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Whose idea it was to release the album is unknown, but the entire project smells suspiciously like a cash-in. Heart Play hit the record stores within days of the third anniversary of Lennon's death and was marketed as a record of great historical significance. Subjectively, Lennon is funny and fairly interesting, but nothing is discussed here that cannot be found in any of his other published interviews.' Objectively, the whole thing is a preten- tious piece of crap. Heart Play was also supposed to ser- ve as a sort of prelude to the long- awaited follow-up to 1980's Double Fan- tasy. Happily, Milk and Honey needs no such introduction. The album con- sists of six tracks by Yoko and six tunes by John which were recorded during 1980 and which represent his last recor- ded material. I'm Stepping Out" starts off the album. This here's the story about a househusband who just has to get out of the house. He's been looking after the kid for days and.days, he's been washing the dishes and screwing around and watching "Sesame Street" till he just goes crazy," Lennon raps at the beginning of the song, fulfilling everyone's suspicion that life in the Dakota wasn't always paradise. Most likely, Lennon never intended to release this particular take of the song, so the singing is very relaxed, and John is unafraid to jive, revealing the sense of humor that seemingly disappear'ed somewhere in the '70s. The next cut, Yoko's "Sleepless Night," makes "Kiss Kiss Kiss" from Double Fantasy look tame. Seems it's late at night and Yoko is suffering from overactive hormones; all she wants is three-minute love she verbalizes in between moans. Yet, alas there is none to be found, so Yoko resorts to an alter- native: This brush must sell like crazy she drools, There are a lot of lonely people out there, you know, "Sleepless Night" is a fun tune though; perhaps the first time we laugh with Yoko, not at her. "I Don't Wanna Face It" marks Len- non's harshest attack since "How Do You Sleep?" The target this time is Lennon and his own hypocrisy: You're looking for oblivion with one eye on the Hall of Fame, . .. You wanna save humanity but it's people that you just can't stand, ... The time has come to see yourself, you always look the other way. "Don't be Scared" follows and without a doubt represents Yoko Ono's finest musical effort. The vocals are not only acceptable, but fabulous; the chorus is wonderfully melodic; and the rhythms and subtle texture make it the most convincing non-Jamaican reggae tune I've ever heard. What a nice surp- rise. "Nobody Told Me" and "O' Sanity," the A and B sides of Milk and Honey's first single, close side one of the album The former bemoans the state of the world, social paralysis and- com- munication breakdowns, without being preachy or even saying much of anything. The latter is a throwaway, a. 64-second bad joke. Side two opens with John's "Borrowed Time," certainly the most optimistic song on Milk and Honey. The song sums up a lot of what Lennon had John and Yoko: Nobody ever told them to say in his 1980 interviews-basically, that when he was younger things were simple but not so clear and that now things are much better, a new begin-, ning is at hand. Lennon assures us that it is good to be older, that the future is brighter. Quite a turn from "Nobody Told Me." Yoko's "Your Hands" is an ex- tremely powerful and beautiful song, yet unfortunately it is not altogether accessible, as the lyrics are sung in Japanese then spoken in English. "(Forgive Me) My Little Flower Princess," which follows, is really the only blatantly unfinished song by John. The music is very funky, very sexy, and there is a tasty little jazz guitar solo at the end; but Lennon had yet to com- plete the lyrics and hence hums and mumbles quite a bit. "Let Me Count The Ways" and "Grow Old With Me" were, contrarily, finished songs which never came to life in the studio. The versions on Milk and Honey are the ones which John and Yoko made at home at the piano. As the story goes, the two songs were to be "the backbone" of Double Fantasy, but because of a deadline, the songs got left out. Yoko's "Let Me Count The Way" is a simple little love song--not bad, but not impressive either. But John's "Grow Old With Me" is a charmer, instantly recognizable, instantly classic. As Lennon once said of George Harrison's "Within You Without You," "You can hear his mind is clear and his music is clear." The album closes with "You're the One," a song full of love, pain and