6 Thursday, March 28,1996 Archers of Loaf Busy Recording New Album, Releasing Old Favorites BY WENDY MITCHELL SENIOR WRITER Browsing through the used bins at Schoolkids’ a few weeks ago, I stumbled across the Archers of Loafs monumental first album, Icky Mettle. My first thought: Is any hunger so great that such a disc should be sold? My second thought: maybe I should buy it, because mine is a bit worn. Slightly obsessive, but we’re talking about the Archers of Loaf: four fairly average Chapel Hillians who have been making very un-average music for four years. Though they’ve become indie darlings nationwide, I still like to believe there’s some part of Chapel Hill in those frenzied, twisted guitars and angry groans. Not redneck kitsch like Southern Culture on the Skids, but another kind of southern influence comes across in those punk jabs and pop hooks: a recklessness inspired by sitting in a kitchen on a sweltering 90-plus degree day growing impatient as flies buzz and the screen door slams. But sit down for this one— Chapel Hill’s arguably greatest export might not be calling Chapel Hill home for long. From a payphone somewhere in Seattle during a break from recording, bassist Matt Gen tling hinted that relocation was a possibil ity, although —of course nothing was definite. Gentling, albeit hesitant to leave his “really cool place in Carrboro” would like to get back to mountainous Asheville. He said vocalist/guitarist Eric Bachmann may move to Seattle, Ann Arbor, Mich., or Washington, D.C., when his girlfriend Fleming & John Reminiscent of Divinyls It may sound like I’m going for nothing more than the cheap critical blurb, but I swear that at times Fleming & John sound like a hybrid between a rock-inclined Enya and some wacky operatic cocktail funk. I understand your confusion. But that’s the beauty of Delusions of Grandeur, the new major label rerelease from vocalist Fleming McWilliams and musical handyman John Mark BRENT SIMON Music Review Fleming & John Delusions of Grandeur B Painter. (Quick trivia quiz: Are they mar ried? Answer: Yes.) It’s an album with 100 different faces. If Grandeur was the video game “Contra,” and F&J’s music were a gun, we’d be talking scattershot. Some of their tracks may typify the “lite” rock trend so many blues-inspired bands seem to call upon these days,but Fleming&John aren’t / T~ 1 OOS t" iyyo f* Charleston APRIL. • Visitor's Center • ib V Bob Margolin Bfihjb. O.J. Ekemode and Vr, W/j JMflgfc The Nigerian VRUI • - H ■ mm Charmaine Neville Band MM ■* APRIL 13 • Main Event Boy 4 4 guest. The Bob Margolin Band I . I < / 1 JR The Pondering aL J. Terrance Simien JWJ * g Jasmine Attic A /W*Vasti Jackson Band Bnttlebank Pack ln The Schools Tickets $7.00 before Apn^s^ Tickets available at alt SCAT locations * . ~ ■ . rt^er - m^or y aatl ° calk 577-7607 USAir AM C ELVEEN I I USAir begins wtUijuu ■UtlKllKMUtt'lHiMtflli’MiWai UjJJj UAMiS Boogie. 1 J oco Cl I I&mm 8 Blues wcsc ® ® 360° Communications graduates from medical school soon. Gentlingsaidhe thought relocation and/ or separation wouldn’t be a problem in the Archers’ future. “I don’t think it would have that much of an effect since we’re touring so much. The only thing it would effect is us coming together to write songs and that sort of thing,” he said. “I don’t think it will be a big deal.” As we await consequences and their third full-lengther (due out in September), there’s anew treat to hold us over: the recently-released rarities collection, The Speed of Cattle. Included in the 18 tracks are the Archers’ session with BBC DJ John Peel, two Treepeople covers, a home re cording of “Web in Front. ” While all such albums are problematic combining the stuff great enough to be singles (“Wrong” and “South Carolina”) with the stuff that easily slipped through the cracks (“Powerwalker”) Cattle is a must for anyone who missed the early singles. Or anyone who was poor enough to sell them. Gentling and I chatted about The Speed of Cattle, their new album, and why he’s clowning around less on stage: DTK How did the singles compilation get started? Why did you decide to put that out? Matt Gentling: Well, unlike a lot of the other stuff we’ve put out, it was something that was in our contract. And it was also that we had a lot of stuff floating around that was either hard to get a hold of or was never released on anything. Wejust wanted to release those things because we liked them and we thought it would be fun to put them out. It’ssortofhalfwaybetweenthat and the fact that it was in our contract. afraid to bring the harder rock on tracks like “Letters In My Head” and “I’m Not Afraid.” Some of their songs recall the Divinyls. And some the Indigo Girls. And the list could go on and on. It’s actually not too surprising, since Painter played guitar, trumpet and accordion on the Indigo Girls’ Swamp Ophelia. Their rock roots and influ ences are further evidenced by the fact that Ben Folds shows up to play drums on several of the tracks. His characterization of the duo? “Fleming & John,” Folds is quoted as saying in the album’s press ma terial, “are the Carpenters of the ‘9os, with Led Zeppelins rhythm section.” Good call. “I’m Not Afraid,” the album’s first single, slips from a wistful groove piece to borderline venom rockwith surprising ease. With catchy hooks and lyrics like, “I’m afraid of growing old/I’m afraid of staying young and running out of fun,” F&J dis play a maturity that makes you ask, “Did DIVERSIONS Music You guys are concentrating on your new stuff —is it weird having people paying attention to your really old stuff? Yeah, it is weird. I haven’t really seen much of it. We haven’t talked to many people who have The Speed of Cattle. A couple of times we’ve run into people who have just heard our really old stuff for the first time. And that’s pretty wild, hearing them react to that, when we’re working hard on our new stuff. Is there anything on there that makes you cringe now? A couple of things. Most of it we really wanted to release. But there are a couple of things that make us feel really silly. Like what? Parts that we’ve played. I know Eric doesn’tlike some lyrics from the old songs. It’s just little things here and there. Noth ing real specific or real terrible, luckily. And how’s the new recording going? It’sgoing really well, actually. It’s sound ing better than anything we’ve done so far. I hope I haven’t jinxed us by saying that. It’s just a matter of all the other stuff we did, it was limited time-wise and by the facility—we didn’t have a really big room, which we’d always wanted to work in. We’ve always done stuff with people we thought were really good at what they did —Bob (Weston, Vee Fee) and Caleb (South ern, Icky Mettle). And Brian (Paulson) is no different he’s incredible. What really makes a difference is the time and the facilities as well as somebody who knows what to do with them. Vee Vee was kind of hurried, we didn’t have all the songs com pletely written by the time we went in these two spend eight years paying their dues and playing assorted gigs and clubs?" Then it turns out that they did just that and everything makes a little more sense. “Love Songs" is the rarest of ballads. Not only does it have genuinely reflective lyrics, but also a strong musical backbone. The flighty “Rain All Day” opens with a siren-like wail and moves through a nice melancholy arrangement. McWilliams has a great voice, stronger than Sheryl Crow and as distinctive and recognizable as Alanis Morissette. And— more impres sively she knows how to use it, varying her pitch, volume and inflection in a man ner that fits comfortably within the beats and rhythms of the songs. If there was a cute summary paragraph for this review, it might offer some sort of strange statement like: Fleming & John are a revamped Roxette for the ‘9os, athinking man’s pop where unthreatening guitar meets pleasant arrangements and distinctive vocals. Archers of Loaf is recording its third full-length album in Seattle with producer Brian Paulson. there, and so we were still doing a little bit of finishing up when we were in there... so that could be a little hectic. We did a little bit of that this time, but it was voluntary. ‘AH Eyez’ Fall on 2Pac After New CD Release The first time you saw Tupac, he was laid back in Digital Underground’s “Same Song” video, bald and surrounded by women in a pseudo-African, Big Daddy Kane-esque,remindyouofHueyNewton in-the-wicker-chair scene. He was 1989’s Black Caesar. You didn’t know if he was hard or soft, but you knew his shit was tight. Deliver ing potent lyr ics with rapid rhymes, his flow delicately danced on the subtle line be tween being too | RICH HARRIS 111 | Music Review 2Pac All Eyez On Me (Death Row Records) A- fast and top relaxed—a line few mc’s had the skills to walk Four albums, five bullets, 11 months of jail and one nappy-ass high-top fade later, Tupac hasn’t changed too much. Tupac is still a magnificent, walking oxymoron, and his new album, All Eyez On Me, reflects this. On two CD’s and 27 songs he’ll both im press and repulse you in the same breath of a lyric. He struts with a rebellious intensity reminiscent of his