Jfaituarp 22, 1993 Sebadoh: a new religion Jonathan White Staff Writer I was sitting in church last week...Preacherman, he say, "You too can be a disciple. Come out with it! Rise up off your feet and meet me, right here, and let us all give it up for God!" At this par ticular moment I jumped up, hands outstretched to the heavens, and belted, "I'm so jealous of Jesus!" I have discovered a new religion (in music, that is). Lou Barlow and Eric Gaffney are Sebadoh, a new group fallen from grace. The album is titled The Freed Weed, formerly two albums that were originally released on cassette. But now you can get Weed Forestin and The Freed Man on one compact disc! Both albums The Kountess Suggests Louisa Spaventa Staff Writer More Boy, Less Friend from Sprinkler: Spouts with power a skillful flow that at times reaches the im pact of a hurricane and strips you of your skin so that you submit to the forces of greater music. Vo cals so agreeable you could shake their hands and drum beats that lead you into deep, confusing, me tallic blue catacombs. You are bridled with fear of good music; "Jr. Loaded" and "Blind" hit the windshield with terrifying veloc ity. In your zombified state you accept the fever of Sprinkler- pick of the litter for 1993. Smeared from Sloan: The epitome of a college target band. Well-mapped lyrics and melodies that live up to your wild est dreams. Like getting a fantas tic back rub, each chorus puts pres sure on the tight muscles around the shoulder blades and neck. You get great happiness by hearing songs live beyond their potential, kinetically reaching new plateaus. Very well produced- palatable like rubbery eggs, but almost too perfect to take out of the package. Suggested tracks: "Underwhelmed," "Left of Cen ter," (a la Lou Reed), and' Two Seater" (a distortion party). Na Vucca Do Lupu from Three Mile Pilot: 4. ' iffe* **"'*>'- fib Jv\ tewp i v tPp®- 4 tx~ Hj ipff ' Ivj. T\ lis v jp J' ■ I / liv? -CyH>f IUP xJL? ** Hlfe Sebadoh The Freed Weed include, what I would venture to call, Well-Fed-Dead-Folk songs. The albums sound like they were recorded on a 4-track recording Sprinkler One day a rubberband wrapped itself around a lemon. Together, these things bounced downstairs to the musty, damp, rat-loving base ment and crawled into a m ildewed, velvet coffin where they sang Fugazi songs to each other while drunk on Mad Dog 20/20 and played bass till daylight Thismight somewhat describe the surreal at mosphere of this album's addic tive content. Try "Slow Hand" or "Horse Sweat" Oren Bloedow (self-titled): He's a man. He writes songs. He's great. Funktual song pattern led by princely vocals and punctu ated by assorted homs. Would appeal to the Joe Jackson fans to the Pavement audience (big, wide gap). Lyrics worthy of investiga tion and a very loose-collared feel to the whole project. "Sleaziness Perspectives instrument filled with static, weeping vo cals, out-of-tune acoustic guitars, and some misplaced per cussion. Lou Barlow is no newcomer to this sound; he used to be the bass player for Dinosaur Jr. You can hear the beginning of | his sound ir."Poledo" J off of Dinosaur Jr.'s You're Living All £ Over Me. Songs ranging from the self affirm ing "Jealous Jesus," to the haunting "Sexual Confusion," to the self destruct- ing "Punch in the Nose" will stick in your head just like a crown of thorns. is when you want something/ That you think you don't deserve/ And you try to get it in a way that/ Someone who didn't deserve it would" (from "Sleaziness"). Flight Instruction Learn to Fly Local Field Lowest Rates in Guilford County Contact: [>.Hre*rtPoo h. 43-4686 $25.00 per hour out M!k UvtAgston Staff Writer . % FLASHBACK: Late 1991. George Bush does not plan to attend the unprecedented UJN, Coherence on Environment and Development (UNCED, the Earth Summit). Environmental groups yell and scream until he changes his mind: he' U attend, he says, but he won't sign the critical Biodiversity treaty or the morato | rium on the export of toxic waste. |He won't sign anything. But he's ! the Environmental President, and ! he'd be happy to have his picture ! taken at UNCED. | FLASHBACK: June 1992. I Thousandv of students, some on \ hunger strike, rally and keep vigil on six continents. Their message, signed by student groups from ; over 120 nations: The Earth Sum mit has been sabotaged. If the U.S. doesn't acknowledge the treaties, why bother? It's just a photo-op for George, "• FLASHBACK: November 3, 1992 M The government of the United otates is ousted. This week: Our first post-Cold War government is installed, and the nation celebrates with an in volved and hopeful spirit it has not known since the end of World War 11. Still, the new President hasn't promised to sign the UNCED treaties,and thenew Sen atehasn'tpromised to ratify them. The North American Free Trade Agreement promises to be one of the msjorcontroversies of the de cade, ; We're still policing the world, ai least when we feel like it But is it possible —having unloaded the dead weight of the Reagartbush Era— to pilot the listing hulk of. the Earth Summit along the course to sustainable I QONO director Steve Collett will join us next week to address the question to detail; meanwhile, we cam trya juick measurement of the distance between activists' nation's reality. It'ssaflfiites how does the nation tEfoe &uilfortrian feel? y During the holidays, Wasftwg toman magazine asked members of D.C/s cultural establishment —journalists; owners, performing artists how they expected the new government to affect the social atmosphere of thecity. (Maybe if san odd ques tion,but considen the whole Fed eral establishment is about to get younger, more energetic, and more optimistic. If Washington traditionally an ulcer of a town —is becoming kinder-gentler, so will the Federal government it self, and so too the country.) Hie magazine reported plenty of optimism, but the strikingprop erty of the public mood is that it's decentralized, not centered on Clinton; as one respondent ex plained, Clinton is justa catalyst, nudging the national psyche past the Reagan Era so "people... feel better about themselves, and that has a positive effect." A caterer saw official govern ment events becoming more re laxed and lively. A bookseller saw more people reading about public policy and current issues taking an interest in participa tory democracy. And even Tom Shales, the Washington Post's designated cyme, looked for "a new positivism on TV and on talk shows... we've had enough whin ing." If "the optimism thing" catches on, and Ls-n't derailed by contin ued "maneuvers" in Iraq (pay at tendon, Bill), then a nation so excited can accomplish a lot. Even, with patience, meaningful strides toward sustainable economy. George Bush swerved, and the Earth Summit wasahigcarwreck. To oo* credit as a nation, we re sistedthe morbid urge to stop and rubberneck, or do further damage with our bungling first aid. We got ourselves a new driver and new maps, and - as then-Senator Gore said in his victory speech -ill it is time for us to go. Earn Serious Money Your campus organization can easily earn SSOO PLUS A BONUS in one week. You pay nothing CALL 1-800-735-2077 ext. 340 5

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