Arti 's proceed to
be donated to UNCF
y
B YO NY - Prince and
tbe N.P.G. rtlea cd -M01Iey
DoII't Matter 2 Night, - the ne
ingle from multi-platinum
Dit"nolld alld Pearls d k,
Mueb3rd.
"Money" i the fifth Single
from the current album, and the
6rst to be rete since Prince
e tabUsbed a ric Billboard
record by charting a Top 10 bit
on the Hot 100 for ten consecu
tive years.
All of the arti t' proceeds
from sales of the Ingle ill be
donated to the United Negro
College FUnd.
The ceo mpanyln music video for the trac w directed by
Spite Lee, and f�tru footage he hot in Cairo, Soweto and
Brooklyn of poor families' struggling through difficult economic
times.
Prince will not appear in the video, which is also expected to
include archival footage of the Oreat Depression. Lee and Prince
had been planning their collaboration on this project since lut
ummer.
PUBLIC'
continued from 81
his time if he wasn't serious," J.R.
add . Job en ed their natural
talents needed professional
guidance, and put an offer on the
table. One week la�r he became
,their maDll&er .. � .. , ". .
: . S:#sSl�g P &ie:flce,l JpUne,
and hard work, �ob invested In the.
group. He purchased high-tech
equipment and put them in a loft in
Buffalo where they worked at writ
ing songs, refining their skills
musicians, and learning the do's
and don'ts of the music bush.e .
The woods bedding proces lasted a
year and a half,
JOE PYBllC
The group's name, Jo Public,
evolved during this period. Dew
explains: "We were sitting in .R.'s
house and one of the guys s8id it
would be cool if we all were nari1ed
Joe and our last name was Public.
See, J.R. and Jake's actual nam
are Joe. I looked up the word
'public' in the dictionary and it said
'to serve the public.' We looked at
each other and s id 'Joe Public,'
yeah that's dope! And u's definite
Jy different."
"Everyday we rehearsed for 8 to
12 hours, just shedding ourselves,"
says Jake. "It was rough," J.R. con
tinues. "V!e were used to playing
gigs and Lionel said 'no, you guys
need to do your homework first.'
We realized that many of the songs
we had. written were garbage.
Lionel would always have us go
back and re-write them."
Job agrees the year and a half the
group spent in relative hibernation
was rough for both partie . "It was
a fight. I used all of my experiences
with them. They were young and
felt they were ready for the big
time. But they did take my advice. "
. "LIVE AND LEARNII
During the latter part of 1990
the group presented Job with "Live
and Learn." "They' had a lot of
songs," Job remembers.' "Once I
b� that tune, I knew they were
ready to come do n to my studio."
.As 1990 spilled into 1991, Joe
Public wa working even day a
week in Job's recording studio-iii
White Plains, New York, penning
a batch of new songs that are now
part of their debut album. The e
include." GOJIQ IJww." "1 Miss
You," -I tUce It, - anil 1Itis One's
For You." "My whole idea was to
bring them into the studio and give
them even more direction," says
Job.
In February, he took ihem to a
benefit show at the Bottom Une in
New York City. "Raw talent per-
. formed that night and it blew the
guys' minds. They toot everything
in and aid 'we want to be where
these people are' ," recalls Job.
Eager to hop the group's demo
to record labels, Job sent four or
five songs on a tape marked "this is
a live band" to Columbia Records,
who dispatched an A4R man to the .
studio to view the band up close; he
w "totally blown away by the
group," he later said.
Joe Public and Columbia
negotiated a deal by the end of
March. Although the contract was
agrecs.d upon and signed with rela
tive ease, the group ha continued
working in Job's studio. "We never
let up," say Kev. "We're always
writing and practicing because we
want to stay on top of what's hap
pening, and we want to be better
than what's out there now." J.R.
agrees: "We've produced so much
material that we didn't know what
to put on' the album. As a matter of
fact, we're ready to start work on
our second album."
JOE PUBLIC i music with a
live attitude. Refre hingly innova
tive but also rooted in the tradition
of American popular music, the
group's sound is top 40 R&B with
a stree't appeal. Or as Jake RUts it,
smiling, "It's a hip-hop/new jack
tltang done in a different way. Our
music is something new going b ck
to the basics."
