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Music Reviews G-O
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- Grant Lee Buffalo-Mighty Joe Moon (1994, Slash/Warner Bros.).
Sorta folk, but not really. Screaming guitars, but only occasionally.
Lennonesque songwriting and the smoothest, most unappreciated voice in pop music,
constantly. Grant Lee Phillips follows up the promise from his bands 1993 debut
Fuzzy with a lovely set of songs about disaster ridden Los Angeles
("Mockingbirds") and historical references galore (the title track), framed
within their three piece ensemble and a string section here and there. I hate to say this,
but perhaps Phillips biggest problem is that hes too smart for his own good.
Smart pop has a very loyal, but too, too small, fan base. Just ask Squeeze and Crowded
House. ****
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- Information Society-Hack (1990, Tommy Boy/Reprise).
Called the missing link between the Beastie Boys and Duran Duran,
Information Society took the Star Trek sampled, Latin heavy techno pop of their debut and
raised everything up a notch. The sampling and beat stealing rivals the Beasties
vastly underrated Pauls Boutique, with the Beasties themselves popping up all over
the title track. Producer and former Scritti Politti drummer Fred Maher loosens the reins
a bit, and while sometimes it can get annoying (they added a few too many bits of gobbledy
gook in between songs), I was having too much fun playing "Spot that sample."
*** ½
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- Jayhawks-Tomorrow The Green Grass (1995, American Recordings).
Minneapolis Jayhawks were unfortunate enough to release their
major label debut, 1992s Hollywood Town Hall, about a year or so after the explosion
of the Black Crowes. The bands had very little in common, but comparisons persisted
nonetheless. The Jayhawks shed that ghost with Tomorrow The Green Grass, a stunning
collection of rock songs with a little twang that owes more to the Eagles than the Crowes,
though they dont have much in common with the Eagles, either. Jayhawk singers Mark
Olson and Gary Louris would rather wear their hearts on their sleeves and play vulnerable,
whereas Don Henley would be too busy kicking a girl while shes down. What really
sets this album above the other Jayhawks albums is the three part harmonies between Olson,
(one of the most underrated singers in rock), Louris and keyboardist Karen Grotberg.
Grotberg, whose contributions to the string drenched "Id Run Away" and the
last-call-for-alcohol "Reds Song" gives the Jayhawks that extra push that
Hollywood Town Hall didnt have. Sadly, this was the first and last time those three
worked together (Olson left the band to go solo), but for one brief moment, the Jayhawks
had it all. **** ½
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- Jellyfish-Spilt Milk (Charisma/Virgin).
Who could have predicted that Jellyfish, a group of San Francisco flower
power kids with serious chops but only minor success, would be the most influential band
of the 90s power pop scene? I certainly didnt, yet the title is a well
deserved one. Spilt Milk, their second (and, sadly, last) album was bombastic masterpiece
of over the top symphonic blasts, monstrous guitar riffs and some of the sharpest and
wittiest lyrics youve ever heard. Where their debut, Bellybutton, was almost kiss
ass tribute to the Beatles, Spilt Milk has them saluting such 70s hitmakers as Queen
("Joining a Fan Club"), Supertramp ("New Mistake"), even 10cc
("Sabrina, Paste and Plato"). Big, powerful and insanely clever, Jellyfish was
far more than the sum of its parts. *****
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- Ke's -I Am (1995, BMG).
This is an album that I stumbled upon courtesy of a coworker of
Debs, who gave her the song "Strange World" on a mix tape. All I can say
is, I wish I had heard it sooner, and I wish BMG had done a better job promoting this, as
it is a wonderful album. The arrangements remind me of some of Seals work, with
acoustic guitars fluttering over layers of keyboards and drum programs. The songwriting is
quite solid, though he does borrow a few tunes quite liberally ("Strange World"
owes a debt to Bryan Ferrys "Kiss and Tell," and "I Think Its
Time" is almost a rewrite of the Stones "Wild Horses"). If there is
anything holding this man back from superstardom, its his voice, which is an
occasionally grating tenor that sounds like hes being prodded with something. An
acquired taste, to be sure. But I found the music so lovely that the voice doesnt
bother me at all. ****
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- Kula Shaker-K (1996, Columbia/Sony).
