💾 Archived View for clemat.is › saccophore › library › ezines › textfiles › ezines › CONSUMABLE › c0… captured on 2022-01-08 at 15:15:34.

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-03)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

== ISSUE 209 ====  CONSUMABLE ONLINE  ======== [May 9, 2000]

  Editor:             Bob Gajarsky
                         E-mail: editor@consumableonline.com
  Managing Editor:    Lang Whitaker
  Sr. Correspondents: Daniel Aloi, Joann D. Ball, Chris Hill, Bill 
                      Holmes, Tim Kennedy, Jon Steltenpohl
  Correspondents:     Michelle Aguilar, Paul Andersen, Christina 
                      Apeles, Niles J. Baranowski, Jason Cahill, 
                      Matthew Carlin, John Davidson, Andrew Duncan, 
                      Matt Fink, Krisjanis Gale, Jade Hughes, Paul Hanson,  
                      Scott Hudson, Jianda Johnson, Steve Kandell, 
                      David J. Klug, Reto Koradi, Robin Lapid, Wes 
                      Long, I.K. MacLeod, Al Muzer, Wilson Neate,
                      Mike Pfeiffer, Linda Scott,  Don Share, Scott 
                      Slonaker, Kerwin So, Chelsea Spear, Michael 
                      Van Gorden, Simon West
  Technical Staff:    Chris Candreva, David Landgren, Dave Pirmann

 Address all comments to staff@consumableonline.com ; subscription 
information is given at the end of this issue. 
==================================================================
	All articles in Consumable remain (C) copyright Consumable 
and their author(s). 
==================================================================
                            .------------.
                            |  Contents  |
                            `------------'
INTERVIEW:  The Posies - John Davidson
REVIEW: The Jayhawks, _Smile_ - Bill Holmes
REVIEW: Macha / Bedhead, _Macha Loved Bedhead_ - Kerwin So
REVIEW: Six By Seven, _The Closer You Get_ - Paul Andersen
REVIEW: Willard Grant Conspiracy, _Mojave_ - Chris Hill
REVIEW: Apples In Stereo, _The Discovery of a World Inside 
   the Moone_ - John Davidson
REVIEW: Ass Ponys, _Some Stupid With A Flare Gun_ - David J. Klug
REVIEW: North Mississippi Allstars, _Shake Hands With Shorty_ - I.K. MacLeod
REVIEW: Sven Vath, _Contact_ - Chris Hill
REVIEW: The Distillers, _The Distillers_ - David J. Klug
REVIEW: Smog, _Dongs of Sevotion_ - Andrew Duncan
REVIEW: Great Big Sea, _Turn_ - Reto Koradi
BRIEFS: Bob Lowery, Step Kings, Ray Ashley
NEWS: Sean Eric McGill, Promise Ring, Z-100
TOUR DATES: Dope / Primer 65, Korn, Meshell Ndegeocello, Noisepop, 
   Red Hot Chili Peppers / Foo Fighters / Muse, Elliott Smith, The The, 
   Train / Gas Giants, Veruca Salt, Wire, Workhorse Movement / Kittie
Back Issues of Consumable
---
	INTERVIEW:  The Posies
		- John Davidson
	Power pop purveyors from the grunge-infected environs of 
Seattle, the Posies maintained an on-the-verge profile over the 
course of five albums and a smattering of compilation appearances 
from 1987 to 1998.  Though never a huge hit outside of indie circles, 
founding members Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow nonetheless built a 
strong worldwide fanbase with their strong songwriting, heavy 
touring, and high-visibility side projects such as their backing 
the occasionally re-formed Big Star.  However, the Internet has 
helped in part to keep their catalog alive, and taking a break 
from his recent work with R.E.M., Ken Stringfellow recently talked 
to Consumable about the plethora of projects (a live album, a 
"greatest hits", a boxed set, an acoustic tour) that are appearing 
from this allegedly defunct band.

