U U U U U U AML AM, An a v w w -w - 0- a MUSiC Warped by the desert, Giant Sand's right on target giant Sand Ballad of a Thin Line Man Zippo Records The desert does strange things to a band. It distorts guitars, and makes them screech. It adds paranoia, and can even lead to dementia. The effect is felt on everything it touches. There are different ways to play the desert. Thin White Rope professes sun-baked insanity, while Naked Prey just rumbles along. The Meat Puppets throw all their efforts to the wind with a carefree abandon, satisfied to be products of their home environment. Giant Sand just plays. On Ballad of a Thin.Line Man, currently available only as an English import (as are too many other good American records), Giant Sand plays distinctly "western" rock music without any of the self- conscious superficiality of bands like, say, the Long Ryders. As with Phoenix, Arizona natives the Meat Puppets, the desert is an integral force behind their sound, but Giant Sand doesn't simply look on it with wonder - they give it a good thrashing. The record opens with "Thin Line Man," a blast of distorted, bent-and- contorted guitar lines that bounces over a riveting, even sexually charged, rhythm. At the flick of a switch, the band halts this aggressive attack and churns out a slower, stealthy crawl. Giant Sand are masters of their instruments, and they don't take any pains to hide it, although they also don't go out of their way to prove it. They charge into a ("misty") mountain hopping bass line on "A Hard Man to Get to Know," but they can also turn off the wattage as easily as they can blow it out. Softer, creepy acoustic numbers such as "Last Legs," featuring Leaving Trains vocalist Falling James, highlight the LP with tinkling piano keys and hushed guitars. For their cover of Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower" they start off with a hollow cello solo before pummeling the song into a ragged frenzy. And when guitarist Paula Jean Brown pipes up to take lead vocals on "The Chill Outside" - a lush, guitar-filled melody - her sweeter singing shows a softer character while maintaining the band's distinctive edge. Giant Sand's songs are portraits of haunted figures. There's the man with the gun in his hand, the graveyard drivers, and many other haggard, desperate men like the Thin Line Man, who "lays low when he can." On the acoustic, waltzing "Graveyard," vocalist Howe Gelb begs to be driven past the graveyard Giant Sand recycles familiar influences, recharges them with a dose of desert dastardliness tonight as a chorus of ghostly voices fill the background with their frightening harmonies. "Who Am I" answers its title with., "he's the man with the son of a gun... " It's too bad that no domestic record label has noticed this LP, but that shouldn't prevent you from digging it out of the local import bins. Giant Sand have produced one of the best albums of the year, and certainly one of the most original. Ride on... -Beth Fertig The Ramones Halfway to Sanity Sire The Ramones have been churning out records since Gerald Ford was President, and this presents a real stumper; how are we to evaluate a new Ramones record? Do we apply a "Beatles" standard, and say "O.K., guys, it's time for an Abbey Road?" But that isn't really fair, is it? It especially isn't fair to impose such a standard on a band that from its very first stirrings wanted to be, and over the years has become, the Beach Boys of punk. While this comparison is somewhat distasteful at first blush, it is meant as a compliment. The Beach Boys never had the talent of many of the groups they have outlived. They have routinely generated records that sound like nothing so much as The Beach Boys, except for those rare occasions when they sound like Jan & Dean. And yet, every few years, the Beach Boys delivered a record with more than the requisite three good songs, and these momentary flirtations with out-and-out brilliance justified the band's continued existence for another couple of years. And 11 years into the game, The Ramones have given us yet another momentary flirtation with out-and- out brilliance. Halfway to Sanity recalls Too Tough to Die, an album which found The Ramones fiddling with their formula. The harder edge of Too Tough, which mysteriously evaporated on the follow-up, the disappointing Animal Boy, is back, but the band adds further variations on the theme. The opening cut, "I Wanna Live" features Johnny Ramone actually playing his guitar one string at a time, for a significant