ARTS Tuesday, January 12, 1988 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Three new soul-filled albums Black Uhuru Positive RAS Records Positive reveals Black Uhuru are back at their glowing best. Polished with crisp, Worldbeat rhythms, this new LP will definitely appeal to a wider audience. Slashing through the thin, exterior membranes that sepa- rate African music, reggae, soul, rap, and the current Afro-American craze sweeping the U.S. called House music, Black Uhuru create an intri- cate labyrinth of musical diversity, swirled and twirled into a scorching reggae rydim. Positive marks the return of lead vocalist Junior Reid, along with longtime vocalist, songwriter, and backbone of the group, Duckie Simpson. Puma Jones, however, has been replaced by the ultrafunky Ola- funke, former bassist and lead vocal- ist of one of the top women's reggae bands in Jamaica, Works of Women. They have also teamed up once again with Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare, the most menacing rhythm section around. Fresh from their hot summer LP Rhythm Killers , these guys lace Uhuru's music with an aggressive, serrated edge that drives the album's original blend of sounds. Black Uhuru rustle up a perfect example of the peaceful, spiritual Uhuru back in action as they con- tinue their fight against worldwide oppression through the power of, reggae music. As Duckie Simpson writes on "I Create," "Freedom of one is the bondage of many/Riches for a few leave the rest without a penny/ Long live the struggle." -Todd Shanker Casey Jones Solid Blue Rooster Blues Record A.C. Reed I'm in the Wrong Business Alligator Records These two albums represent steps into the spotlight for two o f Chicago's most respected, able, and veteran sideplayers. Both drummer Casey Jones and saxophonist A.C. Reed have played with virtually ev- erybody who is anybody in the past 25 years of Chicago blues, including Albert Collins for the past seven. These albums employ many of the same Windy City blues veterans, including guitarist Maurice Vaughn and rock-steady bassist Johnny Gayden. In fact, Jones is Reed's drummer, and Reed contributes backing vocals to Jones' effort. While both albums are successes, Reed's stands out more because he posses a gruffly, expressive singing voice, and distinctive tenor sax style.Wrong Business also benefits from guest appearances by Bonnie Raitt and Stevie Ray Vaughn. Raitt contributes excellant slide guitar and harmony vocals to "She's Fine" and "This Little Voice." Vaughn turns in excellent, relatively subdued perfor- mances on three tracks which show how good he can be when he rises above his self indulgences. On "I Can't Go On This Way," one can hear just how big an influence Buddy Guy had upon Vaughn's playing. Solid Blue is also indeed good., solid Chicago blues. The opening "Boogie Men" is a soulful, touching tribute to blues greats from John Lee Hooker to Muddy Waters to Otis Rush and Albert Collins, all of whom Jones has backed. Billy Branch's harmonica wailings shine on, this, and two other cuts. The al- bum suffers only from Jones' aver- age though expressive voice. The covers of I'm in The Wrong Business and Solid Blue both fea- ture pictures of the artists grinning widely. They have reason to smile. Both have stepped out of the back- ground and into the spotlight of the Chicago blues scene. -Alan Paul Remd Quid We Black Uhuru's new album 'Positive' shows their back in action again with the return Junior Reid and other guest appearances. ethic of the Rastafarian on the west- ern-flavored ballad, "Cowboy Town." Reid's soulful power em- anates from each note as he sings, "This a no wartime/This a Star- time/Gunman put your weapon down/This is not a showdown." "Fire City" exhibits their vision of world consciousness as Simpson's Day-Glo lyrics explore the periphery of South Africa's repressive Apartheid regime. Reid's exultant vocals spontaneously combust, sending angry blue bolts ricocheting through the gloom and strife that pervade in Fire City. Sky Juice creates a colorful per- cussive panorama on the title cut while Asher's moody keyboards per- fectly capture the rhythm's pulse. Lead guitarist Chinna Smith cracks the whip on this tune, however, with positively jolting guitar solos. "Space Within Your Heart" is a Motownish love ballad featuring Steven "Cat" Coore from Third World on cello and Olafunke's soothing, ethereal background vo- cals. On "Pain" the band recounts a tortuous journey into the life of the repressed Rastas in Jamaica. The spiritual anguish in Reid's vocals brings a lucid message of suffering. The song builds to a shattering crescendo of wailing vocals, ravage- torn rhythm, and impending revolu- tion. Positive is loaded with soul stir- ring vocals and complex, high-pow- ered reggae dance rhythms. But more importantly, it's great to see Black Books The Revenge of the Hound By Michael Hardwick Random House $17.95/hardcover The adventures of "the world's greatest; detective, Sherlock