	CO:  How did you work that (greatest hits disc) out with 
Geffen, since on the boxed set there's going to be demos and stuff?
	KS:  The guy approached us about putting it out (from Not 
Lame Records), and I said that we were happy to assemble everything 
and find all the masters and stuff, but we're not going to be 
involved in figuring anything out with Geffen.  "You've gotta go 
talk to them.  Any tracks that they own, you work it out," we told 
him.  So whatever he did, he did, and it worked fine.
	CO:  Did you provide him with masters you had, or did he pick 
up snippets along the way?
	KS:  We put the thing together.  There have been things floating 
around, like live tapes, in varying degrees of quality.  There were 
things that people thought, "Yeah, we wanna hear that!" from this 
bootleg tape or whatever.  We actually have most of the masters for 
that stuff, and right now I'm kind of in the mastering process.  I've 
got reference CDs of the first four discs that I've been listening to, 
and making sure the timing and levels and stuff is all good.  I don't 
know what all is out there; it seems like everything gets out there at 
some point.  The advantage is that we've gone through and taken the 
time to EQ everything with the best possible master we could find and 
assemble it.  It's really good sounding.  Some of the sound qualities 
that we heard originally was pretty atrocious.  All our stuff we have 
now sounds really good.  I've listened to half of it on my home stereo 
now and it sounds really good.  There's like, 22 songs that no one's 
ever heard, which is pretty wild.
	CO:  Demo versions or actual songs?
	KS:  Mostly demos.  There are a few studio things, but a lot 
of four-track things.
	CO:  Is this a Jon & Ken thing that you've been working on 
together or have you done things separately?  Is like the old days in 
that sense?
	KS:  Well, we're only mastering, so it's not like we're making 
anything new. We all had a good laugh at stuff, though.  Actually, Jon 
and I played a show in Seattle in February, an acoustic show, that went 
really well.  We recorded that, and we might even put that out.  I 
actually haven't heard the tapes of the show yet, though, but there's 
a possibility that it might come out.  Either way, I think that Jon 
and I are gonna hit the road.at least that's our intention at this 
point, to do acoustic shows.
	CO:  As you look back on it, since it's been a few years since 
you sort of officially called it quits, is it something that you have 
a hard time letting go of?  Or do you think you've artistically moved on?
	KS:  Well, I think that we sort of have.  But there's no rules.  
I've thought about things, but not, "Oh, we're definitely gonna do 
that," or anything.  One step at a time.  Right now, there's this tour 
thing, and I've got my own stuff going on and he's got his own stuff 
going on.  That will definitely continue.  There's a lot going on.
	CO:  As far as the Geffen _Greatest Hits_ collection, had you 
been working on your own independent boxed set before they started 
gathering tracks together or was that a leftover label obligation to you?
	KS:  No, they didn't have an obligation but they have a right to 
do it.  I was kind of surprised, actually.  We started working on the 
boxed set and then we got a call right out of the blue from Mike at 
Universal, who's been putting together a lot of these reissues, and 
he was really into doing a "best-of."  I thought, "That's great."  I 
thought it was very interesting because it was kind of approached like 
a "greatest hits", and we didn't really have any hits, but they could 
still put one out.  We kinda helped them.  We told them that we were 
working on this boxed set, and kind of narrowed things down so that 
they don't overlap.  There's just stuff from the albums on the "best-of", 
plus stuff from compilations and a B-side or two.  There's really no 
B-sides on the boxed set.  I think there's one. Essentially, they're 
totally separate.
	CO:  Have you ever had any desire to re-work your songs?  
When I think of "greatest hits" I'm reminded back to when the Police 
broke up, Sting's original idea was to re-work a bunch of their songs, 
and then release that as their "greatest hits."
	KS:  He's crazy.  From the fan point of view, if I ever went 
out and got a "greatest hits" and got messed up versions, I'd be pretty 
bummed.
	CO:  Sting's rationale was that songs take on a new meaning 
after playing them for four or five years.
	KS:  To that I would say, "Live album."
	CO:  Getting back to the boxed set, was it fan input that led you 
to pick what you're picking for inclusion?
	KS:  A little bit, yeah.  There was a couple of people:  the guy 
from the label and then a guy from the Posies mailing list.  The guy from 
the list had a few tapes.  The "best-of" thing is all the singles, plus a 
couple of key "shoulda been" singles, plus a couple of B-sides.  The 
boxed set is just "never coulda been" singles.  That's kind of the 
difference between the two projects.
	CO:  Do you think that the Internet offers a lot of opportunity 
for things like this to happen with regards to distribution?
	KS:  For sure.  The whole thing that really opens it up is the 
international angle, and then getting this kind of thing publicized 
outside and even inside of the U.S.  It's kind of an obscure thing.
---
	REVIEW: The Jayhawks, _Smile_ (Columbia)
		- Bill Holmes
	Brian Wilson fans, fear not. Despite the record's title 
(and a track titled "Mr. Wilson"), The Jayhawks are not trying to 
usurp your leader or ride his coattails. And for god sakes, naming 
a record _Smile_ is not blasphemous, although it may have taken 
balls to do so. Allow me to prescribe this simple task. Listen to 
the title track - the opening cut on this record - and get swept up 
in its irresistible, anthemic chorus. Smile? Try NOT to.
	"I love what we used to be, but I'm interested in where else 
we can go", Gary Louris is quoted in the band's bio. And in fifteen 
years, the band has bent and turned and changed, but never so 
dramatically as when Mark Olson left the band and Louris' vision led 
to the Big Star leanings of 1997's _Sound Of Lies_. That baby step is 
now a confident gait, and if the last record warmed your heart, 
_Smile_ is Chapter Two of the new direction.
	You might be surprised to see Bob Ezrin listed as producer, 
as his reputation was built on bands like KISS and Alice Cooper. But 
Ezrin takes no job lightly, and his response to a tape of fifty 
possible tracks was a three page letter analyzing what each one 
needed. (Indeed, in an interview last year, Alice Cooper referred to 
Ezrin as the "sixth member of the band"). The result is a more 
rhythm-oriented disc, layered with guitars and drums and vocals, but 
still the essence of the band. "Somewhere In Ohio" starts out like a 
soft Spring breeze drifting through the window, but then the guitars 
slam in, and now we're nose-to-nose with Wilco.
	"What Led Me To This Town" and "A Break In The Clouds" find 
Louris and new keyboardist Jen Gunderman in a vocal duet that would 
make Gram and Emmylou fans. er.smile. But "Life Goes By" has Ezrin 
steering them (and us) into psych-pop territory, more aggressively 
raucous; wah-wah guitars and percussion driving the song like the Gas 
Giants or Gin Blossoms might do. Then the brakes are slammed, "Broken 
Harpoon" centered on the acoustic guitar and the seamless harmony of 
four vocals fronted by Louris' lilting lead.
	"I'm Gonna Make You Love Me" is probably the first single, a 
hybrid of Ronnie Lane and latter-day Fleetwood Mac that might just 
leapfrog the boyband stranglehold on the airwaves. And if it doesn't, 
that's radio's loss, not yours. Because ten tracks in, after the 
rocking "Pretty Thing", The Jayhawks seal the deal with four killer 
tracks. "Mr. Wilson" is as lyrically thoughtful as it is musically 
