-- -- -_ ----- A po esm n for the • United egro College Fund nnounced that proceeds from Prince' single "Money · DoII't Mattu 2 Night" will be · donated to the UNCF. Additionally, plans for a · sequel to Prince' uperhero · comic book venture are in the • works. · Th Un n or d tory Lutber Campbell i getting · nasty in print. Hi newly- • pubU hed autobiography i • "A NAtty As They Want To · Be: � U1tCeMored Story of : Luthu Campbell of the 2 Live · Crew." It detail Campbell's • days a problem child up through hi infamous rap , r. 9 Sultry pleading and moan- ing is what's made Keith Sweat a hit. The thirty-some­ thing, ex-Wan Street worker has sold more than 4 million copies of his debut album, "Malee It Last Forever" and close to four million of his second release, "1'11 Give All My Love To Ym.". Despite his acclaim as one of the original New Jack swingers, Keith Sweat has made a reputation for himself with his crooming love bal­ lads. And now he holds the undisputed title as the king of the begging balladeers. And, ohl How the ladies love it! Keith will be the first to tell you he's not too proud to beg. In fact, it's what made him tand out among the new .crowd of male singers. For • some, Keith's one-octave, raspy, nasal vocals leave something to be desired. But the critics will agree, Keith's captured the fall of R&.B music-and that's what his listeners are drawn to. Now, Keith I 'keeping it comin' with more moans and groans, and a lot more oul. Uke his last two albums, his current "Keep It Comin'", is full of songs dealing with relationships. Keith says he keep writing about it be­ cause he's quite fluent on the topic. Keith's current single "Why Me Baby" is already making an impres ive stand on the charts-c-giving the crooner another hit to add to the collection. There is omeone special in Keith's life right now, but he wouldn't say who or how serious it is. He did admit that' be would like to ettle �wn. Keith recently moved to Atlanta to get away from it all. But no matter where he i, he's gonn keep it comin-moaning, groaning, moving and grooving an the way to the top. " - compiled by K Bark. - epeclal contributor: RadioScope ... The Column • • Andl sle p And I dream of the person I might have been There I am free again Andlpeale Like omeone who's been to the highut peaks And back again Andlswear ']'JaQt my grass is greener than anyone's 'Til I believe again Then I wake And the dreom fades away and I focetMday And I realize Tliat there's got to be some hero in me When Jeffrey Gaine speaks . about heroism on the opening track of his new self-titled debut on Chrysalis Records, he's inging about life, and the bravery it takes to live it day to day and the courage needed to believe in your own hopes and dreams. By working to realize hi own dreams, he hopes in orne way to show others that heme are found not on ome di - tant, illuminated tage, but right within us all. Jeffrey, now 26, was born, rai ed and still lives in a suburb of Pennsylvania's capital city, Harris­ burg. It w , according to Jeffrey, "the kind of neighborhood where people carved their hedge into IhapeS. I w lucky - pare lievcd in fett g thin gro naturally, and consequently I learned early on to appreciate the beauty of things as they were, rather than what I could make them into." Jeffrey's childhood was filled with free-spirited encounters. "There was always someone ing­ ing or playing records. My whole family loved music of one kind or another. My cousins, for instance, turned me on to artists such as Donovan, Dylan and Zeppelin - all those things residual hippies were listening to. Amazingly, they tuned an old, three-stringed toy guitar of my sister's and were able to play real songs. Right then I real­ ized music wasn't just something on the radio or on records, it was a reality. " The arts, particularly music and drawing, captured Jeffrey's im­ agination from the start, through his interests were not always en­ couraged by those teachers so sharply yet compassionately , depicted in the song "Headmasters Of Mine": "The first song I remem­ ber writing was interrupted by my fourth grade teacher, who snatched up my song and read it to the class hoping this would humiliate me. All it did was make me sad for By GEORGE FERRIS "It's going to be the mo t controversial film of the decade," promises Denzel Washington, talking about the upcoming film, "MalcolmX. " The movie, to be released at Thanksgiving, stars Denzel in the lead role of slain leader Malcolm X and has already stirred its own fair hare of controversy. Two issues parking that ever-desirble media attention are money and personality. The movie was to \:08t $28 million, but that figure has risen to $33 million, a relatively cheap cost as movie go. But the overrun prompted Completion Bond Company, which insures investors against co t overrun, to take control of the movie and inform director Spike Lee that the film will be no longer than two boUlS and 15 minutes, ccording to a report in the children bein force-fed