portion of the song. And the backing vocals throughout are actually tonally proper, musical even, with the lone exception of Deborah Harry's work on "Go Lil' Camaro Go." I'm not at all embarrassed to admit that I thought she was any of the Ramones save DeeDee until I read the liner notes. Ronettes fans will be heartened by two cuts which by rights should have been produced by Phil Spector, "A Real Cool Time" and "Bye Bye Baby." The latter song is quite simply the finest ersatz Spector ever. And the lyrics are typically too- smart-to-be-stupid, too-stupid-to-be smart, exemplified by "Weasel Face" and "Worm Man" two additions to the Ramones menagerie which belong near the wart-hogs. Halfway to Sanity is a lot better than it had to be. It's like meeting an old friend who's lost twenty pounds. The bones are the same, but the flesh looks a lot better. -John Logie Van Morrison Poetic Champions Compose Mercury Poetic Champions Compose is the latest effort from the poet/genius/muse/rock star Van Morrison. On the first try, the album is a disappointingly self- indulgent, painstakingly slow- moving panorama by a burnt-out musician. Soggy instrumentals, lengthy string flourishes, and below average couplets ("I wish I could fly/ like a bird up in the sky") seem to characterize an album as week as its title. But fear not, a couple of replays and all the subtleties and delights we expect from Van Morrison show up. There are some near-classic songs on this record; it just takes some patience. And who deserves our patience more? "The Mystery," for example, might just be a ripoff of Morrison's own "Into the Mystic." He is inviting us to accompany him on the same kind of transcendental journey as he did in 1970, but this time he is the guide, not a fellow traveller. His singing is as confident as ever, the arrangements as unerring as can be. "Did Ye Get Healed" ranks as one of Morrison's great compositions. "You'll get stronger when you get the feeling," he instructs. He's right. As with his other masterpieces, from "Gloria" to last year's "Ivory Tower," there is a feeling and you do feel stronger, just by hearing it. This is powerful stuff, approached but not equalled by a legion of imitators. Even the instrumental tracks acquire a certain c h a r m. Featherweight jazz resting only on barely structured melodies, they make a kind of sense that is all their own. Poetic Champions Compose goes way deeper than its dull surface; it has a sheen that sparkles to no end, given the chance. -Mark Swartz Ray Parker Jr. After Dark Geffen Unlike Luther Vandross and Freddie Jackson, his peers in the R&B hitmaking bonanza, Ray Parker Jr. writes intelligent hits. No, not "Ghostbusters," but think back to "Jack and Jill" and "A Woman Needs Love." These songs had a knowing and cautious attitude, not at all smarmy or superficial. After Dark, Parker's most recent effort, is a return of sorts. The pro- duction goes down as smooth as frozen yogurt. The percussion is perky and the melodies hummable. And it is clear after the first listen which songs will find a home on the radio. "I Don't Think That Man Should Sleep Alone," and "Perfect Lovers" are the two most likely candidates for airplay. The first is a confident but sincere plea over the phone for his "baby" to keep him company. It skips along in an engaging, if not unpredictable groove. Top 40 is written all over this one. "Perfect Lovers" is a true gem. A slow number, produced by Burt Bacharach and Carol Bayer Sager (Yes, they're back. At least they don't sing), it is a mature, unsentimental morsel. The chorus is catchy in a way that hearkens back to Motown's glory years. Of course, After Dark is ir chart competition with blockbusters Bad and Whitney. Against these sub-par products, though, it could emerge as the well-crafted creation that it is. -Mark Swartz LOGIE Continued from Page 8 But what can I do? There he was! Straight from central casting! Complete with, nervous tics, obscene under-the-breath muttering, and, I swear, a tattoo of the Army 'dawg' with blood-red eyes just above his needle tracks. I first knew something was up when the zealous Motown Stadium Cops went after some petty criminal who had probably inflated a beach ball, or incited a nasty chant. "Y'know," Sergeant Rock mumbled, in. tones which recalled Fred Rogers,"everyone treats the police like they're evil, but they're really our buddies! Yes, they ar The last time I heard somethi , like that, Safety-Pup was speaking. It's funny. This guy was a classic under-the-breath