stimulating, "In My Wildest Dreams" dabbles in folk psychedelia with 
great success, "Better Days" beautifully brings the spirit of The 
Band into the year 2000, and "Baby Baby Baby" forges energetic rock, 
great vocals and a harrowing story into an unforgettable brew that 
will have you arguing over the replay button and playing the whole 
damned thing through again start to finish.
	Even if you fell on the other side of the fence after the 
Louris/Olson split, you have to admire this work on its own terms. 
Olson will no doubt continue to make good music. But the Jayhawks 
have just hit back-to-back home runs.
---
	REVIEW: Macha / Bedhead, _Macha Loved Bedhead_ (Jetset)
		- Kerwin So
	Bedhead was a quintet from Dallas whose quiet guitar 
creations rode crests of swelling dynamics to unsheathe the 
throbbing heart of passion within.  If anyone proved a 
shining example of the sub-subgenre of slowcore, it was 
Bedhead.  Although they never broke out of cult status, 
their following was intensely loyal, including their friends 
in the band Macha, who are best recognized for blending 
Southeast Asian sounds into songs crafted with distinctly 
indie rock sensibilities.  Bedhead's songwriters, the Kadane 
brothers, were high school friends and bandmates of Macha's 
McKay brothers; thus, the two bands shared personal as well 
as musical ties.  _Macha Loved Bedhead_ is the result of 
Bedhead recording skeletal drum and guitar tracks, then 
sending them over for Macha to complete.
	Fans of Bedhead will be disappointed to learn that 
the band has not actually reunited, but heartened to hear 
that this six-song EP leans heavily towards the Bedhead side 
of the equation.  The languid ride cymbal and relaxed tempos 
set the stage for Macha to add their signature marimbas, 
electronic washes, and other minor flourishes, but the song's 
pace and Joshua McKay's narcoticized vocals evoke Bedhead's 
spirit in a way that only someone who intimately knew the 
band could pull off.  The only place where Macha takes firm 
control is at the very end of "Only the Bodies Survive," 
which transforms a straightforward mellow rock song into a 
winding journey through a dense forest, populated with digital 
birds and primates echoing their calls at every turn. If you 
watch your CD player closely you'll note that this journey 
takes up tracks 5 through 85 and lasts several minutes.  When 
you emerge from this time warp you land in completely alien 
territory, where a push-button telephone serves as the melodic 
base for a very agreeable cover of Cher's mega-hit "Believe."  
No fooling -- this is straight out of the minds of Sid and 
Marty Krofft.  And that's a good thing.
	All in all, _Macha Loved Bedhead_ is an enjoyable 
half-hour, and a must for fans of either band.  And if you're 
one of those people who must hear every version of the Cher 
song, then delay no longer.
---
	REVIEW: Six By Seven, _The Closer You Get_ (Mantra/Beggars Banquet)
		- Paul Andersen
	If you are looking for soft, seductive candlelight music, steer 
as far away as you can from this album. It is not for the light-hearted. 
However, if you want to experience some of Britain's finest angst, awash 
in a loud, angry mix meant to assault the senses (like the Stooges or 
the MC5's, this is music best experienced LOUD), juxtaposed with moments 
of quiet and space thrown in that are every bit as fierce, then you are 
in luck.
	Six By Seven, a quintet of lads from Nottingham, England, are 
pissed off. When Chris Olley rants "if you eat junk/you become junk," 
he's not talking in allegories. He means it. The allegories arrive in 
"One Easy Ship Away," when he sings, "I'm not sad now putting a gun to 
my head. . . I feel hope now with my head down on this track." Here 
the words take a forked road: is it a song about suicide, or about 
survival in a messed-up world? Lay your money down on the latter, 
because hopefulness, however dark things may appear, emerges on a 
number of tracks. Six By Seven is committed to seeing it through to 
the end.
	Throughout, the music is full of scorch-the-paint-off-the-walls 
guitars and swirling Hammond organisms. Epic in scope, the songs are 
actually shorter pieces than on their excellent 1998 debut, _The Things 
We Make_. That album came out on Interscope here in the States, but 
the band got dropped amongst all the fallout from Universal 
consolidating their new labels into a corporate mess. Dusting 
themselves off after taking it on the chin, _The Closer You Get_ shows 
a band standing strong, thumbing their noses at the world. It will 
take more than record company tomfoolery to knock them off their track.
---
	REVIEW: Willard Grant Conspiracy, _Mojave_ (Slow River)
		- Chris Hill
	Love isn't a panacea in the Willard Grant world.  Rather 
than curing all ills, love's more likely found causing them on 
_Mojave_, an album as starkly beautiful as its namesake desert.  
Couples, burned by the sun and emotion, whirl about each other in 
narrow confines and echoing houses, their decaying orbits leading 
to claustrophobic misery and regret.  Not the most appropriate cd 
to play during the daylight hours, but at night, when the bedroom 
candles burn low and accentuate the shadows they once kept at 
bay, you'll find _Mojave_ makes a fitting soundtrack.
	"I guess that I should have seen/We were far from a 
perfect fit/Whatever it was you needed/I just couldn't give":  a 
conclusion that reoccurs throughout the album.  "Another Lonely 
Night", "How to Get to Heaven", "Love Has No Meaning", "Front 
Porch", "Color of the Sun": all songs that explain and extend the 
melancountry reputation of WGC.  Not a condemnation of love on 
the whole, but tales of individuals and intentions gone awry, 
spun with dense, brutal imagery in rich, well-chosen words:  "I 
can still feel your body/Like a bruise/Against my side", "I've 
seen every tear/You've ever shed/I can count them on one hand/ 
Have five fingers left", "You say everything/I don't want to hear/ 
I'll pretend I don't mind/As long as you're near".
	Like Lambchop, WGC is a collective:  sixteen musicians 
are listed in the cd credits, with the humorous "Anyone else who 
tells you they play on this probably does" attached to avoid hurt 
feelings.  Only six are given specific mention on their website; 
the rest enter as part of a revolving cast that changes from cd 
to cd.  Unidentified on their first two cds, the band wished the 
attention focused on the songs before the players.  Having proven 
their qualifications with two albums and two EPs, the album now 
includes credits, and the cast steps forth to deserved applause.
	Robert Fisher, vocalist and lyricist, stands under the 
brightest spotlight, being the frontman.  His vocals manage to 
simultaneously express the weariness and optimism of his words.  
Edith Frost (with an impressive history all her own) provides a 
counterpoint to his male heartache, echoing Fisher on a number of 
the tracks.  Guitarists: when three are named (Sean O'Brien, 
James Apt, Paul Austin), crediting favorite passages is near 
impossible.  (Austin, however, merits a personal thank-you for 
beginning the fine American Music Club/Mark Eitzel mailing list.)  
Eric Groat on mandolin and David Curry on violin/viola both 
work on the sidelines to add distinctly noticeable, yet somehow 
unobtrusive, touches.  For example, "Catnap in the Boom Boom 
Room" has Groat adding a gentle strumming layer to contrast Mr. 
Curry's edgy, subterranean bowing.  To namedrop, the remainder of 
the crew includes players from Come, the Silos, and Sugar.  But 
singling out players is like praising one peacock feather over 
another - the strength and the beauty of _Mojave_ lies in the 
group and their interaction.  The band mentions this on their 
homepage, relishing that the songs don't remain the same, but 
