Music Awards Course of Empire - Most improved (1990) Independent Release, Act Most Deserving Of Major Label Support, Best Performance By A Local Act In 1990 (Course of Empire release party at Trees, November 16). Male Vocalist (Vaughn Stevenson), Stevie Ray Vaughn Memorial Guitarist Award (Mike Graff), Album Cover Art, Band Fliers, Cover Song Rendition ("We Got The Beat" by the Go-Go's), "The Morrissey" Memorial Dis' (Most Pretentiously Angst-Ridden). It's apparent, in light of the plunder that Course of Empire reaped in this poll, that this band is the new crowned king of Dallas music by both divine right and default. With Fever in the Funkhouse voluntarily relinquishing the keys to the kingdom, these mystical Merlins of industrial metal assumed the mantle. But really, Course of Empire's newfound king-hell bosshood has much more to do with divine right than default. COE is inarguably the local scene's hottest number in terms of power and potential something reflected not only in the number of awards the band racked up (10, with a significant second-place finish to Fever in the Act Overall category), but in the sweeping range represented by those awards. There are two constraints that tend to deliver a band from the realm of mere "good" ness unto "great" ness 1) artistic merit and 2) accessibility through communicating your art to a lot of people who probably don't even like art at least not mixed in with their rock 'n' roll). Number one is usually pointless without number two, and vice versa. Of late, COE, has nailed both of these factors square on the head, though the advent of an audience for its art is a fairly recent development (and may account for the Most Improved award). Unlike homegrown acts like Edie Brickell & New Bohemians and Sara Hickman, which transcended early cult status to become commercially viable national contenders - largely because they were commercially viable in the first place - COE remains a "cult" act in both substance and style. But it has become that oddest of oddities - a cult act with massive popular appeal.- for two primary reason: the audience finally caught up with the band's oblique future tense, and COE released its first album. Course of Empire displays COE at its best - and worst. At its best, the band is a roaring ball of fire, twisting fitfully in its own sobriety. The grinding guitar work of Mike Graff and tom-tom crash of dual drummer Chad Lovell and Anthony Headley provide a libidinous counterweight to vocalist Vaughn Stevenson's ethereal shamanism. At its overwrought worst, COE richly deserves its "Morissey" Memorial and its second-place finish to "Chate" himself (how poetic) in the balloting for "The Jeff Liles" for Most Attitude. But largely, COE manages to maintain a striking balance between the contradictory calls of the wild and the sane, the nether reaches of the body and the high plateau of the brain, achieving a swinging fusion of mood and mission on sublime gutchecks like "Coming of the Century" and the spaghetti Southwestern "God's Jig." How great their art. Let us bow before the new boss.