharine. The waltz here has a Sibelian charm, and the interlude is yearning and sad in its heartrending depiction of a dying man. The Citizen Kane music is full of delicious humor and irony, as is "The Devil and Daniel Webster." But "Sleigh Ride" in the latter takes humor and irony a step further, achieving a most diabolical grotesqueness, which must have struck filmgoers at the time (1941) as a bit ill-mannered. The disc's lead-off track features music from Jane Eyre, and it is without doubt the most wide-ranging, and most restless of the pieces here. Herrmann runs the gamut of emotions in this thirteen-minute extract, and clothes his notes in gorgeously colorful and innovative orchestration. All in all, this is a splendid release. Herrmann died four years after he made this recording, and it is a testament to his compositional as well as conductorial skills. LIDA HUSIK: Fly Stereophonic (Alias) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Dreampop artist Lida Husik continues the musical evolution begun with the 1995 EP, Live At The Grange. On that collaboration with Beaumont Hannant, synths were dominant and the sound was decidedly electronic. Fly Stereophonic finds Lida's guitar at the front of the mix once again, but synths are more prevalent as supporting instruments than they were on her pre-1995 albums. As with any Lida Husik album, the real hook is her multi-layered vocal harmonies, which are beautiful beyond belief. In "Cafe Con Leche," Lida's vocal tracks are absolutely beautiful and, depending on how much you appreciate perfection, could even raise goosebumps. For the average listener, Fly Stereophonic might take a few listens to sink in. Because it is often minimalistic and laid back, it's easy to get distracted and miss what's going on in the music. Headphones! Trust me. What seems minimalistic from a distance turns out to be an intricate and fascinating blend of many sounds and colorful, intelligent lyrics thoughtfully presented by a true artist. THE HYPNOMEN: Sound Of The Silencer/El Pancho (Gas Records) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Ah, a new 7 incher from my favorite mid-fi surf band, The Hypnomen. No direction change, no "new sound," just the powerful, mysterious surf/spy sounds that I expect and crave when I see that Helsinki address on the package. Esa Kuloniemi (guitar) and Juha Litmanen (drums) thunder all over these two tracks, but it's the Farfisa psychosis of Pekka Laine that twists it up into something deliciously sinister. When I close my eyes and listen to this record, I can only picture The Hypnomen playing in the surreal confines of Dr. Terwilliker's castle. Which is why they're constantly on my turntable. (Gas Records [a division of Goofin' Records and Music] P.O. Box 73, 00581, Helsinki, Finland) ISRAEL VIBRATION: Live Again (RAS) Reviewed by DJ Johnson It's been a long long time since the last live reggae album that could be called a definitive document. Live Again surely qualifies. Israel Vibration and their famous backing band, Roots Radics, don't just put on a show: they take their audience inside the music. Cecil Spence (Skelly), Lacelle Bulgin (Wiss) and Albert Craig (Apple), who met as kids when all three were victims of a polio epidemic, present a compelling image on stage, dancing purposefully with braces swinging from their arms, lost in the music and apparently feeling no pain, totally dedicated to the vibe. Radics bassist Flabba Holt, one of the best in the business, nurtures that vibe and infuses it with one of the purest tones on record. Live Again contains just over 76 minutes of roots music that presents most of what's unique and wonderful about Israel Vibration AND Roots Radics. Make sure, once you've picked up your copy, that you find time to listen to this without interruptions. It deserves your undivided attention. KING CRIMSON: Epitaph (Discipline Global Mobile) Reviewed by Steve Marshall When you think about progressive rock, one of the first groups that come to mind is King Crimson. Considered one of the genre's most influential artists; their 1969 debut, In the Court of the Crimson King, is one of rock's true landmark albums. Discipline Global Mobile recently released Epitaph; a beautifully packaged, 4CD box set from the band's debut tour. Culled from various sources, the sound quality is not what you would expect in a commercial release. However, the performances speak for themselves. At the time, King Crimson consisted of Robert Fripp on guitar, Greg Lake on bass and lead vocals, Ian McDonald on backing vocals and just about anything that happened to be lying around the studio, Michael Giles on drums and vocals, and Peter Sinfield on 'words, illumination, and other things.' Greg Lake once called King Crimson "a band without fear." Improvisation has always been the group's focal point, and the material in this box set is a prime example. Disc One contains vintage BBC tracks, and excerpts from shows at the Fillmore East and the Fillmore West. The quality varies from track to track on the BBC sessions. "21st Century Schizoid Man" was the first thing the band ever committed to tape. This version comes from an Italian bootleg. Taken from the BBC masters; the lyrics on "In the Court of the Crimson King" are slightly different and the sound quality is much better. The sound on "Get Thy Bearings" is shoddy at best. On a positive note, this is the only studio version of the song known to exist. Like "Schizoid," the master tapes for this track have long since disappeared. The Fillmore East concerts are significant in that they mark the first meeting of Greg Lake and Keith Emerson. Emerson was still a member of The Nice, who, along with King Crimson, were opening for The Chambers Brothers. The Fillmore East tracks (considered the Holy Grail to Crimson collectors) are from Michael Giles' personal cassettes. He was under the impression that these shows were widely bootlegged, but as it turned out, his was the only existing copy. The embryonic "A Man, A City" features a blistering sax improv by McDonald, but is minus the vocals on the last verse. Disc Two comes from the second night at the Fillmore West, and was the band's last US appearance with this lineup. Out of the four CDs, this one has the best overall sound quality. "Drop In," gives McDonald the chance to stretch out a bit. "A Man, A City" is noticeably heavier than the version on disc one. It's a looser performance, and features another excellent solo by McDonald. The version of "Schizoid" on disc two is another highlight, featuring a killer vocal performance by Lake, and outstanding guitar work by Fripp. Gustav Holst's "Mars" builds to a feverish crescendo to close the show. Disc Three has the worst sound quality of the four CDs. Five different sources were pieced together to form what they believe to be the complete (if uneven) set from the Plumpton Festival. "Schizoid" has a cool mid-section, but is fairly lackluster otherwise. After a choppy edit, an excellent "Get Thy Bearings" follows. Fripp's guitar work here is stellar. The rendition of "In the Court of the Crimson King" is sloppy. Giles misses his cue on the second chorus, and aside from the flute solo (which is better than any other version here), it sounds as if the band just phoned in the performance. Fripp quotes the intro of The Beatles' "Rocky Raccoon" on the cleverly titled "Improv." The track also features a rare Giles drum solo. The fourth disc (from the Chesterfield Jazz Club) also has rough sound quality by today's standards, but it includes some of the best performances of the entire collection. "Schizoid" is definitely a highlight. Fripp's solo starts out faithful to the studio version, then goes into a stunning improvisation. This was one of the few shows where they played the song's final flourish of notes. Up next is the longest track in the box, an 18:10 version of "Get Thy Bearings." It's also one of the best. Fripp's solo builds into a climactic frenzy, before giving way to McDonald's flute solo. While this version of "Mars" is shorter than the other versions, it's noticeably heavier and features vocals. What Epitaph lacks in sound quality is made up for in the packaging. Epitaph is one of the nicest box sets to hit the streets in a long time. The artwork is beautiful, the liner notes are interesting and informative, and it's all printed on high quality paper. In an unusual marketing move, the first two CDs (as well as the box to keep them in) are available at your local record store. The second two discs are available exclusively through Discipline mail order at 213-937-3194. The box has room for the third and fourth discs. Epitaph is not a collection for those just discovering King Crimson; but for the seasoned fans, this is a must-have release. LAKE: Lake / Paradise Island (Renaissance) Reviewed by Steve Marshall Back in 1977, FM radio was in its heyday. Formats weren't as rigid. You could still turn on the radio and hear a 10-minute song. One of the best bands around at the time was a band out of Germany called Lake. Songs like "On the Run," "Key to the Rhyme," and the epic "Between the Lines" kept their debut album a mainstay on FM radio for months. Lake's albums didn't sell enough copies in the US to stay around long (they always had a bigger following in Europe) and eventually went out of print, quickly becoming collectors items. Jump to 1997. Renaissance Records has made quite a name for itself recently by releasing this type of material--most of it available on CD for the first time in the US. Now we can add Lake to the already impressive list of artists. Twenty years later, the songs on Lake's debut still sound fresh, and the sound quality is great. On its own, Lake's debut album is a must-have release. Adding Paradise Island (their third album) onto the same CD just makes it that much better. The fact that Paradise Island only had a couple good tracks on it doesn't matter. Just think of the Paradise Island songs as bonus tracks. In case you have trouble finding Lake / Paradise Island in your local record store, you can order it direct from Renaissance through their web site. Point your browser to http://skymarshall.com/renaissance for more information on Lake or any of the other Renaissance artists. LISZT: Complete Piano Music (Naxos) Reviewed by Robert Cummings Volume 2: Transcendental Etudes, S139/R2b (1851). Jeno Jando, Piano. NAXOS 8.553119 [DDD] 63:58 Volume 3: Poetic and Religious Harmonies, S173/R14, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6; The Dead, S516/R183; Resignation, S187a/R388; Hungary's God (2-hand version), S543a/R214a. Philip Thomson, Piano. NAXOS 8.553073 [DDD] 68:19 Volume 4: Poetic and Religious Harmonies, Nos. 7, 8, 9, 10; Ave Maria in D Flat, S504/R193; Ave Maria in G, S545/R194; Ave Maria in E, S182/R67; Ave Maria d'Arcadelt, S183/R68b; Six Consolations, S172/R12; Hungary's God (Left-hand version), S543b/R214b. Philip Thomson, Piano. NAXOS 8.553516 [DDD] 63.55 When I reviewed the first volume in this massive and important series of the complete body of Franz Liszt's piano music, I noted that Naxos intended to use twenty-five or more pianists for the project (which will consume some 75 CDs!), unlike the British label Hyperion, whose sole pianist for the endeavor, the nearly superhuman Leslie Howard, has gone beyond the half-way point in the decade-long undertaking. In the three issues here, Jeno Jando (pronounced, I believe, Yenu Yando) and Philip Thomson turn in splendid performances that rank among the best I know. And these successes once again reinforce the wisdom of Naxos's decision to spread this massive series among a number of pianists rather than letting it fall to one (or to even a few). It also reflects this label's uncanny ability to find talent the others apparently overlook. There have been a good many pianists who have recorded the Transcendental Etudes: Russell Sherman (intellectual readings, but ultimately dull), Louis Kentner (okay, but not great), the late Claudio Arrau (interpretively outstanding), Vladimir Ovchinikov (impassioned performances, spectacular virtuosity), and others. Arrau, of course, was a great pianist and was consistently interesting in these twelve trying pieces, even if his technique was a bit frail (I believe he was 75 at the time of his recording for Philips). The fiery and insightful Ovchinikov (Angel), however, is almost in a class by himself. That Jando makes the choice difficult between his set and Ovchinikov's says a lot about this Hungarian pianist's extraordinary gifts. This is simply stunning pianism that misses none of Liszt's manic brilliance or his sentimental outpourings or his ubiquitous mephistophelian menace. In Wilde Jagd, Ovchinikov is wilder, to be sure, but Jando plays with more weight and clarity, while imparting greater color and richness to his bass notes. The same assessment can be made about the following etude (No. 10), or, for that mater, about several others. In Harmonies du soir (No. 11) Jando's slightly faster tempo works well, and his shaping of the middle section and slightly warmer tone make his rendition preferable. Both bring off Feux Follets (No. 5) impressively, and one could go on, I suppose, to pick and choose among the rest without ultimately finding a clear winner. Let me say this, however: Ovchinikov's is the kind of performance that would turn a crowd wild at a concert, where Jando's is likely to send them away remembering the music as much as the performance. Ovchinikov has an ounce more technique (he's in a class with Argerich and Gavrilov), but Jando phrases with a tad more subtlety. Naxos offers the better sound and very intelligent, lengthy notes. If Jando is relatively straightforward is his approach to Liszt, Thomson represents an about-face of sorts in his creamier, more sensual style. He's not afraid to wallow in Liszt's religiosity, in its agitated mysticism and worshipful ecstasy. Indeed, he's chosen music almost exclusively from that well-endowed corner of the Lisztian repertory, the stuff of Liszt the true believer, not of Liszt the man of the flesh. And he plays it with such conviction, with such a velvety and powerful, but never fulsome, tone, and with such interpretive insight as to nearly convince you these pieces can be played no other way. His Funerailles (track 1, Vol. 4 CD) begins ominously and builds in intensity and sorrow. I've heard others here--Horowitz, Brendel, Ogdon, Rose, to name a few--but don't believe anyone played it on this exalted level. Thomson conveys the sorrow, the loss, as if it were his own, or as if he were the conduit to Liszt's personal anguish. He plays the Ave Maria settings with a loving gentleness, and the Consolations with appropriate elegance and grace. In Pensees des Morts (track 4, Vol. 3 CD) Thomson deftly catches the opening mystery in the main theme, then quickly turns frenzied, with a left hand hammering nervous chords to accompany the now toll-like theme, creating a climactic episode of devastating impact. The rest of the piece is appropriately haunting and sad, truly sounding like its title (Remembering the dead). Like Funerailles, this performance carries an impact that elevates it to near definitive status. Thomson's version of the Poetic and Religious Harmonies, split between Volumes 3 and 4, will be the one that I reach for in the future. Les Morts (The Dead) is tense and ecstatic, and features powerful virtuosity in the latter half. Each of Thomson's discs ends with Hungary's God, Volume 3 with the two-handed version, Volume 4, the left-handed version. Both are vigorously and fervently rendered. Thomson is an even more interesting pianist than Jando, who is a bit cooler and more sober, though always sensitive. Thomson may well be the most compelling interpreter of Liszt's religious/contemplative music I've ever heard. And I've heard many. Excellent sound and notes. In sum, these three issues are strongly recommended. If this series remains on this distinguished level (Volume 1, with Arnaldo Cohen, was similarly impressive), it could achieve the discographic importance of Schnabel's Beethoven cycle. THE MANHATTAN TRANSFER: Swing (Atlantic) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Every new release by the Manhattan Transfer seems to claim the tag "this is the one we've been waiting for." "Swing" is no different, and may have the strongest claim to the title since the multi-Grammy masterpiece "Vocalese." Once again the group displays great taste and impressive range in the selections offered - songs from Jelly Roll Morton, Fletcher Henderson, Django Reinhardt, Count Basie and Ella Fitzgerald are included, among others with equally aristocratic pedigrees. The supporting cast is similarly stellar. "Clouds," adapted from Django's "Nuages," a classic from the repertoire of Le Quintet du Hot Club de France, is supported by the Rosenberg Trio and no less than Hot Club veteran Stephane Grapelli on violin. Several tracks, including a reworking of the Manhattan Transfer staple "Java Jive," feature the Western Swing stylings of Asleep at the Wheel. The last cut, "Choo Choo Ch' Boogie," recorded live at the Ryman Auditorium, is backed by an all- star Nashville cast including Ricky Skaggs on guitar and Mark O'Connor on violin. Skaggs and O'Connor appear elsewhere on the album as well, as do Buddy Emmons, Ray Brown and a range of strong musicians from both the Western and jazz swing traditions. But the vocals are what make a Manhattan Transfer recording, and the band is absolutely on top of this one. Their genuine affection for the swing genre is reflected in the blend of enthusiasm and precision they bring to every track. Vocal arrangements by Janis Siegal present some of the real highlights, which is not to detract from the arrangements contributed by Tim Hauser, Alan Paul or the group as a whole. As on "Vocalese," the legendary Jon Hendricks contributes several lyrics as the band takes on the role of the horn ensembles of bands including Basie's and Benny Goodman's. Once again, the Manhattan Transfer handles the Hendricks lyrics with a facility that clearly establishes them as the contemporary heirs of the vocal jazz crown long worn by Lambert, Hendricks and Ross. And oh yeah, they'll swing your socks off! This is just plain great stuff. Track List: Stomp Of King Porter * Sing A Study In Brown * Sing Moten's Swing * A-Tisket, A-Tasket * I Know Why (And So Do You) * Sing You Sinners * Java Jive * Down South Camp Meetin' * Topsy * Clouds (adapted from "Nuages") * Skyliner * It's Good Enough To Keep MOTLEY CRUE: Generation Swine (Elektra) Reviewed by DJ Johnson I didn't start to develop any appreciation for Motley Crue until the Dr. Feelgood album. That one caught me off guard, and I remember listening to it quite a bit. And though I can't remember anything but the title track now, I do remember feeling that it "rocked" and that my head was properly banged. Generation Swine is, at the very least, an interesting album. Like so many veteran metal bands, Crue has obviously been surrounded with "alternative" rock and it has effected their sound. Tunes like "Flush" and "Find Myself" do have sharp edges, but hooks have gone by the wayside in favor of noise by the pound. To make up for that, they go the whole nine yards with that noise, stuffing the tracks with all kinds of interesting sounds and bits of production. There are still plenty of wall-of-guitar tunes to give you your daily dose of high voltage adrenaline, including the title track. On the other hand, there is some baffling filler that defies description, making me wonder if either Trent Reznor or Keith Partridge had joined the band while I wasn't looking. I figure I might take a few dozen more listens to absorb all of the interesting sounds, since someone went to all the trouble of putting them there. Or maybe I'll just pop Dr. Feelgood on again. MUSSORGSKY: Dream of the Peasant Gritzko (orch. V. Shebalin); Galitsin's Journey (from Khovanshchina; orch. Rimsky- Korsakov); Introduction to Khovanshchina (orch. Rimsky- Korsakov); Pictures at an Exhibition (orch. Ravel). New Jersey Symphony Orchestra conducted by Zdenek Macal; Westminster Symphonic Choir; Clayton Brainerd, Bass-Baritone. DELOS DE 3217 [DDD] 55:44 Reviewed by Robert Cummings Pictures at an Exhibition, in the well known Ravel orchestration, is the most popular item here, of course. It is splendidly played by the New Jersey Symphony, and Macal's incisive reading is rife with atmosphere and power. In Promenade, the work's opening cue (track 4), the brass play the famous main theme with a burnished, weighty sonority so appropriate to this majestic music. Subsequent reappearances of this theme, whether by horn and reeds (track 6) or by brass and other instruments (track 8), are always convincingly rendered. The muted trumpet playing in Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle (track 13; 1:02) is impressive in its delightfully hectoring enactment. The Hut on Fowl's Legs (track 17) is ferociously powerful and truly riveting, thanks in great part to the orchestra's virtuosic execution. The whole performance is a veritable series of highlights, actually, and prospective buyers needn't worry that this Pictures can't compete with those from the world class orchestras. This reading features startlingly vivid sound, and is quite simply one of the best I've ever heard. But the Pictures may not be the most compelling reason to purchase this disc. The lead-off selection, Dream of the Peasant Gritzko, from Mussorgsky's unfinished opera Sorochinsky Fair, is a most tempting morsel, and should be of considerable interest to fanciers of this composer's music. Well, at 12:19 it's more than a morsel, and in its forces is quite massive, offering a chorus, bass-baritone soloist and full orchestra. It comes to vivid life in the orchestration of Vissarion Shebalin, and contains much music heard in the popular Night on Bald Mountain. Delos entitles this album "Heaven and Hell," and if the "heaven" half comes in the next two selections, especially in Galitsin's Journey, the "hell" segment surely comes here. This operatic scene depicts Gritzko's dream of witnessing a Witches' Sabbath. It is diabolically delicious, fanatically compelling in its dark Russian atmosphere, in its fury and color, in its raw spirit and chilling, chant-like singing. Rimsky-Korsakov orchestrated many of his older colleague's works, even music Mussorgsky had already scored himself. (What is it about Mussorgsky? It seems both famous and little known composers have always wanted to dabble in orchestrating his compositions. Pictures at an Exhibition was written for solo piano, but has been transcribed for orchestra by thirty or more composers, most successfully by Ravel, of course). Khovanshchina was not among the compositions that Mussorgsky orchestrated; so we are indebted to Rimsky-Korsakov and others (like Shostakovich) for their painstaking work. The two Khovanshchina selections here are splendidly played and insightfully interpreted by Macal. The sound on the disc is startlingly vivid throughout, and the copious notes are informative, even going to such lengths as to describe each painting in Pictures at an Exhibition. I wish all labels supplied such scholarly research and interesting background information with their discs. Macal and the NJSO have chalked up a decided triumph with this disc. DAVE MYERS & THE SURFTONES: Hangin' Twenty (Del-Fi) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Del-Fi has dug into the vault and released the debut album from one of surf music's earliest headliners, Dave Myers & the Surftones. This one was overdue for a second look, and if this is your first look at the Surftone's sound you may be in for some pleasant surprises. While surf music is most commonly associated with a quick pick on a vibrato driven guitar, and there's plenty of that here, Myers was equally adept on trumpet and tenor saxophone and was just as likely to take the lead on one of those as his guitar. Ed Quarry's piano was just as important to the sound of the band. One of their best known songs, for instance, "Frog Walk Part II," was a trumpet tour de force. The six piece band (including Johnny Curtis, rhythm guitar; Dennis Merritt, tenor sax; Seaton Blanco, bass and Bob Colwell, drums) not only carried the surf torch high, but presaged other horn driven instro to come, with some tracks having a Latin tinge that lit the path for the Tijuana Brass. It was the hard rockin', wave ridin' sound of songs like "Church Key" and "Kings Surf" that put these guys on the stage of the Rendevous Ballroom (an early surf music Mecca) though. And they're the songs that will put this one in your CD changer again and again. Track List: Frog Walk Part II * Church Key * Smokey Stomper * Kings Surf * Aquavelva * Surferama * Moment Of Truth * Road To Rincon * Surfbreaker * Surfer's Theme * Passion * Wetwalkin' WILLIE NELSON: Just One Love (Justice) WAYLON JENNINGS: Right For The Time (Justice) KRIS KRISTOFFERSON: A Moment Of Forever (Justice) Reviewed by John Sekerka As the dust settles on the this aberration called new country, it is inevitable that folks go back to the real thing, and you can't get much better than Willie, Waylon and Kris. They've seen it all, done it all and sung about it all, but they ain't done yet. Willie Nelson can sing a menu and make me weep, and when the slide guitar starts wailing, the flood gates open right up. His is an angelic voice that is always welcome. On Just One Love Willie plays it nice and slow, singing heartfelt songs of relations and faith. He does slip in the classic 'Smoke, Smoke, Smoke That Cigarette' long enough to squeeze yer hanky dry for another round. Waylon Jennings has always been the bad boy of the bunch, and really, it's a wonder he's still around. Right for the Time is probably the most traditional record here. Just Waylon delivering his authoritative narrative vocal over a twangy backdrop of guitars. It's got that great honky tonk feel few can pull off. When Waylon roars 'Hittin' the Bottle Again,' you know he ain't just whistlin' Dixie. Kris Kristofferson rounds it out with a brilliant return to form. A Moment of Forever shows the man in a rare moment of sync when his stoic delivery compliments his written words. Producer Don Was seems to have gotten the best of Kris, something that hasn't happened in the studio for quite a spell. Welcome back, gents. OLD 97'S: Too Far To Care (Elektra) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Echoing everything from kicker shuffle to Clash crash, the Old 97's have produced a major label debut that displays a blatant disregard for the people who are charged with the task of labeling music by genre. Instead, they've shown great respect for people who just want to hear a damn good band play damn good songs. Lead singer/songwriter Rhett Miller has a natural knack for lyrical hooks. From the opening line "I've got a time bomb in my mind mom," you know you're going to have to listen to this one. But bandmates Ken Bethea (guitar), Murray Hammond (bass) and Philip Peeples (drums) seem dedicated to the singular task of creating a musical panorama that will pull you away from the lyrics and into the songs as a complete experience. Until a line like "My name's Stewart Ranson Miller, I'm a serial lady killer" grabs your ear and pulls you back into the words. The net effect is a disc you'll want to hear again and again, until the words and music are absorbed as the inseparable entity they are. It's easy - way too easy - to tag the Dallas based quartet as another manifestation of the alt.country movement, but how many country rock albums feature Exene Cervenkova as a guest vocalist? The broader label of "Americana" may fit a bit better (if only because it fits a bit looser), but why try to label it at all. This is one fine piece of plastic, folks. Track List: Time Bomb * Barrier Reef * Broadway * Salome * W. TX Teardrops * Melt Show * Streets Of Where I'm From * Big Brown Eyes * Just Like California * Curtain Calls * Niteclub * House That Used To Be * Four Leaf Clover PAVAROTTI PLUS: Live from the Royal Albert Hall, London (May 8, 1995). Arias, Duets and Ensembles from Verdi and Puccini operas. Luciano Pavarotti, tenor; Kallen Esperian and Nuccia Focile, Sopranos; Dolora Zajick, Mezzo-Soprano; Dwayne Croft and Leo Nucci, baritones; Francesco Ellero d'Artegna, bass; Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Leone Magiera. Verdi: Hymn of the Nations; Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus conducted by James Levine. LONDON 448 700-2 [DDD] 70:54 Reviewed by Robert Cummings When I received this latest Pavarotti CD I wondered with a labored sigh just how good such a hodgepodge collection could be, especially since it is dominated by THE tenor of the age, an artist who, most would agree, has seen better days. But it turns out that the "Plus" part of the album in the title represents a considerable enjoyment here, especially in the contributions of the sopranos, Focile and Esperian, and baritone Dwayne Croft. More importantly, though, Pavarotti is in fine form, as well. True, his voice has coarsened a bit over the years, and there are signs of strain in some of the selections here, but he makes the most of his still beautiful instrument and delivers what must be one of his most compelling concert efforts in the last decade. This disc is much more substantive than any of the "Three Tenors" issues as far as I'm concerned. While his Recondita armonia, which opened the concert, was a bit tepid in the first half, his following duet with Dolora Zajick, "Madre, non dormi? Ai nostri monti" from Il Trovatore, was touching and quite effective, even if it didn't erase memories of his performance with Marilyn Horne from twenty years ago. His duet with Nuccia Focile, "Parigi, o cara from La Traviata," which came next, was stunningly rendered. As Pavarotti sings the words "Parigi, o cara" beginning at 1:30 (track 4), notice how subtle the phrasing is in his soft, delicate tones. But Focile matches him in her ravishingly beautiful voice and consummate artistry, and then the two unite to offer the listener near vocal ecstasy. A moment in this concert to savor! The grim duet with Leo Nucci (Invan Alvaro from La Forza del Destino) is the contrasting follow-up: it is quite dramatic and effective. O figli, o figli miei!.Ah la paterna mano from Macbeth (track 6) is well sung by Pavarotti, even if the music isn't among Verdi's most inspired. Kallen Esperian joins Pavarotti in the ensuing selection, Dio ti giocondi from Otello, and creates another highlight in the concert. This IS inspired Verdi, and the two so well capture the love and apprehensions of Otello and Desdemona, and the drama and beauty of the vocal writing. In Puccini's In un coupe from La Boheme, Pavarotti and Croft combine to deliver the frolicking at the outset so delightfully, then, in the visions of Mimi and Musetta, move on to passionate outpourings of love. They render this duet better than Domingo and Milnes (RCA) did in their heyday. Croft has the vocal stuff to become a superstar. In L'acque sant del Giordano from I lombardi, Pavarotti, Esperian and d'Artegna sing beautifully in this charming Verdi selection, the trio abetted by the sensitive artistry of violinist Jonathan Carney. The concert's two encores, the aria, Tra voi, belle from Manon Lescaut and the rousing Brindisi (Libiamo ne' lieti calici) from La Traviata (where Piero Cappuccilli, Natalie Dessay, Leah-Marian Jones, and Giuseppe Sabbatini join the others) are delightful bonuses. The disc opens with a studio performance of Verdi's Hymn of the Nations, where Pavarotti's work is again quite impressive. Personally, I'm not moved by this kind of music: an occasional piece, containing hollow and bombastic patriotic musical quotations (the British National Anthem--"My Country `Tis of Thee" over here). Still, it's well done, and Levine's contribution and the choral singing are admirable. There, I covered every selection on the disc, something I rarely do. But, in this instance, reviewing them whole was hardly the chore I suspected it might be at the outset. The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra performs impressively under the knowing baton of Leone Magiera throughout