From: somms@mit.edu
To: somms-digest@mit.edu
Subject: Soundgarden Digest, Tuesday, 29 Apr 1997
Reply-To: somms@mit.edu
Date: Tue, 29 Apr 1997 01:42:09 EDT
Sender: saperl

 
The Soundgarden Digest:  Tuesday, 29 Apr 1997

listadmin:    saperl@mit.edu
list archive: http://www.sgi.net/soundgarden/archive/

TO UNSUBSCRIBE: email saperl@mit.edu

Today's Topics:
 

                  Re: living with myself is hard enough...
                              Re: chris cornell
                 Re: The Really really real reason SG split
                             Seattle article...
                            Susan Silver article
                               fire maple song
                             Seth is the best!!
                                   Toy Box
                                  Re: Rage?
               Johnny Cash - and RE: Rage?....Aussie Sommsters
                  RE: living with myself is hard enough...
                               First Show Pic
                                  Devilhead
                               The real reason
                     Hey Sommsters,Lets start a webring!
                           Susan Silver Interview
                    a lifetime searching for something...
                                   auction
                           Susan Silver interview
                           Searching for .....Hype

------------------------------------------------------------

From: "wyn" <wyn@powerup.com.au>
Subject: Re: living with myself is hard enough...

> On Sun, 27 Apr 1997, wyn wrote:
> 
> > doing the same and I'm sure I've seen Chris Cornell so does anyone know
if
> > he did program Rage and I missed it or do you think he would and they
just
> > have it somewhere down at the ABC.

Then on Mon, 28 Apr 1997, Justin wrote: 
> 
> 	as for future soundgarden features <wave across the great court to
> jackhammer>, I don't know. I had hoped the band had agreed to a second
> stint as programmers/featured artists while they were here during january
> and february, but I don't know that it will pan out. supergrass (who also
> played the big day out festival circuit) have already been featured,
while
> no other bdo band has been on since.  hopefully we'll see something, but
I
> wouldn't hold my breath. I'm yet to see a band program rage twice. 
> 

When I wrote my original bit I neglected to mention that the shot I saw of
Chris was from the hair DOTU vintage. So we may still have hope of seeing
some sort of interview with videos or him or the rest of SG programming
Rage perhaps.

Bronwyn 
wyn@powerup.com.au &
Wyn <s1041486@student.gu.edu.au>

------------------------------

From: Mercyhurst Prep Library <mercylib@erie.net>
Subject: Re: chris cornell

Yeah, but this is also that kind of scary stuff that wreaks of the stalker
type.  "I will do whatever it takes"????  Even jokingly that's not
exactly....in line.  Just a thought.....

At 01:25 PM 4/25/97 PDT, you wrote:
>
>chris cornell is the man. i love him. and i will do whatever it takes until he 
>is mine.
>
>Tiffany
>
>
>---------------------------------------------------------
>Get Your *Web-Based* Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
>---------------------------------------------------------
>


------------------------------

From: "Ben \"Flea\" Burnsed" <burnsed@ionet.net>
Subject: Re: The Really really real reason SG split

Some things to consider:
 
> The future: Kim, who is extremely upset that he couldn't make Gavin cry,

Maybe he should screw Gwen, if he can stand all the shrieking.

> Ben, Mike Inez and Krist Novoselic form Triple Bass, which becomes the
best
> band on earth, even though everbody hates them.  

Wait a minute, how about having Anthony and Flea getting into a fight,
splitting the Peppers forever, and Flea joins this band and everybody
finally loves them (because Flea has such personality!)  They call
themselves "Fourth Bass"

> Billy Corgan cries.
 
....as opposed to...????

> (ps, all of the above is one big fat joke.  

Please don't make fun of Kim.  So he likes his beer.  So what.  No more fat
jokes, please!

Oh, yeah, don't take me serious on this one.

Flea



------------------------------

From: DustyGrrl@aol.com
Subject: Seattle article... 

>Rock:  End of an era for grunge=92s neoclassical stoner band.
>By Ted Fry
> Most of my friends - girlfriends especially - could never understand
>why I like Soundgarden so much. =20


- --->Makes me wonder what kind of girls Ted goes for?! They dont like
Soundgarden?
And Ted seems like a cool guy...=20


>This was Soundgarden:  strong, true guitars, thundering
>bass, a tidal wave of drums and thrilling vocals that put a spin and a
>chill on every line.  It was an experience I wished I=92d had about 15
>years earlier for the way it woke me up to the real meaning of the word
>"classic" as used to describe rock.

