Page 4 • The Battalion Monday • September 4, Folk gains an innocent style The album jacket of Tapping The Wheel says it all —Jane Kel ly Williams is the kind of singer who likes to sit in her garden with a guitar on her knee. She’s natural and earthy. Her simple, down-to-earth mu sical style suits her just fine. Sounding like a cross between Austin’s Shawn Colvin and the little girl next door, she man- Jane Kelly Williams Tapping the Wheel Parachute Records ★★★ 1/2 (out of five) “Capitalizing on Engineering Opportunities Second Floor MSC Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 6 & 7 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Free Four-Man Scramble Golf Tournament at Texas A&M Golf Course Tuesday, Sept 5 (sign up by Friday, Sept 1) Meet Prospective Employers at the Free Bar-B-Q Dinner Tuesday, Sept. 5 6-9 p.m. in The Brazos Center Free Beer, Bones, & Bingo Bash at the Texas Hall of Fame By recruiter invitation only, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 6-8 p.m. See For more information, call the SEC office at 847-8567, or see our booth in the Zachry Lobby. Now Through September 8, 1995 Vocal Auditions Open to ALL Male Students Membership in the Corps of Cadets is NOT required. Room 003 MSC (Downstairs) 845-5974 Please stop by to make an appointment Rehearsal Schedule: MTWRF 4:10-5:15 Singing Cadets Open Rehearsal 5:00 P.M. MSC Flagroom Fridays Before Every Home Football Game. Dates: 9/15, 10/13, 10/27, 11/17 and 12/1 Williams ages to be innocent without be ing sappy. Williams does not sound as charmingly bitter as Colvin can and lacks some of the cynical edge that helped make Colvin’s Fat City such a powerful album, but Colvin has almost 15 years of life experience on Williams. She is getting there — listeners should just give her time to have a few more bad relationships. Though Williams does not al ways demonstrate a distinctively original voice or an innovative songwriting style, she is consis tently solid. She doesn’t chal lenge the genre much but shows that she can repeat what’s been done with a nice flair. Her talent seems to lie most ly in her story telling, which is the sign of a good folk singer. One sign that she is a folk singer, and not just a pop vocal ist, are her lyrics — there are so many of them. Pop singers often repeat phrases over and over, while folk singers cram as many words into one verse as they possibly can. She writes an especially hon est and powerful song, "Carry Him,” about her mentally re tarded brother in which she pleads for help, and asks “What do you give a man, when you don’t know what he needs?” Williams does particularly well when singing about the: old tragedy of a failed romance, She covers this ground on “Emotional Memory” and “Breaking In To The Past,"in does the subject justice on whs is probably her strongest song,I “I’m Just Feeling it Now.” She sings, “Careful before we call ourselves poets, for when did we ever keep a single sincere word?/Careful before we call ourselves writers, when theinl| that flowed out from our pens was blown off the paper by the first strong wind.” Listeners would never hear these lyrics on a local radio station, that's for sure. In this song, and a few others, like “15 Seconds of Grace,” her lyrics, chock full of profound ob servations, disguise her youth and show that with a few more years under her belt she will have] the maturity needed to share the stage with seasoned folk singers like liory Block, Nanci Griffith, and of course, Colvin. By p The . TT velop deal 1 is alt bettei Th wide mans and e. Dr, progn sis fr shorte ‘Wi oStu Texa univ< Nova offers a revolutionary voice! expe over- By Erin Hill The Battalion SAN Move over Mariah Carey. Move way over, and shut the door behind you. Alternative pop has a. songstress with a soprano range to rival the afore mentioned queen of the Top 40 world. Her name is Heather Nova, she hails from Bermuda originally — there is a track called “Island” — and her al bum Oyster is fantastic. With her voice, Nova could be the ’90s Cyndi Lau- per, but what Nova has over Lauper is sub stance. Instead of “Girls just wanna have fun,” Nova’s message is girls don’t wanna be shunned. A few former lovers get worked over and spat out in Nova’s latest album. In the song “Blue and Black,” she sings, “I never felt so clean/You did the sin supreme.” Nova’s music is a way for her to right old wrongs, and air dirty laundry. For example, she sings about someone who “got her pregnant,” and another who “touched [her] sister.” Ouch. If you started with Sarah McLachlan’s ethereal voice, added PJ Harvey’s dark attitude and mari nated it with something, anything, from Windham Hills, you’d have Oyster. The voice is what will attract listeners. It just catches you and sits you down — in part because of Nova’s use of soaring high notes, and also because her voice is just so clear. But if folk music fans lis ten closely, the attitude is disconcerting, and the Harvey-esque tunes like “Verona” and “Sugar” are what could alienate Nova from the mainstream music world. Her songs are infectious, catchy and compelling, but there is too much behind the surface for her to be really successful in today’s market, which is [campus 1 ,Jal Texas sent mtif [and dom a be wan The & ll’niversit , two [rooms w busing ( | pus by Li Howe liomeles H Un i, wh still I ler three Nova nothing to be ashamed of. She doesn’t seem to be one too concerned with record sales anyhow. As the story goes, Nova went to New York, walked into Columbia records unannounced, and handed them her demo when she was trying to get her start. She seems refreshingly out of the Bill board Charts loop. Still, she can be content with what she has cre ated. She manages to use her voice to convey a wide spectrum of emotions, even bitterness, with ease and beauty, but doesn’t overdo the vocal gym nastics like some other women vocalists do — Do lores O’Riordan of The Cranberries comes to mind. Nova is a good mix of what is best in the alter native women’s scene — music that’s not too hard but not too sweet, scathing lyrics, beautiful instru mentation, agonizing relationship and an overall experience that doesn’t need really to be analyzed, just enjoyed. “Doubled Up,” in fact, could very well be de scribing her music as she sings, “Feels good, feels like poetry / Don’t ask me to explain it, just feels good.” MONDAY NIGHT FOCFTOAUi Each Monday, come watch your favorite football teams and enjoy 99 < £ pints of our handcrafted beer. Happy Hour: 2-7 P.M. & 9-11 P.M. Daily Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 11 A.M. - 11 P.M. Fri. - Sat. 11 A.M. - Midnight 201 Dominik (Just off Texas) 693-4148 College Station, Texas Begim & Wes Mon. Sept 15 - 7:30 825/studei Jitterb Mon. Sept 7;45-9pm $25/studer Int. C Wed. Oct 1 7:45-9pm $25/studer Ballroc Mon. Oct 2 15 - 7:30j 825/studen Hallow Ballroc Sun. Octob 6-9pm 815/studen Bellydc T/Th, Sept 6-7pm 835/studen) B i J^oodw Sept 1 7 e Pm *45/ w, /student Qodwi 6.7 Oct 23. V, *45' /student San B 7 0c, 17.