evolve and morph with the changing of the membership.
	One bright part about a fanbase stronger outside their 
native shores:  the band is currently working on the follow-up to 
_Mojave_, projected for a fall European release.  (_Mojave_ also 
saw prior release in Europe.)  Keep up with the latest Conspiracy 
developments at either the band's homegrown website (point your 
browser to http://world.std.com/~dahlia) or their label website
(found at http://www.slowriver.com).
---
	REVIEW: Apples In Stereo, _The Discovery of a World 
		Inside the Moone_ (Spin Art)
		 - John Davidson
	Going where many indie snobs refuse to acknowledge, 
the Elephant Six Recording Company has never hidden their 
love of melody; they've simply found ways to make it more 
interesting.  It's a modernized time warp where the Beatles, 
Brian Wilson, the Zombies, and others never need cower to 
the appeal of Korn, Kid Rock, or the Backstreet Boys.  
Rather, Elephant Six provides a forum for groups to stretch 
the limits of pop music without becoming cloyingly artistic, 
without losing the sunny appeal that comes with a memorable 
hook.
	And to that, all things Elephant Six seem to branch 
out from Robert Schneider and his main project, The Apples 
In Stereo.  While other bands in the stable may be more 
colorfully ambitious (see Olivia Tremor Control) or more 
folk than pop (see Neutral Milk Hotel), the Apples have 
always had the closest bloodline to _Revolver_ and _Pet 
Sounds_, thus representing a great hope for life above the 
underground.  First was the slightly spacey _Fun Trick 
Noisemaker_, (1995) sort of a paen to Syd Barrett fronting the 
Byrds. Next was the astounding _Tone Soul Evolution_ (1998), 
an album that more or less threw the best of Yo La Tengo and 
Pavement into a Beatles party with Phil Spector at the boards. 
Along the way, there have been the requisite singles, comp 
appearances, last year's nifty psychedelic EP, and a lot of 
touring to tighten the sound so if you add in the various 
side groups and Schneider's heavy production duties with 
the other E6 bands, it's a wonder there was time to even 
consider another album.
	Yet 2000 brings in the finest Apples album yet.  
_The Discovery of a World Inside the Moon_ confronts our 
lives through kaleidoscope eyes without ever leaving the 
masses behind.  Not a lot of dots, loops, or dream sequences, 
just a lot of accessible fun with enough edge to keep the 
college kids interested.  It's got the soul flair of Beck 
("The Bird That You Can't See") and none of the drippy 
baggage.  It's got nods to the Flaming Lips ("20 Cases Running 
Over.") but never wanders unchecked.  It's clever ("Allright / 
Not Quite") without being smarmy.  Most of all, with songs 
like "Go", _Discovery_ isn't radio ready, but radio friendly.
	If anything, the Apples are restrained somewhat 
by a strong 70s vibe, one that leads more in the Sly direction 
than ever before.  Schneider has a rather weak, reedy voice 
and despite the comely melodies, this kind of music gets 
routinely lumped as more nostalgic than visionary.  Still, 
kids of today were raised more by Nirvana than the 
Strawberries or the Kinks, so hopefully _Discovery_ won't 
seem moldy with familiarity--an album this good hurdles its 
influences to become something altogether timeless anyhow.  
Here's to hoping that alternative can slip into the 
mainstream once again.
---
	REVIEW: Ass Ponys, _Some Stupid With A Flare Gun_ (Checkered Past)
		- David J. Klug
	One year ago, as the A&R guy for Tar Hut Records, I came in 
receipt of a demo record titled Radio Pals In The Hands Of The Mau Mau, 
by the Ass Ponys.  It was an amazing whirlwind of quirky and trippy pop 
rock that I described to my label mates as "fantastic new stuff."  I was 
the big Ass Ponys fan at the label, having followed the band since their 
debut on Okra in 1990.  (Incidentally, that debut, Mr. Superlove, is 
reportedly the only record ever released in vinyl, cassette and CD 
format.)  The band's third effort, 1994's _Electric Rock Music_ (A&M), 
played on my stereo as much as anything that year.  
	After receiving the Mau Mau demos I toiled over the fact that 
Tar Hut couldn't afford to consider a release of the music (such is 
life at a struggling indie label).  Time drifted by and I dragged my 
blanket around for months, and enjoyed the record as best and as often 
as I could.  
	What a thrill it is to see this album surface.  _Some Stupid 
With A Flare Gun_ is Mau Mau mixed, mastered, re-sequenced, and released 
by one of today's best indie labels, Checkered Past. The Ass Ponys have 
been accurately compared to Pere Ubu and Pavement, and despite some MTV 
airplay of videos from Electric Rock Music never captured the wide 
attention of the post-Nevermind audience they truly deserved. 
	_Some Stupid_ is also the band's first record since A&M released 
and immediately forgot The Known Universe in 1996, a near deathblow 
action for the band.  What it has in common with Electric Rock Music is 
the band at their very best.  Producer Brad Jones (Marshall Crenshaw, 
Steve Forbert) steers them straight and the Ass Ponys sound completely 
invigorated.  At least one song, "Astronaut," should top the college 
radio charts if targeted. Fantastic new stuff indeed!           
	For more information, check out http://www.checkeredpast.com
---
	REVIEW: North Mississippi Allstars, _Shake Hands With 
		Shorty_ (Tone-CoolRecords)
		- I.K. MacLeod
	Much like describing something as being of world-class caliber, 
the term allstar sends shivers down my spine. All you need to do is to 
listen to Smash Mouth to be considered one or turn on ESPN to see one. 
They key to this band's name is all in its location. North Mississippi 
is home to an entire railway car load of blues travelers that have 
helped to craft some of the best indigenous music around. They may not 
be purists, but when you boil this album down you are left with an 
authentic example of a tradition handed down through decades of 
musicians and families in the Delta region. This attempt to rejuvenate 
and revitalize the blues works because they what this two young men 
lack in hard livin', drinkin', and smokin' experience, they make-up 
for in determination and genuine love for the music.
	Even though this only is their debut offering, the brothers 
Dickinson are far from being new to the scene. They have been working 
things out on the road since 1996 and have a direct link to producer 
Jim Dickinson (The Replacements, Big Star). Luther Dickinson remixed 
the last couple of tracks on the Blues Explosion's _Extra Acme USA_ 
album and has more than his own share of kick-ass guitar tricks up his 
sleeve. Cody Dickinson hits the skins while Chris Chew grabs the bottom 
end with his bass. 
	Unlike most of the Fat Possum roster, the production is smoother 
and slicker yet raw and soulful. "Shake'em on Down" is four minutes 
that of head-spinning boogie blues that will reveals the bands winning 
formula right out of the gate. The North Mississippi Allstars will have 
the juke joint jolting to the sounds of "Drop Down Mama" and "Po' Black 
Maddie." "Drinkin' Muddy Water" will have you sleeping in a hollow log 
while "Goin' Down South" fuses a disco edge to its blues rock core. 
_Shake Hands With Shorty_ comes to a close with a magnificent jam of 
"All Night Long."
	Don't take this the wrong way, but this is a fresh dose of 
fertilizer for the much neglected roots of American music.  Mississippi 
Fred McDowell would be proud. 
---
	REVIEW: Sven Vath, _Contact_ (Ultra Records/Virgin)
		- Chris Hill
	A time portal connecting the early '80s electronic 
releases of Kraftwerk and Yello with modern house and trip-hop 
rhythms, _Contact_ is anachronistic, synthetic fun, courtesy of 
German dance club veteran Sven Vath.
	If the leadoff track, "Pathfinder", loses something in 
