a Monday, December 4,1989 The Battalion Paqe 7 iHard-core radical theatrics flavor [Ministry, Skinny Puppy’s albums ,asy on the nihilism: Ministry finds less violent frame of mind d By John Righter Of The Battalion Staff Ministry The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste Sire r, Zfi 0? TO to ’,#L / ? I From a man who knows some thing about minds, tastes and terri ble things, Alain Jourgensen (he now spells it Alien, but he’ll always be Alain to me), the main schizoid behind the industrialized hallucina tions of Ministry, has injected a dark and violent antibody into the pastel dreaminess of the “Just Say No” de cade. The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste, the fourth full-length release by Jourgensen, offers a gritty taste oflast year’s 77ie Land Ot Rape And Honey. Fortunately, however, it pro gresses beyond that album’s hard- core-inspired nihilism into a more vivid and complete trip. Along with fellow mate Paul Bar ker, a returnee from La/rd, Jourgen sen has culled his experiences from not only his past Ministry projects, but also from his various work with Revolting Cocks, Pailhead, Lard, Skinny Puppy and other under ground-industrial projects. In fact, it’s impossible to know ev erything Jourgensen has been in volved in, since he uses so many pseudonym ns, a practice popular within the rebellious acid-house scene. (For example, who are Hypo l.uxa and Hermes Pan, the produc ers for this album and most of Jour- gensen’s work? Jourgensen?). On The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste, Jourgensen continues to shock and perplex, but eases from the perpetual, numbing spasms of Rape. Compared with the unpredictable leap from I986’s Twitch to Rape, Mind is a safe and easy tab to swal low. Even for an someone as enig matic as Jourgensen, it’s hard to freak the hell out of everyone twice in a row. Not that Jourgensen doesn’t give it his best shot. A self-proclaimed , acid-head and all-around masochist, Jourgensen comes out ripping on “Thieves,” the album’s opening track. “Thieves” was a welcomed adjust ment for me, not in intensity, but in the fact it helped lessen my feelings that Jourgensen is a fascist and a rac ist. Working with radically-tinged hu manitarians like Skinny Puppy and ex-Minor Threat frontman Ian MacKaye would lead you to believe otherwise, but songs like “Stigmata” and “Flashback” left me doubting Jourgensen’s intentions on Rape. It also didn’t help that in that same time period Jourgensen shaved part of his head and inserte- diron crosses, got a tattoo of a goat hung on an upside-down cross and admitted to having a fixation on vio lence and LSD. 1 felt justified in my feelings. Now I feel confused. “Thieves,” though reactionary in its presenta tion and depiction (an electric drill plays a prominent role in the song), is an anti-bigotry song that plays off the ignorance of racists and hate- mongers. “Cannibal Song” and the rapper “Test” also lay question to Jourgen sen’s true beliefs and feelings. I tend to believe that Jourgensen plays along the lines of Alice Cooper in his shock-value theatrics and fla vors his messages with the reactio nary pro-ness of Skinny Puppy. It is the modern philosophy, seen elsewhere in the writing of William Burroughs and the directing of Da vid Lynch, that it takes a shocking, albeit excessive statement to get your message recognized. Ministry and croonings and bizarre orchestration of “Cannibal Song” sound peculiarly reminescent of early P.I.L., circa Flowers Of Romance. In fact, I was pleased to hear this diversification, something missing within the continuous drumming of Rape. The implementation of shock and Compared with the unpredictable leap from 1986’sTwitch to Rape, Mind is a safe and easy tab to swallow. Even for an someone as enigmatic as Jourgensen, it’s hard to freak the hell out of everyone twice in a row. Not that Jourgensen doesn’t give it his best shot. A self-proclaimed acid-head and all-around masochist, Jourgensen comes out ripping. . . Jourgensen are definitely excessive and shocking. Radical is a good description for “Breathe,” a pro-conservation, envi ronmentalist song that shows the in fluence of Jourgensen’s work with