The Michigan Daily-Sunday, C Page 6-Sunday, December 9, 1979-The Michigan Daily Books The Right Stuff': Wolfe in orbit Bootleg records: Rock's thriving blackmarket By Amy Diamond By Eric Zorn Even the most enticing story, if poorly told, can fall dreadfully flat under the weight of turgid, crippled prose. There is no good reason why tex- tbooks, academic journals, and most newspapers must be dusty and dry; it is just that they are crafted by writers with crabbed conceptions of enlightening yet creative and absorbing presentation: Even rather pedestrian tales and events can leap to life when treated by a good writer. Nowhere is this more evident than in the works of the so-called "new jour- nalists" - the Hunter Thompsons and Roger Angells - who explore their sub- jects not just for surface facts, but for the spirit behind them. The reader is in- tended to learn to judge by new rules, speak with a different vocabulary, and approach life from a fresh side. This journalism goes beyond presenting the truth to open up brand new channels of thought. Tom Wolfe is no doubt the king of this breed of writers. Author of such notables as The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby and, Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers, Wolfe infuses a color and grace into his writing not often found in contemporary works. His latest book, The Right Stuff, con- cerns a subject that many will not con- sider inherently interesting: The development of and personalities in the Mercury Project, America's initial manned space flight effort. With so many tomes already penned on just this topic - aimed at everyone from the scientist to the schoolboy - how much more could there be to tell? It seems, on the surface, a redundant sort of work, and yet there is something refreshing, almost ironic, in looking back 20 years to resurrect our long lost national mission and sense of unified purpose. On one level, The Right Stuff describes the courage, skill, dedication, and moral character of the military test pilots who were chosen as astronauts to ride the Mercury capsules into Earth orbit, but on another level it is a wide-eyed look back at a simpler, more purposeful era when values were less obscured by the overwhelming emphasis on the self, and Americans clung to a fierce, innocent pride and belief in their nation as the greatest land of opportunity in the history of the world. As long as there were frontiers to conquer and a single obvious enemy - the Russians - we all, to a measure, were going forward together. In no area was this sense of pushing on the outermost boundaries of the possible more real than for the test pilots - fighter jocks - after World War II. The sound barrier fell to technology, and jets flew faster and higher into the eerie twilight of the up- per atmosphere. Pilots hurtled through the air in winged death traps, denying panic and death, each proving to the other that he had the ineffable quality required to lay everything on the line day after day for a cause that meant something "to thousands, to a people, a nation, to humanity, to God." Indeed, the religious fervor of the pilots transcended mere macho: 'h, ideae ras to prove tit erer' foot of the tay . . . tht you might i "e bl,'0 to joirt that spteial ' w(it the tery top. that elite *ho h M the cIpacity to bring teorrs to atensyes.. the rery Brotherhood of the Right S'r" If itelf .Wolfe writes with conviction and en- thusiasm, as if the tears also come to his eyes. Through anecdotes, tales of derring-do, and taut, tightly-woven description, he sparks this spirit - this covenant with the determined ethos of America - with a sweet, vibrant life See WOLFE, Page 8 THE RIGHT STUFF By Tom Wolfe Farrar, Straus, Giroux, $12.95, 436 pp. THE JOB of a journalist-or any writer - is to assemble facts and present them in a coherent, in- formative, and interesting manner. Eric Zorn is co-editor of the Daily arts page. D URING THE 1920s, the decade of Prohibition, the bootlegger was a familiar figure. Whether crossing the Detroit River with Canadian booze, sneaking to stills in deepest forest, and making transac- tions in the shadows of old warehouses, providing alcoliol to the thirsty masses meant constantly dodging the wrath of the federal government-but it was a lucrative business. Bootleggers today are still dodging the law and raking in profits, but most of them are still satisfying an entirely different taste-music. