
The
chorus is Eric (vocals, guitar, harmonica) and a trio of others
on more acoustic and electric guitars, drums and bass with a smattering
of keyboard help. The general mood of the sounds is reflective,
sometimes folky, and somewhat didactic and justifiably judgmental.
"Farce Fed" relates the tale of woe of someone who's
swallowed too many conventional party lines, but who's still rebelling
as best he can against the artifice. "I Wanna Be Bob"
is a way cool mutation of Dylan's "Tombstone Blues"
with original lyrics which border on genius; it's the best song
on the tape. This groove is also lyrically and stylistically highlighted
on "Neither There Nor Here," an excellent song about
wind-up people. Best line on the tape: "I cannot mean the
things I say, if I can't say the things I mean." Hey, that
is profound. - Jack Jordan
.

Eric
Harrison Wants to Storm Your Revolution!
By Elio Truncoso
When
they threw you in the oven, Babe
You knew it had begun
How quickly your ideas go from half-baked
To overdone . . .
Not
exactly a Hallmark greeting, this couplet comes to us courtesy
of "Storm Your Revolution!" -- the title track of the
latest release from singer/songwriter/Georgetown Law student Eric
Harrison. Frequent shows at Dylan's Café and the Lone Star
Grill in Rosslyn combined with primetime airplay on WHFS have
attracted a rapidly-growing local following that this gifted young
songwriter never expected.
"Law
school doesn't leave much time for self-promotion, so I figured
that I'd just play every couple of weeks or so to let off steam,"
comments Harrison. "I had no idea it would escalate into
a genuine part-time job." Yet thanks to popular local acclaim
of "Storm Your Revolution!" and Harrison's two prior
releases, "Anyone Can Fill Your Shoes" and "Pathosaurus"
(all three released on his own label), the songwriter has found
himself playing to larger, more enthusiastic audiences with every
performance. In fact, Harrison's growing popularity recently earned
him a slot on the TV John Show, which will air on Montgomery Community
Television Channel 49 throughout April. His material, which travels
through Costello-Westerberg-Dylan territory with a unique spin,
promises to inject the show with a welcome freshness.
So
what draws a law student to songwriting? Better yet, what draws
a singer/songwriter to law school? "Certainly not a desire
to break into entertainment law," responds Harrison. "I
want to practice the kind of law that keeps my adrenaline pumping.
Right now that's criminal law."
Currently
carrying a full caseload in Georgetown's Criminal Justice Clinic,
Harrison has spent his third year defending clients charged with
misdemeanors in D.C. Superior Court. He sees strong similarities
between performance on the stage and in the courtroom. "Both
require a lot of ego tempered with a little humility. And both
require showmanship. With every performance you've got to engage
a foreign audience, get to know them and try to win them over
without compromising your dignity -- in other words, no James
Taylor covers."
Indeed,
Harrison's musical performances (and thankfully his legal ones
as well) are blissfully J.T.-free. With a repertoire of over forty
originals, he comments, he feels no need to fill his sets with
other people's songs. "When I started playing live in college
most of my own songs were horrible, so I had to play covers. And
of course it's human nature to react more favorably to a song
you recognize than to a song you don't. So when I'd play Dylan
or the Dead I'd get a warm reception, which I desperately needed
because my self-confidence was shaky. But to a songwriter, the
applause for other people's songs starts ringing thin. You realize
that it's there for the wrong reasons and it drives you to improve
your own material."
Driven
to improve his own material during his senior year at Princeton,
where he majored in English, Harrison estimates he wrote about
fifteen new songs. Upon graduating in June of 1990 he joined forces
with the New Jersey-based Crash Chorus, with whom he recorded
his ten-song debut "Anyone Can Fill Your Shoes." The
album garnered positive feedback from Option ("original lyrics
which border on genius"), The Splatter Effect ("strong
songwriting, good singing, thoughtful production") and several
local magazines.
Harrison
continued writing during his first year of law school, and in
the Summer of 1991 released "Pathosaurus," a collection
of 16 stripped-down, mostly acoustic demos. Like its predecessor,
"Pathosaurus" received rave reviews. The Georgetown
Review described the songs as "tight, pop-folk gems bristling
with wry sarcasm and desperate longing."
"Storm
Your Revolution!", a collection of eight new songs, was recorded
by a new band with producer Steve Evetts in the Summer of 1992.
"In terms of both songwriting and production," remarks
Harrison, "this is by far the best thing I've ever done."
Thanks to WHFS putting the album into regular rotation, D.C./Maryland-area
residents have been getting the chance to share Harrison's enthusiasm.
Harrison
will be performing at the Lone Star Grill in Rosslyn on April
17 and at Dylan's Café in Georgetown on April 23.

