THE MICHIGAN DAILY LIVING ARTS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1994 Page 13 John Mellencamp Dance Naked Polygram Records John Mellencamp has always struck me as a great songwriter with a penchant for writing some incredibly atchy music. However, he's always Ooduced just enough cheese to stay off my personal hit list.Ironically, the catchiest song on his latest album is a cover of the Van Morrison classic "Wild Night." "Dance Naked" is no different than any other Mellencamp album with its musical ups and downs. "Another Sunny Day 12/25" is an excellent acoustic ballad with great words cyni- 1 of modern day doom sayers. Sure, s been done before, probably bet- ter, but here it adds a welcome change ofpace to the harder-edged rock. "Too Much To Think About" is the best track on the album, catchy and light without a bass. On the other hand, "L.U.V." is truly dreadful with its drum machines (a Mellencamp dance song?!) and Warmy chorus. The title track is some the worst song-writing Mellencamp has ever penned -check out this line - "I want you to dance naked/if you like I'll join you/I want to enjoy your body." The images conjured by this line alone are terrifying. Mellencamp is a word warrior for the working class. Stating the obvi- ous in lyrical form for Jethro and the boys in the sandal factory. This time, the theme is the Garden of Eden, redefining the fall of man for a gen- eration that has long since lost its innocence. Sure, it's cheesy, but some- how Mellencamp gets away with it. - Matt Carlson Esquivel Esquivel! Space Age Bachelor Pad Music Bar None Esquivel was a bandleader in the 1950s and 1960s who pioneered and made the most of stereo recording, used bizarre instruments like the buzzimba in his arrangements and whose stage shows included choruses of nude women. But it is his music that is the most important, most memo- rable, and strangest thing about him; his arrangements (derangements?) of chestnuts like "Sentimental Journey" and "Harlem Nocturne" are hilarious and deliciously cheesy. His originals, like "Mucha Muchacha" and "Surf- board" break all known boundaries of camp. Sounding like a warped cousin of "The Jetsons" theme, Esquivel's space age bachelor pad music will send you into orbit. - Heather Phares House of Pain Same As It Ever Was Tommy Boy No, this isn't a Talking Heads cover album, so don't get your hopes up. Even though Everlast mentions every annoying person or group on the planet (from Dio to Pearl Jam, blah), David Byrne has nothing but a reference the group may not have even intended. Oh well. Even with this hackneyed reflexivity of stupidity, "Same As It Ever Was" is a pretty good album. Everlast's voice box is burly and bear- ish, and the music is pretty laid back with some heavy driving forces un- derlying and strengthening it. There is even some innovation on the re- cording, such as on "Word is Bond" which has some cool background vo- cals that sound like the airy singing from the original "Star Trek" theme. Yowza! Let's end with a reality check. Everlast sings on the song "Same As it Ever Was" that he's the same motherfucker that he ever was. Now go out and find his sort of poppy solo album with him being a pretty boy dressed up like a boxer. Laugh like hell whenever you hear him saying he was always a badass. - Ted Watts Deconstruction Deconstruction american No matter what can be held against Deconstruction, Eric Avery's and Dave Navarro's side project after the fall of Jane's Addiction, it does have one thing going for it- it's not Porno For Pyros. While Perry Farrell is busy shooting junk into his cock, halluci- nating about how his little alternative festival and shitty rock band can take over the world, Deconstruction will stand as a testimony to what hap- pened to the art of Jane's without Farrell's direction. In short, it ballooned and became artsy-fartsy, too long and very bor- ing. Take for example the photographs taken to represent each band member. Avery is some sort of automotive doodad; Navarro is a pair of spark plugs; drummer Michael Murphy is an oil filter. I suppose it's some sort of intrinsic message about each member being a part of a more powerful ma- chine. Whatever. Take for example the many differ- ent musical verses, choruses, breaks, jams and solos that make up each song - after awhile the song seems lost without any sense of wholeness. Whatever. Take for example the frag- mented lyrics - different words and phrases splotched together to form a mood not a message. Whatever. Avery's bass playing is decent, but his voice is not too special. He half moans, half hums his jumbled lyrics sounding as little like Farrell as possible. Navarro's guitar work sounds good like usual, but he's off to join the Red Hot Chili Peppers so Deconstruction appears to be a one- shot deal. - Matt Carlson Various Artists "Forrest Gump" Soundtrack Epic Records A huge, 2-disk 32-cut collection. the "Forrest Gump Soundtrack" is no less profound than the wisdom of Gump's mama. And with the excep- tion of Alan Silvestri's "Forrest Gump Suite," the songs are very familiar to us all. If you saw the movie - and most likely you have - you were probably drawn to a couple of the songs you heard; when you hear them playing you remember how great such-and- such a song is. Songs like Aretha Franklin's "Re- spect," the Byrds' "Turn! Turn! Turn!" and Buffalo Springfield's famous Vietnam song "For What It's Worth" (you know, "Stop, yeah, what's that sound. Everybody look what's going down ...") are contained in this soundtrack. You can also find Willie Nelson's "On the Road Again," "the Four Tops' "I Can't Help Myself' and even "Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head" by B. J. Thomas. These See RECORDs, Page 14 41