fear. it is the only song on the album where Yoko looks back and tries to sum up their relationship, and it is not tacky, not overdone. Her voice quivers and shakes, reminiscent of the John Len- non/Plastic Ono Band album, How do I tell you you're the one?" Milk and Honey has a few week spots, but also some fantastic ones. The musicianship is flawless throughout and even Yoko Ono's songs are sur- prisingly strong. And of course the real treats are Lennon's songs. The saddest part of it all is Lennon's Milk and Honey compositions are much stronger than those on Double Fantasy. The best was yet to be. 764-0558 Mumbo jumbo Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth Department of Theater and Drama New Trueblood Arena Theater Monday, February 13-Saturday. February 18, 8 p.m. By David Kopel N66EGE e gra a.e J~NGAGE congratulate moreover state abysmal fairground. Begat peramambulate this areodrom chocolate found. Maureen again dedum-de-da ultimately cried egg. Dinosaur rely indoors if satisfied egg." No my typewriter hasn't been eating mushrooms. The above lines are just the famous Bing Crosby-Sid Vicious hit "My Way" translated into a lanuage called "Dogg." What's "Dogg?" It's a special language that Tom Stoppard created for his one-act play Dogg's Hamlet. Dogg's Hamlet is about some schoolboys who, like everyone else in their country, speak "Dogg." Most of the play takes place in Dogg, except for a schoolboy production of Hamlet, which the boys put on as part of their foreign language study of English. What results is not only hilarious, but also a commentary on language, and on how we often think we're com- municating when we're not. Appearing along with Dogg's Hamlet is another Tom Stoppard one-act, Cahoot's Macbeth. Stoppard based Cahoot's on the experience of Czechoslovakian actor Pavel Kohout. After Russian tanks rolled into Czechoslovakia in 1968 to crush the short-lived "Prague Spring" of freedom, the Communist dictatorship forbade Kohout and other dissident ac- tors to perform in public. Like most ac- tors, Kohout, "could live without the theater," and he, along with other ban- ned Czech actors, resorted to putting on plays in their friends' living rooms. Cahoot's Macbeth is a story of a production of Macbeth in a living room, coupled with a visit from the secret police. Putting on Dogg's Hamlet, Cahoot's Macbeth are graduate students in the Theater Department's M.F.A. program. The students can be expected to put on a strong ensemble performan- ce, having worked together since joining the program a year and a half ago. Philip Kerr, currently a director at the Cleveland Playhouse,- will - direct. Kerr has acted both on and off Broad- way, and at the nation's best regional theaters. I asked Philip Kerr if he chose the plays partly because of Cahoot's political content. He said he had, and that human rights was a crucial issue, especially for artists. "Suppression is something we should be aware of; we're fortunate that it doesn't happen in our society, at least in such a complete and overt way," Kerr said. While many people feel that there is a conflict between artistic quality and commercial success, Kerr disagrees, because "The object is to reach as many people as possible." Kerr does see commercial con- sideratons, though, as limiting the variety of theater that appears on Broadway: "It costs a lot to mount a production, and it costs a lot to go see a production . . . You can't really make money on a shot til it has run for about a year . . . Mostly what producers are willing to bank on is musicals, which Dogg's & Cahoot's: Silly Shakespeare are good entertainment, and plays that have proved themselves in London. A producer doesn't want to sink $800,000 into a play that's going to close after a week." Fortunately,many regional theaters are accepting the challenge of presen- ting untested or experimental American pieces. While the initial 1960s boom of regional theaters is over, Kerr explained, many small theaters are taking economic risks, and devoting their spaces to important new American work. While Kerr has a high regard for Michigan's M.F.A. program, he does not feel that getting a graduate degree is an essential step for a theater career. After al into th Some a Ph.D New Y( wait on see wha As for beth, backgr terest h audienc the play tainmer In cor "Dogg' would domino DELI and PARTY We carry a full line of Groc Fresh Meats and Veget Featuring our famous LEAN GROUND BEEF FROM ROUND $1 69 lb. R D, in CI N'. 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