Page 6 -The Michigan Daily -Weekend etc. -March 18,1993 Bash & Pop Friday Night Is Killing Me Sire/Reprise After the Replacements dissolved two years ago, everyone knew that leader Paul Westerberg's songwriting would continue to thrive.Although Westerberg hasn't released an album since the breakup, his two songs on the "Singles" soundtrack show he hasn't lost any of his talents. Drummer Chris Mars re- leased a solo album last year, a surpris- inglystrongpower-popcollection.Bass- ist Tommy Stinson formed Bash & Pop last year and their first album, "Friday Night Is Killing Me," has recently been released. Many fans believed Stinson was the heart of the Replacements (Westerberg called him "the balls" of the band), but no one was certain if he could survive on his own. Well, all of those doubts were unfounded because Bash & Pop's debut album is a terrific record. Most Replacements fans, ex- pecting an album in the vein of Westerberg's Stones/Big Star fusion, won't necessarily be satiated by the album. Bash & Pop is much closer to traditional classic rock & roll, often recalling the raggedness of the Faces and the rhythmic drive of the Rolling Stones, yet manages to sound fresh. Bash & Pop is closer to the actual spirit of the Faces and Stones, not the sound. Stinson's voice is surprisingly strong - high, raspy, occasionally drifting off-key -and his band is strong, tight yet loose. What really sets Bash & Pop apart from such bands as the Black Crowes is the strength ofStinson's songs. "Never Aim To Please," "Loose Ends," and "Tickled To Tears"are great rock & roll songs-punchy, concise, and tune- ful; "Nothing" and "First Steps" nearly match Westerberg's recent sensitive acoustic ballads. Although Bash & Pop isn't as innovative or original as the Replacements, they are still special,. because these days it's rare to finda rock & roll record as good as "Friday Night Is Killing Me." -Tom Erlewine Television Personalites Closer to God Seed Records Witha voice that combines the phras- ing of Syd Barret with the larynx of a five-year-old and an exuberance matched only, perhaps, by the childlike optimism of Jonathan Richman, Daniel Treacy has reunited the Television Per- sonalities for another pleasing concoc- tion of fuzzpop. "Closer to God" is a 79 minute jour- ney into the disturbed, but ever-ebul- lient mind of Treacy that runs the gamut from the lilting suicidal confessions of "Razorblades and Lemonade" to "Com- ing Home Soon" which smacks of Lennon's declarations of love for Yoko ("I'm coming home soon/Tojacket po- tatoes and cheese on toast/You're the one I love the most"). He even goes so far as to rhyme "amytriptiline" with "pseudochlorophine." Ultimately, though, it's the disturbed couplets that stick longest in the mind ratherthan the almost ludicrously sweet. "Faces in the gutter selling envy," Treacy bemoans in "My Very First Nervous Breakdown." "Goldfish in the bowl is screaming... Free me!" Although Television Personalities dges not break any new ground musi- cally on "Closer to God" (with the pos- sible exception of the 10 minute title track), the fields they continue to plun- der are stillremarkably fertile. The band's breed of fuzzy, upbeat pop sounds as fresh and energetic today as it did 14 years ago and Treacy's childlike and shy, reserved vocals still float lightly on the surface like a flock of humming- birds and while 79 minutes may be a bit long for such an album, it does manage to sustain interest all the way through. -Dirk Schulze Nadja Salerno- Sonnenberg ItAin't Necessarily So... EMI Classics Remember when you were akid and your teachers would drag you on field trips to the concert hall, trying to force you to like classical music? You'd sit through endless hours of old people in black clothes playing long, boring pieces that didn't even have words. And then, at the very end, just when you thought the ordeal was over, they'd come back out to play something fun, like you'd heard in "Star Wars" or "Superman." Now as a mature, discerning music connoisseur, you still look forward to the end of a concert, still ashamed to admit that the best part is when the lady in the evening gown plays the back- ground music from a Cheer detergent commercial, usually to thunderous ap- plause. The difference is, now you can cut to the chase and listen to a whole concert's worth of encores, brilliantly and gleefully played by that rebel with a fiddle, Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg. You'll recognize by name tunes like the title track"ItAin'tNecessarily So"from Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess," and Joplin's "Easy Winners," transcribed by Itzhak Perlman. But there are other nifty numbers on this disc, too. Schubert's "The Bee" is nothing if not an amazing display of technical fireworks, while Sonnenberg's gift for line and lyricism shine on tracks like Rachmaninov's "Vocalise" and Debussy's "Clair de Lune." Accompa- nist Sandra Rivers provides backup on some tracks; on others, she's an equal andclassy partner, as in thejaunty"Banjo and Fiddle" by William Kroll. If you're the type to sleep through a sonata or nap during a nocturne, then this is the one classical disc in your collection that you might actually listen to. --Michelle Weger A little driving music, please "Afoot and light-hearted,I take to the open road, healthy, free, the world before me, the long brown path before me, leading wherever I choose." - Walt Whitman, from "Song of