Is More to Melon than bees By KRISTEN KNUDSEN Enough about that damn Bee Girl. The members of Blind Melon-singer Shannon Hoon, bassist Brad Smith, drummer Glen Graham and guitarists Christopher Thorn and Rogers Stevens-are people too! And Blind Melon's music, a bluesy, groovy grunge, is not based on an image. Any sort of image is, in fact, exactly what Blind Melon rebels against. "You've got people like Whitney Houston that sing someone else's songs and she won (several) Grammys and American Music Awards," Smith said with disgust. "Unfortunately, the masses think that she's the greatest thing on earth when the fact is that most other musicians, that call themselves musicians, are a lot more of an artist in the purest sense." But for every Whitney Houston, there's a Blind Melon, proving that the out-of-the-ordinary can make it big too. With "No Rain," a catchy tune about plain living, Blind Melon made a star out of a Bee Girl, and gave new meaning to the term Buzz Clip. "It's like what the hell? What the hell are people thinking, man? It just cracks me up," Smith said of the girl's unexpected popularity. He added that the original cover of a recent "Rolling Stone" interview featured the band "chopping up" the little honey. As this was too graphic, the magazine chose what they deemed the less scary of their photos: the band naked. "We felt like clothes gave us image so wejust took'em off," Smith joked. The Bee Girl was instead killed, or at least turned into a grandmother, in the group's follow-up video, "Tones of Home." Of "No Rain," Smith just laughed, "It is a cute and overwhelming video and it just touched the hearts of millions." Kidding aside, millions is right. Blind Melon's self- titled debut has sold more than two million copies and the band has shared the stage with the likes of Neil Young and Lenny Kravitz. But success has not been overnight for Blind Melon. Their album, which was released in September 1992, failed to attract much attention until "No Rain" took off a year later. "Being rich and famous is definitely an overstatement right now for Blind Melon because we're still out there struggling," Smith acknowledged. "We have a lot of debt to pay off because it took us so long to even get people to pay attention to us. We've got a long way to go.Ijust don't want to be the Ugly Kid Joe of 1993." Long-haired guys, amusing videos ... but Blind Melon's got the music to back up their hopes for longevity. "I think the younger generation is much more in tune not with image and looks, but with good music and people who have something to say," Smith said of the glam /hard rock era. "The mainstream was so weak for so long, that something had to take over and there's no better candidate than alternative because it's very diverse." Blind Melon's version, which Smith compares in mood to the Steve Miller Band, is hard to categorize. One critic Smith recalled described their sound as similar to Jefferson Airplane's. "I'm like hello!" Smith exclaimed. "I have no idea where they pulled that from." Not surprisingly, then, Smith and the band dismiss critics. They also resist the temptation to act like the big rock stars some would argue they are. "I thought that success would be sippin' martinis in Tahiti," Smith said, "but unfortunately I'm back on the road still doing the exact same thing that got me there anyway." Well, not exactly. At least the Bee Girl's dead. BLIND wil apear wth A iceD'uandThe Meat Puppets tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the State Theater in Detroit. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $15; call 645-6666 for more information. Ed Harris stars in the completely unoriginal "China Moon." Real good to see his career blossoming as of late. 'Moon'9s BY MICHAEL BARNES Film Noir has become recycled fodder for Hollywood. In the 1940's and '50s, this genre of "dark cinema" hit its peak. A hard-boiled detective, China Moon Written by Roy Carlson; directed by John Baily; with Ed Harris and Madeleine Stowe. say Humphrey Bogart, chases after a murderously wealthy femme fatale through a morass of dark alleys and drawn venetian blinds. It seems nowadays certain writers and directors latch on to noir for its slick images of intrigue and mystery just as the neighborhood skaterat has the mandatory pink comb in his or her backpocket for that necessary facade of cool. In any respect, the look ain't original and "China Moon" starring Ed Harris and Madeleine Stowe is testimony to this. The plot reads like a seedy Raymond Chandler novel. Ed Harris plays Kyle Bodine, a loser detective with no prospects who is sent to investigate a grisly murder in a south Florida ghetto apartment. The intrigue glow not ongia builds as a similar murder turns up in the budding romance and intrigue toa the mansion of a wealthy banker, sweltering tropical climate. Many Rupert Munro. In a typical noir scenes are shot at night to capture the fashion, no one comes clean: Munro moody, dark noir look. The black of beats his beautiful, seductress wife, night is as necessary to these films as played by Stowe, who incidentally is a cactus or a dusty rawhide boot is to set to inherit $12 mil lion. Bodine then a western.Cold