t djtiuu~Ut Martin Luther King Day festivities Yolanda Adams: Come hear her sing at the Power Cent8r on Monday at 8 p.m. Tickets are free. Before you do that, check out the Harlem Boys Choir on Sunday at 7 p.m. at Hill Auditorium. Ticlets are $10-$24. Py2 X< ~. ~ anuryFridaya . Janary12, 196 Duckman"s Peck fits the bill By Ted Watts Daily Arts Writer When you think of depravity, what TV network (other than FOX) comes to mind? The USA network, that's right. From the home of T & A flicks known as "USA Up All Night" to the cheesecakey "Weird Science," USA has cheap thrills written all over it. But there is a shining beacon of intelligent comedy amidst the more average USA fare. And you can find this glimmer of hope in a show called "Duckman." With the voice of"Seinfeld"'s Jason' Alexander as the title character, and a I 'DUCKMAN' Where: USA Network When: Saturdays at 10 pm. skilpl .supporting voice cast behind hina;"Duckman" takes on the mantle of mo$ half-hour animated shows. "It's defmitely a sit-com format, and the closest comparison is 'The Simpsons,"' expained Everett Peck, the show's cre- ato'We are different shows, we're a littj more outrageous in some ways, and the look is different from 'The Simpsons.' We're also a bit like 'The Crit.' Just in the sense that we do narrative stories that are on the sit-com format, where we have a linear story thatwe follow throughout. We try to. have a real emotional baseline so you can kind of relate to the characters as opposed to having a series of gags." "Duckman"takes comparisons to "The Simpsons" in aviciously lightheartedway. In the series' third season- premiere epi- sode last week, "NoirGang" (Get it? Like "Our Gang."), it is the epithet "Simpsons wannabe" that pushes a verbal argument over into physical violence. But there's not too much overt physi- cal excesses, explained Peck. "There hasn't been too much interference as far as censorship. We censor ourselves. There are some areas we can be quite outrageous on, and other areas we sort of pull in on a little bit. We're more interested in social satire, pushing those kind of things. And the sexual content, to some extent. We're more interested in pushing those as opposed to how gross can we get, as in terms of can we have this guy licking an open sore or something." The show has a certain cartoon physics to it, but not to an extreme. For instance, when Duckman explodes himself with dynamite, it's represented mostly as a cloud of smoke as opposed to a splash of blood. Well, no show can be all things. When it comes to its creator's par- ticipation in the show, "Duckman" is a bit atypical. Peck, an accomplished il- lustrator and painter, hasn't been pushed to the side in the process. "I'm pretty much involved in all aspects of it. I was involved in it really before anyone else, and I've been involved in almost all the stages. Idea stuff, reviewing scripts, recording, animatics, of course all the art stuff and post-production. Pretty much hands on." Not that there haven't been some changes in the look and character of the franchise. "I realized we had to change the art a bit. We couldn't animate my down and dirty drawing style. So in exchange for losing some ofthe sponta- neous line work, I decided to stretch and tuck (Duckman's) silhouette a bit more. In the comic he's proportioned a little more like Daffy Duck or some- thing. When I went to a cleaner line I made his head bigger, his body a little more squat, legs a little shorter so that his silhouette was a little more unusual." Another piece of visual interest is the signs in the show's background. "In my illustration work I'll very often throw in a sign, like 'Speed checked by glam- orous sex star,' or something. (Writer) Jeff Reno and the writers like the signs. We call those two percenters, because most people won't catch those unless they're recording the show." Duckman is chock full of these interesting things, and it is worth the work to pause and reflect on them. They range from call- ing Duckman a dork to pointing out red herrings in the plot. Altogether interest- .. Yk .. ,ffln of T; el y( k "' t, y Duckman and all his friends. *r .US,. 