" ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, April 1, 1992 Page 5 *Energizing SubPop -ers A grunge-less Seattle really exists, and its in Dayglo! by Nima "I'm a dreamah" Hodaei A new SubPop sound is emerging. In the forefront of this movement stands the Seattle quartet, Love Battery. Featuring the psychedelic, rootsy stylings of vocalist Ron Nine, guitarist Kevin Whitworth, drummer Jason Finn, and bassist Jim Tillman, Love Battery explodes in your face with ferocious wah-wah pedaled, trippy music, in a way quite unlike their Northwestern contemporaries. In a phone interview from Toronto, Nine speaks of the stereotypes thrown on the band. "One of the biggest things when- ever we come into a town is - Sub- Pop this, SubPop that," says Nine. "We're not Mudhoney. At the same time, I really like Mudhoney and I'm definitely influenced, but so far we've only had several instances of people stage diving and causing havoc at our shows. It's hard to say. I think we are right now at the van- guard of a new crop of SubPop bands. "I don't think any of those bands really sound alike. Admittedly, there is a thread of similarity, in .that ... Jack Endino did all the early produc- tion. We actually came out of that same period and same scene. Most of those people are our friends, and I think the thing that was great about it was everyone was trying to sound different." Love Battery first broke onto the scene with Between the Eyes, a gor- geous album of late '60s-influenced rock and punk. The first single, "Between the Eyes," garnered won- derful reviews in music publications around the country, sparking much interest in SdbPop's latest offering. Without the big grunge sound and deafening guitars on their side, Love Battery was definitely from a different cut than most of the Seattle bands of the time. Now, in 1992, the band's sophomore album, Dayglo arrives. New bassist Jim Tillman joins the line-up for Dayglo, an al- bum that captures the powerful bal- ladry of the band, with a little less emphasis on psychedelia. "We did our first U.S. tour for two months," states Nine. "We got the new bass player. Jim entered the band even before Between the Eyes was done. He was actually in on some of the mixing sessions. "I think there's nothing like play- ing every night for two months to really gel a band. I think we became a live band whereas before it was sort of iffy. We really have a sense of chemistry now that we can bring in to not only our performance, but also into our writing and collaborat- ing. I think Dayglo is a lot more co- hesive than Between the Eyes." With their stock rising, the in- evitable question of major label sign- ing comes up. However, Nine steers clear of specifics, only alluding that there has been some major label in- terest. Like other performers on in- dependent labels, Love Battery is wary of making commitments to corporate rock conglomerates.. "There is a certain point that you have to be on a major label to break across into (the mainstream)," ex- plains Nine. "Even the Top Ten on the CMJ (College Music Journal) charts are all major label stuff. So, I think there is a point where it's al- most required that you be on a major label to have a certain amount of success, which we definitely would like. "All we know for sure right now is we're going to record and put out an album as quickly as possible, and that'll be on SubPop." Currently on a tour in support of Dayglo, Love Battery brings their show to Ann Arbor tonight. Nine is full of anecdotes about touring expe- Despite their meta-grunge approach, Love Battery insists on grungy photos of themselves. How avant-garde. riences. "I consider us a good live band," he says. "Last time we played Seat- tle, was nuts. I could barely sing, be- cause the microphone stand kept be- ing kicked over. In San Francisco, all the kids jumping around stage were breaking my guitar cords! Then at the same time, we go somewhere else and people will just stand and listen." Even if you stand and listen, you might not wat to miss the opportu- nity to see' this band in an intimnate club setting before they hit the biz time. Seattle has once again come through with a top-caliber band. Is, the city really so influential in creat- ing great performers? "Someone was telling me we have the highest suicide rate out there." says Nine. "I can believe that, if you spend just a winter oul there. It's a dreary place." LOVE BATTERY performs at the Blind Pig tonight with HOLY COWS. oPening. Tickets are available at "it kelmaster for $5 (p.e.s.c.). Doors open at 9:30 p.m. call 996-8555 for more info. Squash Dangerfield's Ladybugs dir. Sidney J. Fune by Chris "Leapt right off the screen" Lepley * Ladybugs is the latest effort by vet- eran yuk-master Rodney Danger- field. As Chester Lee, a butt-kissing salesman who wants a promotion so he can marry his sweetheart, Dan- gerfield tells all his usual jokes and makes all his old faces, but he doesn't entirely ruin what turns out to be a cute movie. In order for Chester to get his promotion, he has to milk' a winning season from the company-sponsored girls' soccer team, the Ladybugs. With his trusty side-kick, Julie (Jackde of 227 fame), he tries va- liantly to make champions out of a rookie team. Chester's personal problems in- clude getting his girlfriend Bess (Ilene Graff) to marry him, and learning to get along with Bess's Son, Matthew (Jonathan Brandis, best known for the classic Never Ending Story ii: The Next Chapter). Chester