- ---I like how he didnt go right for Chris or vocals first. I guess there
really *are* 4 guys in soundgarden afterall,
missy-fetal-girl-u-need-to-get-a-life.

- ---All in all I thought it was a very good article, right down to the
bong-a-thon!  Thanks for posting it Bonnie.


>She wrote:
>>
>chris cornell is the man. i love him. and i will do whatever it takes=20
>until he=20
>is mine.

- ---I wonder if whoever-that-was got any of that dribble on her shirt?
(ducks/head down)

>Then you wrote:
>
></me shakes head in disbelief and anger>
>have you not noticed that chris is a happily married man of about=20
>seven years to the charming, extremely intelligent, and beautiful=20
>susan silver? give me a break.
>oh, but what do i expect from hotmail people anyway? >=3D[
>
>mind riot

>    You are right.  Besides, Chris Cornell is mine, all mine!  Come here=
,=20
>Chris you stud! :)  Hee hee.  Just kidding.
>     Really, I'll bet Chris gets tired of this kind of crap all the time=
. =20
>Who are these people trying to impress anyway?

>Later,

>Michael Apple

- ---Dam you Mike!  Me and fetal girl dont need your competition!!!  =20

(disclaimer---Im not lusting for Chris, that poor guys over-lusted for)

Carol ;) =20


------------------------------

From: Rebekah Henderson <rebemat@usit.net>
Subject: Susan Silver article

I tried to access that Susan Silver interview Vasant posted, but I get the
digest so I guess I was too late.  It said the file was not found.  It's a
newspaper and I didn't find any place where I could search previous issues
of the paper.  Does anybody have this article???  I would love to read it!!

May Soundgarden be with you.

Rebekah


------------------------------

From: Vince Varkey <varkey@utdallas.edu>
Subject: fire maple song


Got this from the Everclear mailing list:

- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Following article appeared in Spin:

April 14, 1997

Art Alexakis, frontman of the Portland, Oregon multiplatinum act Everclear,
brought his one-man acoustic show to New York City's intimate Mercury Lounge
last Wednesday and managed to cheer up the grunge brethen lamenting the break
up of Soundgarden.

<off-topic stuff snipped>

And although everyone at the Merc hopes that Everclear's lifespan will be at
least as long as Soundgarden's, it's pretty obvious that Art would do just
fine on his own (as will Chris Cornell, no doubt).  

- --Brian Ives  
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------

From: DustyGrrl@aol.com
Subject: Seth is the best!! 

>>Subj:	Seth Perlman is a fanatic - official :-)
>>Date:	97-04-26 07:06:46 EDT
>>From:	deborah@rustycage.u-net.com (Deborah Baker)
>>To:	somms@MIT.EDU