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), bootlegging is a multi-million-dollar-a-year industry, Nationally, truckloads of tapes and albums have been confiscated by the FBI. The recording industry's trade magazine, Billboard, reported in its Nov. 3 issue that record companies lost an estimated $400 million in a one-year period due to bootleggers. Bootleg production is in direct violation of copyright laws, and in some states, it is illegal even to sell the recor- ds. As a rule, record stores don't like to handle bootlegs, but even in the smallest college town at least one establishment stocks a few illegal discs. Bootleggers Amy Diamond covers city housing for the Daily. lay low, but they are by no means in- visible. Top name established artists and groups such as Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, The Grateful Dead, and the Beatles; as well as many new wave and disco musicians, have been mass- marketed by bootleggers. The basic bootleg album isn't hard to spot amidst the racks of corporate-produced LPs. Frequently the contf#aband recordings display incorrect song titles on their makeshift covers. One Grateful Dead bootleg, Double Dead-a live two-record set recorded at the Felt Forum in New York in December 1971-lists a song on the cover titled "Gone Are The Days." But any Dead afficianado would realize, upon hearing the album, that the tune is actually, "Brown Eyed~Woman," one of the group's hits. Many of the people who make the records are fools. They don't even know the titles of songs. Frequently on an album you'll see a list of songs and say, 'Wow, a whole new set of songs.' But that's not really the case," said one bootleg expert, who prefers to remain anonymous. Bootlegs began appearing on record store shelves about ten years ago. In 1969 Great White Wonder, a Bob Dylan bootleg, came out as a double album. The disc in various versions sold for $14 or -$15, and the song titles were absent. Dylan took legal action in November of that year against a man in England who had ordered 15,000 copies of the LP pressed. A Rolling Stones bootleg en- College and its discontents T'S SATURDAY morning, Home- coming weekend. Mom and Dad pack themselves and their thermos, Maize-and-Blue seat pads, and Go Blue hats into their station wagon in front of their suburban Detroit home and head for Ann Arbor to take their college-student son, Mike, to the game. The Wolverines win before yet another sell-out crowd, and after the game and the traditional cider and doughnuts, Mom, Dad, and Mike head for an expensive dinner out, and then back to Mike's State St. apartment before saying good-bye. "You know, Mike," says his dad, "things sure are better here now than when your brothers and sisters were here ten years ago. I mean, look around. The kids seem to be having a good time, and they're obviously studying hard, since there never seems to be an empty seat at the library. I wish college was like this when I was in school. You kids just have it too easy. Financial aid, expensive facilities, great classes-I only hope you ap- preciate all this." "Sure, Dad, sure," mumbles Mike, kissing his parents good-bye. Saturday night is a blur. Mike and a few friends from the dorm sit around with a couple of sixes and drink them- selves into oblivion. The next morning, he drags himself, hangover and all, to the UGLI for a 15-hour study marathon. "Fun," he mumbles to himself, noting that ten pages of the reserve article he is assigned to read have been ripped out by a classmate. In exasperation he Julie Rovner is a managing editor of the Daily.L f ' (F I By Julie Rovner removes another five pages. If I can't get an 'A' because of some asshole, he thinks disgustedly, I'll at least do better than the rest of them. DOES THIS sound familiar? It should-at least, according to Lansing Lamont, whose book College Shock: A Firsthand Report on College Life Today purports to show how the social and academic pressures at many universities are leading students to the breaking point. Lamont, a former correspondent for Time Magazine, doesn't claim to have any cures for the ills of today's college students. If anything, he could easily be accused of glossing over a terribly complex subject. But whatever its shor- tcomings, Campus Shock is a first step towards public recognition of a set of problems that threaten to effect large portions of American society. According to Lamont, the fact that students are not rioting in the streets and taking over university buildings has lulled most outsiders, especially parents, into the mistaken belief that being at college today is a four-year picnic. Lamont, who claims no special expertise in the area other than having four college-aged children, spent two years visiting every Ivy League college, as well as this University, Berkeley, Stanford, and the University of Chicago. On the basis of more than 75 private interviews, he put together what amounts to an investigative- magazine story, Re writes ,"This is a itr , J C. i A - J ,J) I "If4 report on the dark side of college life in the 1970s," and he means it. Under such headings as "The 1970s: What went wrong," "Ethics befogged," and "Careerism, tarnished icon," he spins a story of an entire generation of lost souls. He tries to bring out not only the frightening realities of college life-suicides, racial tensions-but what they mean to people who are thrust into an alien environment and given but a single word of instruc- tion-"cope." The case studies are quite dramatic. There's the story of a University senior who, faced with the prospect of not graduating because he had bitten off more classes than he could chew, locked himself in his new VW and blew himself away with a .12-gauge shotgun. Then there are the not-so-tragic stories-the woman who nearly had a nervous breakdown because her roommate monopolized their dorm room with her "entertaining," and the Columbia student who was punched out by his best friend after revealing that he had obtained a higher grade on a crucial exam.