the live concert. London provides excellent sound from both venues, but no texts in the opera selections. One of the most enjoyable discs of its type in years. LEE "SCRATCH" PERRY: Technomajikal (ROIR) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Lee Perry is mystically cool. He's beyond cool. Hell, Lee Perry is so cool he needed three nicknames! They call him "The Upsetter," and they call him "Super Ape," but most of us know him as "Scratch." Reggae wouldn't be what it is if Scratch hadn't existed, and dub would surely be a far saner genre than it is. The man who burned down his own studio to protest a government that wanted him to stop recording may have finally finished his journey into insanity the day he decided to make a techno record with Dieter Meier of the Swiss duo, Yello. Or so you would think. Meier isn't your typical techno musician. His sounds are deep and intelligent, haunting and beautiful without losing their edge. Sound like any reggae god you know of? Scratch's unintelligible yet primally compelling orations are a perfect fit with Meier's techno backdrops. Technomajikal is a stunner, a head trip of epic proportions, and a whole lot of something amazing you can't quite put your finger on. Rumor has it that Scratch refused to enter the Zurich, Switzerland studio for these sessions, opting instead to sit outside on the lawn with a pair of headphones and a microphone. That sounds like music biz hype unless you happen to know a bit about Perry. Personally, I'm just surprised he requested the microphone. Oh well. He may be slightly off kilter, but he's still pure magic. JEAN-LUC PONTY: Live At Chene Park (Atlantic) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Ponty's first live release since 1979 brings a selection of some of his strongest material from the intervening years recorded before an enthusiastically appreciative Detroit audience last summer. There are few surprises here - Ponty continues to work in the fusion format that brought him acclaim in the Mahavishnu Orchestra (though he clearly has his own voice and vision) - but there are several exemplary performances. The band (Jamie Glaser, guitar; Chris Rhyne, keyboards; Baron Brown, bass; Michael Barsimanto, drums) is a tight unit, clearly well rehearsed. Those rehearsals didn't kill the improvisational fire that burns at the heart of Ponty's music, though, and there is an opportunity for every player to burst into flame during the set. If you haven't heard much of Ponty since, say, Enigmatic Ocean, this is an excellent opportunity to catch up. If you've been listening all along, you'll still want to hear these compositions presented in these vital live versions. Recorded on a summer night, this is one to get you happily through a great many summer nights, and days, and to brighten up the winter too. Track List: Introduction * Infinite Pursuit * Tender Memories * Between Sea And Sky * Caracas * Faith In You * After The Storm * The Gift Of Time * Eulogy For Oscar Romero * The Amazon Forest * The Story Teller * Elephants In Love * A Journey's End BUD POWELL TRIO: Bouncing With Bud (Mobile Fidelity) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Reissued by Mobile Fidelity in their Ultradisc II 24k gold format, this disc, originally released in 1962, captures Bud Powell performing live in Copenhagen. Powell had taken up residence in Paris in the early 60s and produced a number of live recordings at various European venues. This was one of the best of the lot. The Bud Powell Trio was rounded out by two Danish musicians, drummer William Schiopffe and 15 year old bass wunderkind Neils-Henning Orsted Pedersen. Don't let Pedersen's youth mislead. He turns in a bravura performance here, contributing a strong bottom throughout and taking some genuinely impressive breaks. Schiopffe was a journeyman on the Danish club scene and makes a fine contribution himself. The tracks are a mix of standards and mostly familiar jazz themes from players like Coleman Hawkins, Thelonious Monk and Powell himself. Particularly welcome is Tadd Dameron's "Hot House", which Powell had previously played at the legendary Massey Hall concert with Bird, Diz, Mingus and Max Roach. Given full reign with the tune, his playing is spirited and expressive. Powell was nearing the end of his performing life when this was cut. Illness both mental and physical would cause his death four years later, with periods of hospitalization and isolation from the public eye eating away parts of those years. His European sojourn had a salutary effect on his health for a time, though, and this disc is proof that it had a salutary effect on his playing as well. This is a memorable performance by an unforgettable jazzman. Track List: Riffitude * Bouncing With Bud * Move * The Best Thing For You * Straight, No Chaser * I Remember Clifford * Hot House * 52nd Street Theme REGATTA 69: Prime Time With Regatta 69 (Moon Ska) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Snappy rhythms, snotty humor and a savvy business sense (the notes for this one offer the discerning listener a mail order opportunity to acquire a variety of Regatta 69 recordings and paraphernalia) have kept this 7 piece unit from Chapel Hill around to release their third CD in five years. That's a good thing, because it's taken me this long to discover them, and I'm glad I did. Regatta 69 turns in the kind of upbeat party ska that I tend to favor, with solid horn work from their two trombones and alto and a willingness to draw outside the musical lines of the genre a bit. The resident horns are augmented here and there by guest contributions on baritone sax and a pair of trumpets. There's a nice set of original tunes here and an, ummm, interesting cover of Debbie Boone's "You Light Up My Life." It's a little like someone making "Plan Nine From Outer Space" with a competent cast and quality set design. The surprise inside is buried on track 69. It's worth seeking out. Track List: I Wanna Smack You * Waltz Of The Catamaran * Virtual Brain Boy * Operation Time Control * The Fiasco * Fly, Fly Away * Killer Cabbie * Bari Saxy Man * Follow The Leader * She Was Looking At Me * Sioux City * You Light Up My Life (and the surprise inside) THE BUDDY RICH BIG BAND: Burning For Buddy, Vol. II (Atlantic) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Neil Peart has produced the second in a scheduled four part tribute to the legacy of Buddy Rich. Combining the 14 piece Buddy Rich Big Band with an eclectic assortment of a baker's dozen drummers - Kenny Aronoff, Gregg Bissonnette, Bill Bruford, Steve Gadd, David Garibaldi, Joe Morello, Simon Phillips, Marvin "Smitty" Smith, Steve Smith, Dave Weckl, Peart and a featured spot for Buddy Rich himself - ten additional sidemen and a vocal quartet which includes the inimitable Annie Ross and Rich's daughter Cathy, this is an album that should make a big band believer out of anyone. Each of the featured drummers takes a turn, working through 12 tracks by composers including John Coltrane, Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Billy Strayhorn. The 13th cut is "Channel One Suite," one of two numbers that Rich asked that the band not play without him (the other was his signature "West Side Story - Overture & Medley"). Honoring that request, the drums are provided from a 1968 track by Rich himself. The song is played as Buddy never heard it, though. A lyrical tribute by Domenick Allen, Annie Ross, Annette Sanders and Cathy Rich is laid over a background of Buddy's drums, guitar and flutes. Fittingly, this is also the only track that features a drum solo. I can't wait for Volume III. Track List: Moment's Notice * Basically Blues * Willowcrest * In A Mellow Tone * Time Check * Goodbye Yesterday * Groovin' Hard * Big Swing Face * Standing Up In A Hammock * Take The A Train * One O'Clock Jump * Them There Eyes * Channel One Suite KIM RICHEY: Bitter Sweet (Mercury) Reviewed by Jeff Aptor Nashville songstress Richey has such a sweet voice she should keep an eye out for bees. And 'I Know' is one of 97's shrewdest story-songs, all twangy hooks and razor-sharp lyrics, as our heroine reminds herself that life rolls on, even if relationships don't. 'I should...pay some bills, get a clue / Get up, forget about you', she wryly sings, while a loping beat drags her back to the world. With one foot in both the old and new Nashville camps, Richey - at a push - is more aligned with Roseanne Cash than she is your bigger-haired queens of country. Yet the swooning ballad 'To Tell the Truth' wouldn't be lost on a Reba spectacular, with its chiming pedal steel and I'm-suffering-but-I'm-used-to-it lyric. Yet self-flaggelation really isn't Richey's style. When she observes 'Someday I'll forgive you / maybe then again I won't', you know this is a woman who doesn't even know the words to 'Stand By Your Man'. 'Bittersweet?' Absolutely. RUSH: Retrospective I 1971-1980 (Mercury) Reviewed by Steve Marshall Mercury is currently in the process of upgrading and reissuing the entire Rush catalog. In addition to all the individual albums, they compiled two 'best of' packages. The second retrospective isn't bad, but it doesn't stack up against the first one. Ask any real Rush fan what the band's best period is and they'll tell you 'the early stuff.' The songs where Geddy Lee could still hit the high notes. The critics always hated them, but sales figures will tell you - Rush is one of the most successful bands to emerge from above the US border. Retrospective I contains most of Rush's best material. Songs like "Xanadu" and "By-Tor and the Snow Dog" easily rank among their best tracks ever. Those classics, plus FM staples like "The Spirit of Radio," "Freewill," and "Fly By Night" are just a few of the tracks included here. If that's not enough, you also get an excerpt from "2112" and the instrumental epic "La Villa Strangiato." The only bad thing about this CD is the songs aren't in chronological order. Long-time fans are sure to be pleased with the track selection. For those who may be just starting to get into Rush, this is great place to start. SCHUMANN: Symphonies: No. 1 in B Flat, Op. 38 (Spring); No. 2 in C, Op. 61. Chamber Orchestra of Europe conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt. TELDEC 4509-98320-2 [DDD] 67:14 (Live performances from June 1995, Stefaniensaal, Graz, Austria) Reviewed by Robert Cummings Harnoncourt has already given us the most important Beethoven Symphony cycle of the decade (maybe of the century); here he successfully concludes the Schumann set. You know the common wisdom on this composer's symphonies by now: awkward, unimaginative orchestration incarnates music that is inspired but less compelling than that of Beethoven and Brahms. Some even call Schumann a failed symphonist. I call him a successful symphonist, though, one who really doesn't need defenders but only recordings like this one to make his case. But I'm going to defend him anyway: 1) Schumann's orchestration was at least on a par with that of Brahms; 2) his four symphonies are all strong and perhaps only marginally surpassed by those of Brahms. These are opinions, of course, but are hardly as radical as they would have seemed twenty-five years ago. Harnoncourt breaks with tradition here and presents these scores without the usual orchestrational touching up given by most conductors. And the results are impressive. But don't attribute this disc's success to the conductor's purist tendencies, though they're certainly an asset. Attribute them, rather, to his deft baton, to his intuitive grasp of structure, to his keen ability to phrase, and to his fine orchestra. The Second comes across powerfully and poignantly--I don't know if I've ever heard the Adagio rendered with this kind of tender sorrow. The tempo is on the brisk side, to be sure, but never sounds rushed, never even hints at the mawkish or saccharine. Schumann wrote the work after his "black period," a time when he suffered abject depression and anxiety attacks. He would later go mad, of course, and die in an asylum, but not before he wrote a slew of additional works, including two more symphonies. Harnoncourt gets to the core of this great composition, imparting a sense of struggle and tragedy, while never undercutting the work's ultimate feeling of relief and triumph. Indeed, the finale has never sounded so resolute in its hopeful and joyous embrace of life-affirmation. The "Spring" Symphony comes off just as effectively, Harnoncourt catching that quirkiness of melodic line so perfectly in the first movement, and delivering the Larghetto with just right mellowness and dreaminess. The Scherzo is appropriately gruff and energetic, while the finale is deliciously exuberant. As I suggested above, the Chamber Orchestra of Europe performs splendidly in these live performances, delivering precision and commitment in equal doses. Once again Teldec provides vivid, clear sound, and intelligent notes. Many have traveled this terrain, including Karajan, Szell, Inbal, and Semkow, but this entry can rank with the very best. A must for Schumann fanciers. THE SCOFFLAWS: Live! Vol. 1 (Moon Ska) Reviewed by DJ Johnson The pride of the Long Island ska scene follows last year's powerhouse CD/LP, Ska In Hi-Fi, the only way they could: with an even more powerful live album. The Scofflaws are, after all, one of the best live bands in Ska (or any genre, for that matter), so why not hear them in their natural habitat? It's a great idea and it flies. The energy is contagious and the adrenaline is dangerous from the moment the band is announced. forty-two and a half minutes later, you're fling has been flung and you're wrung. Album versions are blown away, one by one: "Nude Beach" slides along with just a bit more menace and mystery, "Back Door Open" kicks a bit harder, "William Shatner" goes just a little crazier, and "Spider On My Bed," which is one of the great tunes of the modern ska era, just flat out explodes into pure energy. I wish they had closed the CD with "Spider," but they came back with a cover of Nancy Sinatra's "Boots," albeit with slightly altered lyrics. Not bad, but after "Spider," it's like... well, kinda like if Ali and Frazier had fought the 15th round in Manilla, throwing pitty-pat jabs until the bell. However, you'll notice this is titled Vol 1. According to the liners, the band intends to release a total of three volumes. Lace up the boots, Rudie. This is gonna be fun. GENE SUMMERS: The Ultimate School Of Rock & Roll (Crystal Clear Sound) Reviewed by John Sekerka Another great rockabilly find, who was a regional hit (in several regions), but never managed to crack the big time. This jam packed compilation (32 tracks) spans a good decade starting with several excellent '58 sides. The closest Summers came to a big hit was 'Big Blue Diamonds' in 1963, a soft 'Sea of Love' type of sway song. Summers was a genuine heartthrob crooner, but he could also steam it up, as evidenced on his '57 sparse, bluesy take on 'Susie Q.' A real discovery for rockabilly fans, except for Texans of course, who've been buying his records for three decades. TIPSY: Trip Tease (Asphodel) Reviewed by John Sekerka While your bachelor pad record collection is full of timeless classics from hi-fi console days, there are few parleying that groove in today's music circles. Enter Tipsy, with a scrumptious electronic soundtrack sure to tickle your fancy. Staying clear of rock guitars, Tipsy play classic lounge with state of the art electronic and percussion devices. Superb instro tunes played velvety smooth, with just enough spice for a swinging atmosphere. Sort of like Esquivel in a small group format, or Les Baxter with restraint, Tipsy are refreshing and original. Theirs is not a retro cash grab, this is the real thing. TOBIN SPROUT: Moonflower Plastic (Welcome To My Wigwam) (Matador) Reviewed by Jeff Apter Tobin Sprout's day band, Guided by Voices, are alterna-legends thanks to their winning way with popcraft and DIY thrift. That truly indie approach is all over his latest solo effort like a rash; this is an album where the first take is more likely the only take. But the secret's in the