3 P Y } u'. ^ +i " M1i y , ing television. But "Duckman" is moving beyond TV in some ways. There is a new and official Duckman site on the World Wide Web and there's even a CD-ROM game in the works. On the website, "you're going to be able to actually go into the office a little bit. There'll be icons to click on, you get to destroy Fluffy and Uranus (Duckman's sick- eningly sweet office workers)." And hey, the game will probably even be available on the all-too-much-igxid,- Macintosh operating system. Peck lj-f self has a Mac: "I'm starting to feejtid I did when I had a Beta (video)tape.: deck." At least his show isn't in danger. of going out of style. ' Th Lovemasters H&-.Pants Zone Total Energy Wow. This album sounds like it's gawge rock .'69 or so.. But it's new. Ycu d swearyou were listening to the. band of the Stooges' brothers half the timrnSamesort ofsound(1o-fl but good), sariS sort of subjects ("Genius From thWaist Down" might give you an inlding as to what I speak of) and same sort of town (the metropolitan Detroit areQ. On the inside picture they even look. like tired old rock dirtbags. It's. like a band that's been around for 20 years that makes good music! Well, they have been knocking around the scene for quite a few years if old Detroit com1ps are to be believed. Apparently theknow what they're doing, if'their product is any indication. You and I bog4now you haye no ability to turn doyn an EP with a song titled "(Annie, Got) Hot Pants Power," so go get it already. - Ted Watts Various Artists- "Friends " Soundtrack Reprise Records Everyone wants "Friends." Every- one wants in on the buzz surrounding the hottest sit-com on television today. Countless girls have the "Rachel" hair- cut. There are "Friends" T-shirts for sale and a companion book on the store shelves. And even the other networks peddled similar young ensemble cast comedies to viewers. So when asked to be included on the "Friends" soundtrack, what band would refuse? Apparently, not many. From one-hit wonders, er, two-hit wonders like the Rembrandts to established artists like Joni Mitchell and Lou Reed, lots of musicians contributed their B-sides and studio out- takes to the soundtrack. Interspersed with sound bytes from first-season episodes, this compilation serves up what the Cen- tral Perk regulars on the show dish out most every week: Cute, sometimes amus- ing, angel food cake for thought. Populated by a variety of unreleased originals and odd cover tunes, the CD is rather mediocre. The short and long versions ofthe show's theme song, "I'll Be There For You," act as bookends. In between, Toad the Wet Sprocket, R.E.M. and Barenaked Ladies perform substandard, uninspired works. As is custom, Paul Westerberg has two bopping tracks included. Radio- friendly group Hootie and the Blowfish do the '80s pop song "I Go Blind" in their typical mindless fashion, while The Pretenders and Grant Lee Buffalo travel further back in time to faithfully cover "Angel of the Morning" and "In My Room," respectively. Mitchell's "Big Yellow Taxi" goes the remix route. The former Velvet Underground frontman runs through "You'll Know You Were Loved" in his characteristic style. The standout track, "Sexuality," by k.d. lang shines as well-done in all respects. So ifyou must be "Friends"-ish, shell out for the soundtrack. Then again, buy- ing a big stupid coffee cup might turn out to be a better deal. -Ella de Leon Brian Lillie Waking Up in Traffic Thursday Records Brian Iillie writes his own songs. Brian Lillie plays guitar for all his own songs. Sometimes he also plays the harmonica. Now, on his debut album, "Waking Up in Traffic," he even sings these songs he writes. Sounds like an- other run-of-the-mill folk singer album, right? Yup. To his credit, Ann Arborite Lillie tries hard to distinguish himself, but "Waking Up in Traffic" just isn't very interesting. Lillie gets many in- struments and musicians in on his act, with an assorted bunch of men and women who sing and play things like the pennywhistle, mandolin and dumbek. His songs cover the usually important topics: Love, isolation, fare- wells, place of origin and nature's won- der, like the "Stars" and "Sky." Unfor- tunately, Lillie fails to present them in an innovative way. Not a single line from his lyrics stands out. Vocally, Lillie sings only well enough. He can carry a tune. Cursed with a limited range, he ends up either talking through his songs, like in the opening pde, "Kalamazoo," or dron- ing on, his voice cracking as the notes get higher. This occurs in tracks like "Fountain Street" and "Goodbye 27." Lillie really struggles at the top of his vocal range with the album's closer, an off-key-sounding rendition of the "Prayer of