- But Lamont's emphasis on the ex- tremes cannot detract from his basic point-there is something dangerously wrong on campuses today, and that the problems are not being dealt with. His careful, if not terribly in depth, in- vestigation left few stones unturned. He discusses not only the suicides, which often get either no attention at all or else, tqo. 4,but also thee, pthey, casualties: Those who cannot deal with the pressures of academics and ram- pant careerism. He looks at the problems of the minority student who is either not properly prepared for the competitive atmosphere or else doesn't know how to deal with the hostility of the middle-class white students who see affirmative action as directed against them. He also discusses cheating and the apparent lack of ethics, a reflection, he says, of the Watergate morality on the seventies generation. But the blame for the troubles is not all on the students. Crime in the streets, a lagging economy, professors who are more worried about publishing than teaching, and the rapid social and sexual revolutions all are contributors to the trauma many students are silen- tly experiencing at the nation's best universities. The turmoil on campus is widespread, but, like cancer, not, readily apparent. Students try- to pretend it isn't there, either by playing the system to its utmost, becoming the "grinds" who never leave the library. Others flout the system by cheating, or turn to other escapes, including alcohol, drugs, and, more often than many ad- ministrators would like to admit, suicide. It is inportant that students, professors, administrators and parents recognize that there is a problem and begin to deal with it, Campus Shock may not be a great book, but it is at least a jumping off place for discussion and communication between those who make college what it is today. And it may point at, if not at what college life should be; ,what it.shouldnot be. titled Liver Than You'll Ever Be came out in Fall 1969, six months before the record campany's production of the same album, Get Your Ya Ya's Out. OME bootleg collectors cherish their recordings of off-beat studio outtakes, simply because of their obscurity. "I paid $6 for an album of Beatle outtakes, just to get the version of Penny Lane with the added seven-note trumpet fanfare at the end," says one collector who specializes in Beatles bootlegs. "It's a rTvelty-not really anything aesthetic-but when you're as big a Beatle fan as I am, you simply must have it. I play the record about once a year, and it was worth every cent." Occasionally, one does happen onto an outstanding unreleased track. "L.- S. Bumblebee," an outtake the Beatles cut in 1968, is generally considered the fines unreleased Beatles track available. It is also the most explicit drug song the group ever wrote, likely one of the reasons it was never released. "Some_ bootleggers have a renegade outlaw mentality," claims one local bootleg collector, who asked not to be identified. "They feel this music is being suppressed by the record companies who are holding back material." But the record companies don't see it that way. Following a raid in California that turned up 12 tons of records and recording gear, CBS Records filed suit in Los Angeles against Vicky Vinyl, a large bootleg manufacturer. Also named in the suit were a pressing plant, a record store, its manager, and Still Rare Records. CBS charged that the copyright on 35 Springsteen com- positions had een infringed upon in three bootleg albums, which were recorded over an FM radio broadcast. CBS is asking $50,000 per composition, plus another $500,000 in damages. The case is still pending. "We have a responsibility to the artist. We'll sue the behind off of anybody," said Peter Lubin, tour publicity agent for Columbia Records in New York. He added, "We can't know about every guy who takes a recorder to a concert and then takes it to a pressing plant, but once we're aware of the situation, we won't hold any information back." "Anything that gets out doesn't hurt the artist. He may lose a little in royalties, but not that much. It doesn't hurt their don't have fans are g puts out, a buying the Arbor coll ween 500 a He adde past five panies( ha proach. 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