t The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 5, 1984 - Page 7 Records (Contined from Page 6) grabbing, a sort of picturesque quality. Sort of dulcet, dulcet ringing bells. This is a cop from Reader's Digest, but 4usker Du seem to have captured gibbed held strangle grip throw jet scream stroke the harmonic hum of the girapped ears that star on the cover of Zen Arcade. Spurt gout but it's not funny anymore. But there is a sense of humor and fun and revelry in the swimming red corpuscles and picked bones and teeth. This record smells like a really bad motorcycle vs. car wreck. But a hedonistically deft motorcycle vs. car wreck. It's all planned, but spontaneous in execution with dim evolution and min- ds choking free from pollution. Why this and why that and come on and please and no no no no! All the noises from a twelve year old who never cleaned a septic tank chock ull of every damn human chewed body ste and part. >I this weren't so fun, and funny, it ould be terribly bleak. I am trying to make sense of three guys trying to make sense in a rockin big beat. here is where we can start to grow as x ;whole thing starts to grow from a ziroscopic view of here come the planes. Grow like a mold. But a con- tained petrie dish mold that never leaves the confines of the two record "arty headbang discs that really is all it wanted to be and does that very well. .S;mething you can put on and play airtrash can to. Or you can mime barf long with the words. But it's not funny any more. Not entirely. I mean, something out there mated an gave forth of this fleshy splinter acid disease. Maybe it's tragic but by the same token what's tragic about hurling your body all over the room and walls and other bodies in visceral ex- citement and exulting maiming. Here is where the picture becomes bigger and bigger until there is a whole world full of neds flinging their guts about in mindless rush of circular saws cutting through cement and howling something awful, with the occasional eClies of a stray limb or squirrel sb ificed in the name of hotly freshly tarred streets. JrZen Arcade is such a cold shower type of squeeky clean that'you just can't srub off your body. More cracked braincases happen in the bathroom 'tliri anyplace else. - C.E. Krell The Time - Ice Cream Castles (Warner Brothers) Morris Day has a bad sense of (unavoidable pun) timing. For three years he has fronted a band best known as Prince's warm-up act. While Prince pursued the crossover market, and relegated his more sexual songs to the B-sides of his singles, the Time remained a nasty, funky band made for the soul charts. Then Morris and the band stole Pur- ple Rain out from under Prince, and all this without a concession. Now would be the time (sorry) for Morris and the band to cash in, but instead they have disbanded. Their final album is their third ex- cellent funk offering, and it is better than either of their previous releases. Ice Cream Castle is a solid record, and a fitting companion piece to the Purple Rain soundtrack which shamelessly omitted "Jungle Love" and "The Bird." These are included in full-length versions, rather than the excerpted versions in the movie. Also from Purple Rain, sort of, is a dialogue over music titled "Chili Sauce." It is an extended version of the seduc- tive patter Morris used on Appolonia in the movie, but this time (sorry, again) the results are, predictably, in Morris' favor. One gets the sense that Morris did not enjoy playing the guy who loses the girl in Purple Rain, and perhaps his depar- ture from the Time is motivated by a desire to be his own man at whatever cost. "Ice Cream Castles," (the song) is a plea for racial tolerance, if only to allow Morris to spread himself around more liberally. "My Drawers" and "If The Kid Can't Make You Come" are a pair of nasty little ditties, the first with screaming guitars and an incredible hook, the second more soulful. "Kid" is also notable for its ending, which features a climaxing woman reciting "The Pledge of Allegiance." It is important to recognize that there is a qualitative difference between both the music and the lyrical content on this album, and that of Vanity's record. Where Vanity takes herself seriously, Morris is outrageous and self- '-SH I'RT cPBINTINe Ann Arbor's fastest! From 10-800 T-shirts screenprint- deprecating. While both records are R- rated, The Time's shows a sense of humor, and the content is so outrageously overstated and put-on that there is little comparison to be made between the two records. It is hard not to wonder