4 ARTS Thursday, October 11, 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 6 Records Tina Turner - Private Danc (Capitol) Tina Turner has deserved success for a. long time. Members of her field, in- cluding Rod Stewart and the Rolling Stones, have recognized her as one of the hardest-working, most intense per- formers in the music business, but curiously this has never translated into record sales. Now, with the release of Private Dancer, Tina Turner has arrived. Her twenty years in the business have paid off. She is as hot on the charts as she is on stage. The sound of Private Dancer is the sound of an excellent performer singing material ranging from adequate to good. The songs themselves are not memorable. Tina's renditions of them, however, are. Tina Turner is possessed of a superior interpretive ear. She knows how songs should be done, and for- tunately she has the equipment to sing them the way they should be sung. What a register! This album has a positively dazzling array of growls, snarls, and crystal clear high notes. The first cut, "I Might Have Been Queen," is a no-holds barred, spider of a song. It is upbeat, yet with lamenting F "Ths year's best film!" - -Ts Liz Smith, Syndicated Columnist "Mozart's greatest hit... Mozart comes raucously alive as a punk rebel, grossing out the Establishment...a grand, sprawling entertainment'-Time "A sumptuous musical epic...a love story, a drama of revenge and the story of a young musical rebel felled in his prime'-David Ansen, Newsweek " Amadeus' is unequivocally the grandest epic ever made about the life of a great composer...brimful of imagination, complexity and sublime art' -Bruce Williamson, Playboy "(a) fullfledged screen epic, a staggering panorama of life, love, morality and immorality...Forman pulls performances from his actors that are nothing short of devastating"-Merrill Shindler, Los Angeles Magazine "..A stunning motion picture'-Bob Thomas, Associated Press "With 'Amadeus' director Milos Forman has created what might be one of the best movies about music ever made...But best of all...we have here a picture that provides sustenance, a story with aftershocks and repercussions". -Chris Hodenfield, Rolling Stone ...EVERYTHING YOU'VE HEARD IS TRUE SAUL ZAENTZ ,, PETER SHAFFER'S AMADEUS . MILOS FORMAN F MURRAY ABRAHAM TOM HULCE ELIZABETH BERRIDGE SIMON CALLOW ROY DOTRICE CHRISTINE EBERSOLE JEFFREY JONES CHARLES KAY :. MICHAEL HAUSMAN- BERTIL 0HLSSON " MIROSLAV ONDRICEK w NEVILLE MARRINER PATRIZIA VON BRANDENSTEIN ,. TWYLA THARP .,,32| PETER SHAFFER SAULZAENTZ tMILOS FORMAN OTaOf PNICLR A S n [~ ~ rr , Rc'rt7nr. "+ PG PMRENT~. GUIDANCE SUUESTFD . t<_____*SO** MAEf YlVCA L I~lM . C ST84 R BOMO NO WPLA VING lyrics. Tina simply soars on the chorus. This song should have been the first single. The lyrics are, metaphorically, the Tina Turner story - up until this album hit the top ten. By now most have heard "What's Love Got To Do With It," a testimonial to the loveless relationship. It has but one major flaw . . . why does it use a synthesizer sounding like a harmonica rather than a real harmonica? Synthesizers are easy. This song isn't. Tina's voice isn't. Sure, a har- monica might not have been as smooth as the synth, but this song doesn't need smooth. "Show Some Respect" is a relatively bland R&B offering. "I Can't Stand The Rain" is a bizarre little song. Weird percussion, punctuated by bursts of horns and hornlike synth, over a pulse- like bass, this is the most ambitious song on the album, and it achieves a limited degree of success. -"Better Be Good To Me" features Tina asking, demanding, and even imploring her partner to cut the crap. I don't have the time for your overloaded lies, she sings, You better be good to me. One gets the sense that there is no other option. "Let's Stay Together" is a well- crafted opportunity for Tina to exercise her full range of vocal gifts. Once again, her performance has merits far greater than those of the song. Next, she brings a new, snarling element to David Bowie's "1984". The "Savage Joy" that Bowie detachedly sang of is now truly savage, and savagery con- tinues on the next cut, "Steel Claw". Tina turns tiger, and rips out this rave- up at a pace that makes you forget that she is as old as your mother. The album's title cut is also its final cut - the worst song on the record. A "Private Dancer" is, disappointingly a hooker. This is a smarmy, slutty song which