the linguistic translation ("Things are always changing/I feel 
that is all right/I like to discover/All different things"), the 
song gains a Chauncey Gardener innocent profundity from the 
sincere delivery.  A pseudo-Casio drum machine bumps and burbles 
against spectral atmospherics reminiscent of Rockwell's '80s hit, 
"Somebody's Watching Me".  The song is Vath's "follow your bliss" 
declaration:  quoted from the press release, "The path is the 
goal, go and make the most of it."  To accomplish this lofty 
ideal, Vath recruited a roster of up and coming producers to push 
his boundaries, digging into past favorite artists like the Human 
League and Thomas Dolby for stylistic inspiration.
	"Your Sweat (Dein Schweiss)", the first single, pulsates 
with electric playfulness, fitting thick slabs of beat against 
simple mechanical keyboard tones.  The track invokes images of 
Ross Geller - but cool - doing his "Robot" dance moves.  Vath's 
curt, inflected vocals appear and disappear like Hogan's Alley 
targets.  The song was inspired by the perspiration Vath's music 
generated from its audience.  Quoting Vath again - "For a lot of 
people, sweat is something quite unsavory.  I find dancing sweat 
very erotic.  It means intensity and it's the perfect image for 
letting go, for succumbing to the mood."
	This image is targeted with an extended instrumental run 
during the middle third of the twelve tracks:  "Smuggler", 
"Contact", "Once More", and "Strahlemann & Sohne".  Each track 
encourages the primitive impulse to surrender one's consciousness 
to the repetitive beats and swift, hypnotic rhythms.  "Once More" 
has a wistful, subcutaneous romanticism, while "Strahlemann and 
S�hne" stretches edgy, metallic notes over various percussive 
noises and samples, their different beats per minute clashing 
against, yet complimenting, each other.
	When "Apricot" breaks the streak, bringing the music back 
into the vocal arena, it's in a nonsensical direction.  "I've 
lost my senses/...Apricot/balla, balla!/...Who cares about flying 
sausages?"  Quirky and fun, it's this song in particular that 
recalls Yello.  
	Quick associations come to mind throughout the album - 
"Ydolem" has a '60's spy theme air, "Privado" has a Tangerine 
Dream benevolent ambience, and "Agent P.", the album closer, has 
an Art of Noise coffeehouse flavor.  A bit like stumbling into an 
old school reunion, the familiar faces put one instantly at ease, 
and this album, initially new, could soon become a friend.
	Surfing turf:  http://www.ultrarecords.com for Vath's 
label and http://www.cocoon.net/ for Vath's homepage.
---
	REVIEW: The Distillers, _The Distillers_ (Epitaph)
		- David J. Klug
	The Distillers are possessed with the original spirit of 
punk rock, and take energy and aggression to levels far beyond what 
most like-minded bands display on record today. This self-titled debut 
is a blowtorch of enthusiasm as the band cranks off 14 songs that 
never relent, including a blistering cover of Patti Smith's "Ask The 
Angels" and the standout original "Oldscratch."  I suspect that the 
Hepcat label didn't ask that the band tone down their balls-to-the-wall 
two-guitar, bass and drums assault -- the tracks shoot from speakers 
with a spontaneity that much label or studio tweaking would have 
surrendered to anyway. Like the Lunachicks, who are an obvious 
reference point, the Distillers are loud, fast, rude and very talented.  
Fronted by singer/screamer Brody, an Australian formerly of Sourpuss, 
the band is rounded out by Rose "Casper" on guitar, Kim Chi on bass, 
and Mat Young (formerly of ADZ and CH3) on drums. 
	Here the Distillers present some of the freshest and rawest 
sounds I've heard in recent times, and this record is the kind of dirty 
rock monster that should crush just about anything waving a punk flag 
this year. The band has toured with X, The Dwarves, L.E.S. Stitches, 
and Rocket From The Crypt, among others and are on the national 
Punk-O-Rama tour now through June with Bouncing Souls, Dropkick 
Murphys, and the Dwarves.
---
	REVIEW: Smog, _Dongs of Sevotion_ (Drag City)
		- Andrew Duncan
	Coming from a peculiar man, Bill Callahan - better known 
to most as Smog - has picked a strange name for an album title 
or is it the other way around?
	_Dongs Of Sevotion_ is simply Smog as we know it - no 
new gimmicks and no tricks up his sleeve, just a solid selection 
of songs that range from quirky four-on-the-floor '70s 
references to '90s alt-country and obscure R&B.
	Callahan's talent comes from his voice and the words he 
writes, blending dark humor and sincere humanity within the 
same sentence. The opener "Justice Aversion" takes a stab at 
the justice system and society as a guitar squeals in the 
background, sounding like something that came out of a Miami 
Vice episode.
	Callahan subtly transforms into "Dress Sexy At My 
Funeral," a sleepy-eyed country tune that is almost strange to 
admit, a catchy song to say the least. His use of twisted 
perverseness makes for one of the more creative songs in the 
music industry. Singing in a deadpan Lou-Reed imitation, the 
words revolve around the concept of Callahan laying in his 
casket and pondering about all of the places him and his wife 
did "it" - a concept that compares to Nick Cave's imagery if 
Cave was more fascinated with sex rather than murder.
	The darkness continues as Callahan travels down "The 
Hard Road," passing by uniquely creative songs like the sober 
piano-and-acoustic renderings of "Easily Led" and "Devotion" - 
picture a younger Tom Waits with a smoother voice who has 
been browsing through his Leonard Cohen collection. The final 
destination is "Permanent Smile," revisiting the concept of 
death. He sings, "And when your shadow covers me from head to 
toe / And curonevrae flies tell me it's my time to go - and 
then I will have earned my permanent smile."
	With songs of such a deep and morbid subject matter, 
Callahan may inadvertently teach us more about life through 
the simplicity of his music.
---
	REVIEW: Great Big Sea, _Turn_ (Sire)
		- Reto Koradi
	While the world seems to be getting smaller each day, there 
are still music cultures that many of us have probably hardly even 
heard of. And at leat for this reviewer, Newfoundland, a maritime 
province of Canada, was one of them until this CD by Great Big Sea 
showed up in the mail. And since curiosity was always one of the 
strongest human instincts, of course we wanted to know what kind of 
music these Newfoundland people make.
	_Turn_ starts out with some folky pop tunes like "Consequence 
Free" and "Can't Stop Falling" which have immediate appeal, plenty of 
hooks, and are solidly written and performed. Most of the rest of the 
album is filled with adaptations of traditional numbers from 
Newfoundland, songs that have been sung there for hundreds of years, 
while the island was isolated from the rest of North America, and more 
influenced by Europe. They sing about sailors going to sea, leaving 
their loved ones behind, about men that are drinking ("I'm a rover, 
seldom sober"), and about childhood memories ("I remember days of 
sunlight, with my father by my side"). Not topics that we hear a lot 
about these days, but maybe that's exactly what makes this music so 
different and interesting. The tunes are infectious with their 
multi-part vocals, and often have a Celtic feel to them. With a 
little imagination, you sometimes feel like you're standing in a 
crowded Irish bar, with a Guiness in your hand.
	This album can definitely be recommended to anybody with an 
affinity to folk from different parts of the world. If you like the 
Pogues (in a more traditional incarnation), Los Lobos (whose member 
Steve Berlin actually co-produced _Turn_), or Les Negresses Vertes 
(for our francophone friends), Great Big Sea is a band worth checking 
out.
---
	Briefs - Not Boxers