> The poor guy must be
>some sort of fanatic - but all the same it's a very good effort."
~~~~~~~~~
Thank you Seth, for being the kind of fanatic we and Soundgarden can really
be proud of!    

Thanks to you, (I kno you havent always appreciated me for my ~now~ less
frequent dumbass comments 8), I have met alot of cool people/fellow fans
here. Somms is the reason I survived the split. Somms people can communicate
on that certain level that most people in my life cant relate to when it
comes to my favorite band. 

YOUR THE MAN!!!

;)

Carol ---> Throws a big high five to Deb for posting that excellent review!!


------------------------------

From: Rhinosaur4@aol.com
Subject: Toy Box

I would LOVe to know the lyrics to the song "Toy Box"!!!!

------------------------------

From: e9328995@student.uq.edu.au (John Grieves)
Subject: Re: Rage?

At 01:38 27/06/96 +1000, Rosario Fusca wrote:
>chris cornell did program rage, i think it was a couple of years ago. i
>think i still have a copy of it on cassette, but im not sure. i think
>there's a bit of an interview with him too, but im not sure. ruth
>

Yes, there is that Rage special with Chris Cornell in it - it covers a lot
of Soundgarden videos, and has Chris Cornell interviewed in a motel room (?)
with Ben Shepard misbehaving in the background in between videos...quite
worth having your hands on! It was somewhere early in the Superunknown era -
it had Spoonman and (I think!) Blackhole Sun video.

Chris Cornell discussed, for a large part, the process of video making and
how little it has to do with the band's interpretation of the song.

Jackhammer


------------------------------

From: Carolyn Hanel <carolynh@dove.net.au>
Subject: Johnny Cash - and RE: Rage?....Aussie Sommsters

[Carolyn Hanel] =20
This morning on Triple J Johnny Cash's version of Rusty Cage was =
introduced by saying
"Soundgarden is dead, but Johnny Cash lives on to play their songs for =
them......"
How sad.  :-(  But I do like his version!

From:	wyn [SMTP:wyn@powerup.com.au]
Has anyone else out there in Australia seen the little promo they have =
on
Rage for Rage (you know the usual thing a whole heap of people
saying/screaming Rage!). But this one has various bands or artists in it
doing the same and I'm sure I've seen Chris Cornell so does anyone know =
if
he did program Rage and I missed it or do you think he would and they =
just
have it somewhere down at the ABC.
[Carolyn Hanel] =20
I've seen that too, Bronwyn.  I don't think it necessarily indicates SG =
or CC programming Rage :-( - that was on while SG were in Australia.  I =
think they perhaps just got footage of various bands while in our =
country, even if they didn't come into the Rage studios.  {I like the =
silverchair's version of saying 'Rage' on there, btw!}

Bronwyn:
I just got reminded of this by Jackhammer's (John Grieves) post 25/4/97:

>More importantly, does anybody know of Rage here in Australia putting
>together a Soundgarden special some time in the future? It would seem
>fitting at the closure of the band for them to play all Soundgarden =
videos
>as a tribute to the band, and they certainly have done it for other
bands...

I also hope that they do a tribute as well.

[Carolyn Hanel]  You can add me to that!!  :-)


Bronwyn:
************ Also must remind you all you must go to the Recovery site:
		http://www.abc.net.au/recovery/home.htm  =20
and place a few votes at the Hyperchart for us poor Aussies with no pay =
TV
and can't get MTV. Just click on the Jukebox bit and then Hyperchart =
then
vote SG- Jesus Christ Pose. (we're starting with this one first)
*************

[Carolyn Hanel]  I've just done it.  Now I have to remember to watch it! =
 (can you believe Kylie Minogue is up there near the top??????)  :-#

Hang in there, to those of you I owe mail to!  (Justin, esp you)  I'll =
be writing when I can.........

Carolyn the Most Flaccid
You wired me awake and hit me with a hand of broken nails.......SG/JC


------------------------------

From: Carolyn Hanel <carolynh@dove.net.au>
Subject: RE: living with myself is hard enough...

- -----Original Message-----
From:	wyn [SMTP:wyn@powerup.com.au]
When I wrote my original bit I neglected to mention that the shot I saw =
of
Chris was from the hair DOTU vintage. So we may still have hope of =
seeing
some sort of interview with videos or him or the rest of SG programming
Rage perhaps.

[Carolyn Hanel]  Yes, Justin - I saw it too, and it was definitely taken =
while SG were here this year.  Hopefully this might be the first time a =
band will do Rage twice????

Yah, me once more,
Carolyn the Mighty Fine
You tied my lead and pulled my chain to watch my blood begin to =
boil......SG/JC

------------------------------

From: Rebekah Henderson <rebemat@usit.net>
Subject: First Show Pic

I checked out Seth's site today and I was looking at the new pics.  It's the
KERRANG! pic of Chris that has me wondering.  It's an old pic.  Long hair
and no goatee.  I saved the pic and I noticed the file name; firstsho.  Is
this the show Chris where it was the first time Chris was the frontman and
he didn't remember anything about it because he had a temperature of 103??
The reason I'm asking is because he looks SICK in the pic!!!  I mean, he
