r COUPON 1 See Our 18-Foot, 1500 Gallon I Salt Water Acquarium ENTERTAINMENT Carry-Out Service Available ENJOY EXCITING DINING! HUNAN PALACE Oriental Cuisine and Cocktail Lounge Szechuan, Hunan, Mandarin and Cantonese Dishes 10% OFF ou inteh T n h iosr CCar ry O ut - Open 7 Days — Mon.-Thurs. 11:30-10:30, Fri. & Sat. 11:30-11:30, Sun. 12-10 38259 W. 10 MILE RD. & HAGGERTY • Farm. Hills 473-3939 JN NEXT TO HOLIDAY INN Near Gd. River r I COUPON I eNE. yAaD BARB T. OPEN 7 DAYS — 11 a.m. to 12 Mid. BAR-B-Q SLAB FOR 2 PLACE FOR RIBS $10.95 INCLUDES: 2 POTATOES, 2 COLE SLAWS AND BREAD FOR 2 $7.85 INCLUDES: 2 POTATOES, 2 COLE SLAWS AND BREAD FOR 2 BAR-B-Q CHICKEN FOR 2 11,777174=TI"tnn ‘ „ Coupon Expires 9-30-88 JN • 1 Coupon Per Order TRY OUR DAILY SPECIALS MON.-FRI. (Inquire Within) FARMINGTON HILLS — 851-7000 I LIVONIA — 427-6500 30843 PLYMOUTH RD 31006 ORCHARD LAKE RD. AT 14 . Learn how to take better care of your heart, call Red Cross. 833-4440 American Red Cross rnvir Well Help. WillYou? A Public Service of This Newspaper A The Advertising Council 0 - - 0w01°111 Open 7 Days A Week taiiraist lilikes Pe 111 One Pound OA Sul Cooed Beef fiat Coupon Expives Get 1/2 Pound • Casty-Out On y e Ruby ays: v lour lOgate * de Or Baskets No" 4:0 64 Rock and Roll Continued from preceding page FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1988 and roll would be an in- teresting listening concept." Shapiro took that often meaningless phrase seriously. While at NYU Shaprio had enjoyed a local conceptual jazz show. That program planted a seed in his mind. "I felt that the same sort of an approach to rock and roll would be an interesting listening con- cept." Shapiro pitched the idea of an "intelligent" rock radio show to KCUR in 1978. The station accepted it and "Cyprus Avenue," named after a song by rock star Van Morrison, was born. The show, picked up from the Kansas City station by Detroit public station WDET last year, runs locally from 1 to 2 p.m. on Fridays. It features a different theme each week. His themes have included Motown, Bob Dylan, the British invasion of the 1960s, and, frequently, new music which has not made its way into the restrictive world of commercial radio. "It's a hobby, it's an avoca- tion," says Shapiro of his show. "All the time I've spent putting it together is purely volunteer time on my part. In fact, the show is available na- tionally because I, out of my own pocket, pay the cost of getting it up on the NPR satellite, which makes it available to the (40) stations across the country which carry it" at no charge. "I am hoping that with the passage of time I will build a big enough group of carrying stations that I can induce some kind of a national underwriter to pick up the cost of the air time." The Andrews and McMeel publishing company needed no inducement to work with Shapiro. They contacted him to do a book about rock and roll on compact discs. The book reviews the rock music available on CD. "I basically went out and acquired a little more than 500 CDs to use as the body of the book," he ex- plains. "So there went my publisher's advance real fast!" Just as he included the CDs of his choice in the book, Shapiro enjoys he freedom to play whatever he wants to on his radio show. "That's one of the reasons why I love it," he explains. "As long as I don't say any of the nasty words, and as long as I don't try to hype any kind of product, I have total autonomy as to what I do." Shapiro often uses that autonomy to introduce his listeners to bands they might not hear on commercial rock radio. "I'm a great fan of Prince's music," he says. "I think he's probably the most creative guy out there right now in a lot of ways. I like Terence Trent D'Arby a whole bunch. Among the lesser- known acts I'm very impress- ed with a guy named John Hiatt, who brought out a wonderful record last year called 'Bring the Family' and has a brand new one due out any day now. I like REM. I think they're a very creative band. And I like U2 and a lot of the name bands today. I still think there's good music being made. It's just that it's fewer and further between." The 1960s were rock's By the early 1970s the music industry woke up to the fact that this was a multi-billion- dollar-a-year business as kids became more affluent. golden decade, that being a time of protest and ex- perimenation. As the nation moved into the "me decade" of the 1970s, money took over the world of rock and roll. "The money in the last 15, 18 years has been the worst thing that's happened to the business," says Shapiro. "I guess it's inevitable in the kind of world in which we live. "By the early 1970s two things happened. Number one, the music industry woke up to the fact that this was a multi-billion-dollar-a-year business as kids became more affluent and had more disposable income and they were disposing of it on records. And secondly, about that time we moved into the conglomerization, where businesses got bigger and to- day, unfortunately, you've got rock acts sort of going out on the stage with banners behind them provided by Miller beer or Budweiser or Coca-Cola. And that is just antithetical to what rock was all about in the first place. To- day it's more marketing than music." "I'd like to see more concern with the music and less with marketing. I'd like to see ar- tists given the opportunity to express what they want to say, more so than the kids to- day who are going into it with, very definitely, dollar signs in their eyes. I've talk- ed to kids over the years who are hoping to get a break in- to music and instead of talk- ing about what they want to say, the message they want to deliver, they're telling me about how good-looking they are and what great names they have and how they've got these super costumes. It's really become a very commer- cial enterprise," he concludes with disappointment in his voice. As much as rock has chang- ed since 1970, many feel it has produced even greater change in Western society since the 1950s. While Shapiro is not certain whether rock has caused or reflected societal change, he says rock "certainly has led to a unity in the youth culture, or did at that time — it established a youth culture as something separate with its own music and its own values and ultimately, of course, that led to its own films — the first of which was probably Blackboard Jungle, that used the Bill Haley and the Com- ets song, "Rock Around the Clock," — and that sort of thing, of course, ultimately, over the years, has grown in- to the major marketing con- cept in America." That fact has little impact on many public radio pro- grammers. "It's tough to sell public radio on the idea of rock and roll," says Shapiro. "WDET is really kind of a non-mainstream station in that way. So often when you talk to public radio peple they say, 'Well, the other stations in our market only play rock and roll, so to serve the public we're gonna play nothing but jazz and classical? Which to me just indicates that there's a snobbery or a bias there, because rock and roll is every bit as legitimate an art form, in my opinion, as jazz or folk or classical. Presented the way I try to present it, anyway, I think it's valid on public radio." While many music lovers would scoff at anyone using the terms "rock and roll," and "art form" in the same sentence, Shapiro maintains that much of the music which flies under rock's banner is art. "Fifty years from today when people look back at who were the important artists of the 20th century, I think that a guy like Bob Dylan or the Beatles, in terms of their im- pact on society and their ex- planation of the way the world was, are going to stand just as tall as the film direc- tors, like John Huston, or the novelists, like.-Ernest Hem- ingway. I think that these people have every bit as much to say." Shapiro is a divorced father