mix - both musically and emotionally. Amidst the shamelessly simple delights of 'Get Out Of My Throat' and the title track, an entrancing meditation on love, is the downbeat (and damn near heartbreaking) 'Since I...', the equally somber 'Exit Planes' and a handful of riff-heavy, weary-hearted dirges; although the away-with-the-pixies psychedelia of 'Angels Hang Their Socks On the Moon' is a radiant sunburst. If you can picture Nick Drake with a heavier backbeat, 'Moonflower...' should make a lot of sense. Shame Sprout's stuck with such a reedy voice, 'cause his guitar-pop talents are truly supernova. STRAVINSKY: Symphony in C; Symphony in Three Movements; Symphonies of Wind Instruments. New Zealand Symphony Orchestra conducted by En Shao. NAXOS 8.553403 [DDD] 59:42 Reviewed by Robert Cummings My first experience with this New Zealand ensemble was on a Stradivari all-Barber CD from 1988. I didn't care for the main work on that issue (Symphony No. 2), but the performances sounded more than decent. Still, my expectations in this Stravinsky issue weren't high, even though I've come to expect that the second-tier orchestras used by Naxos are generally quite impressive. I guess I was a bit leery of the conductor, Chinese-born, England-based En Shao. It turns out that he conducts these scores with as much drive, tartness and Stravinskyan coolness as one could wish for. And the orchestra responds to his incisive baton with commitment and robust playing that, but for one minor shortcoming, could rival that of many so-called world-class ensembles. The Symphony In C is the lead-off piece here. It has an urgency and sweep that yields little, if anything, to the splendid Davis reading on Philips (coupled with the Symphony In Three Movements). Where it may fall short by comparison is in the horn playing, which is at times a bit reticent. Try, for instance, the five note motif, the last three notes repeating, beginning at 2:51 (track 1), and notice how some of these soft notes aren't just soft but sound weak, almost missing. This is the shortcoming I spoke of above, but it ultimately doesn't undermine the effectiveness of the performance since there's simply too much gusto and raw spirit spread among the other players to offset what is in the end only an infrequent mediocrity. But it's not just "gusto" and "raw spirit" the New Zealanders flaunt, they have panache and finesse, as evidenced in the reed work of the second movement. The oboist is especially attuned to Stravinsky's subtleties, capturing both the humor and delicacy in the writing. And the strings can dig into the notes in seemingly less consequential sections to deliver a propulsiveness that so often features an undercurrent of grittiness and pride. Try, for example, the passage beginning at 0:32 (track 1) where emphatic lower strings seem to spit out their notes with a delicious forthrightness. All in all, a fine performance. But the Symphony In Three Movements may be more convincing still. It is a grim enactment that so well captures that mixture of violence and triumph, of mystery and uncertainty. This was, of course, a wartime composition, and it sounds it here in no uncertain terms: rhythms are firm and powerful; tempos are fairly fast (the briskly-inclined composer himself, in his 1962 recording, clocks in ahead of Shao by only less than a minute); and Shao imparts a sense of doom lurking around the corner in his clever phrasing of the ominous flute and muted strings passages in the Andante, and a sense of powerful culmination in his handling of the triumphant ending, where the slashing string-dominated chords augur the hard won victory the final chord emphatically delivers. Altogether, this performance can rank with the best. The Symphonies of Wind Instruments, to me not the most rewarding Stravinsky work, is well rendered, too. Notes are informative and the sound is vivid. While I wouldn't rank Shao above Davis in the two Symphonies, or ahead of Salonen in the Symphony in Three Movements, he is competitive and probably has the field to himself in the budget arena. URIAH HEEP: King Biscuit Flower Hour Presents (King Biscuit) Reviewed by Steve Marshall Through the years, Uriah Heep has been one of the critics' most hated bands. One reviewer went as far as to say "if this band makes it, I'll commit suicide." Well, they made it, and now King Biscuit has just released a vintage show from the band's 1974 Sweet Freedom tour. It has most of the hits, plus several rarely played album tracks. The Heep sound great on the show, although the performance definitely has its warts. There were numerous technical problems that night. The cool thing is that the band wasn't fazed by it. They were clearly having a great time onstage. The show starts with one of the band's early singles, "Easy Livin'," and the energy doesn't let up till the CD ends. "Easy Livin'" is followed by the triple play-"Sweet Lorraine," "Stealin'" and an excellent version of "July Morning" all in a row. "Seven Stars" was one of the more complicated songs on the Sweet Freedom album, and unfortunately doesn't come across as well live. "Sweet Freedom" sounds much better, though. Hearing Byron sing these songs live makes you realize what a great singer he really was. When he was on, there weren't many singers that could outdo him. Check out the killer version of "Look at Yourself" and you'll see what I mean. The only negative factor is the tape hiss. Aside from that, it's a truly entertaining show. This CD is a great addition to any Heep collection, as well as an excellent starting point for someone just discovering the band. VARIOUS ARTISTS: Big Surf Hits (Del-Fi) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Del-Fi was surf central in the early sixties and this 1963 compilation is a treasure trove of hot early instro. It may fall a bit short of its own hype of "all the big surf hits" (Dick Dale, for instance, would certainly lay claim to a surf hit or two of his own in those days), there is nonetheless some great surf music here. Some of these bands and songs have faded from the memory of all but the hard-core aficionado, so it's nice to have a CD reissue that makes them available to a new generation of fans. The bands range from surf notables like The Lively Ones and Dave Myers & The Surftones to one-off assemblages of studio players like the Surf Mariachis. Along the way you'll meet The Impacts, The Sentinals, The Surf Stompers and The Centurions. If all those names aren't familiar, you're likely to remember some of the cuts - "Church Key," "Bullwinkle Part II," "Green Onions," "Watermelon Man..."and if the titles don't jump immediately to mind the sounds themselves will be familiar to folks ranging from those who were listening to the radio in those days to folks who listen to Quentin Tarantino soundtracks these days. Altogether a fine set and a significant reissue both in the surf genre and rock history in general, this is an item worth a spot in your collection. If you missed it when it first hit the stores, grab it before this summer is over. Track List: The Impacts/Wipe Out * The Sentinals/Big Surf * The Surf Stompers/Original Surfer Stomp * The Lively Ones/Surf Rider * The Centurions/Bullwinkle P. II * Dave Myers & The Surftones/Church Key * The Surf Mariachis/Undertow * The Lively Ones/Hillbillie Surf * The Impacts/Blue Surf * Dave Myers & the Surftones/Moment Of Truth * The Surf Stompers/Green Onions * The Surf Mariachis/Watermelon Man VARIOUS ARTISTS: George and Ira Gershwin In Hollywood (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Whether you're a fan of the movies, the Gershwins in particular or American popular music in general, this is an absolutely delightful collection. Released by Rhino as part of the movie music project they have undertaken with Turner Classic Movies, the tracks aren't limited to the MGM numbers in the Turner vault. Included are tracks from RKO films like "Girl Crazy" and "Shall We Dance," Warner's "Rhapsody In Blue" and "The Man I Love" and others ranging from Vitaphone to United Artists. There is, of course, a heaping helping from the MGM catalog as well. Because of the great range and the rarity of some of the material offered, there are tracks that reflect the weaknesses of the acetate source that was used to capture some of the performances. The sacrifice in audio quality is repaid with the preservation of some magnificent music. Many of these cuts won't be found anywhere else in the extended forms offered here. And what offerings. Al Jolson singing "Swanee." Astaire lending his considerable charm to "They Can't Take That Away From Me" and "Shall We Dance." Astaire and Ginger Rogers' classic "Let's Call The Whole Thing Off." Gene Kelly. Judy Garland. Tommy Dorsey. Ella Fitzgerald. And more, more, so much more. As impressive as the roster of performers may be, this is ultimately a Gershwin set. The contribution of George and Ira Gershwin to popular song and musical theater is displayed stunningly through this look at their contribution to the music of film. For film buffs, musical historians and lovers of great songs, this one's essential. Track List: Disc One: The Warner Bros. Studio Orchestra/Overture (Medley: Swanee/ Somebody Loves Me/Fascinating Rhythm/Embraceable You/Oh Lady, Be Good/ The Man I Love/I Got Rhythm/Liza/Rhapsody In Blue/Strike Up The Band) * Al Jolson/Swanee * Lena Horne/Somebody Loves Me * Fred Astaire/I Can't Be Bothered Now * Georges Guetary/Stairway To Paradise * Fred Astaire/ They Can't Take That Away From Me * Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra/ Fascinating Rhythm * Gene Kelly/Love Is Here To Stay * Ginger Rogers/ They All Laughed * John B. Hughes/135th Street Blues (Blue Monday) * Anne Brown/Summertime * Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers/Let's Call The Whole Thing Off * Ella Fitzgerald/But Not For Me * Fred Astaire/Nice Work If You Can Get It * Avon Long/Liza * Gene Kelly/I've Got A Crush On You * Oscar Levant/Third Prelude * Judy Garland & Mickey Rooney with Six Hits & A Miss/Strike Up The Band Disc Two: Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra/Boy! What Love Has Done To Me * Fred Astaire/Aren't You Kind Of Glad We Did * Peg La Centra/The Man I Love * June Allyson & Mickey Rooney/Treat Me Rough * Fred Astaire/ A Foggy Day * Eddie Quillan, Dixie Lee & Mitzi Green/You've Got What Gets Me * Artie Shaw & His Orchestra/Oh, Lady, Be Good * Fred Astaire/He Loves And She Loves * Ella Logan/I Was Doing Alright * Virginia Verril & Jon Hall/Love Walked In * The RKO Studio Orchestra/Promenade (Walking The Dog) * Fred Astaire/Beginner's Luck * Gene Kelly & Georges Guetary/ 'S Wonderful * Fred Astaire/Things Are Looking Up * Sally Sweetland/ Delishious * Fred Astair/Shall We Dance * Judy Garland, Mickey Rooney & Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra/I Got Rhythm * Fred Astaire/You'd Be Hard To Replace * Bob Fosse/In Our United State * Dick Haymes & Betty Grable/ For You, For Me, For Evermore VARIOUS ARTISTS: The Inner Flame (Atlantic) Reviewed by John Sekerka A tribute record that attracts Jonathan Richman, PJ Harvey and Robert Plant, is surely a novelty item. You might not know of Rainer Ptacek, but that will change. He's a fella with a strange history: born with a Czech name in East Berlin, raised on the rough streets of Chicago, and finally settled in sprawling Arizona, Ptacek (little bird) lives in a small two room house with his three kid family. He plays dobro and steel guitar like you wouldn't believe, and he also pens memorable songs. Songs that flow from a pen of somebody who has lived, and almost died. About a year ago Ptacek was diagnosed with brain cancer. Some of the money you'll slap down for this record, and believe me, you'll slap it down, goes to Rainer as he fights his storm. But you don't need to know any of that, what matters to you, the music consumer, is that there's finally a great rootsy slab of music out there with the likes of Victoria Williams, Evan Dando, Vic Chesnut, Emmylou Harris and Giant Sand, sitting in with Rainer. Hopefully not a too late discovery. VARIOUS ARTISTS: Maracas, Marimbas and Mambos Latin Classics At M-G-M (Rhino) Reviewed by DJ Johnson So far, this is the greatest disc in a great series of M-G-M movie music compilations. Of course, that's a matter of personal taste when you're talking about discs of Al Jolson, Fred Astaire, Louis Armstrong, and Gershwin brothers music, and I admit that, for me, it's a tough call between the Armstrong and this one, but... Oh, what the hell, why try? Listen, this series is pure magic for anyone who loves classic films. Maracas, Marimbas and Mambos may end up with the biggest sales figures because this genre is currently hot again thanks to the lounge revival. The tag has to be "Various Artists," as there are guest performers on nearly every track, but in truth this could be labeled "Xavier Cugat and Carmen Maranda At M-G-M." The popularization (read: Americanization) of Latin music was largely due to these two performers, and in fact they were so intertwined with the genre and the films that it would be nearly impossible to make a meaningful compilation without including them. Rhino went one step further by focusing on them. One or both appear on 13 of the 18 tracks, with stars like Esther Williams, Betty Riley, Lina Romay, Carlos Ramirez, Virginia O'Brien, The Wild Twins, Ethel Smith, and Frank Fontaine filling out the roster. Some of Miranda's most endearing performances, including "Yipsee-I-O" and "Cuanto Le Gusta," and her classic "Caroom Pa Pa," with the unforgettable lyric "Everybody's got one, got one, got one. Everybody's got one, got one but ME!" And nearly every track reveals the greatness of Cugat and his band. If you're familiar with the sounds of Cugat and Miranda, you already know this is a wonderful collection of festive music because that's all they made. If you're curious about the genre, it's a good starting point before you jump off into the true Latin music of artists like Tito Puente. That's not to say this isn't Latin music, because it is. It's just Americanized in order to appeal to mainstream US audiences in the 1940s. It's still an exciting and intoxicating whirlwind of congas, bongos, maracas, marimbas and mambos. Track List: Bim Bam Bum (Lina Romay with Cugat) * Viva Mexico (Carlos Ramirez & Co.) * Walter Winchell Rhumba (Cugat) * Cuanto Le Gusta (Miranda with Cugat) * Alma Llanerna (Lina Romay with Cugat) * Cae Cae (Cugat) * El Cumbanchero (Betty Riley with Cugat) * La Bamba (M-G-M Studio Chorus & Orchestra) * Boneca De Pixie (Esther Williams, Van Johnson, Ethel Smith & Co.) * Te Quiero Juste (Carlos Ramirez & Co.) * Babalu (Lina Romay with Cugat) * Caroom Pa Pa (Miranda) * Tico Tico (Ethel Smith with Cugat) * Take It Easy Lina Romay, Virginia O'Brien, The Wild Twins with Cugat) * Granada (Carlos Ramirez with Cugat) * Rumba Rumba (Lina Romay with Cugat) * Yipsee-I-O (Miranda with Frank Fontaine) * Yo Te Amo Mucho (And That's That!) (Cugat) VARIOUS ARTISTS: Mondo Hollywood (Ultra-Lounge #16) (Capitol) Reviewed by DJ Johnson The Ultra-Lounge series is now up to volume 18, and serious lounge rats are irritated with Capitol for continuing the series instead of releasing the original albums these tracks come from. I can see the gripe, and I can see Capitol's side of it. They can either sell the 30 or 40 greatest albums of their lounge catalog, or they can continue to slowly milk those albums (and a hundred or so other not-so-stellar albums) for a long, long time, knowing full well that the fans will continue to scarf 'em up. If this is a tough call to your way of thinking, you're not thinking like a business person. The problem for the consumer is that they will occasionally have to pay full price for a disc that is 50% dreck and 40% so-so in order to get the two tracks they really want. Mondo Hollywood has more than a few clunkers and embarrassing moments. Some of these songs helped me remember why I had denounced this, my father's music of choice, when it was popular the first time around. Leroy Holmes' butchering of "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly" is as strong a reason not to buy this disc as John Barry's "Beat Girl" is a reason TO buy it. Barry's oft imitated spy instro is absolutely indispensable, and it's no coincidence that the 2nd best track is Barry's "Seance On A Wet Afternoon." Barry's music had that certain touch of exotic danger that I find so magnetic. Almost seems like blasphemy to have elevator music like Henry Jerome's arrangement of "Moon River" in the same compilation, but what can ya do? Until Capitol opens the vaults for real, this is what we get. It could be a whole lot worse, but it sure could be better. Track List: Experiment In Terror (Al Caiola) * A Man And A Woman/Live For Life (Billy May/Leroy Holmes) * Barbarella (Ferrante & Teicher) * Cool (Martin Denny) * Hot Rod Rumble (Sandy Courage) * Pink Panther/It Had To Be Tonight (Plas Johnson) * Beat Girl (John Barry) * You Gotta Taste All The Fruit (Leroy Holmes) * The Shadow Of Your Smile/The Days Of Wine And Roses (Ray Anthony & George Shearing) * Theme From The Apartment (Tito Rodriquez) * Watch What Happens (Denny McLain) * I, A Lover/De Sade (Leroy Holmes) * Seance On A Wet Afternoon (John Barry) * Girl Talk (Billy May) * Moon River (Henry Jerome) * You Only Live Twice/Thunderball (Sir Julian/Elliot Fisher) * The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly (Leroy Holmes) * Your Zowie Face (Nelson Riddle) * Town Without Pity (Gene Pitney) VARIOUS ARTISTS: The Monterey International Pop Festival (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun Dale It's been 50 years since Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play, and 30 years since the Beatles told us the story. 