Skinny Puppy, and more specifically his enrollment in the industrialized- conglomerate Revolting Cocks. On the other hand, the previously mentioned “Test” and bassy “So What” mix in the flavorings of his rawer work with Pailhead. The shock-value theatrics is certainly ef fective in terms of drawing attention and response to an issue or feeling. But that effectiveness is squandered if it is completely engulfed in a mass of archaic noise and subliminal tricks without pause or relief. Mind is much stronger and defi nitely more appealing than Rape be cause it switches gears and throws loops like the militant-rap of “Test” (The Grand Rapper, whoever he is, does the vocals). Jourgensen even enlists other singers (The Grand Rapper and Chris Connelly) for three of the tracks and leaves vocals off another. Apparently, Jourgensen felt the necessity to produce the nihilistic Rape to distance himself from the earlier With Sympathy and Twitch albums. He even has gone so far as to block the release of Twitch on CD. He was certainly successful, but quite frankly, I was really disturbed by the hatred and subliminal proc esses of Rape (and I’m not easily dis turbed). Mind is much' more ambiguous, which I suspect is Jourgensen’s goal, and 1 don’t leave it feeling as if I just had my head kicked in by a Doc Marten boot. It works through con ciliation. Case in point: the finale “Dream Song” is probably the most disturb ing song Ministry has ever done, yet it is also probably its softest and pret tiest number. Ambiguity? Maybe Jourgensen is becoming more confident in his feel ings. Maybe Jourgensen is becoming more serious with his music. Maybe Jourgensen has finally just fried his brain to mush and doesn’t know what the hell he is doing. I don’t know, but I do recom mend Mind to those of you with a mind for terrible things and ambi- gous tastes. Rabies:'Stranger than you have ever imagined’ By Chuck Lovejoy Of The Battalion Staff Skinny Puppy Rabies Capitol “Be prepared to enter a world stranger than you have ever imagined,” a voice warns on “Hexonxonx,” the second song on Skinny Puppy’s new album, Rabies. I wouldn’t exactly go that far, but Rabies, the Pups’ seventh mu sical compilation, comes pretty close. In fact, the whole project that is Skinny Puppy is a trip to a world more bizarre than most people care to hear about. The whole thing started in the summer of 1983, when the band’s founders, Cevin Key and Nivek Ogre, stumbled on the idea of Skinny Puppy — a look at the world through the eyes of a hun gry, homeless and helpless dog. That vision is not a pretty one. The band, which now includes Dwayne Goettel (formerly of the band Psyche) and guest artists such as Alain Jourgensen (of Ministry and Revolting Cocks fame), has tackled several contro versial topics with its electronic wizardry. For example, the group’s last album, Vivisect VI, dealt with ani mal research and testing. The tour supporting the album sported a live show in which vo calist Ogre transformed from an man oblivious to the plight of ani mals used in medical testing to one enlightened about them. In between, Ogre took on the persona of the vivisectionist, and in the end seemingly became the tortured test animal, writhing to the band’s haunting synthesizer sounds. On Rabies, Skinny Puppy’s ap proach to the problems of the world is considerably less ex treme, although still incredibly pessimistic. The entire project seems more mainstream and more accessible than Vivisect VI, which was char acterized by computerized distor tion and reverberation of already amorphous songs. (This change obviously is attributable to the presence of Jourgenson, who helped produce the album.) Still, there’s still more than enough haunting and heavy syn thesizer rhythms and sampled (and real) screaming to make you only want to listen to Rabies with the lights on. The album begins with “Ro dent,” a danceable, almost sub dued effort that shows how syn thesizer rhythms should be used. From there, the LP’s songs run the industrial dance gamut. “Hexonxonx” features a (I hate to say it) peppy beat that is surprisingly similar to Book of Love’s “Witchcraft” — but the similarities end there. There is no way anyone could confuse