looked like he needed to be in bed, with a cozy blanket, and a bowl of
chicken noodle soup.  He looks horrible (in a sexy kind of way, mind you.
:))  Just wondering.

May Soundgarden be with you.

Rebekah


------------------------------

From: Geri Ryan <gryan539@concentric.net>
Subject: Devilhead

I just picked up "Pest Control" by Devilhead the other day for only
$1.  I haven't really been able to deeply listen to it but I think it's
pretty damn good.  I look forward to seeing what Ben can add to their
sound, especially with his song-writing skills.  I know he may have been
one of the reasons for the breakup but give Devilhead a shot.  Please
respond ifanyone has heard any of their music.  I was also wondering
what the Andrew Wood connection is to the band and also: 
	What songs are on the bonus disc in the "Down on the Upside" 		    
Australian import.
													Kool Moe D.

------------------------------

From: Mitchell Family <normlstl@stlnet.com>
Subject: The real reason

Hi everyone,
 
  Now I've heard a couple different stories about thr real reason why sg
broke up.Friends have asked me why 'cause they know I like SG and I don't
knnnow which story to tell them or show them.Maybe there is no real
reasons,just stories people say to explain it.Please if you know the REAL
reason why e-mail me.I'm a little clueless and tired (at the moment to
think) with all of it but,I love SG and woould like to know.Thanks
Peace
      Megan




                                                                    


------------------------------

From: Bosshogrox@aol.com
Subject: Hey Sommsters,Lets start a webring!

While searching the index at webring.org the other day,I realized that there
isnt a soundgarden web ring.I know that there are a lot of us sommsters out
there with web pages,so I was wondering if there was an individual out there
who would be interested in designing and maintaining  the main page for the
ring.I would do it myself,but I work too much. Think,wouldnt it be great to
have one place where all of us sommsters  could learn more about eacxh other
and our favorite band?Please give me some info if you are intewrested!

------------------------------

From: Vasant Ramamurthy <vman@ctdnet.acns.nwu.edu>
Subject: Susan Silver Interview

Well, it appears that interview of Susan Silver in the Chicago Sun-Times
isn't at the URL it was at yesterday, so here's the text:

- -------

Susan Silver steers careers toward rock stardom

BY JAE-HA KIM Pop Music Critic

At last year's Lollapalooza in Downstate Pecatonica, three 15-year-old girls
ogled Soundgarden's bare-chested frontman, Chris Cornell, as he sang. One of
them turned to the other and said, ``I want to be Susan Silver,'' referring
to Cornell's wife.

I asked her why, expecting the teen to gush about how cute Cornell was or
how cool it would be to be married to a rock star.

Instead, she said, ``Then I would be powerful, too.''

In a business that is dominated by men onstage and off, Silver is an
anomaly. For most of her adult life, the 38-year-old has guided the careers
of superstar groups such as Soundgarden, which recently disbanded after 12
years together, and Alice in Chains. Silver got into band management for the
love of music. Money wasn't an issue. Until six years ago, Silver maintained
secondary jobs to make sure the bills got paid.

Her conviction that music should always come first in the music industry has
earned her a stellar reputation in the rock community.

``In a world where the music industry is a really crazy place, Susan is an
island of sanity,'' said director Doug Pray, who documented the music scene
in Seattle in his film ``Hype!'' ``Out of all the bands in Seattle,
Soundgarden managed their career the most carefully and thoughtfully for
over a decade. They did everything on their own terms--even their breakup
that everyone wanted to find dirt on, where there was none. It's all
attributable to Susan. She just gets it.''

The first band Silver managed was the U-Men in 1983. She then added First
Thought to her roster. By 1985, she met Soundgarden and started dating
Cornell. The following year she began working as their manager and in 1990
married the singer.

She specializes in ``loud rock music.'' When she's off the clock, Silver
will play a variety of records, ranging from Edith Piaf and Eartha Kitt, to
Jeff Buckley and Tuatara, to Spanish guitarists and gospel singers.

Silver prefers to avoid the limelight, but in a rare interview, she spoke
with the Sun-Times about what it took to get where she is today.

Q. A lot of people get into the music business because they secretly wish
they were in a band. Are you a frustrated musician?

Silver: No. I never thought of it as a career. I played really bad keyboards
in a performance once, and that was it. Oh, and I played clarinet--first
chair--growing up. [Laughs.] I enjoyed playing, but I was never good at it.
Even in college, I took choral classes and really loved singing. I loved it,
loved it, loved it! And only after the fact did I realize how incredibly bad
I was.

Q. When you began your career, there weren't a lot of women managing bands.
Were you apprehensive about tackling a male-dominated field?

Silver: I never thought of being a woman as a hindrance. I just went forward