performance in “Juice” on songs like “Hearts of Men,” where he raps “I can be a villain if you let me/A Mothaphukka if you do upset me/Tell the cops to come and get me. ’’ Then he can get mushy and sentimental, like he’s trying to rap to Janet Jackson, as he does on “Life Goes On”: “Butnowthatyou’regone/I’m in a zone/Thinkin’, I don’t want to die alone/And all I got left is sinkin’ memo ries.” In “All About U, ” the chauvinist Tupac croons with the same mindframe that got a certain UNC fraternity into trouble last fall. He raps, “I see you starin’ like you CAROLINA UNION ARTS SERIES'^ APRIL 1 7 8 P.M. MEMORIAL HALL UNC Les Ballets Africans THE NATIONAL DANCE COMPANY OF GUINEA sl4 - $22 General Public $8 - sl2 UNC Student For information, call Carolina Union Ticket Office: 962-1449. 135 E. Franklin St. Chapel Hill • Between Nationsßank Plaza & Salon 135 i^ y sB jMgmk " How did you guys decide to go with him? We’d always liked stuff that he had done. Some Uncle Tupelo stuff, Son Volt, Wilco, Superchunk. And as a band, one of Kraffl want it/Well baby if you got a better thought, let the liquor help you get up on it.” “How Do You Want It” embodies Tupac’s contradictions. Featuring KC and JoJo from Jodeci, the song’s provocative title and sultry sound foreshadow a sexy type of temptation. Tupac begins, “Love the way you aggravate your hips and push your ass out/Catch you at the club, Oh shit, you’ve got me feenin’/Body talking shit to me but I can’t comprehend the meanin’.” But then, somewhere in the middle, Tupac crosses a great frontier with one stride. Between the words “Alaze” and “Delores Tucker,” he goes from talking about hoochies to rambling on about po litical issues. Jumping so quickly from one subject to the next would make one think Delores Tucker is some around-the-way girl he knows who resembles the rap regu lator of the same name. Then he wittingly remarks, “Delores Tucker, you’s a motherphukka/ Instead of tryin to help a nigga, you destroy brother/ Worse than the others... They wanttocensorme, they’d w HSR E Anjana’s Early Spring SALE> Monday-Thursday 10-6 • Friday & Saturday 10-7 Sunday 12-5 968-0365 ®!)p Saily Ear Hppl our favorite albums in the universe is Spiderland (the pre-eminent work by Slint). See ARCHERS, Page 7 rather see me in a cell/ Livin’ in hell” insightful political commentary, but in the wrong place. The album’s diversity be comes its only potential setback he ad dresses enough topics for several albums. 2Pac’s retum-to-the-West Coast verses fit perfectly between Richie Rich’s thick Oakland playa style and E-40’s 150 mph lyrics in “Ain’t Hard 2 Find.” On “Got My Mind Made Up,” Redman’s flows kick like Bruce Lee tidin’ a Fuji, and Method Man’s chorus (“I got my mind made up/ C’mon, get into it/ Let it ride/ Tonight’s the night”) compliments Tupac's lyrics. He raps, “My lyrics motivate the planet/ It’s similar to Rhythm Nation but dragged out/ Forgive me Janet.” Tupac and Dr. Dre in particular fit to gether well on the hit single “California Love.” Frequent backup from other Death Row “inmates” Snoop Doggy Dogg, Nate Dogg, Daz and Kurupt will convince you that Tupac belongs in the Death Row fam ily. Tupac discusses how marginalized he and Snoop are as black men in “Amerikaz Most Wanted,” his life after court cases in “Life Goes On,” open relationships in “Run Tha Streetz” and heaven in “Heaven ain’t Hard 2 Find.” He has all the prerequisites for being the label’s first adopted son 2Pac’s high powered lyrics are matched in controversy only by his flamboyant and contradictory lifestyle, never mind his pending court cases. At least eight of the tracks on All Eyez On Me will get you moving; even my father recommends the album. He likes “Got My Mind Made Up, ” “Heartz of Men, ” “Cali fornia Love,” “What’z Ya Phone #” and “Check Out Time.” You’re The Reason It Works. Bright Horizons is America’s leading provider of.employer-sponsored (hild care. We owe our success to our dedicated employees. Recognized by Working Mother magazine as one of America's "tOO Best Companies,” we provide child care ervices to leading employers including IBM, Glaxo Wellcome, First Union Bank and Mattel. Currently, we’re staffing for several new centers in the Raleigh area. Open Yourself to Unlimited Potential At Bright Horizons, you'll enjoy competitive pay and comprehensive benefits, including health, dental and disability insurance, 401 (k) retirement savings plan, tuition reimbursement, and a child care discount. Bright Horizons Children's Centers 109 Brannigan Place Cary, NC 27511 Phonl: (919)460-5981 ’EOF BRIGHT HORIZONS®