the Open Road" Sometime last fall, a friend of mine told me about the night when, in a lousy mood, he took his car out on a long stretch of Plymouth Road to push the speedometeras farasitwould go. When he got it up to around ninety, he realized that, no matter how pissed off he was, it really wasn't worth smearing his ass all over the pavement. When I asked him what had senthim to the edge, hereplied that it had been that classic combination of pressure from school, stress at home and romantic dissatisfaction. Now, months later, he's probably forgotten that he told me that story; but, for several reasons, it's stuck with me. First of all, at the time, his tale seemed like an incredibly personal thing to share with me; nevertheless, I was intrigued to learn thatI'm not the only person who has used her car as a late-night decom- pression chamber. (Though I don' tmake a habit of attempting to kill myself with a half-ton of imported steel.) Finally, I think I remember that conversation most for the question I didn't ask him and am still curious about: What was on the stereo as he shifted into high gear and floored the pedal? It wasn't that I was looking for in- sight into his state of mind - he'd already made that abundantly clear. It's just that we, the MTV generation, have become so used to having a soundtrack for everything we see, that we also like to have mood music for everything we do, and I was wondering what some- body might choose to listen to while tearing up southeast Michigan's notori- ously bad roads. Traveling is (and always has been, even before Madonna started losing her clothing on cable)definitely high on the list of activities that we seem to need to do to music. How else do you explain that every field trip you've taken on a school bus has somehow turned into a marathon TV-theme song sing-along? And it's the only possible explanation for the popularity of an eight-track tape my parents own called "Keep on Truckin"'which we played on virtually every vacation we ever took in our motor-home when I was a kid. At least part of the mystique of rip- ping down the open highway with tunes pouring out of the speakers is indelibly linked to the many "road" songs of rock 'n' roll: "Born to Be Wild," Jackson Browne's "Take it Easy," the Boss's "Pink Cadillac," and "Hit the Road, Jack," to name but a few. There are others whosegrooves also seem tomatch therhythm of purring engines, spinning wheels, and rattling mufflers, like the Eagles' "Hotel California," Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues," and Don Henley's "The Boys of Summer.", Make no mistake, though, rock: hasn't cornered the market on cruising. I've never made it through a long roac trip without listening to a tape of Ella Fitzgerald-Louis Armstrong duets at. least once. And I'll never forget driving': one hot summer day in the Rockies, awestruck by the scenery, thinking that Gershwin could just as easily have had those mountains in mind when he wrote "Rhapsody in Blue" as a Harlem jazz club. But lots ofother serious music could: fill the bill, too, such as minimalist' composer John Adams' "Chairman' Dances" from "Nixon in China." Make^ sure you've had enough caffeine before popping that one in the stereo, though,' or the combination of the endless double- yellow line and Adams' repetitive mo- tives could have you ready for post- hypnotic suggestions in no time flat. All of Stravinsky's and Copland's ballet, scores have elements of intense for- ward motion, making them great music for motion. And you can listen to a wholeopera-say "La Boh6me," "Die Walkiire," or "The Barber of Seville" - during a long-distance ride. If you prefer to take to the road in a moreecologically-correct manner, don't overlook the possibility of clipping a walkman to your hip-sack and hopping on a bike or taking a stroll. Only when' you're wearing headphonesdoes it seem like the music is actually originating from inside your head. The swing and sway of aBobMarley tune is the perfect accompaniment to a fresh-air sojourn. With Annie Lennox wailing in your ears and the spring breeze in your hair, you can't go wrong. (It will be spring soon, won't it?) If you're vehicularly challenged, just fork over 75ยข to the AATA bus driver, hook into those head- phones, and turn up Tom Waits' soundtrack to "Night on Earth," which was written, after all, for a movie about people riding around in cabs. Who knows what my friend was listening to as he sped along through the dark. It could have been anything from The Disposable Heroes or Prince to Dizzy Gillespie, to Shostakovich or' Mahler. Or maybe there was just si- lence, which is also good. Until next time, keep your mind and your ears open. Former Replacement's bassist Tommy Stinson leads Bash & Pop. It's his first group effort since the Mats demise. THE GOVERNMENT GAVE HER A CHOICE. OR llFE AS AN ASSASSIN. NOW, THERE'S NO TURNING BACK. DA 0 6 .n POINT OF NO AINIIl 1 iI' C'DE55 I 1KG n R Waits S WARNER BRaS. PRESENTS p' r AN AR IINSON PODUcTiON A JOHN BADHAM FILM BRIDGET FONDA 'POINT OF NO RETURN GABRIELI BYRNE DERMOT MULRONEY wra ANNE BANCROFT AND HARVEY KEITEL co.PsRocER JAMES HERBERT UsIc Y HANS IIMMER TRAVEL SMART THIS SPRING! FROM CHICAGO Roundtrip One Way London $450 $225 Guatemala City $530 $265 Costa Ica $550 $275 Oslo/Stockhon/ Copenhagen $590 $299 Athens/Istanbul $658 $329 Tbkyo $729 $584 Bangkok $869 $680 6 FILM EDITED DY FRANK MORRISS i DDAv~nurIII'TIAU NHfl Dv PNIl IP HAAIHN ra