Page 10-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, December 12,1990 1; Burn, baby, burn Never mind the bollocking 1990s, here' s the 1970s f . k,.. by Peter Shapiro and Nabeel Zuberi S ince it has become 2 hype to groove on the vibes of the '70s in the past year or so, we, as chillun o' the '70s, have been inundated with the usual corporate glitz passing as legit folk culture - an updated re- make of The Brady Bunch, c'mon. Sure, the Me Decade could be summed up in five albums, one movie and its soundtrack and one TV show (Never Mind the Bollocks, Here's the Sex Pistols, Parliament's Funkentelechy vs. the Placebo Syndrome, Boston's Third Stage, Frampton Comes Alive, C'est Chic, Saturday Night Fever and The Par- tridge Family) and retro-'70s hipness is encapsulated on the cover of Deee- Lite's World Clique, but it's no an- cient Chinese secret that super groups, white disco rips and x-tra speshul cheezee kreashuns weren't all that was going on under Hamil- ton Jordan's nose. The Mighty O's In the hallowed tradition of great family singing groups like the Mills Bros., the McGuire Sisters and the Andrews Sisters, The Osmonds stormed out of the 'burbs of Provo, Utah with great complexions, wholesome values and a religious zeal that made the young'uns of the world temporarily forget about the Jackson 5, even if they did have a cartoon first. Maybe Erik Estrada, David Cassidy, Leif Garrett, Andy Gibb and John Travolta his fine self had bigger pecs, bosser hair, briter teeth, even better voices, but Donny had the eyes, oh those wondrous, magical twinklers he had(s). Yeah, and maybe Farrah Fawcett had a steamy poster and won Lee Majors' heart, Cheryl Tiegs wore better bathing suits and Loni Anderson had, well you know about Loni, but Marie sure was purty in Goin' Co- conuts. And if you don't know Mer- ril's, Wayne's and Alan's sartorial contribution to American culture, then check out the poster hidden be- hind the front door at Wazoo's. But image isn't everything, de- spite what that great poseur Andre Agassi says. Without the musical goods to back up their stylish exte- riors, the O's would have only been a collection of second-rate Bobby Shermans and Fabians. The Os- monds pulled off two of the decade's great concept albums - The Plan and Donny's Too Young. 1973's The Plan was a Miltonesque attempt to come to terms with their Mormon beliefs in a world of materialistic chaos: "Nations take up their battle stations/ Patrons of Zodiac revela- tions/ Lustations breaking family re- lations/ Litigation allowing shoot- up sensations," from the Tommy Oliver (yeah, it's the same guy who led the band in Name that Tune and Face the Music)-sweetened"Last Days." From the apocalyptic open- ing instrumental, "War in Heaven," to the ecstatic closing epiphany, "Goin' Home," in which the broth- ers attain communion with their savior, The Osmonds create a proto- Stryper imagistic portrayal of the Lord's plan that delivers its message through a guitar as powerful as the Book of Revelations without sermo- nizing. Aside from "Down by the Lazy River," "Crazy Horses" and "A Little Bit Country, A Little Bit Rock and Roll," the family's pop masterpiece is Donny's Too Young, ostensibly a musical statement wrestling with Donny's sex symbol status. With covers like Richie Valens' "Donna" and Dion and the Belmonts' "A Teenager in Love" on the first side, he is ineligible. As the album progresses, though, Paul Anka's "Lonely Girl" and Gof- fin/King's "Run to Her" change sexes, his parents beg you to "Take Good Care of My Baby," and finally Donny has become the "Last of the Red Hot Lovers."- P.S. Sheila B. Devotion "Spacer" (7") Other than Sister Sledge's Whit- manesque masterpiece We Are Fam- ily and "I Want Your Love," "Spacer" is Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers' greatest production for their Chic organization. Blond teutonic beauty Sheila B. had a previous hit with a poxy disco version of "Singin' in the Rain," memorable only for her English pronunciation. These were the days when having a German accent wasn't a drawback to a popstar's career. A love song to a Luke Skywalker surrogate, "Spacer"'s video/promo featured a lithe Ms. Devotion waving around a light saber with considerable relish while flanked by the two badly choreographed Black men who al- ways show up in dance videos for the gay club market. The Chic trademarks of skittery funk guitar, effervescent bass and those strings make "Spacer" the best dance single of 1979, along with Joy Division's "Transmission. - N.Z. Hot Chocolate "Every l's A Winner" (7") Fronted by Black and bald Errol Brown, the original man in the white suit, Hot Chocolate were a multi-racial, cross-cultural pop Premier documenter of 70s decadence Barry pumps out another Brecht- Weill classic at a local whiskey bar. group long before multi and cross were cool terms bandied about like they're going out of fashion. Brown's exasperated yelp, the funky dance groove, and a fuzz guitar riff repeated as often as is humanly pos- sible on a 45 RPM disc, make "Every 1's A Winner" a masterpiece of overdubbing and a weird confla- tion of rock, funk and disco that foreshadows the work of the Happy Mondays.--N.Z. Lou Rawls "Groovy People" (from All Things in Time) Overshadowed on its album of origin by Lou's mega hit, "You'll Never Find," this vastly underrated statement of purpose, along with See DISCO, Page 11: Candlelight Carol Worship I f L T 0 with favorite carols of the Christmas season Service followed by baby shower honoring Jesus's Birthday with gifts donated to local agencies. TONIGHT - 7:0X University Lutheran Chapel 1511 Washtenaw 66-5560 663-5560 The Scholof t1&ca~ton Mevrsity Commnittee N presents A -{ofidacii Concert byj the Southjfidct Ambassatdors Chiorus (dfementciri andi mi44k school cFtiU from Soutwkfiddi) Tuesdy, December 18, 199 2 p.m.f Schiort~ngAudito ri-um , Schioof of Ed~ucaiotn BudiUr 4~ ildren 90 ,ng. Oipen to the}'ubLic Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation The Shape of Two Cities: NewYork/Paris 9 Applications are being accepted for the 1991-1992 academic year at the Special Undergraduate Program. A junior year introduction to architecture, urban planning, and historic preservation for students who have completed their sophomore year at an accredited college or university. Students spend the first semester in New York at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation and the second semester in Paris at Columbia's studio and classroom facility in the historic Marais district, The program offers a choice of academic terms: 1. Summer, 1991 in New York and Fall, 1991 in Paris. 2. Fall, 1991 in New York and Spring, 1992 in Paris. Applications due March 15, 1991 M