1967. The Summer of Love. And the introduction of the modern era of rock festivals. While the melee in the mud at Woodstock would become the touchstone event of the festival era, the real story can be traced back to the Monterey Peninsula in June of 1967. And much of that story can be found in the four discs newly repackaged and released by Rhino. 21 of the 31 festival acts are included, ranging from San Francisco stalwarts like the Airplane, Big Brother & The Holding Company and Country Joe to the Memphis soul of Booker T. and Otis Redding. Along the way are visits with British invasion in the persons of the Who, a Yank recently returned from England with a Brit band and an amazing new sound, one Jimi Hendrix, a side trip to the Indian subcontinent with Ravi Shankar and more blues bands, folk rockers, rockers and poppers than you can wave a stick of patchouli incense at. The Hendrix and Redding sets are perhaps the best known, having been released back to back in a vinyl edition years back, and having separate video releases as well. There's much more worth hearing in this set, though. More than a valuable document of an epic event, this is a musical treasure house. The Byrds turn in a 7 song performance here, interspersed with rambling thoughts on things conspiratorial. Redding is preceded by sets from Booker T. & the MG's and the Mar-Keys that stand up well. The festival closing set by festival organizer John Phillips' group, The Mamas & The Papas, is another keeper. It lacks some of the polish of the quartet's studio work, but the energy they bring to the live performance is fine compensation. There are some weak moments - the Who was apparently one of those "you hadda be there" things, for instance - and we're dealing with 1967 live recording technology here but there's still a musical feast laid out on a historical table here. Track List: Disc One: John Phillips/Introduction * The Association/Along Comes Mary/ Windy * Lou Rawls/Love Is A Hurtin' Thing/Dead End Street/Tobacco Road * Eric Burdon & The Animals/San Franciscan Nights/Hey Gyp * Canned Heat/ Rollin' And Tumblin'/Dust My Broom/Bullfrog Blues * Country Joe & The Fish/Not So Sweet Martha Lorraine * Big Brother & The Holding Company/ Down On Me/Combination Of The Two/Harry/Road Block/Ball And Chain Disc Two: The Butterfield Blues Band/Look Over Yonders Wall/Mystery Train/Born In Chicago/Double Trouble/Mary Ann * The Steve Miller Band/ Mercury Blues * The Electric Flag/Groovin' Is Easy/Wine * Hugh Masekela/ Bajabula Bonke (Healing Song) * The Byrds/Renaissance Fair/Have You Seen Her Face/Hey Joe/He Was A Friend Of Mine/Lady Friend/Chimes Of Freedom/ So You Wanna Be A Rock 'N' Roll Star * Ravi Shankar/Dhuni: Fast Teental (excerpt) * The Blues Project/Flute Thing Disc Three: Jefferson Airplane/Somebody To Love/The Other Side Of This Life/White Rabbit/High Flyin' Bird/She Has Funny Cars * Booker T & The MG's/Booker-Loo/Hip Hug-Her * Booker T & the MG's with The Mar-Keys/ Philly Dog * Otis Redding/Shake/Respect/I've Been Loving You Too Long/ Satisfaction/Try A Little Tenderness * The Who/Substitute/Summertime Blues/Pictures Of Lily/A Quick One While He's Away/Happy Jack/My Generation Disc Four: The Jimi Hendrix Experience/Killing Floor/Foxy Lady/Like A Rolling Stone/Rock Me Baby/Hey Joe/Can You See Me/The Wind Cries Mary/ Purple Haze/Wild Thing * The Mamas & The Papas/Straight Shooter/Got A Feeling/California Dreamin'/I Call Your Name/Monday, Monday * Scott McKenzie/San Francisco * The Mamas & The Papas/Dancing In The Streets (Festival Finale) VARIOUS ARTISTS: Murder Is My Beat Classic Film Noir Themes And Scenes (Rhino) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Though this looks and feels like part of Rhino's M-G-M series, it actually covers more territory, taking in films from Warner Brothers, RKO, and 20th Century Fox, as well as M-G-M. The project, captained and championed by Ian Whitcomb and Julie D'Angelo (see our interview with Whitcomb in this issue of Cosmik Debris), was to create a decent collection of themes from classic movies in the film noir genre. By presenting the music in fade-ins and fade-outs surrounded by classic bits of dialogue from the films, Whitcomb and company turned it into a highly entertaining tribute to the films and the genre. Film noir was a specialized film style, exemplified by the mood and look of flickss like The Maltese Falcon, The Postman Always Rings Twice, Born To Kill, and Murder My Sweet. Deep shadows behind harsh lights, vertical lines, sharp angles, menacing thugs in trenchcoats, and beautiful sultry women you can't trust. Murder Is My Beat succeeds in tapping your memory and imagination to achieve these same effects through sound. Track List: The Asphalt Jungle * Key Largo * The Maltese Falcon * Laura * Murder My Sweet * The Postman Always Rings Twice * Mildred Pierce * The Big Sleep * The Racket * Crossfire * Force Of Evil * The Letter * Scene Of The Crime * Dark Passage * Born To Kill * Macao * High Sierra * White Heat VARIOUS ARTISTS: Romantic Duets from M-G-M Classics (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun Dale One of the most appealing discs in Rhino's ongoing chronicle of great performances from the Turner Classic Movies catalog, "Romantic Duets" presents a plethora of stars singing the songs that gave meaning to the movie musicals - the "boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy sings song and gets girl" theme that lay at the heart of the genre. Did I say stars? Bing Crosby & Grace Kelly. Gene Kelly & Judy Garland. Mickey Rooney & Judy Garland. Jeanette MacDonald & Nelson Eddy. Esther Williams & Fernando Lamas. Lucy & Desi. Fred Astaire. June Allyson. Mario Lanza. Jane Powell. Vic Damone. Ethel Waters. Howard Keel. Rosemary Clooney. Jose Ferrer. Connie Francis. Danny Thomas. And then some. Did I say songs? "True Love." "For Me & My Gal." "Make Believe." "Stranger In Paradise." "Cabin In The Sky." "So In Love." "You Are My Lucky Star." For starters. Did I say movies? How about "High Society." "Show Boat." "Three Little Words." "Kismet." "Annie Get Your Gun." "Kiss Me Kate." "Singin' In The Rain." Among others. Need I say more? Track List: Bing Crosby & Grace Kelly/True Love * Gene Kelly & Judy Garland/For Me & My Gal * Esther Williams, Fernando Lamas & Co./Ain't Nature Grand * Lucille Ball & Desi Arnaz/Breezin' Along With The Breeze * Howard Keel & Kathryn Grayson/Make Believe * Fred Astaire & Anita Ellis/Nevertheless (I'm In Love With You) * An Blyth & Vic Damone/ Stranger In Paradise * June Allyson & Peter Lawford/The Best Things In Life Are Free * Mario Lanza & Kathryn Grayson/Be My Love * Jane Powell & Vic Damone/I Know That You Know * Judy Garland & Howard Keel/They Say It's Wonderful * Ethel Waters & Eddie "Rochester" Anderson/Cabin In The Sky * Debbie Reynolds & Vic Damone/Imagine * Rosemary Clooney & Jose Ferrer/Mr. & Mrs. * Howard Keel & Kathryn Grayson/So In Love * Connie Francis & Danny Thomas/I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me * Jane Powell & Vic Damone/How Do You Like Your Eggs In The Morning * Jeanette MacDonald & Nelson Eddy/Will You Remember * Judy Garland & Mickey Rooney/I Wish I Were In Love Again * Tony Martin & Joan Weldon/ Medley:One Kiss/Lover Come Back To Me * Gene Kelly & Betty Noyes (for Debbie Reynolds)/You Are My Lucky Star VARIOUS ARTISTS: Sweet Mother: Free Activation Series No. 1 (Sweet Mother) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Sweet Mother is a Seattle area label that deals in all kinds of electronic dance music, most of which has a wonderful mysterious vibe at the forefront. In the 3 years they've been at it, they've made a name for themselves with those who are firmly entrenched in the scene, but this release may bring them to the attention of the fringe listeners, as it is being distributed by the highly visible Sub Pop label. Culled mostly from 12-inch singles and EPs, these ten tracks cover several of the sub-genres that are currently hot stuff, including trip-hop, trance, drums and bass, and that elastic genre that seems to include everything and then some, acid jazz. Artists include 3xInfinity, Dragonfly, Strange Voices, and Pigeonhed, whose "Glory Bound" is remixed here by David Ruffy and Steve Dub of The Chemical Brothers team. The music flows from track to track, deepening the trance, and the groove, as well. 3xInfinity's "Wonderland," with its stormy atmosphere and electric piano reminiscent of "Riders On The Storm," its incredibly fluid bass line, and the hypnotic vocal, sets a dreamy tone that slides along unabated to the end of the disc, making it a great meditation piece. More importantly, it will make a lot of people aware of what's up with Sweet Mother Recordings and the Seattle electronic scene. Track List: Wonderland (3xInfinity) * The Big Smooth (High Fidelity) * Dragonfly (Dragonfly) * Drums & Bays (T.S.R.) * Strange Voices (Strange Voices) * Crooked Axis For String Quartet - Remix by DJ Spooky, The Subliminal Kid (Earth) * Jumpin' The Turnstyles (Alms For The Poor) * Marauder (Dragonfly) * Viscid Violet (Strange Voices) * Glory Bound (Pigeonhed) VARIOUS ARTISTS: TV Town - Ultra-Lounge #13 (Capitol) Reviewed by DJ Johnson Another in the seemingly endless Ultra-Lounge series, TV Town is several notches higher in quality than most of its predecessors. For cheese factor, the disc begins with "Bubbles In The Wine," better known to millions as The Lawrence Welk Theme, and while it's not the only slice of cheese on the tray, it's also not the only flavor. Some tracks are silly ("Powerhouse" by Spike Jones), some are pleasantly familiar (the themes from The Odd Couple and My Three Sons), and several push the cool-meter all the way to the top. "The Munsters' Theme," "Man From U.N.C.L.E.," "The Fugitive," "Mannix," "One Step Beyond/The Twilight Zone," and John Barry's chilling "The Human Jungle," a tune that really needs to be covered by a good surf band sometime soon. The jumble of sounds and styles on TV Town makes it one of the most unusual and entertaining entries in the Ultra-Lounge series. If you're looking at this daunting 18-CD series and trying to figure out where to start, I would recommend putting this one near the top of your list, not because it offers the best overview of a genre (it certainly doesn't), but because it's one the most entertaining. Track List: Bubbles In The Wine (Freddy Martin and His Orchestra) * Naked City Theme (Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra) * The Odd Couple (Billy May and His Orchestra) * The Man From UNCLE/The Spies (Al Caiola) * Thanks For The Memory (Dave Pell) * The Munsters Theme (Jack Marshall) * The Fugative Theme (Si Zentner) * Dick Van Dyke Theme/Alvin Show Theme (Nelson Riddle) * The Human Jungle (John Barry) * Batman Theme (David McCallum) * Mannix (Billy May and His Orchestra) * One Step Beyond (Fear)/The Twilight Zone (The Ventures) * Mr. Lucky (Si Zentner) * The Mod Squad Theme (Al Caiola) * My Three Sons (Nelson Riddle and His Orchestra) * Burkes Law Suite (Liberty Soundtrack Orchestra) * Bewitched (Peggy Lee) * Meloncholy Serenade (Jackie Gleason) * Powerhouse (Spike Jones) VARIOUS ARTISTS: VH1 - More Of The Big 80s (Rhino) Reviewed by DJ Johnson In the 80s, when this music was all the rage on MTV, the OTHER music channel, VH1, was playing a lot of mellow Diana Ross videos. ZZZzzzz. In the 90s, when MTV was playing with itself, VH1 almost became the MTV of yore. The Big 80s, VH1's showcase of 80s-era rock videos, became a humungoid hit. The connection between that program and this series of discs is a little bit fuzzy. I suppose all of these songs appeared in video form on the program at one time or another, but then each of these songs appeared in a lot of places. Oh well, I guess ya gotta tie it to something or other. Most of the music is available on a zillion 80s comps, so it really all comes down to one question: are there enough tunes here that you don't have yet to make it worth buying? The other issues are hit and miss. Yes, the sound is fine. No, the liners aren't particularly informative, but what do you need to know about "I Ran" and "Stray Cat Strut" that you don't already know? Yes, there's a hook: Godley & Creme's "Cry" makes its first appearance in comp form. In the end, a review is totally unnecessary because you really only need the track list to aid in your decision. But I get paid by the word. TRACK LIST: Mickey (Toni Basil) * Come On Eileen (Dexy's Midnight Runners) * Der Kommissar (After The Fire) * Whip It (Devo) * I Ran (Flock Of Seagulls) * Words (Missing Persons) * She's A Beauty (The Tubes) * Stray Cat Strut (The Stray Cats) * What I Like About You (The Romantics) * Everybody Have Fun Tonight (Wang Chung) * Obsession (Animotion) * Doctor! Doctor! (The Thompson Twins) * They Don't Know (Tracy Ullman) * Cry (Godley & Creme) * Tuff Enuff (Fabulous Thunderbirds) * Major Tom (Coming Home) (Peter Schilling) VARIOUS ARTISTS: Wild, Cool & Swingin' Too! (Capitol) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Volume 15 of Capitol's Ultralounge series brings us a collection of the great lounge vocalists of the 50s and 60s. You didn't have to be an Italian man or a Black woman to get a spot in this crew, but it sure helped. Check out the lineup - Vic Damone, Tony Bennett, Dean Martin, Mel Torme, Louis Prima, Bobby Darin (who was born a Cassotto). The ladies include Nancy Wilson, Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitgerald and Lena Horne. Of course, there was still room for Steve and Eydie, Jack Jones, Peggy Lee, Bobby Troup and Julie London. Styled as a taste of Vegas lounge culture, there's also the inevitable spot for Mr. Las Vegas himself, Wayne Newton. If you've never seen his show, Newton's ability to swing "Strangers In The Night" may come as a surprise. Rat Pack fans may feel slighted by the single selection by Pack member Dean Martin, but bear in mind that these were the acts on stage when the Chairman took the boys out to howl. Backed by bands and orchestras under the leadership of luminaries like Don Costa, Burt Bacharach and Nelson Riddle, with a couple notable appearances by the Count Basie Orchestra (backing Bennet and Vaughn), these were some of the premiere singers of the era. They are presented here delivering swinging standards that lack only your self supplied rhythm sounds of a martini shaker in motion. In other words, "Wild, Cool & Swingin' Too!" is great music and a ton o' fun! Track List: Eydie Gorme/Frenesi * Steve Lawrence/Night And Day * Bobby Darin/Charade * Nancy Wilson/A Lot Of Livin' To Do * Louis Prima/5 Months, 2 Weeks, 2 Days * Vic Damone/Wives And Lovers * Peggy Lee/The Boy From Ipanema * Wayne Newton/Stranger In The Night * Tony Bennett/ With Plenty Of Money And You * Bobby Darin/Call Me Irresponsible * Dinah Washington/Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby * Bobby Troup/Snootie Little Cutie * Julie London/Daddy * Dean Martin/Just In Time * Sarah Vaughn/Perdido * Jack Jones/Angel Eyes * Louis Prima/Just A Gigolo-I Ain't Got Nobody * Mel Torme/Midnight Swinger * Dinah Washington/ Destination Moon * Lena Horne/It Had Better Be Tonight * Ella Fitzgerald/Hawaiian War Chant (Ta-Hu-Wa-Hu-Wai) BEN WEBSTER & OSCAR PETERSON: Ben Webster Meets Oscar Peterson (Verve) Reviewed by DJ Johnson This 1959 session marked the fourth time these artists worked together. Ben Webster had mellowed considerably by this time, and these dates found him blowing some elegant and emotional sax and making no forays into the slashing, biting style for which he was so well known. This Webster was a dreamweaver, floating rich, breathy notes over the effortless perfection of the Oscar Peterson Trio. Peterson himself is flawless, as always, and Ed Thigpen (drums) and Ray Brown (bass) make them both sound even better (if that's possible). Five of the seven tunes are ballads that perfectly showcase Webster's mature tone. Even an overused tune like "Bye Bye Blackbird" sounds fresh in Webster's hands. His finest moments come near the end of "In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning," as he puts the song to bed with a quiet outpouring of resigned passion. The lone uptempo cut, "Sunday," coaxes Webster toward that other sound, and for a moment here and a moment there, it seems he's going to make the leap, restraining himself at the last second. Instead, Peterson makes the leap, delivering an amazing and joyful solo. The final tune, "This Can't Be Love," allows the trio to stretch out in that medium tempo swing structure that always set Oscar free. The sound quality of this recording is breathtaking. They sure knew how to record jazz in the 50s, didn't they? Verve rereleased this as a part of the Master Edition series, packaging it in a cardboard foldout case and including original cover art and liner notes, along with reissue notes. Good. This beautiful album deserves the special attention. TRACK LIST: The Touch Of Your Lips * When Your Love Has Gone * Bye Bye Blackbird * How Deep Is The Ocean * In The Wee, Small Hours Of The Morning * Sunday * This Can't Be Love WEEN: THE MOLLUSK (Elektra) Reviewed by John Sekerka Ween are the rock gods of the nineties, presenting every music genre under the sun with subversive grins. The Beatles used to make such pretty and innovative music, but they took themselves too seriously. Ween have their fingers crossed, tongues in cheek, and eyes rolling at all times. This is Chocolate & Cheese part two. The brilliant send up highlight being a poke at Irish pubsters in 'The Blarney Stone,' an infectious sing-along that speaks some nasty truths. Sure to offend everyone. Last time they had us singing 'Spinal Meningitis (got me down),' this time it's 'I'm Waving My Dick in the Wind.' The Ween we all know and love, and the band who would be king, if there was any justice. IAN WHITCOMB & THE WHITE STAR ORCHESTRA: Titanic - Music As Heard On The Fateful Voyage (Rhino) Reviewed by Shaun Dale While he may feel otherwise, it's perhaps a good thing for music lovers that Ian Whitcomb was passed over for the role of the ship's orchestra leader in the new Titanic film. After all, if he'd been busy with the role, he may not have found time to research and record this set of songs, and the world of recorded music would be poorer without it. The White Star Orchestra, Terry Glenny (violin), Bobby Bruce (violin), Marston Smith (cello) and David Pinto (piano, organ, bass), under the baton of Ian Whitcomb, perform over 20 of the popular songs which were either in the official songbook of the White Star shipping company or were identified by survivors as songs played during the Titanic's voyage. In addition, Whitcomb (piano, accordion, ukulele) and Fred Sokolow (banjo, guitar, mandolin) appear as the Musical Murrays, playing a variety of music hall tunes and other numbers that might have been performed among the third class passengers below decks. Altogether this is a fascinating look at a musical era, performed with historically appropriate instrumentation using authentic arrangements of the day. It is packaged beautifully with illustrations of the ship and the band and includes a fascinating booklet of notes by Whitcomb, who is a fine prose writer as well as a musician and songwriter. It would be a pity if this disc were confined to the attentions of the community of Titanic buffs. Anyone with more than a passing interest in the popular music of the 20th century should have this one in their collection. (By the way, don't look for "Nearer My God To Thee" here. Eyewitness accounts confirm that, legend notwithstanding, the song was never played by the Titanic band. The song in the air when the ship went down was "Songe d'Automne," which is, fittingly, the last song on this disc.) Track List: The White Star March * The Convergence Of The Twain * Glow-Worm * Mon Couer S'Ouvre A Ta Voix * In The Shadows * Oh, You Beautiful Doll * Music Hall Waltz Medley: Are We To Part Like This, Bill?/If Those Lips Could Only Speak * The Mosquito's Parade * The Merry Widow Waltz * Alexander's Ragtime Band * Somewhere A Voice Is Calling * Music Hall March Medley: I Do Like To Be Beside The Seaside/Fall In And Follow Me/Ship Ahoy * Selections From The Musical Comedy "The Arcadians": Chorus Of Waitresses/My Motter/Arcady Is Ever Young * Shine On Harvest Moon * That Mesmerizing Mendelssohn Tune * Destiny * Waiting For The Robert E. Lee * Salut d'Amour * Frankie And Johnny * Silver Heels * Lily Of Laguna * Moonstruck * Songe d'Automne IAN WHITCOMB: The Golden Age Of Lounge (Varese Sarabande) Reviewed by Shaun Dale "One of the functions of music is to act as a pillow, buffering us from the terrors of the street." This opening line of Ian Whitcomb's album notes sets the premise for this compilation of Whitcomb recordings over the last 15 years as eloquently as I can imagine. In some ways a companion to his new collection of songs from the repertoire of the Titanic ship's orchestra, this is "Palm Court" music. The object is to soothe the spirit, rather than to excite the spirit. The tunes are can be sung, hummed or danced to, or can serve as a sort of aural wallpaper. In that sense, these are truly the roots of lounge music. The musicians in a cocktail band or piano bar know that they'll have to play at a precise point between attracting interest and dampening conversation and conviviality. The best can pull it off, and it's one of the toughest gigs in music. On this disc, Whitcomb provides a textbook example of the form. The songs range from Stephen Foster chestnuts to Whitcomb originals and the instrumentation is carefully fitted to the mood and period of each piece. Waltzes, rhumbas and foxtrots. Ragtime and pop. Non-stop joy. Put it on. Give it a good listen. Put it on again and go about your business. But don't blame me if you find yourself humming along, or trying out a quick soft shoe while you do the dishes. Well, actually, blame isn't the point - don't *thank* me. Thank Ian and the generations of songwriters and lounge players that made this disc possible. Track List: Nola * Amapola * A Little Street Where Old Friends Meet * The Teddy Bear's Picnic * Merry-Go-Round By Moonlight * Same Old Moon- Same Old June * Rose Room * Sol Tropical * Twelve O'Clock At Night * Moon Of Waikiki * In The Land Of Beginning Again * Rolling With The Quake * Who Made Little Boy Blue * Beautiful Dreamer * Lotusland (A Rag Of Southern California) * The House Of Dreams IAN WHITCOMB: You Turn Me On/Mod Mod Music Hall (Sundazed) Reviewed by Shaun Dale Thirty two years ago I picked up the first album by a young Englishman who had become a local hero in the Seattle music market. Of course, it was "You Turn Me On" that sold the record, but it was the combination of bluesy rock music infused with a dose of Tin Pan Alley sensibility that captured me and made me a lifetime Ian Whitcomb fan. Naturally, when the followup, "Mod Mod Music Hall," appeared the following year I had to get it too, though a breakthrough single had not yet appeared. What I found was something altogether different than what I had expected, and something that was altogether delightful. These were genuine music hall numbers, and straight Tin Pan Alley tunes and ragtime played for fun rather than study. This was great stuff, and it still is. Unlike the then contemporary work of acts like the New Vaudeville Band and the Sopwith Camel, these were the real songs performed by someone who loved them rather than someone who mocked them. Whitcomb, of course, has gone on to carve out an impressive resume as a chronicler of early 20th century pop, and it all started here. Sundazed has put out these first two Ian Whitcomb offerings on a single disc just in time for some summer fun. Tall drinks, lots of ice, a paper umbrella and "You Turn Me On." Life is good. Track List: You Turn Me On: You Turn Me On * River Of No Return * Be My Baby * Nervous * Poor But Honest * Fizz * This Sporting Life * Too Many Cars On The Road * That Is Rock n' Roll * Sugar Babe * No Tears For Johnny Mod, Mod Music Hall: Poor Little Bird * Got A Date With An Angel * The Night I Appeared As MacBeth * August, 1914 * Coney Island Washboard * Mother! Mother! Mother! (What A Naughty Boy Am I) * The Junkman Rag * The Sweetheart Of Sigma Chi * The Awful Tale Of Maggie May * Where Did Robinson Crusoe Go With Friday On Saturday Night * Saucy Seaside Sue * Reindeer - A Ragtime Two-Step * Ida! Sweet As Apple Cider * That Ragtime Suffragette * Oh Helen! * Your Baby Has Gone Down The Plughole WHITE HASSLE 'National Chain' (Matador) Reviewed by Jeff Apter Though their name may have you thinking otherwise, there's not even a hint of red on this New York duo's necks. 'National Chain', instead, is a ramshackle collection of hard-luck stories and cry-in-your-beer ballads, as White Hassle heads into industrial jug band territory, blending their very lo-fi sound with a chronic case of the Hank Williamses (see the tragicomic 'The Beating of My Heart' for proof). Marcellus Hall croons and croaks like a teen pinup with a dark streak and trouble in mind, his tongue wedged so firmly in his cheek that he might just choke, as he warns 'There's no need to dial 911 / It's just the beating of my heart.' In the background, Dave Varenka keeps a steady beat, crashing away on cardboard boxes, pots, pans - anything handy that passes for percussion. This results in a sometimes creepy, often creaky soundscape, while the production of 'National Chain' (what there is) makes the Violent Femmes sound lush by comparison. ___________________________________________________________________________ BETWEEN ZERO & ONE By Steven Leith YOU GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR The good old double standard is alive and well in Washington, DC. No, I don't mean the double standard that says it is OK for legislators to be exempt from most laws nor the double standard that says they can collect their pay even if they don’t do a damn thing. The double standard I was thinking about is the one that says it is OK for this country to invest heavily in the elections of other nations but other nations dare not invest in our so called "free" elections. There is nothing free about American politics. The cost of buying an office has gone through the roof and although it is accepted practice to let major corporations buy favors, when news comes out that a foreign nation wants in on the action, well that’s when you dust off your double standard. The United States has spent untold millions mucking about in the political systems of other nations. From the Congo to Costa Rica, from Haiti to Havana we bring our friends and enemies the same sort of cash centric politics that U.S. politicians excel at. After decades of training the world in the benefits of our system why are we surprised when the money flows toward us? We should be proud that our example has born fruit. We should also be thankful that someone else is paying the tab for our free elections. I for one would prefer it if Japan owned Jesse Helms rather than the tobacco lobby. Maybe then I could get a low cost high quality sake. I think Germany should put a down payment on Slade (the commandant) Gorton. Italy should buy, Alfonse (the ethnically insensitive) D'Amato and then the Axis could rise again. So, if China wants to own a piece of our President, why not? China seems to own the congress already since they never even get a slap on the wrist for their heavy handed pogrom against free expression. (Of course they are against free expression, they are an emerging capitalist wunderkind and we all know capitalism grows best fertilized with the blood of repressed workers.) As for me, the next time some candidate asks me for money I’m going to give them the phone number for the nearest foreign embassy. It’s time the rest of the world starting picking up the tab for our free elections. ____________________________________________________________________________ PHIL'S GARAGE By Phil Dirt A TALE OF LOUIES At the innocent dawn of rock ‘n roll, it wasn't unusual for simple riffs and gentle lyrics to break new ground. What we now see as derivative was both fresh and immediate. Like now, the sources of inspiration were around the innovators in the air. Nothing burst from a vacuum. In the early fifties, rock ‘n roll was the hot stepchild of black culture, of jump and jive, the blues, rockin’ R&B, and of the country music heard on the radio. There were elements of many other genres as well: jazz, calypso, and what ever else was lurking about. Often, the progenitors were young blacks from the ghettos or the poverty stricken areas of the rural South. Chicago was the launch pad, but the West Coast scenes in the San Francisco Bay Area, and in South Central and East LA were equally creative and vital. The Southern California scene had the added influences of the local Latino artists, which gave their music a more soulful flowing and rhythmic feel, with a flair for the heat of the night. A young black man from East LA with a marvelous bass voice was singing great R&B and Doo Wop. He was an unassuming guy with a great charm. He was also somewhat lame from childhood polio. He was making a name for himself, and had already recorded with Dolphin’s of Hollywood. EL LOCO CHA CHA One night in 1955, Richard Berry was sitting in the dressing room at the Harmony Park Ballroom waiting to go on. This is the same ballroom that would be home to Dick Dale just a few years later. His backup band that night was Ricky Rillera & the Rhythm Rockers. They were a popular Latino band, doing their own brand of the standards of the day. The Rillera brothers would play in Dick Dale’s band in the sixties. The Rhythm Rockers were already on stage warming up the audience. Richard was waiting in the dressing room for his big entry. The opening number was a zippy cover a popular semi-calypso Rene Tuozet instrumental number called “El Loco Cha Cha." Richard heard the tune coming through the walls and was fascinated by the simple introduction bass riff. He thought it would make a good backtrack for a song. He quickly dashed off the melody line and some notes about lyrical content on a brown paper bag. A guy named Louie that was being told of the melancholy of a young man far from his home and girl. After the show, Richard went back to his paper bag, and developed the lyrics. It was to be a simple Jamaican love song about a guy, maybe a sailor, missing his girl across the water. He's telling his story to a guy named Louie, maybe a bartender. The song he wrote was "Louie Louie." Richard recorded the song a year later for Flip Records as the unassuming B-side to "You Are My Sunshine." It was issued on both 45 