Just when you thought the early 90s were over, along comes
Sanskrit spouting, mysticism bent Crispian Mills and Kula Shaker, serving up some of the
best dance rock grooves since the Stone Roses. Working with legendary producer John Leckie
certainly helped, as this album could very easily have wound up half as entertaining as it
is. "Taatva" rolls with the feel of a blown White Album track courtesy of the
George Harrisonesque slide guitar. Kula Shakers biggest liability is that everything
theyre doing has been done before, but upon its release at the end of 1996, with
grunge finally dying its slow death, this album sounded just fine to me. *** 1/2
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- kd lang-Ingenue (1992, Sire/Warner Bros.).
lang opens her heart, bares her then tortured soul and delivers the best
album of her career. Layering it with a slick pop gloss compared to her previous
countrified outings, lang assembles a lush landscape of love, longing and despair. Being
so heartbroken never sounded so good. *** ½
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- Lightning Seeds-Dizzy Heights (See Desert Island Discs)
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- Aimee Mann-Whatever (1993, Imago).
Aimee Manns first album of new material since 1988, when Til
Tuesday bowed out with Everythings Different Now, finds Aimee in the same jilted
frame of mind, but the musical landscape around her has changed considerably. Gone are the
cushy synths and only-in-the-studio drum sounds, replaced with a rawer yet much fuller
sound. Jon Brion, who toured with Til Tuesday on their 1989 tour, says on board as
producer, and proves to be the cheerful yin to Manns jaded yang. Even on songs laced
with bitter recriminations, like the charged "Say Anything" ("If you were
everything you say/Things would be different today/Though Id be happy to
believe/Id have to be much more naive"), Brion fills them with bubbling organ
riffs and layers of vocals that turns it into something much happier than it sounds. Aimee
Mann has damn near cornered the market on the love gone wrong song, and on Whatever, being
dumped never sounded so much fun. **** (Now issued by DGC)
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- Aimee Mann-Im With Stupid (1995, DGC).
Tremendously defying the odds and getting better with each release, Mann
strips away the layers of sound from her lovely 1993 solo debut, Whatever, and turns in a
wonderful lo fi album. With longtime collaborator Jon Brion in tow, Mann seems to have met
her match with creating instantly familiar songs about rather depressing subjects, and
bringing along Squeezes Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook for a couple tunes
certainly didnt hurt. Now if she would only do some silly video featuring her making
a scene at some swanky place, maybe shed start selling records again. If there is
any justice, Aimee Mann will have her day once more. ****
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- George Michael-Listen Without Prejudice Vol. I (1990, Columbia/CBS).
Here was George Michael asking, pleading, to be taken seriously, and for
the most part, the public didnt buy it. Too bad, because his songwriting had
improved dramatically over his gazillion selling 1987 album Faith. (Did you know
gazillion is in Microsofts dictionary? I just found out by writing this)
Michael was finished being a boy toy and pop star, and wanted to be a musician, and he
found out the hard way that people liked him better as a boy toy. When I wrote a review
for the Ohio University Post on this album, I said that this was Georges Sgt.
Pepper, meaning he wanted people to listen to it as if it were by another artist, the same
way the Beatles wanted to step out of themselves and do something completely different. I
still stand by that claim now, though hindsight makes it more obvious why this album
didnt do as well. The singles from the album were all about as subtle as
sledgehammers, starting with the heavy handed "Praying For Time" ("Charity
is a coat you wear twice a year"), "Mothers Pride" (a song about a
mother losing her husband and son to war, which was shamelessly released during the
Persian Gulf Distraction) and "Freedom 90," which has fared the best
because at least it was upbeat. However, the song that most people missed was
"Cowboys and Angels," a rapturous seven minute jazz piece that stand as one of
the best songs, if not the best song, Michael has ever written. Listen Without Prejudice
could have been a classic, if Michael hadnt lost focus on what made him such a star
in the first place. As it is, its a good idea, with some of his absolute best work,
taken way too far. ****
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- Neds Atomic Dustbin-God Fodder (1991, Sony).
Sporting the unique lineup of two bass players and only one guitarist
certainly separated Neds from the rest of the Manchester pack in more ways than one
(they had no business being lumped with any of those bands, but timing is everything, I'm
afraid). But they also had some catchy songs and a ferocious live show to go with it. The
opening track, "Kill Your Television," grabs you by the scruff of your neck and
it barely lets up from there. A band that seemed destined for greatness, until Nirvana and
Teenage Fanclub stole the limelight and give Neds a serious identity complex. (their
second album was unfocused, and the third was a cry for help from a rock band trapped in a
techno world) Too bad, because this was a sound worth following up on. *** ½
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- Nirvana-Nevermind (See Desert Island Discs)
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- William Orbit-Strange Cargo III (1993, IRS).
Longtime remixer and king of ambient music scores big on his third solo
outing. From the pulsing, erotic beats of "Water From a Vine Leaf," with the
sultry Beth Orton on vocals, to the new age synth strings of "Hazy Shade of
Random," Orbit creates the soundtrack without the film. Its also the warmest
sounding machine generated music around and a great alternative for people who love techno
music but dont care for the relentless high speed Kill-your-mother beats associated
with it. ****
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