Tracks
of the Pathosaurus: The Songs of Eric Harrison
By Carl Settlemyer
Those
who have heard "Freebird" one time too many (music's
answer to mathematics' universal set) should buy Eric Harrison's
Pathosaurus if for no other reason than to have a personal copy
of "and the Band Played 'Freebird'," a chilling exposition
of the best criminal defense since PMS. Equally good reasons,
however, abound.
Harrison's
best work on both Pathosaurus and his prior collection, Anyone
Can Fill Your Shoes, exhibits the strengths of Elvis Costello
(Harrison's voice could garner him the lead role in DeclanMacManusMania
if there ever is such a thing) and Bob Dylan, his two most obvious
influences. Characterized by deft lyric turns and a delivery that
serves a subpoena on mind and soul, the songs are tight, pop-folk
gems bristling with wry sarcasm and desperate longing. These two
tapes, furthermore, are radiant with more incandescent moments
than most songwriters can muster in a career. Comparisons of Harrison
to Costello and Dylan are not uninvited. The tunes are punctuated
with allusions to the masters of his craft. (Costelloisms like
"punch the clock" and "crocodile tears" abound;
"I Wanna Be Bob" speaks for itself.) Harrison's implied
confidence in his ability is not, thankfully, unmerited.
My
personal favorite, "Astroboy," from Shoes, boasts a
set of lyrics worthy of any songwriter you can name.
Yeah
she's got a brand new boy/He draws the shade, locks the door
She swoons his lips drip poetry/Tell me who's gonna wipe the floor?
Equally
impressive are the haunting "Hospital Steps," the plaintive
"Secret Place" and the slashing, cynical "This
is America," from Pathosaurus, and "Lipstick Case"
and "Hello John" from Shoes. In addition to masterful
turns of phrase, Harrison also adeptly depicts the broad cast
of characters who populate his songs (lovers and the loveless,
beatniks and businessmen, yuppies and junkies, yokels and wanderers)
and treats a disparate array of themes (political correctness,
suburban malaise, addictions of all sorts, loneliness, etc.).
Shoes
is the more fully realized of the two projects. It features the
Crash Chorus, a band consisting of Harrison, his brother, and
two childhood friends and displays a variety of styles and disciplined,
but not overly reserved arrangements. My one gripe about the collection
is that all the lyrics are not printed. A cheap ploy to get people
to listen to the tape repeatedly if I've ever seen one. Pathosaurus,
recorded on a 4-track machine this August (Shoes was produced
in a New Jersey studio) is an almost entirely acoustic collection
of demos reminiscent of Pete Townsend's Scoop. Almost all the
lyrics are printed too. Though Pathosaurus is the more uneven
in that in its comprehensiveness (there are a lot of good songs
on this tape) it tends to recycle Harrison's themes (note the
recurrence of pill popping people and "secret"/"some
other" places), both tapes share a single-minded dedication
to song and voice, and not to band, singer or image.
All
of this praise should not suggest that Harrison's work has not
shortcomings, but it is important to point out that these shortcomings
are primarily a function of the class of songwriter into which
he has put himself. For example, I would suggest that the fabric
of reference and experience Harrison employs is not as dense as
that of his mentors. But a moderately unfavorable comparison to
Dylan and Costello is, I hope, to praise with faint damnation.
The
more serious criticisms of Harrison's work are two-fold. First,
his 'angry young man' stance tends to focus a bit too much on
rather obvious targets like yuppie greed, bourgeois hypocrisy,
redneck stupidity, and intellectual smugness. He thus covers ground
that writers (again, like Dylan and Costello) have already covered
more convincingly. To his credit, however, Harrison usually makes
the most of his opportunities by turning these occasions into
memorable songs. Essentially he is much more adept at depicting
inner life and relations between individuals ("Lipstick Case"
and "Neither There Nor Here" are exemplary) than he
is at depicting outer life. Certain sections of "Secret Safety
Net," "Something to Defend" and "Hollow Years"
tend toward sloganeering and, I believe, illustrate this point.
"Astroboy," on the other hand, unifies the public and
the private by suggesting social relations through personal relations
and is reminiscent, in this respect, of Billy Bragg's better work.
Secondly,
in certain instances Harrison tends to, quite unnecessarily, put
his thumb on the scales of songs he otherwise balances quite carefully.
For example, the last line of "Running Out of Runway"
("crash landing up ahead") is objectionable not because
it is incongruous, but rather because it spells out what the rest
of the song successfully suggests. It is canned laughter to a
joke that is already funny. These instances suggest that Harrison,
for all his self-confidence, somewhat distrusts his poetic gift.
He needn't.
The
best part about this entire deal is that one needn't take my word
for any of this. Eric Harrison is a 2L right here at Georgetown
and plays solo at the In Chambers Pub on Fridays from 3-6 p.m.
Go hear him play before you plunk down your hard applied-for student
loan dollars on his tapes at our friendly corner bookstore. Go
if for no other reason than to not feel like a complete dork 5
or 10 years down the line when the rest of the world will know
what you missed out on.
The
author of this review is a second year evening student.