Book of Love’s smooth chantings with Ogre’s gravelly vocals. “Fascist Jock Itch” comes as close to thrash-type punk as mu sic can come without Suicidal Tendencies leaping out of your speakers amidst the machine-gun drum and guitar repetitions. “Rain” is a beatless stew of syn thesizer noises, sampled laughter, sobs and screams and Ogre’s computer-garbled wailings. The only complaint I have about Rabies is that you can’t quite make out the band's lyrics — half the words are screamed and the other half are lost amid the hypnotic computerized pound ings. Words are printed on the cassette liner, but I wasn’t able to fit them wdth any individual songs. In fact, the only words truly discernable are sampled voices and bits of conversations, as in “Hexonxonx.” But perhaps the band is using these to make statements above and beyond the lyrical meanings of the songs. “Tin Omen,” the album’s dance floor-bound first single, contains the voice of a woman who repeatedly cries, “All good people-are asleep and dreaming.” “Fascist Jock Itch” is distin guished by a man who says, “Brothers should be close, don’t you think?” And a man in “Wor- lock” declares, “Now is the only thing that’s real.” The lyrics of “Rivers” are com posed entirely of a myriad of sampled musings from a variety of people speaking in different tones and accents. Still, it’s almost frustrating that it’s so hard to understand Skinny Puppy’s songs. If you pay $10 for a cassette and $15 for a CD, it would be nice to know what point the artist is trying to get across — especially when they insist on screaming it at you. On the other hand, maybe I don’t want to know what Skinny Puppy is trying to tell the world. I don’t like nightmares. r CO-OP STUDENTS REQUIRED MEETING FOR ALL CO-OP STUDENTS SCHEDULED TO WORK IN SPRING 1990 MONDAY December 4,1989 5:15 p.m. 601 Rudder At this meeting you will: * Receive final reminders that you will need as you go to work and instructions on how to ensure that you get to pre-register early for summer and/or fall classes. * Meet in small groups with your faculty co-op advisor who will give you hints and requirements for your co-op term paper. * Meet with other students who will be working in the same geographical locations in order to discuss taking night classes, ar ranging car pools, types of available housing in your area, and roommates. Spark Some Interest! Use the Battalion Classifieds. Call 845-2611 1 FRATERNITIES RECEIVE 10% OFF ALL RUSH ITEMS PURCHASED AT up front JL Slt.HSl RKL7V/NO NOW THROUGH DEC. 31, 1989 THIS MEANS BIG SAVINGS ON . . . AND MUCH MORE! CALL RAY OR CHARLIE AT 775-8383 AND RUSH TO YOUR SPRING SAVINGS SIUtSCREBNING 108 S. MAIN BRYAN. 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HAJI, MD KARIM l HAJI, MD, FACS AND ASSOCIATES 2703 Osier Blvd., Bryan (409) 776-7513 office (409) 776-7631 Home (409) 822-3434 Ans. Service M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Patients Seen By Appointments & Walk-Ins MOTHERS BOOKSTORE 901 HARVEY • WOODSTONE CENTER COOL WEATHER SWEAT SALE DECEMBER 4-8 RUSSELL: ATHLETIC BLANK RUSSELL SWEAT SHIRTS & PANTS OVER 20 COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM $15 95 REG. $12°° SALE Great for Christmas! Long-Running Favorites Gnamnteed to Last. Russell Athletics sweat pants, sweat shirts and pullover hoods are vwar- giia ran Iced ‘ for five full jeats. And their classic style outruns any fad No wonder they'te such favorites * IvwKisivv < if U-.inmriMjjini'.a-il sp >ris p.lrl Kiji.it ii >n ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE 901 HARVEY RD. WOODSTONE CENTER 764-3969 Alpha Kappa Psi National Professional Business Fraternity Proudly announces it’s newly inducted members Melisa Albin Ginger Ash Kyle Blake Meredith Brown Patricia Brooks Karen Cain Tracy Collins Danny Duffy Rhonda Duwaji Denise Hethcock Michael Howell Judy Hudson Rose Ann Lawrence Brandon Tommy Matthews Amanda Murray Nina Nelan . Deborah Owen Marissa Salinas Kathy Schmidt Kenneth Schott Keith Schwartz Scott Skrabanek Jon St. Clair Mike Stenftenagel Robert Swanson Richard Villaneuva Wilson Pledge Trainers Laura Monroe Jon Armstrong Bill Cavanaugh Phillip Howard Todd Storch Congratulations to the new actives!