BLUES JAZZ "RITUALS 'OPOLAR
R& BLANK NEEDLE ACC!! ISORIEI
MAIL ORDER ACCTO· 8LUE DIUIfIWTOIf
__ (313) 571-2222
6340 CHARLEVOIX • NEAR MT. EU.IOTT • DETROIT, MI
f
____ . __ ............ IIiIIIIiI ... _ ........ _IIIIiIII ... _ ... __ IIIiIIII ... __ ..... .. _
• Jazz concert/fund d v lop
ment - Jazz pre entation:
Straight Ahead. Tickets: $10
thru Finally Got The
Newsl 12.50 at WSU Com
munity Arts Auditorium 7pm. .
Saturd y, r.21
• ·Ce/ebrlty Millionaires party, -
7pm-1 am in the Riverview Rm of
Cobo Hall, will feature Las
Vegas-style games, dancing,
music, food and fun. Gu will
have a chance to win airline tick
ets for two or ticket for th
Detroit Branch NAACP Fight for
Freedom Dinner, reported in the
Guinness Book as the larg
sit-down dinner in the world.
Donation $30. Tickets avail at
the door. (313-871-2087).
• ·Walk a Mile to Save a MInd, •
a 5K indoor walkathon. The
UNCF's New Center Area 5K
walk travels thru the hallways &
skyways of the General Motors
and Fisher bldgs and the New
Center One. Registration
begins at 7am. Walkathon starts
y,
• SCooi JAzz to perform next in
Jazz Aubum concert series at
OCC 8pm. The concert will be
In P rformance Space, Bldg
F, Rm 119, on the Auburn Hills
C mpu of of OCC, 2900
F e one Dr in Auburn Hills.
Adm ion: $7 & $5. (34()'6817).
• Spiegel merchandise in the
Community Arts Exhibit Hall of
the Michigan State Fair and ex
pos n Cntr, 1120 W State Fair
March 13-29. Mon-Sat 9am-
1Opm. Sun. 10am-6pm. Free.
urd y, Mar. 14
• Can You Sound Just Uke Me?
- Red Grammer is on of the
nation's most engaging
troubadours in the field of
children' mu Ic.
tun to n oy h m n
m com 11 -2pm on
th Youth tr t 9
o rolt In of ,200
Woodw d A (833-2323).
• Phot nd Fun I th th m
of ctivtt the Mich g n HI -
torical Mum, 717 W. All gan
, In ng. Th pro-
gram from 11 m-3pm colncld
h th mu urn's current ex
hlb ·Stlll Memories: A Century
of h gan Photography.· -
o can bring th ir antiqu
camera to Ie rn the back
ground of ntique camera
ChIdren .,py • fun hanct.on eo·
. (517) 373-3559.
• Porcelain Doll work hop is of
fered by t Detro Historical
Mu eum, 6401 Woodward,
March 14, 21 & 28 from 1 0:30am
- 12:3Opm for ag 14 and up.
Registration f $25. A materials
fee of $251 aI 0 required. Must
attend all three ion. To
reg r call 833-1283.
• Paraprofessional Accountant
Program, at Oakland University
DMsion of Continuing Education
from 7:30 to 8:30pm at the Oak
land Cent r on campus. - The
noncredit program, can be com
pleted in a minimum 15 months,
offers a bookkeeping certificate
in six months and job referral
upon graduation. Up to two ac-
r.11
CLASS REUNION
• Commerce & E. Comm
High School' of Detroit. MI'
Cia of 1960, 1961, 1962 �
1953. Tentative Oat : Nov. 7,1
1992. Call: (313) 748-9843. I
• MACKENZIE CLASS
REUNION - CI of 1951,
1952 & 1963. T ntattve dat: I
10/1992 Information: 748-9843.
.)
Send' all announcements net
• upcoming events to: Mlchlg�
Citizen, P.O. Box 03580, Hlgh�
land Park. MI 48203
I
Where You Coine From
Has A' Lot Th Do With
Where You're Going,
Chuck Morrison
Vice President, African·American and
Hispanic Consumer Marketing.
The Coca-Cola Company.
After graduating from college, Chuck Morrison
took his degree and "hit the ground running."
Thday, he looks back with pride on a career
that has taken him from the classrooms of
, '
Bishop College to th boardroom of Coca-Cola
USA.
Vice President, African-American and
Hispanic Marketing, Chuck supervises the
d elopment of adv rtising and strategi
planning for thes important markets. Under
his guidance, these segments hay
significantly increased their impact on Coca
Cola profitability and growth. IndividuaJly, he
has b n hon red for his many civi
contributi ns.
But Morrison is qui k to point out, "With ut
a coli g education, I would n ver hay
njoyed as much good fortun . It just that
simple"
W've har d d ply in Chu k' "good (i rtune"
For that, Coca-Cola ay .. 0
Thank You,
Bishop College.