The Michigan Daily - Weekend etc. - October 15,1992- Page 5 I got you under my wheelz Everything you always wanted to know about a Monster Truck Battle ... "So Marco," friends and family members often ask me, "just what the hell is a Monster Truck Pull, any- way?" They ask me because I'm the only person they know who's been to one, a sad statement about bourgeois middle-class snobbery. These are people who think professional wres- ding is "fake and stupid," yet will spend a beautiful Sunday afternoon guzzling beer and watching grown men really beat the hell out of each other. People who don't think rap is music, but will pay money to get into a classic rock bar and karaoke "Yakety-Yak." People who make fun of me for suggesting a tape from the "Elvis" section of the video store, then beeline to New Releases and say, "Boy, that John Candy sure is funny." Do you fit the description of one of these hypothetical hypocrites? If so, this weekend's your chance at re- demption: The Pontiac Silverdome is hosting what promises to be the Mother of all Truck Battles, the Mon- ster Truck Challenge, Saturday at 8 p.m. Only the strong will survive. Now, I don't claim to be some sort of Zen figure when it comes to Mon- ster Trucks. I've only been to one Battle, and that was at the Breslin Center in Lansing, a considerably smaller venue than the 'Dome. But using my first impressions from that formative event in my life, I've put together this quick and dirty guide to one of our great country's most popu- lar forms of "sports entertainment." Read on, go to the Truck Challenge on Saturday, and then watch "Ameri- can Gladiators" Sunday morning. You'll thank yourself later. Q. OK, so what do the trucks actu- ally do at a battle? A. It's easy. Just think of a Mon- ster Truck Battle as a simple race. The only difference is, these trucks are big enough to crush your house, so to make it more challenging, they're rac- ing over a bunch of cars lined up side by side. These cars are eventually ground into nothing. Q. How are the races judged? A. It depends. Sometimes, the win- ner is the truck that can get over the line of cars the fastest, butother times, it's whichever, truck can pop the big- gest wheelie without flipping over on its back like a giant chrome turtle. Q. IfI wanted to gamble money on one of the trucks, which would you recommend? A. Well, there's always Bigfoot, the perennial fave. But Gravedigger might even be more popular, just be- cause it's a big, mean-looking black truck, the kind of truck people imag- ine themselves in when they fantasize about driving through the mall or Disneyland. Attesting to GD's popu- larity, at the Breslin Battle, an entire family was dressed in matching Gravedigger caps and T-shirts. (I'd recommend steering clear of such dedicated fans, as they can usually smell hairspray and Polo cologne a mile away, and as a rule of thumb, if it don't smell like diesel fuel, they don't like it.) Q. Does anything else go on be- sides the truck races? A. Yes, of course. At the Breslin Center Battle, a daredevil known only as "the Ice-Man," jumped over a line of cars on a three-wheeler. Then, he locked his wife, "the Human Bomb," in "the Coffin of Death" and, as the I-a man sitting behind me shouted "BLOW 'ER UP!", he blew her up. They both survived their stunts, and most members of the audience breathed a collective sigh of relief. Q. We've all seen the classic "Truckasaurus" episode of The Simpsons. That kind of stuff is just a product ofMatt Groening's sick mind, isn't it? A. No. At the Breslin Center, they wheeled out TruckZilla, a three-story, fire-breathing monster. "You wanna see TruckZilla eat this Toyota?!" the MC cried. Of course, he was met with a xenophobic roar of approval. But unfortunately, as the huge, smoking American beast tried to grind the tiny, well-constructed Japanese product in its massive steel jaws, it got stuck and stalled out. After a few awkward moments of trying to revive TruckZilla, the organizers were forced to have other trucks push it out of the stadium in disgrace, a humbling mo- ment in an otherwise Caligulan dis- play of unadulterated excess. EAS' E$ d 'S " The 'What' and why of Common Cents by Jason Vigna The good news is now that I'm done reviewing the album "What" by the Common Cents, I never have to listen to it again. It's so bad that the first draft of this review included the word "shit" twelve times. Of course, this was just a first impression. The Swords I use to describe it now are a little more civilized. "Misguided" and "unfortunate" come to mind. There'snothing disagreeable about this album,it'sjust that it's so ... well, bland. I suppose it's the aural equiva- lent of a dentist's waiting room. The drums keep the beat, the guitars try to assert a melody, the keyboards fill it out, and the vocals are there, but that's about all. As I listened to "What," I kept thinking, "Maybe I could toler- ate this if it had some passion ... or a tempo above comatose... or if it was a completely different album by a completely different band." The listening experience couldn't begin in a worse way. Right off the. bat, we have "Can't Wait 'til It's Over," and this is exactly what listen- ers finds themselves thinking. An overhanded organ riff tries to drive the song forward, but it can't even move it out of the driveway. The guitar solo isn't horrendous, but it can't even begin to save this wreck. "Louder," is a weak, distorted gui- tar jam layered over a rumbling bass line. The only decipherable lyric is "louder," which gets repeated ad infinitum. It makes a bow to conven- tional songwriting wisdom and in- cludes a short, but satisfying bridge. Perhaps this is what makes the song sound so dated. Perhaps it's just that every single note is predictable. "Touch Somebody," is the good song on the album. The guys in the group must have realized this because they took the time to record it prop- erly, in an actual recording studio (the rest of the tracks were, quite obvi- ously, recorded in the lead singer's bedroom). The standout feature of this song is the presence of a real string section, but everything about it is of worth. Hell, I even caught myself humming it once. "Touch Somebody" leads one to suspect that if they had the money to record the whole album in the studio, maybe it would have been more tolerable. "Could've Been Different" is pretty decent, too. It's in a jazz/blues vein, which may actually be the best mode for this band. Jean Michele Creviere's vocals come through sur- prisingly smooth, but the lyrics are still beyond comprehension. I could see this one being a real belter live. Unfortunately, this song, like most on the album, doesn't have an ending, and just seems to run itself out. "What" just drives itself to submediocrity. Itdoes throw us acurve in its sixth track, though. At first I thought, "A song with bite! And those torturous vocals are gone!" Then I realized that it was simply a cover of Van Halen's "Unchained." Despite the trademark sound of the song, its identity isn't instantly apparent, though. The Common Cents get points for originality by playing V.H. on electric cello and saxophone. They would have gotten more if they hadn't dragged the song on forever. "What" ends with "Hold On," as in "Hold on, it's almost over." By this point the listener can't wait. 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