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H E A R__I T

"Sellout"
Juliana Hatfield
(640k)

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T A B L E__T A L K

Whether you call it jungle, drum & bass or breakbeat, you can discuss the genre's latest mutations in the Music section of Table Talk.

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R E C E N T L Y

Belle and Sebastian
Lazy Line Painter Jane (EP)
Jeepster Recordings
(11/14/97)

Spice Girls
Spice World
Virgin

Salt-N-Pepa
Brand New
Red Ant/London/Island
(11/13/97)

The Beach Boys
The Pet Sounds Sessions
Capitol Records
(11/12/97)

G-Love and Special Sauce
Yeah, It's That Easy
Okeh/Epic
(11/11/97)

Jon Nakamatsu, Gold Medalist
Tenth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
Harmonia Mundi
(11/10/97)

BROWSE THE
MUSIC ARCHIVES

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V O W E L L

Sound Salvation
By Sarah Vowell
The presidential suite
(11/14/97)

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B O O K S

[Rolling Stones]
The Rolling Stone Book of Women in Rock
Essays on women's role in rock history, and on artists ranging from Tammy Wynette to Courtney Love.
(11/18/97)

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Barnes and Noble

"Please Do Not Disturb"
Juliana Hatfield

"Firecracker"
Lisa Loeb

______________________[ lisa loeb ] "FIRECRACKER" GEFFEN
[ juliana hatfield ] "PLEASE DO NOT DISTURB" (EP) BAR NONE

Juliana Hatfield        Lisa Loeb

BY MICHELLE GOLDBERG
|
I  received Lisa Loeb's new album, "Firecracker," and Juliana Hatfield's
new EP, "Please Do Not Disturb," on the same day. I put them both in my
CD player while I made dinner, and I didn't notice when one ended and
the next began. During the next two days, whenever I listened to them
together, I had to pay attention to know which one I was hearing. So
it's strange that once I sorted them out, I was annoyed by Loeb and
enamored of Hatfield. Though they have similar styles -- strummy
guitars and baby-doll voices -- they stand on opposite sides of the tiny
line that separates the wistful from the insipid.

Both Loeb and Hatfield share the ignoble distinction of having hit singles from the "Reality Bites" soundtrack. But while Hatfield had a substantial indie history prior to the film, Loeb didn't even have an album before her song "Stay (I Miss You)" became the movie's theme. Instead, she had a friendship with star Ethan Hawke. A year after the single hit No. 1, Loeb released "Tail," her first album. While Hatfield's hook-filled bonbons have a ragged undertone that comes from passion and experience, Loeb's second album, indeed her entire career, feels nearly as prefab as the Spice Girls.

Hatfield often gets slagged by macho critics for her small voice and teen-diary lyrics, but she's shown impressive perseverance since her turn-of-the-decade days with the Boston band Blake Babies. The first song on "Please Do Not Disturb," "Sellout," sounds like a cry of frustration against a world that's ignored her while catapulting a crop of alt-rock nymphets to stardom. Her voice breaks with sarcastic anger on the chorus, "It's not a sellout if nobody buys it/ I can't complain 'cause nobody likes it."

Conversely, when Lisa Loeb twitters, "You just don't understand me/You just don't understand/And I want to be understood," it's as humorless and banal as an Alanis Morrisette refrain. Her melodies are catchy and her lyrics are suitably sad, but the whole thing is hollow. She doesn't help herself by stealing the beginnings of better songs. The first few bars of "Split Second" are identical to the beginning of the Smiths' "Panic." It prompted a spark of happy recognition before the irritating song kicked. I wanted to switch it off and pop in "Louder Than Bombs" instead.

Actually, Hatfield steals some openers as well. The start of "Sellout" is nearly identical to the first few moments of Veruca Salt's "Seether." But unlike "Split Second," "Sellout" is a great song, a charmingly self-deprecating complaint about obscurity. There's a similar lament in the grinding punk song "Give Me Some of That," with its bratty refrain, "If I had/some of what you had/I would be so, so fucking glad."

It's not just because she throws more amusing temper tantrums that Hatfield is the more appealing artist, though. The understated "Trying Not to Think About It," a lovely, fragile song about a friend who drowned, is impossibly poignant in a way that Loeb's sonic wallpaper can't touch. Strange that Hatfield should be complaining about her lack of success after 10 years and eight recordings, while Loeb already has had a No. 1 single, a Grammy nomination and a Brit award. Isn't it ironic? Don't you think?
SALON | Nov. 18, 1997

Michelle Goldberg is an editorial assistant at Salon.




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