	Sometimes, there's some new music which deserves at least 
a quick mention.  Here's a look at some of those - Bob Lowery, 
Step Kings and Ray Ashley - from Al Muzer.

	Bob Lowery, _Yellow Light_ .  A warm-voiced singer / 
songwriter in the Freedy Johnston, Paul Thorn, John Hiatt, J.C. 
Mellencamp, Steve Earle vein; Jersey-based, Philly-raised, 
many-strings instrumentalist Bob Lowery checks in with an 
outstanding batch of sharp-eyed observations and pithy confessions 
topped off by the moving, dobro-riddled "Sad Stories" and an 
accordion-fueled Cajun alt. stomp titled "Dashboard Elvis." 
Check out http://www.caymanrecords.com for more information.

	Step Kings, _Let's Get It On_ .  Kicking solid 
ass in the New York area for more than a few years, The 
Step Kings have taken it national with the recent 
re-release of 1999s 15-song _Let's Get It On_ by 
New York-based Roadrunner Records.
	A Newark, N.J.-formed post-grunge, hardcore-friendly, 
powerhouse power-trio, Let's Get It On was produced and mixed by 
Machine (White Zombie) and mines bassist/vocalist Bob McLynn's, 
guitarist/vocalist Mike Fernbacher's and drummer Mike Watt's 
love for louder-harder-faster-heavier influences such as Ozzy, 
Bad Brains, NWA, Sabbath, Jane's Addiction, Korn, Slayer, 
Monster Magnet, Bad Religion and Motorhead.
	"Do It Again" and "Eleven" peel paint, "Right Is 
Wrong" smokes, and the group thoughtfully examines the 
many uses of the word fuck throughout the album while 
adding playful snatches of funk, rap, thrash, soul, 
metal, pop, punk, the Police and, on "One And One," 
enough melody, power and swaggering, Grand Funk-worthy 
hooks to sneak into the upper reaches of the Top 100 
if given half a chance. For more Step Kings information, 
go to: http://www.stepkings.com .