Holmes," continue in Michael Hardwick's rendition, The Revenge of the Hound. In the style of Sir Conan Doyle, the creator of Sher- lock Holmes, Hardwick positions Dr. John H. Watson as chronicler. Ie tells his.audience it is the sum- mer of 1902 and England is prepar- ing for the coronation of Edward VII. Hardwick portrays Holmes as an individual with serious flaws in his personality - not the perfect character one would expect. Holmes lias been solving crimes for a num- ber of years and has become accus- tomed to his private, ordered life at 221B Baker Street. He has also grown . somewhat eccentric and reclusive. Watson writes, "If it should appear to Sherlock Holmes' devout admirers that my account of his behaviour ... is less than flatter- ing, so be it." Dr. Watson, on the other hand, has a very agreeable personality. He is fond of fellow human beings and is open to change. Yet Watson threatens the stability of the world Holmes has created for himself when he decides to marry a third time. To Holmes it seems that Watson gives "no thought to its possible repercussions upon the unique career of [his] friend and fellow tenent." Watson tells us, "He was used to my company, and, I daresay, my always- unstinting praise." When Watson interferes with Holmes' lifestyle, Holmes' response t is ungracious and surprising. It is not the behavior one would expect rom the world's greatest detective. fie appears childish - "he flung himself down into an armchair and smoked furiously." A tension devel- ops between the two as Holmes hurls insults and Watson relishes in the satisfaction of making him sputter in his coffee." Hardwick's gharacterizations are a refreshing Ipange from the stereotypes that are called to mind when one speaks of Sherlock Holmes and his side- kick,Watson. From this promising beginning, Hardwick's adventure disperses in too many directions at once. First there is the appearance of an enor- mous hound in Hampstead that at- tacks a sleeping pedestrian. But the incident is not enough to arouse disappearance of Oliver Cromwell's bones from their burial site and the introduction of Mycroft, Holmes' brother, who summons him to per- form a secret errand for the soon-to- be king. These incidents begin to kindle Holmes' intellect and supreme pow- ers of deduction. He successfully disguises himself and mingles with his suspects only to discover the in- terlocking aspects of the cases and their possible impact on the stability of England. The result is a satisfying unification of a story whose direc- tion is previously unclear. Then, in a climatic scene on the grounds of Hampstead, Holmes' anger towards Watson reaches its peak and then subsides, leaving Holmes to accept his companion's decision to be married again. Work- ing so closely together on the cases allows Holmes and Watson to re- lease their growing tensions and re- call the respect they feel toward one another. While the partners are working to solve the crimes, Hardwick consis- tently refers to book titles that chronicle earlier cases. Most of these references are barely explained and are not needed. They are neither thought-provoking nor helpful. Hardwick does manage to inform the reader of interesting historical facts which are significant to England's heritage and add substance to the varying plots. The Revenge of the Hound seems to grapple with too many plots in the beginning, but its con- clusion leaves the reader with a feel- ing of satisfaction. The criminals are uncovered, Holmes and Watson are I 0 resolved in their friendship, and one has to wonder what will be next in the adventures of the world's greatest detective, Sherlock Holmes. -Jill Pisoni STUDENTS INTERESTED IN AN ACTUARIAL CAREER ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THE CNA INSURANCE COMPANIES' ON-CAMPUS RECEPTION I WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20th 4:30 til 6:00 PM MICHIGAN UNION CNA For All the Commitments You Make* J 1d ,-W-w ww wr" - or, * * * . . $ .? t . "+ . . : : . . : : : : . , . r.?..v'+ 4" L . ,;'" 6 :+ .'i r .r4 4 .^ t : > ,titi: . . a ." ' 'rF7, : r{, h' .i : t r$rr,$:: .>rGtti $;??: "DIVERSITY: A PREREQUISITE FOR EXCELEMINCE" U -ADMISSION FREE- TO THE THIRD FLOOR... 11 A commemorative symposium Monday, January 11, 1988 Keynote address: The Honorable Lawrence Douglas Wilder Lieutenant Governor of Virginia 4:00 p.m., Hill Auditorium January 11 and 12. 1988 at The University of Michigan Robb., Tuesday, January 12, 1988 Plenary session: Or. James Jackson, Associate Dean, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies 9:00 a.m., Rackham Auditorium Workshops will be held at 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. in the Michigan League and at the University Hospital Closing address: Professor Eleanor Holmes Norton, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center 4:00 p.m., Hill Auditorium - Memorial concert: -.00"" 74 -l", .,.0ov- \ -000 Roberta Alexander, Soprano, I I m HnhrtaBookn Rushan. H Haiw km Fin.,Tan &8-830-8Din. M-