0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 7, 1989-- Page 4 The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursd /7 S I 88.3 WCBN Student-run l~z.NAlternative 1I:~ 5 tv-s" The last crusade: finding an album Here s a story, of a A 89.1 89.9 91.7 92.3 94.7 95.5 96.3 97.9 98.7 99.5 100.3 101.1 101.9 102.9 105.1 105.9 FM WEMU (NPR) Jazz out of EMU CBE Classical WUOM (NPR) Classical WVAE New Age/Jazz wCsx Classic Rock wCzy Top 40 WHYT Top 40/Top 10 soul/funk WJLB Urban WLLZ Album Rock W DTX Top 40 WNIC Adult Contemporary WRIF Album Rock W DET (NPR) Jazz/Alternative WIQB Ann Arbor-based. Classic Rock WQRS Classical WJzz Jazz NPR - National Public Radio Station By Michael Paul Fischer NSE Entertainment Editor Passion, the long-awaited Peter Gabriel soundtrack to Martin Scorcese's The Last Temptation of Christ, had just been released on single compact disc (CD), single cassette, and double-LP formats, and I rushed into Liberty Street's Schoolkids Records store after a particularly hectic day at the Daily building a block down Maynard Street. Whereas early compact disc releases of 80-minute double LPs had been truncated to the format's 70-minute capacity by dropping songs and fading out others, infuriat- ing CD buyers, the Gabriel album (by "album" I mean a volume of songs on any format) follows the precedent set by Sting's ...Nothing Like the Sun and cemented by U2's Rattle and Hum, by forcing out a questionably-doubled extra-price vinyl set to accommodate a 50+ .minute recording designed for CD size. Holdouts like Simple Minds' Live in the City of Light require two CDs - and a death-spelling price for the marketer. "Looks like we won't be seeing the real double-LPs for much longer," I lamented to the sales clerk. "Looks like we won't be seeing any LPs, period," he returned dryly. And as record companies and re- tailers alike pursue a self-fulfilling policy of reducing vinyl stocks in response to a perceived consumer abandonment of the LP, major chain stores like Record Town, whose local outlet is found near I-94 in the Briarwood shopping mall, earnestly whittle away the space devoted to these oversized platters, leaving the fan of this format in a quandary: ei- ther to accept the inferior dynamics of a prerecorded cassette or pay the extra seven dollars demanded for digi- tal perfection - or to spend hours searching madly for a format that's getting almost as hard to find as an 8-track cartridge. Fortunately, music-buying plu- ralists exiting suburban strip-mall vertigo for our lovely campus are suddenly to encounter a thrilling haven from progress in the area of Liberty and State streets, where a mighty triad of new-record outlets offer a remarkable combination of variety, selection, and price. Despite its recent remodeling and expansion to accommodate a complete CD de- partment, the Schoolkids store stands as a true rarity in that it still stocks primarily LPs - and not just any LPs, but an unparalleled selec- tion for its size of modern and col- lege pop, international, jazz, folk, and soundtracks on cassette and CD as well. Earlier in the decade, 0 u i magazine included Schoolkids in a list of the nation's top ten record stores. And bitch as they may about Schoolkids' recently increasing-to- close-to-suggested-retail prices, lo- calites will not deny the vigor of the store's comprehensive stock: a super collection of cut-outs, those hard-to- sell oddities or overstock items at heavy discount (you can build a Brian Eno collection at only four bucks a shot), obscure imports (although thinning continuously as major labels clamp down the copy- right statutes), and a complete rack of music magazines, including British weeklies like the Melody Maker. You can even find 12" disco mixes there - as well as the new White Lion or Winger album. Should you be searching for these on a Saturday, when the aisles jam up with enthusiasts, go instead to Discount Records, which has an impressive classical selection on its own, put particularly features lower prices. Unlike regular chain stores such as Record Town, who even sell their $8.99 lists at $9.99, Discount cuts way below regular re- tail, and is distinguished by a laid- back style evident in crayon-written dividers and elaborate displays. But Discount sells few LPs. Selling even less is State Discount, a drugstore across the street which sells a limited stock of new releases and predictable mid-line oldies on CD and cassette. By dealing in enormous volume, State cuts close to the bottom of a retailer's 40% mark-up to offer unbeatable prices. But if these aren't low enough, or you still can't find Ry Cooder's Paris, Texas on LP, head down State toward Angell Hall and find the amazing Wazoo used record store. Like PJ's at Hill and Packard, Wazoo sell almost all LPs - and because of the alternative bent of Ann Arbor listeners, you'll find much more at both stores than just old John Waite pressings. Instead, search out old imports and new pro- mos sold off by local hacks and DJ's. Classical buffs will be satisfied by two more stores in the same vicinity. Liberty Records is the older, an institution which also sells