somber blues saturate begins apassionate affair with Stowe's backgrounds to further create a steely, character. A bed dries not do this duo anesthetical atmosphere. Blood justice - they must consume one splashes across cool bathroom tiles another in the exotic locales of and the blank walls of a car wash to southern Florida. Notable amongst intensify the aura of modern these flings is a skinny dipping session bleakness. Visually the film is striking. in a moonlit bay. The bodies keep Mystery seems fit to unravel in the falling and the film builds up to its tropics but, instead, we get the predictable climax-is Bodine going predictable events of typical noir fare. to get iced by the shady seductress? Baily's trite symbolism makes the Harris is steady as Detective film even more silly. The title of the Bodine. He shows more heat in his film becomes a recurring motif interaction with his partner played because, as Detective Bodine notably by Benicio Del Toro then in explains, "My grandmother used to his passionate trysts with the steamy say that when the moon is like a big Stowe who executes the dangerous old plate of china, strange things bitch persona quite well. Both happen." Baily ends the film with a characters suffer though from the shot of that bewitching symbol of shallow molds ofnoircharacterization night and the effect is more humorous - the Detective is the typical swell then mysterious. "China Moon" is guy in over his head with the necessary interesting and definitely worth stylish but predatory babe. watching, butif you want sex, intrigue John Bai ly, a noted and glamour in the tropics, old reruns cinematographerof such films as "The of "Miami Vice" do it better. Big Chill" and "In the Line of Fire" C1INAaMOONis paying at directs the film. He works to translate Briarwood and Showcase. Various Artists Planet Rap (a Sample of the World) Tommy Boy Records "Planet Rap" is a collection of rap songs that are currently popular in other countries, such as France, Ireland and the United Kingdom. This CD shows that rap, as an art form, has tnade an impact, not just in the United tates, but throughout the world. However, this CD is, for the most part, nothing to shout about. From the rap cuts, it goes without saying that some countries' rappers got it goin' on. "Daddy," performed by Adl (Sweden), who has a voice and rap style very similar to Tupac's, is a prime example of rap that could probably hit it big in the U.S. Sootfunk's (Denmark) "Huffin' & Puffin'," rapping to that Black Sheep tip, also shows that some foreign rap groups know what's up. Groups like MVP (Canada), Mama's Funkstikools (Australia) and Prophets of the City (South Africa) are also among the groups which perform as if to say, "Hey, I'm down, too!" Unfortunately, this CD also howed beyond a doubt that there is still much wack in rap. Some of the groups sounded so fake and forced it made me wish for the artistic genius of Vanilla Ice. The music of the MD MCs (Brazil), "Salvador Astral," is proof that steel drums don't belong in rap music. Whoeverdidthescratching and mixing on "Legge del Taglione (An eye for an eye)," performed by Articolo 31, needs to be taken out and shot. The group Microphone Pager (Japan) tries to take popular rap to another level with the song "Begin the Revolution." "Tries" is the operative word here; "fails" is the result. Just as every cloud has its silver lining, this CD does contain some fresh cuts which somewhat make up for the BS tracks that have to be put up with. It's nice to see that rap has come so far, but as some of these songs show, rap still has a ways to go in some countries. If you're the type who buys an entire CD for one or two songs, you should have no qualms with buying this CD. For the rest of you, I'd just wait for someone else to buy the CD and then just copy the six or seven good cuts. If you do decide to buy the CD, a word of advise: prepare to do a lot of fast forwarding and rewinding. - Eugene Bowen Blur Modern Life is Rubbish Food / EMI Blur are under the influences. Under the influences of The Kinks, The Jam, The Beatles, early David Bowie and any number of other Great British Eccentrics in Popular Music. Blur are also under the impression that they are carrying on this tradition. But as it is so painfully obvious to hear, they don't have two original musical ideas to rub together; a cool record collection does not a good band make. Nor does a cool record collection a good album make. Every stylistic turn that they have "borrowed" from their elders, from singer Damon's supremely annoying faux-Bowie accent to their genuine-imitation Kinks-like jangleremindsthelistener of those older, better groups and makes one wish they were listening to them instead of this blur of Brit-rock See RECORDS, Page 8 San Francisco based major bracket investment bank seeking native speaker of Mandarin and/or Cantonese for Analyst position. College degree required. The Fifth Annual Pre-Med Students' Symposium Teing a Part of the Changing Medical Profession' Featuring Keynote Speaker: Dr. Susan Hershberg Adleman Saturday, March 12, 1994 *1W liiiIII 143- U1IAmi-- - - A I ' I I I «' 1 l 11 I 1 l' It / I it& xlpffl", Mww 11WAVA I I I