St. Francis." But hey, prac- tice makesperfect and it's Brian Lillie's first album, right? Right. -Ella de Leon Various Artists Music From the Motion Pic- ture Mallrats MCA/510 "Mallrats" was an OK movie, and the soundtrack for the flick is right at the same caliber. At first glance the film looked promising. Its predeces- sor, "Clerks," was an instant cult clas- sic, and"Mallrats" was another slacker film from director / writer Kevin Smith's same veins. But where Smith really went wrong with "Mallrats" was going Hollyweod . and casting a "hip" actress like Sharinen. Doherty, and compiling a soundtk.: with "hip" musicians like Bush. .t , So, to not 'iuch surprise, ,ttie "Mallrats" soundtrack isn't all thatxtadil cal or gnarly. The lineup sounds some' what good, with Weezer, Elastica, Bel Wax and a few others like Squirtgun a Y . Archers of Loaf. But the inclusion of I s y minutes-of-famers Bush, Silverchairan Sponge just bring down the overal Iqal g ity of the disc with substandard" hfid lousy tracks (even by Bush, Silverdhair and Sponge's standards). Also, most of the tracks on "Mallrats are not new. Some are old B-sides, like. Weezer's"Susanne," one ofthealbum''s best, and some are regular album tracj like Elastica's "Line Up." The Bush, Silverchair, Sponge, Wdk and Belly tracks are all new, but they..' are really nothing to wow-at eitherv Wax's "Mallrats" is simply weak,,with- the repetitive and inane lyrics: "Dam- aged goods, and no receipt / no re ceipt." Belly's contribution "Brolken'. and Thrush Hermit's "Hated It""are: pretty good, along with Cal-punker Squirtgun's "Social" and the Arch "Web In. Front.".Bush's "Bubbles;'aim Sponge's "Seventeen" are both pitifu. tracks. ... But for the most part, "Mallrats is-, nothing earth-shattering and serves nibre asaGeneration-X samplerthananykind of real interesting collection of ho't'a'rt-, ists. The dialog clips between the ttabks are amusing, but the album still desn't build up enough momentum to fly outof suburbia. -- Brian A. Gn$ GET ORGANIZED CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTION OF ACCESSORIES AL, IN ANN ARBOR A 1 E- Can you guess which Toad has the hots for Chandler? HOLDS 48 CDs $20.99 HOLDS 30 CDs $9.99 HOLDS 100 CDs $31.99 Sem-annual half-price tickets sail into town By Emily Lambert Daily Arts Writer There's snow on the ground and the temperature is low. You know what that means ... it's time for the Univer- sity Musical Society's second half- price ticket sale of the school year. Tomorrow morning at the Hill Audito- rium box office, anyone with a student ID may purchase relatively inexpen- sive tickets to some big-time gigs. While eager buyers waited for hours in balmy September weather to secure half-price seats, UMS doesn't want stoic" music-lovers to freeze to death on the steps of Hill Auditorium. As a result, HOLDS 30 TAPES $12.99 t t ~ _ er MUSiC Towers got the BLUES, and you can too! VIDEO the winter sale is simpler. The society would prefer that you pay for tickets with cash, check or credit card. This Saturday, the box office will be open for student orders between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Some highlights of the upcoming season will include Mambo master Tito Puente, who will visit Ann Ar- bor in April, and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, which is set to return for the first time in 15 years. Korean percussionist-dancers SamulNori and the popular Cana- dian Brass will both make appear- ances in the next few months, as will symphonies from St. Louis, Boston, San Francisco, St. Petersburg and Is- rael. Pianist Garrick Ohlsson will wrap' up his much-applauded cycle of Chopin's solo piano music with a fi- nale in Hill Auditorium. But don't plan on buying a ticketW see famed trumpeter Wynton Marsalis play in the Michigan Theater. His shoW" is sold out. And if you want to 'hdr Indian sitarist Ravi Shankar, you'll have to pay full-price. Half-price tickets are" not available for all upcoming UMS., sponsored events, but the sale gives you" plenty of ways to spend some bucks.'For more information, contact the UMS'box' office at 764-2538. U U iple . wi an wl Wl gar ; w, $1099 The University of Michigan School of Music Saturday, January 13 Faculty Recital "The Complete Beethoven Sonata Cycle-Program Two" Andrew Jennings, violin; Anton Nel, piano Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Sunday, January 14 Vininin Martin Howa~rd Lectiure k