with what I wanted to do. I think if I had thought about it, it may have
been a hindrance. But I didn't know that I couldn't do it, so I just did it.

Q. Were you perceived as a hanger-on in the beginning?

Silver: I had already been part of a scene in Seattle by the time I started
managing, and I was working all the time. So there wasn't much time to even
look like I was a hanger-on. If I was perceived that way, it didn't matter
to me because I was doing a job that I loved, even though it wasn't a paying
job. I loved being involved.

Q. You majored in Chinese at the University of Washington. Anyone who does
that can't be money-driven. When did you start earning income as a manager?

Silver [laughs]: I always had other jobs until 1991. So it was really only
since then that it became my full-time, paying job, even though I had been
doing it for about 12 years.

Q. How difficult is it to work with your husband?

Silver: We have pretty good boundaries. In the beginning, everything was so
new and exciting that I did want to talk about [the business] 24 hours a
day. There are days that I still want to do that, but I stop myself. You
have to keep them separate.

Q. What's Soundgarden's future?

Silver: When the band's ready to say something, that will be it. But they
are respectfully disbanded.

Q. How much of a band's success is related to its management?

Silver: It's a partnership. The strength of an organization can really
create a successful environment for an artist. Certainly, the music comes
first. It's really important for great artists to surround themselves with
great management, but I think lawyers are as important as managers. My job
is to present the pros and cons as thoroughly as possible, but ultimately
[the choice of which label to sign with or whether to hold out for another
deal] is the artists' decision. They're the ones who have to live with what
they decide.

It's really a balancing act to preserve a band's future as well as make them
successful. The time we're at right now is where there's a heavy emphasis on
chart-topping hits, and there's less room for artist development. With
Soundgarden and Alice in Chains, we got in under the wire because there
still were a lot of opportunities for artist development. Thankfully, there
are still some patient record companies that continue to invest in groups
and realize that. But in general, the music business is much more of a
song-driven market as opposed to a lifestyle market.

Q. What do many bands overlook when they sign a record deal?

Silver: It's not that they overlook this, but nowadays bands have to be up
not just on the financial aspects, but the mechanics of what they have to do
to break a record [such as waiting for the right time rather than expecting
a hit with your first try and knowing how radio works for and against you].
The guys in Sponge [who Silver also represents] are so on top of the game.
Bands need to have a real awareness of how incredibly competitive it is. I'm
finding more and more artists are aware of how much goes into that and
staying on top of their game.

Q. What keeps you sane?

Silver: Chris. And my dogs. I have three small ones here and another two at
home.

Q. Taking care of bands must be easy compared to that.

Silver [laughs]: There you go! It's all perspective.

- ------


Vasant

Vasant Ramamurthy
vman@ctdnet.acns.nwu.edu
http://ctdnet.acns.nwu.edu/~vman/me.html



------------------------------

From: justin nicholls <s325961@student.uq.edu.au>
Subject: a lifetime searching for something...

	without further ado, here is chapter 2 of justin's soundgarden
songbook. this week's topic is 'gun'. I hope you like it. if you hate it,
mail me and we'll work something out...

	details - track three from _louder than love_, 'gun' runs in at a
modest four minutes and forty-two seconds.  similar to many soundgarden
songs, both the music and lyrics were penned by chris cornell. the record
itself was produced by terry date, whose fruitful history with the band
included production duties on _badmotorfinger_, and of course soundgarden
themselves.  something I've always liked about this record is that both
stuart hallerman and jack endino provided studio assistance; reason being
that jack was good to the band in their early history and stuart seems to
have been around for ages, popping up everywhere. two good men behind any
mixer, in my book.  'gun', like the rest of the album' was recorded over
the christmas break of 1988-89 at london bridge studio. never released as
a single, 'gun' was included on a promo cd of 'loud love' and an audio
track of its performance on the video _louder than live_ was included on
the australian and european release of 'blow up the outside world'.

	music - well, this song can truly be called, if you'll pardon my
bluster, an "old school" soundgarden song.  the riff is immediately
recognisable to anyone who has listened to the band for a period longer
than six months, and so it should be. this song is classic soundgarden;
the certain amount of swagger and volume requisite in any pre-superunk
recording is here, and it is here in abundance.  probably the best song
from _ltl_, imho (closely followed by 'I awake').

	despite that, there isn't much to say about this song musically,
since it is fairly linear and not to complex or noodly. but having said
