people of destroying them- selves-you deny them the compassion that comes out of tragedy." Blades admits that music like this creates a marketing problem-"It isn't your tradi- tional format-oriented album," he says-but he has hopes that it will gain mass acceptance. "The promise that it holds is, it could be a breakthrough-not just for a Latin artist doing his first English record, but for English-speaking musicians as well. Why does every song have to sound the same? Why not take a chance?" Making this an even bigger month for Blades is the release of his fourth movie, "The Mila- gro Beanfield War," directed by Studying Robert Redford. It's a comedy about the clash between developers and the residents of a New Mexico mountain town. Two years ago, after "Crossover Dreams," he moved from New York to Los Angeles to study the movie business up close: "I wanted to see for myself what kind of mentality there is here and why bridges to build and to main- tain. Right now Blades is pre- paring for the late-spring re- lease of "Antecedentes," a Spanish-language record on Elektra, and considering movie parts. And late this year he'll move back to New York and soon will begin planning for his eventual return to Panama- where, rumors persist, he'll run for office someday. But not un- til he's well prepared. "There's a lot I have to understand," he says. "I have to identify the problems. For that I need to gather a group of people who are equally motivated, and who aren't subject to the existing po- litical structure. Once we've ,r analyzed the problems we can ar present a plan." Never mind that Blades al- ready talks like a politician when he talks politics. More important is this: in Panama Ruben Blades will come full circle and keep the promise of his life and work, which is that going forward doesn't have to mean you can never go back. BILL BAROL the business up close: In 'Milagro Beanfield W there isn't more Latin participation in film production." The connection with Redford has already paid off. Next year, Blades hopes, he'll be bringing a group of Panamanians to study film at Redford's Sundance Institute in Utah. In the meantime there's work to be done, Reggae, Heartache: Two LP's I f you're a reggae musician and your last name is Mar- ley, fans of the island music will give you a listen-even if your first name is Ziggy. But anyone expecting this son of the legendary Bob Marley to remain comfortably within the traditions of his father's music had better get out of the way. With his dazzling third album, Conscious Party (Vir- gin), Ziggy Marley has cut a path for reggae to follow into the next decade. Certainly, Ziggy has amusi- cal, as well as physical, resem- blancetohislatefather. There is the same political fervor, as in "We Propose," when Ziggy and his band, the Melody Makers (with Marley's two sisters and younger brother), exhort "warmongers, politi- cians, racists, capitalists" to "learn, learn, learn!" And there are the undertones of Rastafarianism, the Jamai- can religious sect. One of Ras- ta's more powerful themes, the call of "back to Africa," drives "Dreams of Home," with its traditional rhythms and majestic choir. Ziggy's music, however, has a cleaner, more "pop" sound than his father's. The effer- vescent "Tomorrow People" is irresistible. This is not the butter-smooth, recycled reg- gae of bands like UB40; songs like "Tumblin Down," defiant and confident, and the steamy "New Love" maintain a raw edge. Through the hop of the rhythm, through the refined tunes, burns the unmistak- able fire of his father. For reg- gae, rent by Bob Marley's 1981 death and the murder of Peter Tosh last year, Ziggy's powerful work couldn't have come at a better time. Ton BARRETT f the great pop songwriters of the '60s knew how to do one thing, it was ache. John Lennon and Paul McCart- ney's "Ticket to Ride," Brian Wilson's "Don't Worry Baby," Jerry Butler and Curtis May- field's "He Will Break Your Heart"-there's more honest, hope-toldie heartbreak in those three-minute sides than in all of this week's Top 40. That's whytheSmithereens,a quartet from northern New Jersey, are such a revelation and their second major-label release, Green Thoughts (Capi- tol/Enigma), is such a pleas- ure. Pat DiNizio, the group's songwriter and singer, can ache with the best of them. It's clear on a first listening how deeply DiNizio has ab- sorbed the work of the '60s pop craftsmen, who prized lovely melodies and meticu- lous lyrics over visceral pow- er. Less skillful musicians have been ruined by this rev- erence for the past. The Smithereens get away clean. The band plays with a tough, propulsive attack that's ut- terly contemporary. Produc- er Don Dixon has shaped an aural landscape that shim- mers with dark tensions. And while DiNizio obviously be- lieves that love is a hurtin' thing, his songs have none of the old masters' naivete. "Only a Memory" makes a jilted lover's nostalgia sound downright ominous, like a brush fire about to spread out of control and burn down the whole town. "Drown in My Own Tears" makes you be- lieve that this guy means to do just that. "Green Thoughts" may be the most perfect record ever made for' people who are brokenheart- ed and pissed off about it. B. B. 'Conscious Party': Ziggy APRIL i988 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 45 APRIL 1988 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 45