mutterer, and I was eavesdropping to the best of my ability, but the only word I could ever pick up was the f-word. For nine innings, non-stop, he ran on,"mumble, mumble, mumble, mumble F-WORD, mumble, mutter, F-WORD, wheeze." And even though I'm sure he wanted the people sitting around him to hear his muttered nasties, his non-mumbled commentary was "Leave it to Beaver" clean. Every opportunity for a really tasty obscenity was bypassed with substitutions like "stink, stank, stinking, stunk, smells, smelly, golly, darn," and "gosh." "My God," I thought to myself, "this guy probably spent two years in DaNang getting the living shit scared out of him by 'friendly fire,' and the foulest language he openly mouths is 'stinky?"' And he was soooo wrong. Moments after the Tigers substituted Scott Lusader for Larry Herndon, and Lusader handled a bloop single as well as any right- fielder could, he turned to me and grumbled., "Y'know they oughta get someone like Lusader out there, someone with a hot mitt." For those of you who don't know, this is an impressive mistake. Larry Herndon is black, and Scott Lusader is white, and this reads even from three hundred feet. And no way did this game stink. he final out inspired Kim to dead- lift my augmented bulk off of the bench I had been jumping up and down on. I recognize that this game will be old news by the time these words are read, but it sure beats the heck out of my original column idea-"Breakfast at the MUG...I really dig it!" And if you still feel shortchanged, remember, Sarge might readthis...I'm risking my life here. INTERVIEW Continued from Page 8 more of an entrenchment in the form of various kinds of conservatism, if not reaction. I happened to be here (Ann Arbor) the first time, in the '30s, when everything was to the left and so it was in the whole . - ' ""' s , _~ ,u y; r %; i . -. ', , , =-' ' I N country. And the country moves that way but I think it's not unique to the United States. It seems to me to breathe in that way. There are times in a country when social reform becomes absolutely imperative and then there's a reaction against changing anything. We've been through that now in the last years with Reagan. And, after all, it's-only twenty years ago that the most profound legislative attempts to solve racism were enacted under Johnson. And it's the same country, the same people walking around. And yet, they allegedly became very conservative on these issues. And I think now, it's very possible, with us running into eco- nomic troubles, you may find again a radical upsurge in this country. Or a liberal one. It wouldn't surprise me at all. Q: Do you mean that people vote with their bankbooks? M: Well...I think that the attitude of the country is pretty much practical. When it's practical to be conservative, the people are conservative, and when it's practical to be radical, they're radical. I know that during Roosevelt's time, in the space of a year or less, people who were extremely conservative, a year later were, out of desperation, voting for the most radical reforms in the history of this country... .Maybe that's a virtue of the country, that it does that. In other words, people react not ideologically so much as out of necessity. Now, as far ar racism goes, I per- sonally have always felt that it was the Achilles heel of the American culture and in some ways it's a good sign that there's more trouble be- cause it may mean that a change is closer at hand. Nobody ever got anything that didn't complain about it. Nothing changes unless there's trouble. Q: Well, looking at your work, I don't see a romantic, but a pragmatic man. M: Well, I don't think that there are many writers who aren't basic- ally romantic. They don't write very much. There's a longing for what isn't there on the earth, and that's romantic. An analytic person accepts a v v v v t x i, I s I I t t Z t c v d " Rare European Music Posters " Music Tour T-Shirts S" ,.h 3 The New Store in Town 340 S. State St., Upstairs 994-3888 Now Open Nightly'til 8 p.m. and Sunday AtfI After Join B'z great a :ar and th after game MSU h Pre-Game Lunch 5 & Cheer-Off Cheer on your home team and warm up with great food and spirits at the Cup! We have a full food and drink menu with croissants, Greek salad and lots more! Famous Gyros and Great Clam Chowder 1 ,, Champagne Mimosa $1.00 Bloody Mays $1.50 Hot Spiced Wine! 220 M.A.C. (In the University Mall) 332-3567 PAGE 4 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 9, 1987 WEEKEND/OCTOBER 9, 1987