and 78 RPM. The disc sold moderately well in the R&B market, but generally failed to cross over to top forty radio. Some 6-700,000 copies were moved by Flip before the record faded. From that success, Richard Berry’s recognition increased as the vocal and writing talent he surely was. He toured more, and recorded extensively with Etta James, the Robins (Coasters), Jesse Belvin, the Flairs, and many more. By the end of the fifties, Richard Berry was a well established vocal talent on the California R&B scene. After the song fell from the R&B charts, Richard sold the rights for $700 so he could get married. Richard once told me that the contract was written on a napkin in a restaurant in LA. The buyer was Max Freitag. Richard thought it was a good deal. He’d made his money from the single, and didn't think his little B-side had anything left in it, so why not sell it? He'd already had a follow-up spin off single titled "Have Love Will Travel"; based heavily on a very similar riff. THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST Around 1959, Rockin' Robin Roberts came across Richard's "Louie Louie" in a used bin at a Seattle or Tacoma record store. He decided to add it to the repertoire of the Wailers, the extremely popular Pacific Northwest band he was working with at the time. Eventually, they recorded it, and made it a set list "must" in the Seattle/Tacoma area. It was so popular that every teen band "had better do it" in their set if they wanted to play a second time anywhere. The next significant cover was recorded by Paul Revere & the Raiders, the Boise, Idaho band, transplanted to Portland, that would eventually sign with Columbia. A week or two later, Portland's young Kingsmen went into the very same studio and recorded a rendition as well. Their version is starkly different from the Revere version. Paul Revere & the Raiders rearranged the Wailers' version. They got the words right, played well, and Mark Lindsey sang clearly. The production on the session is also quite crisp. The Kingsmen covered the Wailers' version as well, but unlike Revere's band, they did not do as well in the studio. There were several reasons. Lynn Easton, their usual front man, didn't sing the song. Rather, their teenage bassist Jack Ely did. Jack didn't know all the words, so he mumbled sounds that fit to fill the voids. Jack once told me that he had learned it from seeing other teen bands do it, and that he didn't get all the words. Jack also said that the mic was way over his head (probably set for the much taller Lynn Easton), so he had his head tipped back, stretching his neck, and his vocal chords in the process. Jack also had braces on. All that added to a lot of unclear vocalizing. Why the production is so different is a mystery. The engineer and studio are the same as the Revere session. Both the Paul Revere & the Raiders and the Kingsmen versions of the song were issued as singles. With the clear superiority of the Paul Revere recording, it was destined to make the charts. Columbia picked it up and promoted it heavily. However, Revere only made the cut in San Francisco and some parts of the Pacific Northwest. It was the cruder Kingsmen recording that took the nation by storm, reaching number 2 in Billboard. Why that happened is one of the major chapters in the story of "Louie Louie." I'M OUTTA HERE Shortly after the recording "Louie Louie," Jack Ely left the band. He went off on his own across the country. It must have been strange to hear your recording being a monster hit on the radio, and you're not in the band. It must have been a little like it was for David Marks, who left the Beach Boys because he was sure they weren't going anywhere. THE MEANING OF LOUIE The lyrics to "Louie Louie" have been the object of considerable discussion for 34 years now. Everyone, even government lackeys, sang the praises or condemnations of "Louie Louie" before it was over. Here's a loose interpretation of the chronology: Some DJ on the East Coast did what DJ's had done many times in the fifties and early sixties... violated their Music Director's rotation plan by playing a record that had not been "picked" by the MD. Some kids in a college frat house heard the song and loved it. They not only went out and bought it, they flooded the local radio station with requests. The MD finally added the record, and even more people thought it was cool. The frat brats were partying down to the record, and because of the infectious Rene Touzet / Richard Berry riff, wanted to sing along - and there was the rub... It wasn't long before those frat brats realized they couldn't quite get the words right. The harder they tried, the less they could actually understand, and the more it sounded like the words were, well, dirty... "I felt I rose in her hair..." and "she had a rag on...," etc. To remember what they thought they heard, they wrote the "lyrics" down. The frat brats sang those lyrics along with the radio. Lyric sheets were passed around, and soon every kid in Indiana was sure it was a dirty song. The 50 some odd sets of lyrics were all different, of course. Some parent, still reeling from the "Devil's Music" thing of the fifties, came across one of the lyric sheets from some poor frat refugee, and raised holy Hell with the authorities. The Governor of Indiana banned the song. He was followed by local authorities across the East and South East. Just like with 2 Live Crew, sales soared as the reputation of the indecent lyrics grew. Soon, it would top the charts. Not to be stopped, the Governor of Indiana got the FBI going on an obscenity investigation. The Portland office of the FBI dragged the remaining Kingsmen into their lair and threatened them with federal obscenity charges. They denied that the song was dirty, but Jack Ely, who'd sung the thing, was no where to be found, and they didn't have the original record or the sheet music. They were scared. The Los Angeles office of the FBI rounded up Richard Berry, dragged him into their local interrogation room, and began to ask about the song. "What are the words to "Louie Louie?" Richard produced the published lyrics. Armed with the "real words," the FBI responded with "we want you to give us the REAL lyrics!" They were threatening to indict Richard Berry on federal obscenity charges, threatening with prison time, and generally scaring this meek black man, Richard, to death. Meanwhile, the FBI crime lab in Washington DC was hard at work. They had obtained a copy of the record on Wand, and were analyzing it with the best technology they had. Of course, the Wand single was not even the original Jerden issue. The played it through filters, sped it up, slowed it down, watched it on their oscilloscope, and strained to hear those titillating words. After many hours of listening, they delivered their formal report on the most dangerous recording of the decade. BAD DAY AT HOOVERVILLE It was not a good day to be a member of that club. They were unable to definitively deliver the "dirty" lyrics to J. Edgar Hoover. He'd signed off on most of the pages in the bulging FBI file up until then. Surely he expected to read some pretty hot stuff, and take out a real menace to the morals of American youth. In the FBI crime lab's final report, they concluded that "...even if it (the Kingsmen's "Louie Louie") was obscene, the lyrics are unintelligible at any speed." Case closed, but the legend lives on today. The more the stories of the dirty lyrics and the FBI probe circulated in the media and by word of mouth, the more copies of the Kingsmen's record sold... so, what else is new? What's more, during the sixties, and throughout the seventies and eighties, many of the imagined dirty lyrics were recorded by the likes of Iggy & the Stooges. The FBI cemented the myth of the dirty words forever into the history of American music. Their campaign created the very recordings they sought to ban, recordings that did not exist before they got involved. They demonstrated yet again just how futile it is to legislate morality. A good use of our tax dollars. Just think of it; a crippled poor black man from the ghetto and a bunch of white suburbanite teenagers could have been on the infamous FBI Ten Most Wanted list. Amazing! PHOENIX RISING By the early eighties, Richard Berry was broke and on welfare. He was in a retraining program, learning basic computer skills so he could get a job. His childhood polio had left him slightly lame, and the LA city bus hitting him while he was parked in his car in front of his house didn't help. Stretch Riedle called him up and asked if he wanted to join KFJC in their impending "Maximum Louie Louie" special. Richard thought it was a lark, just a bunch of college kids playing a few records and hosting an old black R&B guy on the air. He figured he'd get a free train ride with his daughter, hang out, have a little fun, and go home. He was shocked to discover it was nothing of the sort. 63 Hours plus over the entire weekend, blanket coverage on Bay Area TV, international press, and 823 different versions, many of which were created by listeners just for the event. Jack Ely came down for it, meeting Richard for the first time. Richard played a forty five minute version of his song backed by the Lady Bo Trio (Peggy Malone - ex-Bo Diddley guitarist) and trumpeter Eric "Ricky Sludge" Lenchner, Readymades member and future founder of the Ultras. Jack sat in on second bass, and traded lead vocals with Richard and Lady Bo, who'd written special event lyrics. The resulting publicity wave got Chuck Rubin, Richard's lawyer, to call Richard right in the middle of the program. He was moving on recovering some of Richard's rights to the publishing. A couple of years later, Richard was back in possession of the rights to his song, and was making a few hundred thousand dollars a year. Things had changed for Richard Berry. The best change was what happened in his family. Richard brought his daughter Christi with him to "Maximum Louie Louie." She was 14 and not particularly knowledgeable of or impressed with her dad's past glory. When she witnessed the adoration that was heaped upon him, and the hospitality and love shown him by the staff at KFJC and the thousands of listeners who came to shake his hand, she became a believer. When Richard got home, his son Marcel began playing bass with him. Richard could now perform more regularly. The new bond they discovered made Richard smile. This is the real story of "Louie Louie." PARADE OF LOUIES The Leukemia Society used the song successfully for a fundraiser theme parade in several cities, and Richard Berry was the honored leader. The first one I attended in San Francisco was a grand event, with Da Monz (now the Berzerkers) backing Richard on stage at Justin Herman Plaza. Da Monz had worked up a half dozen different versions of the song, a Ten Years After version, a Chicago Blues version, a surf version, and several R&B variations. Along the parade route there were three bands, all playing only that song as the paraders marched passed. The bands were the wonderful Guttersluts, Johnny Kool & the Rattlesnakes, and the Surf M.C.s (aka Thermo). The paraders were also playing and singing "Louie Louie" as they proceeded along the Embarcadero. Witnessing Richard singing his song in front of a surf band with a lead guitarist in a wet suit was a sight to behold. LIVING FOREVER This material was assembled with kind assistance from Eric Predoehl, and fond memories of time spent with Richard Berry. Richard died in his sleep on January 23, 1997. I miss him. To learn more about Richard Berry and his anthem of all of the rock generations, visit Eric Predoehl's marvelous web site, The Louie Report, at http://www.netuser.com/~erp/Louie_Louie.html. ___________________________________________________________________________ STUFF I NOTICED By DJ Johnson Forgive me father for I have strayed. It's been two months since my last column. We've got some catching up to do, huh? Well luckily, I've been noticing stuff while I was busy doing other stuff. Here's an itemized list. * Anybody else been watching the festivities in Washington DC? The annual Republican Party Fox Hunt? This year things took a turn for the weird. Seems they had Newt Gingrich all tagged and caged, and they'd even rubbed a shirt all over him for the hounds to sniff, but something happened. Next thing we knew, the fox was sitting on the lead horse and a small handful of the hunters were running in naked terror through the woods, having suddenly found that they were the game. That nutty crazy Newt. Remember when Ted Bundy kept escaping? Yeah, it kind of reminds me of that. Course, we all remember how THAT one turned out. * I can't seem to keep my 10 year old away from Crap TV. Well, that's my own nickname for this terrible local station that runs garbage 24 hours a day. Stuff like Baywatch, Jenny Jones and Ricki Lake Barf-O-Rama talk shows, and a ton of predictable sitcoms designed primarily to give impressionable white people the idea that black people all act like idiots. On the other hand, they also run that Suzanne Sommers sitcom, so I suppose impressionable black people are getting the idea that white people are all ditzes as well. Anyway, my daughter is glued to it all, and all my best parenting has been unable to penetrate her dull glazed stare. I've tried lectures, out and out restrictions, pleading... none of it works. Tomorrow, I'm going to take the TV out of her room until she promises to watch only good solid intelligent TV programs. I was going to do that tonight, but Married With Children was on and I got distracted. I just can't imagine why she would want to watch all that predictable garbage... * How come every phone call that actually requires an early exit from the bathroom turns out to be somebody selling windshield ding repair? * My Jennifer Aniston fantasy is blown all to hell. God, was it really only the hair style in season one? Now she looks like Barbara Streisand. Dear God... BARBARA STREISAND! * The mini-mart up the street from me has porno movies for rent right out in the open, with all the original boxes showing. In case you're pure and innocent, I should tell you that porno boxes no longer show only a woman in a slinky outfit. They now contain 30 or 40 small stills from the film, and we're talkin' major hardcore slick and stiff stuff here. And here is a big cardboard box filled with these porno flicks sitting on the BOTTOM SHELF OUT IN THE OPEN! Not behind the counter, mind you. Under the cold medicine! The aforementioned 10 year old said "Hey daddy! Look! They rent movies here!" and she was off like a shot heading for that box. From a distance of 30 feet I recognized what she was walking into, and I managed to get there before her. "No! These are grownup movies!" Thwarted but dangerously curious, she shied away toward the candy aisle. I reached for one of the boxes, and by george, I had been correct! This WAS hardcore pornography right there in plain sight at the local minimart! There were pictures of men and women, women and women, men and men, a man and what looked to be Spuds MacKenzie, women and latex, and... this one beeeeeeeautiful brunette with a push-up bra and a sharks tooth necklace that could actually take a... well, that's neither here nor there. What's here is anger, and what's there is a box of hardcore pornography at a 3 year old's eye level. When I asked the store owner about this, he claimed they were out of sight and walked away in a huff. They're still there. I'm no prude, but it seems to me something should be done. Boldly springing into action, I organized a one-man boycott, which I strictly enforce except when we're out of milk or I need to rent a movie. * Did Oasis really announce that anybody who bought their records or tried in any way to promote them through word of mouth would face litigation and public caning, or did I just have a blown speaker during that particular newscast? * It was reported from Hollywood that 24 consecutive hours transpired without Charlie Sheen, Kelsey Grammer, Todd Bridges or Robert Downey, Jr, being arrested. It's quiet. It's too quiet. * Suspected murderer