pretends to have a social con- science, but is instead merely an ex- cuse to present a classy woman as a plaything. It is most unfortunate that Tina Turner did not veto this song. She must know the difference between sexy and sleazy and between performance and pandering. Perhaps this stems for a lack of creative control on Tina's part. She was in no position to be making demands of her producer on this record. Next record, she will be. It will be exciting to see if her gifted ear can improve the song selection process. My guess is that it can. This record will, hopefully, be regarded as the turning point for Tina Turner, as her success will bring freedom. It should give her the legs she needs to take control of the creative process, Stanley H. Kaplan The Smart MO\VE! PR EPAR ATION FOR: LSAT eGMAT " GRE { For Information Please Col: F KA PLAN 662-3149 -"". An A203 E. Hoover Ann Arbor, Ml 481 04 and be her own woman, rather than someone else's Private Dancer. -John Logie Various Artists-Every Man Needs a Woman (Polygram) The hysteria about John Lennon has scarcely died down during the last nearly-four years since his tragic death. This is at least partly due to the strenuously morbid, high-visibility presence of Yoko Ono, who has prac- tically forged a perverse career out of public mourning. Perhaps the major post-tragedy tragedy has been the sub- tle subversion of Yoko's own talents. Here's the woman who predated the wave yowlings of Siouxsie, Lene Lovich, et. al. by more than a decade; whose influence was stupidly damned for 'suffocating' the talent of everybody's fave Beatle; whose own playfulness and imagination won so much less attention than her consort status. Let's face it, buddy, the 1980 Double Fantasy laid comatose on the turntable whenever John lamely pop-dittied about marital bliss, and jumped to gid- dy life whenever Yoko lent her eccen- tricity to a wave-pop format ("Kiss Kiss," etc.) Lennon's last hurrah to the recorded world was the wonderfully screechy guitar for Yoko's jangling 1981 dance hit, "Walking on Thin Ice"-and a fine if still sad way to say goodbye that was, participation in something so vibrantly alive and challenging. Perhaps if Lennon had lived on, Ono might have finally gained solo credibility as composer/perfor- mer. Instead, she remains largely a novelty-a widow before anything else, at her own insistence. The new compilation Every Man Needs a Woman shares, by its title, a fair deal of the morbidity that dogged Yoko's two post-John LPs, Season of Glass and It's Alright. Those albums subverted Yoko's natural accentric bent in favor of a misguided effort at broad appeal and eliciting sympathy, much of which the new record likewise suffers from. Originally conceived as a "birthday present" to Yoko from John, Every Man offers covers of various Ono songs by an eclectic mixture of artists, with varied results. The concept is wonderful-it's about time somebody expressed concrete interest in Yoko-but lame sentimentality in- trudes all to often. The dogs can be swept aside easily enough. Yoko could be indicted without a fight for the English-is-definitely-my- second-language simplicity of her peace 'n' love-oriented lyrics, and there's way too much of that stuff here, reverently delivered. Particularly ex- cruciating is the Sprit Choir's version of "Now or Never"-if the very idea of a children's chorus warms your heart, OK. Otherwise, hum a UNICEF ad in- stead. Harry Nilsson, a big friend of J & Y's, delivers boringly literal versions of "Silver Horse" and "Dream Love," and vocally belabours the agony on a funkier "Loneliness." More blameless but equally super- fluous is a super-sweet "Nobody Sees Me like You do" by country-popper Rosanne Cash. The album's biggest disappointment is a flac.cid "Walking on Thin Ice" by Elvis Costello; a stun- ningly ambiguous song reduced to suckable cool-pop, with the TKO Horns no substitute for Lennon's original squawking guitar. A pass garade is given to pop-cliche-before-he-even- started Eddie Money, who does "I'm Moving On" as a thundering FM rock rave-up-nothing great, to be sure, but at least a real demonstration of en- thusiasm. Likewise, Roberta Flack lends nothing beyond conventional good taste to the raggae-flavored ballad "Goodbye Sadness," but her restrained, delicately harmonic inter- pretation refuses to indulge in any un- necessary pathos. The real inspiration starts with.. . John Lennon, whose cover of "Every, Man Needs a Woman" has that slowly 4 I 4 4 Torch Song Trilogy Winner of the 1982 Tony and Drama Desk Awards for Best Play, Harvey' Fierstein's "Torch Song Trilogy" will arrive in Detroit for a week's stint at the Fisher Theatre, October 23 through 28. A comedy-drama comprised of three individual plays, "Torch Song" paints the world of its gay hero, Arnold Beckoff (played by P.J. Bejamin, pictured above with Malcolm Stewart) through seven years of laughter, tears, great lines, and general Life stuff. Proceeds from the opening night performance will go toward support of' AIDS research. Call the Fisher box-office for details on tickets. 