Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 13, 1987 Records (Continued from Page 7) they simply substitute another worthy cut, like Grandmaster1 Flash's "The Message" or Kurtis Blow's "The Breaks," both of which would have lent the project an even more impressive scope. This infuriating flaw aside, t Rap's Greatest Hits does, on the whole, deliver, and it serves as an excellent introduction to the biggest1 and best songs of a medium which, has earned respect. 90 percent of this record is def.] -John Logie Dark Angel Darkness Descends Nuclear Assault Game Over Possessed Beyond the Gates Combat Records Three more in the tradition of black metal pioneers like England's Venom, these California speed fiends are headed for hell in the fast lane. The music roars like an outboard motor and typical metal themes like girls, dancing, and girls Be hip! Be groovy! Be a Daily Arts staffer! Yes, you, too can join our illustrious team. Come to our mass meeting Wednesday, Jan. 14 at 7:00 p.m. upstairs in the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St. For more information call 763-0379. have been replaced by songs about hell, nuclear destruction, and hell. Dark Angel relies on constant blur guitars and temper tantrum one-two-one-two drums in nearly every song, but the singer flexes his vocabulary like a muscleman flexes at the beach: "Inimical powers against humankind, this charnelhouse ensanguined," he croons on the title track. Nuclear Assualt takes a rockin' look at the apocalypse with a sound that ranges from motorized, tight-as-spandex tunes like "Sin" to playpen thrashers like "Hang the Pope." The singer sounds like Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson with a rope around his neck. Possessed is the scariest of the bunch - they sound like Motorhead's Lemmy growling over a forty minute car crash. Plus, the album cover folds out into this big poster of spooky frightwigs floating across a hellish landscape....hang it up and look at it while you bang your head. But keep it away from the PMRC, whatever you do. -MarkDancey Lil' Ed and the Blues Imperials Roughhousin' Lonnie Brooks Wound Up Tight Lonnie Mack Second Sight Alligator Alligator tends to release its records in batches, making it tough on the budget-conscious to to pick up all their worthwhile releases. What makes it worse is that Alligator is one of the most consistent record labels in the coun - try, seldom, if ever, releasing poor records. Any one of these is a sure bet. My favorite is Lil' Ed, but it could go any way. Ed and the Imperials are a Chicago bar band who've made a name for themselves as one of the top young bands in the genre by playing throughout Chicago and various places in Canada. This album was recorded live in the studio, the first time the foursome had ever been in one. It is, as Alligator promotions promises, "houserockin,"' but it's much more as well. Ed is a spirited -zinger whose hoots and exclam - ations are so sincere that it's hard to believe he isn't playing for an audience. The band is tight and the selections superb - and Alligator promises it was all done in single takes! Brooks is a fairly regular guest at Rick's. This new release is his fourth for Alligator, and with it he shows he's still in the front ranks of contemporaty bluesmen. With a good handful of originals and a couple of covers, Brooks and the band serve up the next best thing to being there. Jim Liban helps out a little on harmonica, but the finest gems, "Got Lucky Last Night" and "Wound Up Tight" Rick's regular Lonnie Brooks releases his new album 'Wound Up Tight.' The University of Michigan presents: The Honorable William H. Gray III United States House of Representatives feature Johnny Winter on guitar. Mack, the genius behind "Mem - phis," is the oldest and best known of the three, and his release is probably the most ambitious of these. With offerings ranging from fast stuff with the Memphis Horns to Christian ballads like "A Song I Haven't Sung," not everything works. A surprising amount of it does, though, and Mack proves that Alligator's 1983 "re-discovery" of him was just a hint of more to come. -JosephKraut UM News in TheDai 764-0552 The keynote address for a commemorative symposium "Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. : The Unfinished Agenda" Tuesday, January 13, 1987 8:00 p.m. Hill Auditorium This free address is sponsored by the Office of the President, The University of Michigan Finally, A College Job That Will Help Get You A Real Job... If you are mature, reliable, and able to talk persuasively about the University and its needs, University of Michigan Telefund Office is willing to pay $4.00 - $6.00/hr. plus bonuses for your time just a few evenings each week. INTERESTED? Come to: Michigan Telefund Office 611 Church St., Suite 304 or Call....................7637420 Equal Opportunity - Affirmative Action THE WILDEST TIME OF YOUR LIFE AWAITS You AND CoWDAt --THE GATHERING PLACE- ur Room Now At Ft. Lauderdale's Only Official Spring Break Headqu r HOLIDAY INN OCEANSIDE (305) 463-84 1\ Pre sent T his Ad T o S AV E 10% On Y our Room H/ Financial Analyst Positions Salomon Brothers Inc wants to hire brigh, ambi,ous undergraduates to work as Financial Analysis in our corporate Finance Department. No experience is required and degree candidates for any major are welcome to apply. A description of the financial analyst position is on file at the placement office. Please send your resume and a cover letter by January 28, 1987 to: Stephanie M. Asphar SALOMON BROTHERS INC One New York Plaza New York, New York 10004 Equal Opportunity Employer Salomon Brothers Inc: Innovation Performance