Andrew Cunanan is no longer on the loose. It is reported he committed suicide on a houseboat in Miami, Florida. Unnamed sources reveal, however, that Cunanan was actually the victim of stampeding Hollywood screen writers. * Here's one for the books. In Harare, Zimbabwe, the economy has gone straight to hell in a handbasket, effecting everything from the food trade to... yes, prostitution. The prostitutes in Harare belong to a union of sorts, and somebody in that union decided the best way to deal with the situation was to publicly ask that women send their husbands out at night with more money in their pockets. This just wouldn't fly in, say, Hartford Connecticut, you know what I'm saying? And finally, I would like to end the long drought by giving the coveted Sharp Pointed Stick award to Roger Katz, a 51 year old junior high teacher who got caught with a nude 14 year old girl in his car. That's dumb enough, but this idiot actually stood up there in front of the judge and jury and claimed that he only did it to pay her back for saving his life in 640 A.D., when they knew each other in Tibet! I think the old tried and true "but Your Honor, she LOOKED 18" would have stood a much better chance. And hey, talk about delusions of grandeur! He's so damned good in bed that a roll in the hay with him is sufficient payback for saving his life? Even Rudolph Valentino would have bought her a steak afterwards. This guy is a complete moron, and a natural stick recipient. That's about it. If you notice anything that you think I should notice, drop me a line at moonbaby@serv.net and tell me about it. See you next time. _____________________________________________________________________________ CLOSET PHILOSOPHY With Rusty Pipes OLD HABITS Two years ago the final breath should have gone out of the sails of the Hippie movement when Jerry Garcia died. But somehow it still continues. Maybe the drugs haven't worn off yet. I can't call myself a Deadhead but I have at least a dozen solo Garcia and Grateful Dead recordings in my collection. Early on I didn't like them as much as, say, Quicksilver Messenger Service, but somewhere around the time of Workingman's Dead, American Beauty and Jerry's first solo album I gained a lasting respect for them. Today, I promised I'd write something to commemorate the second anniversary of his death. I've wrestled with his legacy a long time but I can't seem to think about him without immediately thinking of drugs. I don't think Jerry Garcia would have become so worshipped or played the way he did without them. A greatest strength and greatest weakness. You could say they killed him, but I think that 50 odd years was enough. Hell, down through most of human history 50 has been a very ripe age indeed. At least he lived in a century when his work could be recorded and now he belongs to the ages, immortal in a sense that could never have happened a century's fingersnap ago. Can we forgive Jerry his drugs when he used it to produce such sweet trills on his guitar? Perhaps the drug aspect that drove him will fade, a footnote like Freud and his cocaine. These thoughts may be my own druggy past that's calling me for reconciliation. I still have a feeling for that other plane I used to visit. Nah, that's overstating it. All that Castaneda stuff I DID NOT experience. The few times I went tripping on LSD it scared me too much, so I never took the very high doses required to experience a true shift of plane, if that's really what's supposed to happen. I did take enough to produce some lovely patterns, though, and still one of the favorite moments of my life is seeing a sunrise from the summit of Haleakala, 10,000 feet, frigid and HIGH above the cloud layer. It's funny though, as the effects would wear off and my eyes stopped playing tricks, I often found myself with lots of energy--energy that I'd use to clean up the house (symbolically cleaning up my act?). Somewhere around 1975 I promised never to do LSD again. It amplified too many things and I felt too out of control. Cocaine? Frankly I was too poor to get into it but I accepted contributions. It was good to work on. But like George Carlin said, "Cocaine makes you feel like a new man. Trouble is, new man wants a hit too!" One DJ acquaintance who got into shooting it went very weird, very fast and is probably long dead by now. It was also the reason for my one experience with heroin. I snorted it thinking it was cocaine. I spent a few hours lying in a corner thinking, "this is supposed to be fun?" Alcohol was never big with me because I seem to have a unique aversion to headaches and retching. Tobacco makes me retch too. Homey never did play downers either. Marijuana was another thing. I smoked every day for about 7 years back in that period. I was operating with a load ALL the time. Fortunately I wasn't doing much important--deejaying late at night on the radio, frisbeeing in the afternoons, getting around by bicycle--so I didn't hurt anybody doing it. During that time at University of Hawaii everyone I knew smoked too, at the beach, at concerts, on the air at the radio station. I would partake in as many as a dozen joints in a day. Fortunately it was an easy school and I ended up with a bachelor degree in communications by 1978. It only took me NINE YEARS. The worst things about pot: I can't read very well stoned, my fingers go fumbly and it made me too damn lazy. Eventually I moved back to the mainland and through the 80's my pot smoking had a slow withering. No epiphany, no 12 step program, but no slamming the door either. The last time I smoked was many months ago, I can't remember exactly (...but then memory is a problem too isn't it?). My favorite drug these days is caffeine, no contest. I don't mess up my brain cells with anything at work; my day job demands focus. I'm nice, clean-cut and responsible, but I still enjoy listening to Grateful Dead in the office because their long meandering jams are great for noodling through spreadsheets and databases. What's wrong with this picture? Too much coffee almost gave me ulcers and I've suppressed my artistic side. (Thank God for the Cosmik Debris steam vent and my DJ sessions at the local coffee house or I'd go nuts.) I loved the inspirations, the cosmic free associations pot could (can still?) unloose. I think that's where Jerry Garcia was at in his prodigious drug use, but even he realized he had limits. He died of a heart attack in a drug-rehab center, trying to clean out his system. I cannot give blank slate approval to all psychoactive drugs like Terrence McKenna. Each drug is different and each body is different in its reaction. So prohibition is the answer? No, it's dangerous because it makes bullets fly. But then if it was all legal we're definitely going to see more aimless fools drunk and stoned at the same time thinking, "sure I can drive a car." Legalize and fight the drug war with clinics? Not perfect but better. Moderation, sort of a variation on the Buddhist middle way has to be taught. Unfortunately to most of Jerry's legions of Dead Heads, moderation is an alien concept. That's sad because I think, with a bit more moderation on his part, we possibly could have enjoyed a few more of those lovely Garcia guitar runs. In the end, Jerry was no saint but I am proud to have a quote of his on my wall: Simple kindness really matters. And on that note the Closet is closed until next month. ___________________________________________________________________________ ENTER TO WIN AN OMEGA MEN CD!! Just send an e-mail message to moonbaby@serv.net stating your name, your normal e-mail address, and some indication that you wish to enter your name in the Omega Men CD drawing, and that's all there is to it. Five lucky winners will receive copies of The Spy-Fi Sound Of The Omega Men from MuSick Recordings. None of the information will be shared in any way with anyone other than Sparky Lou (the giveaway guy) and his Cosmik Debris cronies. That means you won't end up with a mailbox full of sales pitches. We have no ulterior motives. We just like giving stuff away. Good luck. ____________________________________________________________________________ COSMIK CORRESPONDENCE - Letters From Our Readers A GROUSE LITTLE LETTER FROM THE LAND OF OZ Cosmik: As well as the Ben Vaughn article I really enjoyed reading the one in issue 24 on GT Stringer. I have their two cds and reckon they're grouse! (Oz slang popular in the 70's and now making a big comeback in the 90's, roughly translates as cool, awesome etc.) They are criminally ignored in Oz. I first discovered them through Phil Dirt's page! Whilst over in Adelaide (which GT Trev [Ed.Note: nickname of sax man Trevor Ramsay) lovingly refers to as Adlebrain) I caught them live whilst taking a breather from the Womad world music festival last Feb. Keep spreadin' the word on them. They're currently recording their third cd. Regards Ian McPhail Melbourne, Australia (Ian, you are so right! The word must be spread. GT Stringer is one of the best bands I've ever heard. Talk about diversity! Jazz, blues, funk, surf, and a bunch of other sounds, sometimes all in one song? Gimme more of that, please. By the way, thanks for the new word. "Grouse" is a new one on me, but you can bet I'll be driving my friends nuts with it now. - Ed.) IS IT VEGETABLE, ANIMAL OR VISUAL? To the editors of Cosmik Debris - The artwork in your magazine is wonderful. We download the cover every month and use it for a desktop for Windows 95. My son wants me to ask one question. What's a coLeslAw? Whatever it is, please keep making it. Anne Cowan USA (Dear Anne. A coLeSLAw (you must get the upper/lowercase sequence correct!) is... well, it's coLeSLAw, our resident artist. Actually, he prefers the new politically correct title of "Visual Realization Facilitator," or VRF. I've watched the boy work. It's amazing. He sits at his computer and tries this and that, and suddenly he'll yell "YES! YES!!" just like Meg Ryan in When Harry Met Sally. It's incredible. And fifteen minutes later he'll have this amazing piece of art I can't stop staring at. Another interesting factoid about coLeSLAw: if you walk back and forth, his eyes follow you all around the room! Freaks me out. You should check out coLeSLAw's Gallery at http://www.serv.net/~coleslaw/ because he has a ton of his stuff online. - Ed.) WHAT ABOUT FRANK!? Cosmik - I looked at your mag (just glanced through it), and I think it looks good, so I bookmarked it. I just wondered, though, how you could have a publication called Cosmik Debris and not even mention Zappa on page one!? T.C. Richards Canada (We're named after one of Frank's songs, and we've had more than a few articles and interviews that are Frank-related, but we never intended this to be a ZappaZine. We do get this question quite often, and some people get very angry when they find out we're about all kinds of music. We all do share a high opinion of Frank Zappa and his music, however, and we're always open to the idea of an article or an interview with one of his former bandmates. We just like to spread them out a bit to avoid promoting the notion that we ARE a ZappaZine. By the way, we used to mention him on page one, but as the WWW evolved, so did the definition of "page one," so now it's just not there anymore. Thanks, by the way, for asking this question nicely. ONE guy actually wrote "hey, you #&$%, whassamatta? Frank $#%!ing Zappa not GOOD enough for you?" Scary. - Ed.) BUT WILL HE STILL RESPECT US IN THE MORNING? Dear Editors, I'm grateful to you for directing the efforts necessary to put out this excellent e-zine. I'm always pleasantly amazed at the cutting edge interviews and spotlights of what I consider to be the freshest and most interesting segment of the music business. Quite often, I learn about an artist through Cosmik Debris, then later on I'll start to hear about that artist in other avenues of the media as the rest of the world turns on to them. In other words, you have a keen eye for new, up-and-coming talent that I really appreciate. The amazing part is that you do all this without the in-your-face advertising that makes so many other sources such a drag. I don't know how you pay the bills, and I'd understand if you had to go to some form of advertising, but I'll enjoy the refreshing atmosphere while it lasts. Dan Lynch USA (Thanks for the nice note, Dan. Criticism is helpful, but heaps of praise are waaay more fun. We never try to be one "the cutting edge," because that would involve interviewing and writing about lots of artists we don't care about. What we do is write about artists that we really love, and every now and then one of 'em will suddenly break out into the spotlight a few months later. So I guess I'm saying it's blind luck. We're glad you're enjoying it all, though. I should warn you about something... We haven't had ads up until now, but it's not cheap to run Cosmik Debris, so we're in the process of preparing for the "ad era." Starting with a few simple buttons, and eventually expanding to a few banners. We know people hate this, but it beats the livin' snot outta charging subscription fees. We are hoping to have some entertaining forms of advertising to soften the blow. More on that later. So bear with us and understand that advertising is sometimes a necessary thing. - Ed.) NOW LET'S NOT BRING POLITICS INTO IT! Hi, Cosmik Debris. While I was reading my favorite part of your zine, Between Zero and One, it suddenly occurs to me it's this angry political thing in a music zine, and there's nothing else like it in your pages. Don't you think that's weird? Name withheld by request (Well, here's the deal. When we started Cosmik Debris we were more like a zine than we are now. By that I mean we were more into the political and social issues than we are now. We still care about all of that, but we seem to have evolved into being almost entirely about music. If you've been with us since the beginning, you might remember things like Jim Andrews' Urbania column, Shaun Dale's Political Playbook series, and our anti-censorship issue [July 1995]. And, of course, Between Zero & One, written by Steven Leith. Now, that column is our only holdover from the original "zine-like" format. In fact, when you think about it, our whole slate of columns is our "zine-like" section. We've got Steven talking about politics, Rusty talkin' zen, I wrote about porno movies at a mini mart, fer Chrissakes, and David Walley writing his strange little fables. Wait a second here... Phil Dirt's column is the only one that IS about music on a consistent basis. So what the hell are you talking about?! Get OUTTA here, Name Withheld! - Ed.) - - - - - Got something to say to the editors or writers of Cosmik Debris? Just drop 'em some e-mail at moonbaby@serv.net and let them know what's on your mind. E-mail addresses will only be posted if you request it, and names can be withheld if you're truly paranoid. You will be notified via e-mail if we include your message. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- E-MAIL ADDRESSES FOR CONTACTING COSMIK DEBRIS' WRITERS DJ Johnson (Editor)..........moonbaby@serv.net Shaun Dale.(Assoc. Editor)...stdale@well.com Jeff Apter...................jeffa@netaxis.com Ann Arbor....................Nprice@aol.com coLeSLAw.....................coleslaw@serv.net Robert Cummings..............rcumming@csrlink.net Phil Dirt....................reverb@cruzio.com Louise Johnson...............aquaria@serv.net Steven Leith.................leith@speakeasy.org Lauren Marshall..............Ocean@pluto.njcc.com Steve Marshall...............SteveM@pluto.njcc.com Rusty Pipes..................RustyKLST@aol.com Paul Remington...............prem@frontiernet.net John Sekerka.................jsekerka@gsc.NRCan.gc.ca Sparky Lou...................sparkylou@hotmail.com David Walley.................dgwalley@bcn.net Cosmik Debris' WWW site..http://www.cosmik.com/cosmikdebris Subscription requests....moonbaby@serv.net coLeSLAw's gAllARy is at http://www.serv.net/~coleslaw/ Shaun Dale's web site is at http://www.zipcon.com/stdale Phil Dirt's Surf Site is at http://members.cruzio.com:80/~reverb/central.html