that, 'gun' is by no means a boring or plain song.  what it lacks in
complicated song-writing it easily makes up for with sheer power and
weight. if you are in the mood for cheesy (and fairly simple) analogies, I
equate 'gun' with a large and rather sweaty locomotive, slowly gaining
speed over it's course, running down anything in it's way.  this pretty
much sums the song up, I guess. 'gun' has slow beginnings, but from the
first listen you get the clear impression that this song can't possibly
maintain this speed.  it *must* get faster.  and it does.  driven by
matt's toms and pure chunk from kim, 'gun' gains speed bar by bar, each
terse...I mean verse (pardon my $1 vocab) racing faster than the last. the
rhythm of the song is fantastic, catching you up and pushing you to
conclusion with its momentum.  in full swing by the second verse, 'gun' is
unique in the soundgarden catalogue; no other song plays on acceleration
and anticipation quite like it. marvelous, really.  the band would have
been dumb to try and replicate it on future albums, and much to their
credit they didn't. kim pontificates thusly: "The thing about this song
that's so distinct is that the tempo starts off slow and gradually speeds
up, but it doesn't walk up steps or come to sections that are faster. It
just speeds up until it culminates in a big jack-off guitar solo. Then it
slows down again. It's a fun song to do live because Matt [Cameron,
drummer] always speeds up way too fast. Faster than we can play." (guitar
school, may '94)

	instrumentally, 'gun' belies the simple motion of the song's form. 
this song requires some major chops.  you may hear matt pounding his floor
tom, but ultimately it is his kick drum and hiro's bass that have total
control.  I'm not sure of any other song where hiro and matt were as tight
as they are here ('beyond the wheel' and 'incessant mace' come to mind,
but I'd have to listen to them again). kim should also be pleased with his
effort;  I'm yet to think of a song that sounds so clean yet so dirty at
the same time. not a note out of place, as far as I can tell. chris'
vocals are clean with no effects (which would have been unnecessary
anyway) and aren't doubled, giving the listener an unadorned glimpse into
what his throat really can do. the pace of the lyrics also gel perfectly
with the song's intent (which came first, the words or the music?)
unfortunately, I didn't have time to watch _louder than live_ this
morning, and I can't really tell if chris plays guitar on this track. 
there might be two guitar tracks (both by kim?), but everything is so
tight that I can't figure it out. any tips would be appreciated.  at any
rate, the final result of these four men's skill is (if you listen to it
closely) almost mind numbing in its beauty.

	structurally, 'gun' is weird.  there is no chorus. or at least,
there is no discernible chorus.  the repetitive sections ("shoot, shoot,
shoot...push, push push") seem like a chorus, but the riff being played is
exactly the same as the one during the more varied lyrics ("nothing to
worry"), so I'm not sure that it counts.  but then again, I'm no expert,
and soundgarden have never been sticklers for structured song-writing. 
there is, however, a distinction between riffs here. the riff played
during the intro is later used as a bridge between verses, leading me to
think that this is the lyric-less chorus. then kim strides in at 2:53 with
a *great* guitar solo, which is centered rather than panned to the left. 
the solo itself is in sharp contrast to the song's abrasive introduction,
but by this point the all four instruments are racing for the finish line
anyway, so it seems perfect ('rhinosaur' solo anyone?).  the lead break is
followed by a breakdown at 3:25, which then concludes by returning to the
song's original (much slower and chunkier) riff, chris' voice full of
menace. 

	a couple of interesting points (all to do with drumming, if you'll
pardon my blathering). listening through headphones last night, I picked
up something totally wacky.  at 3:13 matt gives us a rare treat...a double
kick drum! although a self-acknowledged average double bass player, he has
laid out seven of them at the conclusion of kim's solo.  they sound kind
of out of place to my ears, now that I know they are there. also, the
breakdown for 'gun' is cool, in that it progressively became a chance for
the band to just go wild.  the song was added to the band's setlist early
and often (it was at one time a staple of their performance), and I think
that as they became more comfortable with the song, they let it grow.  I
strongly recommend those who haven't got this song on a boot somewhere at
home, go get a copy. at later shows, this song more than any other became
a showcase for matt, progressing from thumping rolls to twenty second drum
solos (the version on _this is boston, not seattle_ must be heard to be
believed).

	and just on a tangent, I originally thought that 'gun' was the
first of the truly tom-driven soundgarden songs.  wrong wrong wrong.  the
first was 'little joe', but I feel safe discounting that one because I
don't really like it that much.  there is also, of course, 'beyond the
wheel' (may my flesh be stripped from my living body for forgetting that
