I R ECOR D S Diversity Club NER/EEA CUARLUE IIADEN/ED BLACK WELL Tickets - $6.00 on sale now at Mich. Union Box Office, Schoolkids nd Discount Records into 763-2071 1 By PATTI DIETZ If Bruce Springsteen is rock's greatest storyteller, then Elvis Costello is most certainly its greatest kibitzer. On all his records this man has been alternately disillusioned and hopeful, angry and resigned, off-handed com- plimentary and an outiright critic, and, for my money at least, the most vital songwriter in rock music today. It's awesome to think of the level of maturity reached with Get Happy!!, only the fourth album by Costello and his band, The Attractions. On Get Hap- py!! Costello further plays with metaphors, perhaps more deftly than on his prior outings, slipping his messages through neatly and seduc- tively, yet hitting the listener squarely betwen the eyes (ears?) so as not to allow one brief moment of respite from his badgering visions. But: packaging first. Costello's albums have been notoriously outlan- dish and confusing; Get Happy!! is no exception. In fact, if the record-buying public bought solely on package attrac- tiveness, Costello's records would surely be in the cutout bins by now. Get Happ's!! garish mixup of orange, lavendar, and green initially made me want to leave it in the record store's bag. I'm almost disappointed it doesn't glow in the dark (musically, maybe. Visually, nah). But once out of the bag there are interesting tidbits to be found: 20 tracks, 10 per side, most around the two-and-a-half minute mark. The packaging is pure early 60's sparseness. And Elvis reverses the or- der of songs from jacket to wax, so that side one on the jacket ends up as side two on the record, and vice versa. Cute, huh? LONG-TIME producer Nick Lowe's liner note convinves us that Get Hap- py!! does not suffer from "groove cramming" and a resultant loss of sound quality. This is true, although the album's mix does succumb to a rivalry between Elvis' vocals and the level of. his band playing. "Five Gears In Reverse" and "Beaten To The Punch" are mix nightmares, wherein The At- tractions nearly overpower Costello's lyrics, which are never than easy to decipher anyway. Get Happy!! is, for the most part, a revival of the joyous jump music of the '50's and '60's, a reverent nod to the Stax-Motown era (in Elvis' covers of "I Can't Stand Up For Falling Down" and "I Stand Accused"), and I almost suspect if this album isn't in some way a belated apology for Elvis' barroom quip "Ray Charles is a blind, ignorant nigger" made in early 1979 (whereupon singer Bonnie Bramlett knocked both his glasses and his pride to the floor). Elvis hints at 'gospel on "Motel Mat- ches" and "Secondary Modern" (which practically yearn for a black female backup) and at R & B in "Temptation" and "B Movie". And throughout I hear the '60's fun schlock that made tunes like the Grass Roots' "Midnight Con- fession" such classics. But it is only thrugh his use of metaphor that Costello gets away with such revival in this age of New Wave. "Love For Tender" finds Elvis squealing "I pay you a compliment/and you think I-am innocent/You can total up the balance sheet/and never know if I'm a counterFEET! ". He compares love to such an ordinary, dispensible 0 6 item as "Motel Matches": "falliri' out of your open pocketbook/givin' you away like motel matches". COSTELLO'S songs have always taken a dim view of women and relationships, partly because he takes both for granted and won't expend energy to build or maintain affection. His relationships seem to fall into his lap, and its arguable whether or not Elvis admires or resents this. On This Year's Model he growled "I don't want to be your lover/I just want to be your victim!" Throughout Get Happy!! Costello remains aloof, cautious, and biting: "I could almost swear/I could promise that I'd always be true to you/But we may not live to be so old" and, further on, "I'm fickle in the face of your affection" ("Man Called Un- cle"). Love is skin to battle in "Oppor- tunity": "I'm in a foxhole/I'm down in the trench/I'd be a hero but I can't stand the stench". He is a "victim of circumstance" in "I Stand Accused". By his subtlety, Elvis is a more effec- tive misogynist than The Knack's Doug Fieger., And, yet, for all his in- decisiveness, Costello is sure of one thing: He's just as good as (or bettera than) any other guy after his woman. "The Imposter", perhaps the only song -on Get Happy!! that isn't long enough,, is in this Graham parkerish "you- don't-want-him-you- really-want-me"' mold. Though Elvis' three previous slbums found a wide British audience where the allusions to England's political, ~ 0 turmoil were understood, Get Happy!i may be more accessible to U.S. listeners because it is relatively apolitical. Costello has quit bitching about Churchill, South Africa, the BBC, and the low-life working class, and has moved on from wallowing in his nobody's paying any attention to me' self-pity. After all, The Clash is giving us that now. What keeps Elvis Costello and Get Happy!! attractive is not so much Elvis' insights, which are im- poratnt enough, as the music which is their backdrop. Costello is most skilled when lightheartedly passing off such profundity as "everybody's hiding un- der covers/Who's making Lover's Lane safe again for lovers?" while the organ chirps up roller rink riffs in "Clown- time Is Over." On first listen, it seems as if the sugary '60's pop treatment (complete with tambourines and whooshes of piano and Farfisa) under- mines the lyrics when, in fact, it enhan-V ces Costello's contrariness. A recent review of Get Happy!! in New York's Village Voice criticized Costello- for "cooling out", suggesting that the meanest guy in rock "doesn't bite, doesn't sneer". Though he may have lost his apoliticalness on this album, he admits, aftera machine gun guitar intro on "King Horse", that he is caught "between tenderness and brute force". This is mellowing? From theE '60's production and packaging, right down to the double exclamation marks of the album's title, Get Happy!! proves that Costello is merely feeling his oats. 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Solutions abound, but the fact is that these killings are being committed by the Bee Girls, buzzing race of lovelies spawned by radiation. Can their sting be resisted? Come see if these deadly and seductive Bee Women can be stopped before they invade your town! "A great Schlock soft- core science fiction movie."-Roger Ebert. Tomorrow: New Wave German Filmmakers night with Wim Wenders' ALICE IN THE CITIES and Werner Herzog's STROSZEK at MLB. A COMPLETE SHOWING TONIGHT AT 9:15-COME AT 7:00 or 9:15 and see "THE FOG" and "THE SERIAL" at no extra cost! TONIGHT ONLY AT 9:15 p.m. ONLY BOX OFFICE CLOSES 10:00 P.M. "Honor thy wife, and everyone else's." 41a 0 I