	Ray Ashley, _Cinema Inferno_ .  This leads off with 
a reflective oboe/clarinet duet that launches into a 
classically-structured near-hour of moving, hypnotic, 
emotionally performed, challenging, inventive, frequently 
transcendent Return To Forever/King Crimson/Santana/Esquivel/
Arto Lindsay/Mahavishnu Orchestra/Nektar-inspired prog-rock 
buzz performed with genuine heart and a genius soul.
	The combined forces of Dema San Tuna (organ), Jim 
Speer (clarinet), Amy Ksir (oboe/flute), drummer Freedom 
Electric and touch-guitarist/composer Ray Ashley climax 
nicely on a 23-minute, Fripp-fried acid-wash called "Crazy 
Legs." Check out http://mars.superlink.net/~rayash/inferno.htm 
for more information.
NEWS:	> Consumable regrets to inform that one of our staffers, 
Sean Eric McGill, passed away from a heart attack.  With a 
wall of computers and fiber networks keeping much of our 
staff at length away from each other, the temporary 
disappearance of people for periods of time comes to be 
expected.  Sean was an integral part of the Consumable 
staff and his presence will be missed by his family, fiance, 
and friends around the globe.
	> The Promise Ring will be releasing a four track 
single of new material entitled "Electric Pink" on May 16. 
The four songs include the title track, Strictly Television, 
American Girl (v.01) and Make Me A Mix Tape.
	> New York City's Z-100 has announced the lineup for 
its annual Zootopia concert, scheduled on Friday June 2 at 6 pm at 
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Along with the traditional 
teeny-bop artists, featured performers include Sugar Ray, Macy 
Gray, Vitamin C and Goo Goo Dolls. Tickets are on sale 
only at Ticketmaster outlets.
---
TOUR DATES:
	Dope / Primer 65
May 11 Chicago, IL House of Blues
May 12 Indianapolis, IN Emerson Theater with Pimpadelic
May 13 Detroit, MI St. Andrews Hall with Pimpadelic
May 14 Grand Rapids, MI Orbit Room with Pimpadelic
May 16 Cleveland, OH The Odeon with Pimpadelic
May 17 Pittsburgh, PA Metropol with Pimpadelic