one) and 'nazi driver' (a song matt wasn't happy with, from memory). since
then, there have been a ton of soundgarden songs that rely heavily on
some weird or driving tom pattern from matt.  and the list doesn't start
and end with 'jesus christ pose' (as amazing as that song is).  in fact,
no less than five songs from _superunknown_ follow this drum style, as do
three from _down on the upside_.  interestingly (and I'll shut up about it
in just a moment), while 'like suicide' and 'wooden jesus' are great
examples of matt's skill on the toms, 'switch opens' is probably one of
the coolest <hearing gasps>, if only because matt throws us a change-up.
in all of the above songs, matt uses his toms during the verse and then
moves to the hi-hat or ride cymbal during the chorus. but in 'switch
opens' he plays some pretty cool toms during the *chorus* and leaves his
zildjian's to the verse.  perhaps not that noteworthy, but interesting to
me. 

	lyrics - here they is:

	I got an idea of something we can do with a gun
     	sink load and fire till the empire
     	reaps what they've sown
     	shoot shoot shoot till their minds are open
     	shoot shoot shoot till their eyes are closed
     	push push push till we get some motion
     	push push push till the bombs explode

     	I got an idea we can do it all on our own
     	nothing to worry
     	regret must weigh a ton
     	kick kick kick till the laws are broken
     	kick kick kick till the boots are worn
     	hit hit hit till the truth is spoken
     	hit hit hit till the truth is born

     	I got an idea of something we can do with a gun.

	chris at lollapalooza '92 in phoenix introduced this song as "an
open-minded song...it's about getting off your ass and forcing people to
change...".  I guess that really sums it up. in some respects it seems
that chris is taking an anti-war stance ("till the bombs explode"), but
the means he would use appear very aggressive or violent, even
militaristic. perhaps he is hoping to use the "empire's" own force against
them, turn the tables on those in power, so that they know what it is like
to be on the wrong end of a gun barrel. it is certainly a song where the
writer wants to cast off authority, yet make those in authority know
and understand the suffering of those below.  truth and freedom are very
strong themes here, and the desire to fight for them is just as strong.
almost inevitable, in fact; the line "regret must weight a ton"
illustrating a future where such (dare I say) revolution has already taken
place and those who sat on their asses must be wishing they did not.  all
in all, a rather cheery number. coupled with 'power trip', 'hands all
over' and (at a stretch) 'uncovered', you could almost mistake soundgarden
for some sort of political band :)

	well, that's it fellow sommsters.  next week, 'new damage'.


		  -----------------------------------------------
		   in your real life, treat it like it's special
		      in your real life, try to be more kind
		  in your real life, think of those that love you
		      in this real life, try to be less blind
		              words by vernon reid
                   ----------------------------------------------








------------------------------

From: Lee Christensen <ar303921@student.uq.edu.au>
Subject: auction

Hey ya,

Well it's been awhile since my last posting :) Good to see the rest of the
Aussies are still in here :) hey ya everyone :)

OK got to: http://www.streammedia.com/auctionline/
and you get big on a SG guitar signed by the band...it's for a cancer
research fund or something..so it goes to a good cause if you win.
Just thought I would throw it in anway.

umm not much else to say...excepct to Justin, I am sure bands have programed
RAGE twice...of course I can't think of examples but I belive they have :)
And you would think Rage will do a tibute fairly soon....they usually do,
all the SG videos ever made...now let's hope they do it :)

umm that's it for me and my once a year posting :) 

seeya
      Lee
*****
"I'm sorry I was cruel, I forgot to kiss you..... "

For KC dog....love you always....Oct 1986 - Feb 25 1997


------------------------------

From: DodeRoad@aol.com
Subject: Susan Silver interview

I typed in the URL that someone posted here for an interview with Susan
Silver, but It said File Not Found.
The URL I got was 

      http://www.suntimes.com/arts/current/SILV_Apr26.html

Is this right?

















                                                                       ~Kelly

------------------------------

From: "Saskia Becher" <sbecher@selenite.agso.gov.au>
Subject: Searching for .....Hype

     Hey
     
     I have two questions....For those of you that have seen the Hype video 
     there is a bit where Chris starts singing Searching with My Good Eye 
     Closed that starts off real slow and goes on from there and I was 
     wondering if anyone knows where I can find an audio copy of that 
     version??? and where I can find somewhere on the net (or someone) to 
     order SG bootlegs as I have found one (Stolen Prayers) which is good 
     but I would like to get more.......
     
     Sassy


------------------------------

End of somms Digest [Volume 3 Issue 105]
****************************************

