The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 25, 1989 - Page 13 RECORDS Continued from Page n determined to make it to the top, but in no real hurry. "Where Teardrops Fall," is a drony evocation of a far- away land, a shelter from the storm "in the turning of twilight, in the shadows of moonlight." A psychi- cally exhausted Dylan will meet some mystic female in that place. Is she the same woman he thinks of when he sees a "Shooting Star" in the closing track? The same one whom he asks "What Was It You Wanted," perhaps too late, long after she's left him? I like to think it's been the same anonymous, timeless lover ever since Another Side of Bob Dylan's "Spanish Harlem Incident" (1964). She's infinitely wiser than he, a teacher as well as a friend. "Something there is about you that !brings back a long forgotten truth," he sang to her on 1974's Planet Waves. "You're trying to break into another world, a world I never knew," he marvels this time. On Oh Mercy, Bob is thinking a lot about what it means to be Bob. The first three songs of side two openly ponder his private and public obligations as a human being. You don't get much heavier than that. "What good am I," he asks, "If I know and don't do, if I see and don't say, if I look right through you?" "Disease of Conceit," were it written in Dylan's sixties heydays, would have been a fingerpointing harangue along the lines of "Ballad of a Thin Man." Instead of scolding that "something is happening and you don't know what it is," he can only sigh that "there's a whole lot of people suffering tonight." In a way far more profound than John Cougar Mellencamp's silly "Pop Singer," Bob Dylan wonders aloud whether his abilities as a songwriter can (still) make a difference. In that department, Bob, you re- ally have nothing to worry about. All we expect from you is honest re- sponses to your world. "Ring them Bells," a deliberate recollection of your own "Chimes of Freedom," is as fine a work as you've come up with in this decade. As stirring in its understated religious conviction as "I Shall Be Released" or "Blowin' in the Wind," it succeeds as a hymn, a pop song, and a political outcry. It should sound just great when you play it in concert this November. -Mark Swartz Paul Kelly and the Mes- sengers So Much Water So Close To Home A&M Records It's been said that the difference between rock 'n' roll and its parents, country and blues, is that it lacks their sense of guilt. Elvis, Little Richard, and their crowd could raise hell all night and wake up the next afternoon and face no real conse- quences. Ever since that emancipa- tion, the devil's musicians have been freed from having to face down the horrible beast of regret. What then, is Paul Kelly and the Messengers? (On their Aussie home- turf, they're Paul Kelly and the Colored Girls, as in "doo de doo de doo.") It sounds like rock 'n' roll to these ears. Just like those great old time, drums/bass/guitar shakedowns of yore. So why doesn't Kelly lighten up? Because the man has a con- science. Not so much a ideological conscience in the vein of U2 - although that's present - but an in- terpersonal conscience that's sad, simple, and guilt-stricken. Thanks to it, he's one of the best trad song- writers around. So Much Water So Close To Home is the title of his third American release; it's taken from a Raymond Carver short story of the same name. Like the much-missed author, Paul Kelly is a master at be- ing down-to-earth in his images but larger-than-life in his resonance. From the opening track, "You Can't Take it With You," a restatement of Dylan's "Gotta Serve Somebody," to the heartbreaking "Cities of Texas,"Water is Kelly's easiest al- bum to like. His limited voice wins your trust with its earnestness. His melodies, country-based and serene, assure you in their straightforward- ness. Irony is a tool for insecure show-offs. Kelly knows what he wants to say and he says it. -Mark Swartz I Hated Batman? Loved Bernstein? Leave your roommate alone - Tell it to the world in Daily Arts Call 763-0379 Above: Bob Dylan has finally come to his senses - he's come out with his first real album in a while, the intense, heavy-duty Oh Mercy. His self-reflection results in some effective material. Right: Paul Kelly and the Messengers nearly drown in guilt on their latest album, So Much Water So Close to Home. For the career-oriented, we're offering a career a in the Orient. r : !yw3 C! r. s}lc;, . . , ,:; F,,., , ,ry :..,, /f r i,{. r ' .,... ... ....... , .:..;rte f'' a. ., ,.., .... ,,. v. ..r .,.,. ,,. .. wr. .} . ti re f U: .. ,,; ... If you're seeking a successful future with a leading electronics company, Nippon Motorola Ltd. headquartered in 'Ibkyo, Japan is offering you a world of opportunity. 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