comes up with a plan to kill two birds with one stone by dressing soccer player extraordinaire Mat- thew up like a girl ("Martha") and using him/her as a ringer to save the team. But why, you ask, would a 14- year-old boy agree to dress up like a girl just to help a man he doesn't like? Think hard, because some- where deep in the Brady Bunch- trained recesses of your brain you already know the answer. His dream girl must be a member of the team! Yes, you guessed it: Vinessa Shaw plays Kimberly Mullen. Not only is she Matthew's dream girl, but she's also the boss' daughter. Shaw's performance is subdued and touching, and she and Brandis make a cute couple, especially when he's wearing a dress. The rest of the film is clich6 but it's not bad clichd. Of course, each cute little member of the Ladybugs gets her time to shine, triumphing over little girl problems like wearing thick glasses and too much make-up. The inevitable sight-gags involving Matthew/Martha were predictable but still fun, mostly due to Brandis' angst-ridden performance. The biggest problem in the film Ladybug is that the situations which could be funny - the team going skinny-dip- ping and inviting "Martha" along, or "Martha" having a soccer ball kicked hard into "her" crotch - are over in seconds, while Dangerfield's stupid jokes seem to last forever. It's almost too bad Dangerfield is in the movie at all, because the rest of the cast is much more entertaining. The film is perfect for pre-teens, even though it perpetuates stereo- types about sex-roles which teenagers could do without. Mat- thew's fantasy about Kimberly is es- pecially offensive in a Miss-Ame- rica-Pageant-swimsuit-competition sort of way, but the majority of the jokes are harmless. The refreshing thing about films like Ladybugs is how you feel when you emerge from the theater. Sud- denly the day is a little brighter, the grass a little greener, and you feel confident that, in a universe where someone as butt-ugly as Rodney Dangerfield can believably get the girl, world peace is not an impossi- ble dream. LADYBUGS is playing at Briarwood and Showcase. With a bomb like Ruby, Aiello ought to star in Madonna's video, "Papa Dont Preach 2: Electric Boogaloo." Mackenzies stale Rubyis Sno gem 4 Ruby dir. John Mackenzie by Marie "Jamboree" Jacobson Ruby shamelessly rides the hype generated by Oliver Stone's controversial, critically-acclaimed JFK. But while JFK was a cinematographic coup, well-re- searched and carefully-constructed, Ruby is nothing more than its shallow, money-grubbing cousin. JFK had my bid for best film of '91, so any com- parison at all is bound to be a harsh one. All contrasts aside, however, Ruby can't stand on its own two feet. The film features a mediocre Danny Aiello in the title role. Jack Ruby, owner of a sleazy Dallas nightclub, had unequivocal connections to both the FBI and the Mafia. He traveled to Havana and Las Vegas on Mob business and he shot Lee Harvey Oswald. This is all we really know about the man. But the speculativeRuby wants to fill in all the holes. To do so, the film explores the platonic relationship between Ruby and one of his niost popular strippers, Candy Cane (Sherilyn Fenn). Candy fleshes out the human side of the man who killed Oswald: his kindness, his generosity, his insecurity and his courage. Which is all well and good until we learn, in a foot- note at the end of the movip, that there is no Candy. Never was. After taking you for six bucks, Ruby takes you on a two-hour wild goose chase. Candy is the filmmakers' whore - she allows them to indulge their ill-researched conspiracy theories while providing the perfect opportunity to add some T &A to an utterly blah set. She does little more: Alternately dumb as a post and smarter than any of the other charac- ters in the film, Fenn's Candy never adds the depth Ruby desperately needs. On all fronts, Ruby falls painfully short of its goal..In its attempt to portray Ruby as the perenial outsider, a Jewish nightclub owner struggling to reestablish the re- spect of the Sicilian Mafia, the film hardly evokes the sympathetic response it relentlessly craves. Mackenzie's film suggests that Ruby, at once a hopelessly confused bit player and a calculating killer, instantly identifies with Oswald. Why, then, did Ruby assasinate the guy? Ruby never really poses or attempts to answer the important questions that made JFK such a powerful rpic- ture. While Stone's film was criticized for its paranoid conclusions, Ruby is too fanciful, unfocused and schi- zophrenic to even invite serious contemplation. RUBY is playing at Showcase. We all know Rodney Dangerfield's range is out of this world, and now he's finally found a showcase that does this talent some justice. Notice the depth of expression, the pain behind those eyes. Oscar, here he comes. Oomph! Vf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 doIj-Cr II-IJ: IW'I . . ' .z ViIiMI~~I ROUNDTRIPS LONDON FROM PARIS FROM ATHENS FROM 6498 $588 $,2p "THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS IN APPLYING.TO LAW SCHOOL AND HOW TO AVOID THEM" ST. PETERSBURG $728 NAIROBI FROM $1450 TOKYO FROM BANGKOK FROM COSTA RICA - FROM RIO FROM $799 $949 $465 X779 A Seminar on the Law School Admission Process and the Successful Student's Approach Featured Topics Include: * How Law Schools Evaluate Applicants " How to Select Law Schools " Strategy and Timetable for Admission SYDNEY FROM $1389 CHICAGO DEPARTURES r VIUAIL UAUUU@ o~s:6 N ,,,,r hea