	Korn
May 12 Milan, Italy Filaforum
May 13 Lyon, France Palais de Sport
May 15 Stuttgart, Germany Boblingen Sporthalle
May 16 Paris, France Bercy
May 17 Rennes, France La Liberte

	Meshell Ndegeocello
May 11 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
May 12 Boston, MA Axis
May 13 Philadelphia, PA Electric Factory

	Noisepop
May 11-13 Chicago, IL Various Venues

	Red Hot Chili Peppers / Foo Fighters / Muse
May 13 Providence, RI CIvic Center
May 14 Portland, ME Cumberland County Center

	Elliott Smith
May 12 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
May 13 Philadelphia, PA Trocadero
May 15 Boston, MA The Roxy
May 16 Providence, RI Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel
May 17-19 New York, NY Irving Plaza

	The The
May 12 Seattle, WA Showbox
May 13 Vancouver, BC Commodore Ballroom
May 14 Portland, OR Roseland
May 16 San Francisco, CA The Fillmore
May 17 Los Angeles, CA El Rey Theatre
 
	Train / Gas Giants
May 11 Philadelphia, PA Electric Factory
May 12 Norfolk, VA Town Point Park
May 14 Greenville, NC Attic
May 16 Grand Rapids, MI Orbit Room
May 17 Cincinnati, OH P&G Pavillion

	Veruca Salt
May 11 Providence, RiI The Met Cafe
May 12 Philadelphia, PA Theatre of the Living Arts
May 13 Washington, DC Black Cat
May 17 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom

	Wire 
May 12 Boston, MA The Roxy
May 13 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
May 15 New York, NY Irving Plaza 

	Workhorse Movement / Kittie
May 13 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom
May 14 Oak Bridge, NJ Birch Hill Nite Club
---
Founded in August, 1993, Consumable Online is the oldest 
music reviews publication on the Internet.
To get back issues of Consumable, check out:
        WWW:     http://www.consumableonline.com

To subscribe to Consumable, send an e-mail message to
consumable-request@westnet.com with the body of the message stating
"subscribe consumable".  To unsubscribe, send a message to the
same address stating "unsubscribe consumable".

Web access contributed by WestNet Internet Services (westnet.com),
serving Westchester County, NY.

Address any written correspondence to Bob Gajarsky, Consumable Online,
409 Washington St. PMB 294, Hoboken, New Jersey 07030
===