whether Morris Day will suffer the same fate as Vanity now that he has left Prince's production, and quite possibly Prince's authorship. While Morris clearly possesses much more talent than Vanity, it is hard to tell how much of his success to date he has earned, and how much of that success really belongs to Prince under the auspices of the Starr Company. That Morris has left would seem to indicate that he feels that he has something to prove. In any case the record buying public stands to gain. Prince, no doubt, will exercise his star- making abilities elsewhere - if they in fact exist - and we have solo work from Morris Day to look forward to. The rest of the band remains a first rate funk unit, and they undoubtedly will not sink into oblivion. There will always be a place for the first-rate dan- ce floor music with the exquisite licks that this band has on vocals, guitar, and synth. Maybe it was time for a change. - John Logie Vanity - Wild Animal (Motown)- The press kit accompanying Vanity's first solo release manages to sum things up pretty well by providing this definition from Webster's,..Vanity - excessive pride; excessive attention to one's appearance; a thing or trait regarded as vain..." Somehow Prince's production job on the Vanity 6 album managed to conceal the factthat Vanity is one of the.most talentless pieces of window dressing since Bo Derek. This record is almost impossibly bad, and the amazing thing is that the things that make this record bad are almost all Vanity's fault. .It must now be recognized that Vanity has no singing voice. Recognizing this, the prudent thing to do would have been not to tax her in this area. Instead Vanity gets many, many chances to show off her nonexistent up- per register. It is gratingly off-key, and downright ugly in places. Vanity is quite proud of the fact that she has "co-written" the songs on this record. It is possible to sing about sex and sexuality without being tacky, and the sense of humor displayed on the Vanity 6 album was one way of avoiding tackiness. Unfortunately, Vanity does not seem to have learned anything from Prince's tutelage. She tries to be clever; but fails miserably. The most damning review I could imagine for this record would be simply printing the lyric sheet. In the absence of that, these examples should serve: "I'm Flippin out! YAH! I'm Flippin OWOWOW OUT ooh. / HA HA. Yoo can swallow me all in 1 bite, / creme de la cocao is what I taste like. / Bite me here swallow me there..." - from FLIPPIN OUT "Don't you provoke me, come on stroke me. STROKE ME. / Strap this thing tight. / If you want to glide down my highway it's open. / STRAP yourself in RA Hi HA HIDE." - from STRAP ON "ROBBIE BABY" RNN 5th Avenue at UbertySt. Q >' 781-9700 "Ooh, yeah, such a pretty mess / He made such a pretty mess on my dress.'' - from PRETTY MESS "Yor anything but ordinary / and I'm getting your attention hard! / Yor body's shooting X-ray bullets / Fire away, I'm unarmed and all of a / sudden you push replay replay / mechanical emotions in my middle / Hey! Ahhhh yor in my symphony / Fine! Why? Wh? Why? / love yoo anyway. - from MECHANICAL EMOTION This is all delivered in a series of yelps, howls and orgasmic moans over a surprisingly good musical background. It doesn't matter. The music itself is thoroughly obscured by Vanity's insipid lyrics and delivery. If she's trying to be campy, she has failed. People who enjoyed Vanity 6 in all probability will not like this record. It also should not draw any fans of Motown music. It will, however, be very popular with fans of sleazy cover art, and will complement the works of the Ohio Players and Montrose's "Jump On It" quite nicely. John Logie 14,789 to choose from - all subjects! Rush $2 for the current, 306-page cata- log. Custom research & thesis assis- tance also available. Research, 11322 Idaho Ave., # 206 WA, Los Angeles, CA90025 (213)477-8226. BLOOM COUNTY - *4'. '/1I HiU A student bites a teacher. The school psychologist goes berserk. The substitute teacher is a certified lunatic. And students graduate who can't read or write. It's Monday morning at JFK High. te TEACHERS7 United Artists Presents An AARON RUSSO Production An ARTHUR HILLER Film starring NICK NOLTE -JOBETH WILLIAMS -JUDD HIRSCH RALPH MACCHIO "TEACHERS" ALLEN GARFIELD iih LEE GRANT ad RICHARD MULLIGAN Written by W. R. McKINNEY Production Designed by RICHARD MacDONALD DirectorofPhotogrnphy DAVID M. WALSH M '.] Executive Producer IRWIN RUSSO Produced by AARON RUSSO. 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