many soundtracks. But you'll never figure out its arrangement; ask a sales clerk for assistance. Just on the other side of Schoolkids is its new offshoot, SKR Classical, a fancier, more modern-looking store. The dif- ference in selection is hard to tell. And should you be searching for new-age, your mecca will be Earth Wisdom Music in the Seva restau- rant up towards Division. They'll pay every tape for you before you buy it; but they don't sell LPs any- more. U and g The Movies present the Movie Goer Special " " - Consisting Q choies of entree 2 English Fries 2 Beverages. Tickets $17.5O0 Y " Try our 10' peel and eat shrimp and' cocktail hour Briarwood Mall " 668-7500 By Alex Gordon NSE Editor "Mike," Carol said, "why don't we load the kids into the wagon and take a vacation?" "Where can we go, honey?" Mike responded. "We've been to Hawaii, and the Grand Canyon." "We'll take a vote!" Carol said triumphantly. "Greg, Marcia, Peter, Jan, Cindy, Bobby!" Down the stairs the six polyester- clad Brady kids came. As they settled in the romp room, Mike opened the meeting of the Brady household. "Kids, your mother and I have de- cided we should take another vaca- tion. We're going to let you kids de- termine where we'll go." "Groovy!" Jan said. "I heard about this college town in Michigan that has just tons and tons of muse- ums and galleries. With my glasses I'd really like to see the Monets at lovely gallery the University Museum of Art." "And a m "Art, that's for stinkers!" Bobby prices he cha sneered, drawing a quick glare from "Personally Carol. Slusser Ga "Son, you know I don't like that Architecture word." Campus." "Aww, but Mom, in Ann Arbor "Now Mik they have a really neat mummy at tion is for y the Kelsey Museum of Ancient work. After and Medieval Archaeology." amusement p "A mummy, oh really Bobby, poster we've you've been watching too much tv, mixing busin Greg said. "I'd like to go to T h e Marcia s Hands On Museum. I hear that Perhaps if place really smokes." d sat the Clemei "That's fine," Carol replied, "as a ydal ' long as you don't smoke.", my diary. I' Jr ha ened illion dollars with the arges," Mike chuckled. I'd like to see the llery in the Art and Building on North ke, the idea of this vaca- you to get away from that fiasco at the ark with the Yogi Bear all had our share of ess with pleasure." ddenly had an idea. we look through all the .y American documents ants Library, we'd find just die if Desi Arnaz to be looking at the rare w my diary." bout as likely as my ng as the six of us are to record a song," Peter sides, I'd like to spend e at the Bentley Library, on North ey have lots of swell ut the history of could show up Buddy Just then Alice, the housekeeper, and a University of Michigan gradu- ate, entered the room. "I hope you folks don't mind me intruding, but I remember the Natural Science Exhibit Museum being a real hum dinger. Sam the Butcher says there's a skeleton of a wooly mammoth there so big that he could make a hundred steaks out of it." .I1. pI 11UU L books and sav That's ab voice changi getting ready chortled. "Be all my tim Historical Campus. The things abo Michigan. Is 0 H br nal ju Fi Ar Th Si RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINIA BILL WOOD/Daily Jo and Julie Ferar, not Carol and Cindy Brady, gaze at the mysteries of the Oriental Art Exhibit at the University's Museum of Art. L IBERTY St. 120 E. Liberty Ann Arbor, M 148104 3,tarVIDEO Phone 663.3121 V I E Looking for something different? We have it. F C 4 *0 VSSGAME"'"" Welcome Back U of M Students Once your boxes are unpacked and you are ready for a real choice in home ENTERTAINMENT; Columbia Cable will bring you choice, convenience, and the quality programming that only CABLE TELEVISION can offer. CALL TODAY 973-2266 r -" -, 0 0 o - "Entertainment at your Fingertips" " no " credit card " no " member- * no *" deposit s" S 6/ V+ Vi ~+ FOREIGN CLASSIC DOCUMENTARY CULT FAVORITES plus ALL THE BIG HITS!!! L .2 for 1 Mondays and Wednesdays The University of Michigan Gilbert and Sullivan Society invites you to a MASS MEETING for the Society's Fall production of Gilbert and Sullivan's THE SORCERER Sunday September 10 at 8 PM in the Henderson Room in the Michigan League For more information call 761-7855 "THE DASE COOP PROGRAM A COURSE IN REAL LI "The big thing it offers is experience, and that's whatc There are things I've learned on the job that I couldri The Department of Army Scientific and Engineering (DASE) C provides ROTC students the opportunity to work in a Departr facility while still in college. Each is paid while getting practic in a high-tech facility. Selected students also receive up to $5,0 per year and the opportunity for continued employment after To be eligible, you must be a freshman in a baccalaureate a degree in science or engineering. For more information on cedures, contact the Chairman of the Co-op Department, or th Military Science. Students are selected on a competitive basis. ARMY ROTC THE SMARST COLLEGE COURSE YOU CAN TAKE. Contact Captain Alic Find out more. *r ... IYYIYY MYYIYIY IYYYYYYI Y YYOYI YI n1Y YY YYY v r I f 131 North Hall 764-2400