A. Page 18 ARTS The Michigan Daily/New Student Edition - Thursday, September 6, 1990 r r X w Hit the Bong! And Bong, the hit-a classic by Greg Baise Bongwater Too Much Sleep Shimmy Disc Recently at the bus stop, some guy was giving away copies of the "#1 Best Seller," "Perhaps the most controversial and provocative book of this century"-no, not the H4oly Bible or The Satanic Verses, but a Biblical study by one E.G. White called America in Prophecy. Page 635: "We live in the last days of history. The end of life as men now know it is nearly ended." "The key is now," explains a double-talking voice on a piece of Shimmy Disc vinyl. We are living in the last days: Bongwater joins the E.G. White consensus in "The Living End"-the opening track on Too Much Sleep, which is Bongwater's second album. "The Living End" is the apocalyptic anthem of the year, with Kramer gnarling his bass and guitars (perhaps Dave Rick's guitar as well?) together like two slabs of hardened lava grinding against each ' other-after all, Bongwater is singing about living in the .- magmatic last days of Pompeii. Dogs bark, maniacal pre-recorded/ sampled laughter is constantly heard, the canvas is stretched tighter, and Bongwater are ready to paint their apocalyptic uniptych. Double Bum- mer, the classic diptych 1988 double album debut full length release by Bongwater must make way for the genius of this new record, although all together, the three albums, along with the odd Bongwater single and EP and surplus tracks, make an ;. excellent aural equivalent of the Illuminatus trilogy. n Nowadays Bongwater is essen- tially erstwhile performance artist/ regularly employed actor Ann Magnuson (formerly Magnusson) : and Shimmy Disc magnate/ engineeraholic Kramer (formerly Mark Kramer). As usual, Magnuson provides most of the lead vocals and lyrics, while Kramer broadens his already immense horizons by covering the categories of "Instru- ments" and "Music," as well as backing vocals. Former drummer David Licht has been replaced by a drum machine, and Dave Rick was discharged from the Shimmy Disc family last year, although he is credited with lead guitars on Too Much Sleep, and he co-wrote three of the new songs (two of which are only available as bonus CD tracks). Through the incredible post- whatever (...as if antecedents are important here. In a couple mil- lennia, if not sooner, Bongwater will be revered as the antecedent) psychedelic music, augmented by tapes of different ridiculous speeches, not to mention the waking dream lyrics, listeners of Too Much Sleep, and Bongwater in general, may feel like they are sleeping in the early '70s, having some technicolor 70mm lucid dreams with a cast that includes Marcia Brady, Brad, Peter Blegvad and Anthony Moore, Kevin Ayers, a Chinese student killed on the night Khomeini died, and of course our deadly sane somnam- bulistic eyewitness to this narco- philiac/narcophobic wonder, Ann Magnuson. Magnuson's stream of unconsciousness spoken/lyrical ex- cursions, which occasionally popped up on Double Bummer, are here mostly benignly relegated to the area of CD bonus tracks, three of which are said spoken activities, while the other bonus track is a cover of the Soft Machine's "Why Are We Sleeping?" A prophecy for America and the world: Too Much Sleep, a classic for the '90s, if not all time, will be looked upon as the antithesis of the Beatles' "White Album" (that eponymous thing the Fab Scallys released in 1968). Everybody knows that Charles Manson listened to The Beatles and heard his own prophecy, which he interbred with some Biblical scriptures, producing an Marianne Faithfull Blazing Away Island "There are many songs, not all are here, but these are the main songs of my life at the moment. Anyway, I would never write a book. Pictures and songs are how I see it." So writes Marianne Faithfull in the liner notes for this exhil- irating collection. Recorded live last November at St. Anne's Cathedral, Brooklyn, Blazing Away is the autobiography of a great singer who's really been through the mill. Faithfull pulls out all the skeletons from the closet and bares herself in a way that most singers have forgotten. While torch singing has largely become a series of moves and artful poses that are all style and negligible content (a la Sade and Everything But The Girl), Faithfull spills her guts as Billie Holiday dlid in her later years. While even Ric ie Lee Jones seems to have turned into Diane Keaton singing in Annie Hall, Faithfull picks at her scabs and shows us the wounds without superfluous affect. With a group that includes Gart# Hudson of The Band, Dr. John, and guitarist Marc Ribot from Tqm Waits' band, Faithfull attacks "Why'd Ya Do It," a gloriously filthy song about jealousy which has merited a parental advisory warning label. She twists and teases John Lennon's "Working Class Herp," accentuating class hatred. Her version of the traditional Irish balla "She Moved Through the Fair" is a' touching as Van Morrison's on Irish Heartbeat. The bony "Sister Morphine" is riveting. Along with See RECORDS, page 17 Perhaps you saw Ann Magnuson seduced and then immolated by David Bowie in The Hunger. Consult the Bongwater songs "David Bowie Needs Ideas" and "Talent Is a Vampire" for further information in this area. incarnation of death for the Love Generation. Well somebody someday will listen to Too Much Sleep and .that person will hear the truth Kramer and Magnuson are sending out. She or he will wake up and perhaps run for president or some- thing and straighten these messy last days out. Evidence of the antithetical existence of Too Much Sleep? Note that this time around, there are no Beatles songs for Bongwater. There aren't even any Monkees songs. There are the aforementioned Soft Machine track on the CD, and the 13th Floor Elevators' "Splash 1," which Bongwater turn into a truly Texan song to sing while finishing rounding up your bovine livestock and retiring to sit in front of a campfire at sunset, or perhaps to use as a travelogue interlude in an updated John Ford movie. Roster- mates Dogbowl are also covered; a melancholy, romantic song called "One So Black." Melancholia pops up all over this record, especially in some very unexpected places. Take the "Psychedelic Sewing Room," perhaps the best song on the album. The music is exotic and'relaxing, with the combination of Kramer's organ and the syncopation of the drum machine giving the song the tinge of a lysergic Wurlitzer, a feel the combo duplicates throughout the album. The friendly mall Wurlitzer See BONGWATER, page 17 Marianne Faithfull's latest release has a video counterpart, with footage of her Blazing Away performance, an interview and conceptual footage filmed in Ireland and New York.f '43 WVIDEO WATCH Free Membership Welcome back students! The largest selection of VHS movies, Nintendo games and VCR rentals in the Area. 5 Convenient locations to serve you. All movies and Nintendo Games rent for 2 days and 3 evenings (New Releases excluded) Ann Arbor 1754 Plymouth Rd. (North Campus) - 668-0007 2190 West Stadium (Stadium & Liberty) - 668-0060 4080 Packard Rd. (Packard & Carpenter Rd.) - 971-1515 Coming Soon 6th location -'(Huron & Parkway & Washtenaw) Ypsilanti 1480 Washtenaw (1/2 mile vest of EMU campus) * 484-3500 1025 Emerick (Gault Village Shopping Center) -484-3900 'Valuable couponI Valuable coupon Valuable coupon