omeone el e' morality by dul perpet t­ ing their own fe and i curitic. Children houldn't be taught me or be frighten d to feel. W y b c then I knew I w nted to pe for those ilenced." In the pring of 1979, 13-ye r­ old Jeffrey traded in an old drum t he had for new electric guitar. Jeffrey explains, "I played drums a bit, but once I decided to get a b nd together I knew I wanted to sing and thought I'd try coming out from be­ hind everyone. I pent countl hours in b ements and g rages working out covers and eventually I got into bands relying he vHyon my vocal." Jeffrey's first "profe sional" gig came in the early 'BO's when he and a group of high school buddies were hired by the owner of a strip bar. "We were happy to be playing for someone other than our shadows," he remembers. "We played covers by The Clash, The Jam, Elvi Co­ tello, Joe Jackson and Gang Of Four," Two other artists, John Len­ non and David Bowie, were special influences. Their directne , in­ tegrity and daring were models for Jefferey' own songwritting. Inter­ estingly, Lennon and Bowie al 0 sang about "heroes," both working cl and just-for-one-day kinds. JEFFREY CONTINUED to. pi away t music In Harris­ burg, installing carpet by day and playing whenever, however and with whomever by night. "I learned a lot," he says, "but soon I was just treading water. I wanted to play for some new faces. During the spring of' 89 I had been given two choices: go to New York and join 8 band as a front man or go to Philadelphia and start a solo gig with a manage­ ment team. The band was already assured a deal with a major record company, but I figured I'd be sell­ ing out all the people who liked what I was about. So I continued by myself and moved to Philly." His songs and decided non-rstar trip" stage demeanor won a strong following in Philadelphia. "The next thing I knew," Jeffrey laughs, "I was playing the Bitter End in New York and they were calling gigs 'showcases." Do one more quick cut and Jeffrey is signed to Chrysalis and recording his label debut with friends from old Harris­ burg bands. The album, produced by Richard Gottehrer, "is not too elaborate," according to Jeffrey. . "People know me as a solo per­ former, so I figured I'd work a band in slowly. For me, it's a comfort­ able transition." The songs, set in a context of Jeffery Gaines , classic rock with delicate folk shad­ ings, speak for themselves. They are both character sketches and philosophical meditations, ex­ aminations of living in the world fashioned with gentleness, clarity and disarming honesty. It's romance not in simple, storybook terms but in the guise of "A Dark Love Song." On crucial tracks like "Hero In Me" and "Scares Me More," Jeffrey confronts dead-on the terrors and limits that come not from the outside, but from inside a person's head and heart. ing to do with me. I'm completely insignificant, and I like that. There are too many individuals in music now who think their name and presence is more important than what they do with it." Jeffrey Gaines' self-titled debut is a raw, unconventional, off -center approach to "working things out" for those who will see vulnerability and truth as very necessary ele­ ments. "I KNOW SO many people who are down on their lives," Jef­ frey says gravely. i'They look at their TV and say, 'Tell me about the world of the Beautiful People -let me see what the "real" people live like.' What I try to express is what most people try to cover up. And by doing it and remaining sane and honest and still playing a slow, I'm hoping people will say 'Well, if he can do it, I cando it too.' It's almost like now what I'm doing has noth- a New York Times. The film, which was shot in Harlem, upstate New York, Egypt and South Africa, is in the editing proces . Recently, Lee showed Warner Brothers executives a four-hour version Lee reportedly told the Warner bigwig that if Oliver Stone .could IUD the movie about John F. Kennedy for more than three hours, be should have equal 'time. STUDIOS PREFER shorter films, because they can show it more times in a day, making more money. Malcolm X producer, Marvin Worth, backed Lee up, saying if Lee anted three hours, he would get the three hours for the movie. The movie i based on a screo.nplay ntten more than 20 years ago by late writeJS James Baldwin and Arnold Pede Malcolm X's widow, Betty Shabazz, served as consultant on the film, as did Highland Parker Paul Lee, historian specializing in Malcolm X research. Amiri Baraka, poet, took issue with Spike Lee and the film last summer, contributing to the ongoing controversy urroundlng the film. Baran said the movie will be a distortion o( Malcolm X's life "to make middl�lass Negroes sleep easier." Baraka also criticized Lee's "She's Goaa Have It" and "Do tM Right Thing" for their depiction of African Americans. Lee is part of a "retrograde movement in this country," according to Baraka. Meanwhile, the public-Denzel fans and Malcolm admirers alike -await the movie' release. Denzel W bingtoo