4 .; building tension and pop likeability that trademarked the later Yoko of Double Fantasy. Lennon'svocals are more in- teresting than usual, and despite a con- ventional sax-frilled arrangement this track succeeds as unwatered Ono. The album really works, though, in the tracks by its least-known artists: Alternating Boxes does a jumpy-synth- dominated, delightful "Dogtown," and the minimalist German band Trio (of "Da Da Da" near-fame) lends subtlety and joy to the affirmative "Wake Up." These, at last, are the heirs of Yokor Ono-experimentalists functioning within a solid pop-rock framework. The album closes on a grace note, as well. Young Sean Lennon sings the banal happy-lullaby "It's Alright," and though the idea of having Lennon's fatherless child sing such a hymn cour- ts sentimental disaster, the track (the only one on the LP produced by Yoko) is aggressively funky. Sean's pre- adolescent preacher-talk vocals have an undeniable innocent zeal-one is at the same time stirred and a little revolted, the way you might feel wat- ching the inspirational climaxes of Mickey Rooney movies. As an introduction to an underap- preciated music icon, Every Man Needs a Woman has its value, however uneven the individual tracks are. Let's hope there's a looser, wilder sequel-one less cramped by conscious or unconscious reverence, one with a, little more of the craziness of Yoko Ono's own best moments on vinyl. -Dennis Harvey Rickie Lee Jones-Magazine (Warner Brothers) On Magazine, the third full-length. album by Rickie Lee Jones, there is a departure from the bluesy street-style music of her previous albums. Side one opens with a pretty prelude to the song "Gravity", which, once Jones starts to sing, absolutely jumps off the vinyl. Yes, the album was recorded digitally, but this is brilliant production, folks. The vocal layerings are beautiful, especially in "Gravity" and "It Must Be Love", which are just wonderful to listen to. It must be love the sailor sails for/Must be love that drives a bottle to the bottom of the ocean floor. In general, the lyrics are not }as "street-oriented" as those on her other albums, although the characters are just as real, with feelings almost anyone could relate to. Some stuff gets a little obscure and may take awhile to understand, more so than previous Rickie Lee Jones material. And she shows that same "wordy" tendency that makes one look at the lyrics and wonder how that could be sung, but all doubts are erased once they are listened to.. This lady just has a way of twisting lyrics around or crying them out so that it matters not what she says but how she's saying it. There are some other pretty fantastic noises on this album. They include jaz- zy brass sections, and the 'incom- parable drum work of Steve Gadd. The stuff is not generally as moody as that on her other albums, but it lacks any big party numbers such as "Woody and Dutch on the Slow Train to Peking" from Pirates, or "Danny's All-Star Joint", from her first album. About three quarters through this album is where Jones' new sound comes through. There is an Italian Style melody called, "Theme For the Pope", followed by a poetry reading set to piano entitled, "The Unsigned Pain- ting." Something to think about, perhaps, but a little weird-some mday choose to remove the needle from the record at this point. Magazine is to be highly recommen- ded, whether you be a long time fan of Rickie Lee Jones or a soon-to-be con- vert. It might be heady stuff at times, or a little obscure, but it is definitely a worthwhile listening experience. -Beth Fertigl BE A ROAD SCHOLAR RENT FROM NATIONAL Get away and get a free T-shirt. Getting away this weekend may be easier, more fun, and less expensive than you think. 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