AC ROLLING BACK THE PRICES IN ' AN r BOTH LOCATIONS RISING SON from page 75 • PRICES GOOD THRU SEPT. 15TH Food Making Is Like Making Love. You've Gotta' Put A Little Effort Into It! Top to bottom: Jakob with Papa Bob in 1970. "[Parents] are one part of a person, and there are many other parts," says Jakob Dylan. TUESDAY & THURSDAY MONDAY & WEDNESDAY $14.95 New York Sirloin $14.95 Veal Picante $15.95 p Shrimp Bordelaise $10.95 I Fettuccine Alfredo Sliced Beef Pepperonata ..$11.95 $11,95 Chicken Cacciatore Filet Mignon (with zip sauce) ..$15.95 $14.95 Veal Marsala $11.95 Chicken Picante $11.95 Sliced Beef Siciliana Manicotti or Canneloni . .$ 9.95 $11.95 Broiled Whitefish Family portrait: Jesse, Samuel, Bob, Sara, Jakob and Anna Dylan, around the time of Bob and Sara Dylan's divorce in 1977. Jakob lived with each parent during his adolescence. • FRIDAY & SUNDAY It's Our 53rd Anniversary Open Since 1948 Chateaubriand (for two) . .$40.00 Sliced Beef Stefanelli Broiled Whitefish Chicken Moretti Crab Legs . .$11.95 $11.95 $11.95 r $16.95 (Leith Zip Sauce) All Dinners Include: Antipasta with Salad Bowl Minestrone or Onion Soup • Pasta Del Giorno • Bread Basket *Please no special discounts or coupons on Anniversary Specials. 4222 SECOND STREET, DETROIT • (313) 832-1616 • VALET PARKING 1477 JOHN R ROAD, TROY • (248) 588-6000 • VALET PARKING SZECHUAN • HUNAN CUISINE • Healthy Diet • Cocktails, Dishes Available • Beer & Wine CONSTRUCTION SPECIAL TOTAL DINNER BILL • Expires 8-30-2001 • Excludes Holidays + Complete Catering Service For'All Occasions • Open 7 Days A eek 29875 NORTHWESTERN HIGHWAY • 353 7890 Easy access to Applegate off Inkster Road! - At Inkster . Applegate Square AWAWLOSNATC7 ,MWOEM/Afar 29556 Orchard Lake Rd. Just N. of 13 Mile On the East Side r DINE-IN • CARRY-OUT CATERING Open Mon.-Sat. 6:30 - 3:00 Sun. 8:00 - 3:00 2001 78 COUPON ▪ =II NM TOTAL BILL EVERYDAY Huge Eggwhite Omelets Homemade Soup Waffles Lo-Cal Menu Bagels & Lox Not Valid With Any Other Offer • Fresh Salads Expires 9/30/01 I. • Fresh-Baked Muffins • • • • • 8/24 calf 10 /0 OFF (248) 626-0804 Fax: (248) 626-0814 r COUPON - FREE CUP OF HOMEMADE SOUP WITH ANY SALAD FROM OUR LARGE SALAD MENU Not Valid With Any Other Offer Expires 9/30/01 0 from England. The same could be said of [singer-banjo great] Ralph Stanley, because bluegrass doesn't have relevance to my music. But it's thrilling for me to hear him, and part of what's thrilling is that his music is totally unattainable." For his part, Dylan and his band's thoughtful, no-non- sense brand of heartland rock has proven very attainable — and appeal- ing to a large audience. That despite or, perhaps, because of — its stylistic debt to such artists as Tom Petty, the Band, Van Morrison, Elvis Costello [who guests on the Wallflowers' latest album] and others, including Bob Dylan. The Los Angeles-based group's sec- ond album, 1996's Bringing Down the Horse, sold more than 4 million copies and yielded such memorable hits as the Grammy-winning "One Headlight," "Three Marlenas" and "Sixth Avenue Heartache." The Wallflowers' latest album, Breach, finds Dylan and his bandmates — Michael Ward, Mario Calire, Greg Richling and Rami Jaffee — crafting a sound and style of their own. It entered the national Billboard album sales charts at No. 13 with a bullet, buoyed by a media blitz that included a lengthy profile in Rolling Stone. The video for the album's first sin- gle, "Sleepwalker," found itself in reg- ular airplay on both MTV and VH 1, while the song also clocked in on Billboard's Modern Rock, Mainstream Rock and Adult Top 40 charts. This feat underscores the Wallflowers' ability to appeal to a broad array of listeners, including a large number of young fans who don't necessarily care, or know, that the band's leader is the son of Bob Dylan. Timing is everything in the realm of pop music, but "what other people are doing is irrelevant," says Dylan. "You can't allow yourself to pay attention to it. A lot of people have made records compromising themselves in order to be 'current.' By their next record they backtrack, and say that they're 'getting back to their roots.' "You have to see who's been around a long time, and what they have — and haven't — done." Dylan knows he need look no far- ther than his own father to learn what to do to achieve musical longevity. But his dad has been a taboo sub- ject, both in interviews and in the younger Dylan's songs, which went out of their way not to mention any- thing about his personal life in general — or even to write lyrics in the first person. "I definitely didn't want to spend