8 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 17, 1996 Women act alone in Basement Arts' new' ge' U' theater senior brings her unique London experiences to the stage By Tyler Patterson Daily Arts Writer An integral part of the playwriting experience is the opportunity to see in a full and live performance the world you created. This weekend Khristee Rich, a senior in the department of theater and drama, will get such a chance. After working all year, her play, "Coming of Age," is fi- COMING 0! nally ready for production in Where: Arena Thei Basement Arts. Rich wrote the (in the Frieze Built play about herexperiences while When: Thursday tt spending a year abroad in Lon- at 5 p.m. General don. are free. "It's an all-women cast. Seven women," Rich explained. "And it takes place in the flat in which they live in London. The school has assigned them to live together." The seven women, then, are forced to live together, having no previous experience with each other. The results are somewhat explosive. Rich went on to explain that some of her influences in writing the play were classes she has taken in the past. "All ofthe ideas that Igot," Rich said, "were from in high school when I took philosophy and psychology classes, and they talk a lot about the different cycles you grow through, like rebirth." AGE i d Also very much a part of the playwriting experience for Rich :er is that it is serving as a tribute ng) for a friend she met in London. ough Saturday Obviously touched by her as- dmission seats sociation with this woman, Rich decided to write a play in her honor. "It's about learning," Rich explained. "It's about growing. It's about women coming together and find- ing strength." Since it was written about people she knew, it was interesting for Rich to see actors portraying their roles. "For me I've been happy," Rich said,"They've been able to emulate the characters who I actually knew. So they've done a really great job with that." Being in the Arena Theater, Rich was forced to make some adjustments in the script, changing the set design. In the original manuscript, the script calls for a kitchen on the set, but since the budget for Basement shows are limited she was forced to improvise. Offering incentive for those interested in seeing the creative process at work, Rich said, "Men will learn a lot about women. Especially how women act when men aren't around. It's a funny play. It's crazy. There's a lot going on, so it will definitely be fun to watch." All in all, the entire experience has been a good one. Having done a staged reading of the first act for her Theater 420 class, Rich is now ready to see her play under the lights, so to speak. Describing her play as a story that needed to be told, Rich will finally get to tell it - the only way a playwright can. Big babies! Goos drool into towl RECORDS Continued from Page 5 Jackson 5 The Ultimate Collection Motown Records If Motown Records wanted to, it could quit promoting new recording artists altogether. It could make all the loot it needs by simply re-releasing the many old-school jams produced by the leg- ends who made the label so big that even its birth-city, Detroit, came to be known as "Motown." Take, for example, the five-brother collective, the Jackson 5. This well- known group ran the early '70s with their disco-driven fast songs and bal- lads. Youngest brother Michael keeps running things to this day, causing people to faint and have heart attacks at his concerts. Even middle brother Jermaine had a few solo jumps in the early '80s, and though we could care less about Tito, the second-oldest, his three sons have recently released a CD under uncle Michael's MJJ Records. "The Ultimate Collection" takes us back to the days before daddy Joe was accused of child abuse, before LaToya posed for Playboy and before Michael just plain lost his mind. It takes us back to the Gary, Ind., beginnings of this rockin' quintet which put child groups on the map. It contains 21 songs listed in the order they were recorded. Such unforgettable hits as the danceable-to- this-day "ABC" and "The Love You Save," as well as slowercuts like "Who's Lovin' You" and "Never Can Say Goodbye," help compose the first third of the album. The middle portion of the album fea- tures many songs which best exemplify Michael's youthful, soprano voice (a voice which, surprisingly, remains with him to this day). The slow-sung "Got to be There," the medium-motioned "I Wanna Be Where You Are" and the very fast "Rockin' Robin" all showcase little Michael's singing above his broth- ers. "The Ultimate Collection" also contains a Jermaine balladeering solo, "Daddy's Home." Closing the album, we find the song M.C. Hammer remade, "Dancing Ma- chine." We also find the very beautiful slow song, "I Am Love (parts I and II)" and the psychedelic "Just a Little Bit of You," another Michael solo. "The Ultimate Collection" is chock- full of those unmistakable parental memories of a time when music was music and artists put on a real show. While some of us from the new school may not quite understand the nostalgia, it would be unfair and illogical to un- derrate how greatly the influence of '70s disco-funk sounds, like those per- formed by the Jackson 5, can be felt to this day. - Eugene Bowen Various Artists Big Ones ofAlternative Rock Vol. 1 Boxtunes / PolyGram At this point in time, the world needs a best of alternative rock as much as it needs nuclear warfare. Well, maybe not that extreme. But when it comes down to putting Bush on a compilation of anything other than an album of the worst bands of all-time. there is some- thing terribly wrong. Terribly, terribly, wrong. Maybe I can forgive the pro- ducer of "Big# Ones of Alterna- tive Rock Vol. 1,"_ released by The Box, an rarely re- ceived competitor bum is titled "Big Ones of Alterna- tive Rock"; nott "Good Ones" or "Best of Alterna- tive Rock." i Maybe they know, "Pass the Special Sa this stuff is crap. Pass______p______ Nevertheless, on the 12-song compilationyou won't even find the best of alternative rock. It's more like alternative rockers who gave us the rights to put on our CD. Among the tracks are White Zombie's grizzly breakthrough "Thunder Kiss '65," Bush's terrible "Everything Zen," The Cranberries' "Dreams" and Juliana Hatfield's "Universal Heart- beat." The Divinyls' "I Touch Myself" is one of the few cool tracks on the comp, along with G. Love & Special Sauce's "Cold Beverage." The acid-fried Meat Puppets' one-hit "Backwater" is here, along with CIV's decent cut "Can't Wait One Minute More" and Whale's "Hobo Humpin' Slobo Babe." Deadeye Dick's "New Age Girl"and Korn's "Blind" are real "alternative" rock winners, and so is Danzig's "Until You Call On The Dark," which rounds up the disc. A better title for this compilation would be "The Best of Beavis and Butt- head," because almost every song on the disc was featured in the degener- ates' show. Maybe Beavis and Butt- head are the idiots programming our radio stations. - Brian A. Gnatt Various Artists au soundtrack would supposedly bring all this spectacular variety to a head. But alas, with a few exceptions, this album is sorely lacking. The album's signature song is rap group Lost Boyz's "Jeeps, Lex Coups, Bimaz & Benz." This song blew up all over last year forgood reason. It is one helluva hype hip-hop hit. Rapper Tyme was okayin"L.I.F.E.," and Little Shawn was even better with "Dom Perignon." Never- theless, as far as rapping went, Lost Boyz didn't have to break a sweat out- lyricizing these two. ice, please." ThisCDiscom- plete mediocrity at times, which Mary J. Blige shows when singing "You Make Me Feel Like a Natural Way" remake. While not booty, this song is nothing compared to the original. The Jodeci brothers, K-Ci and JoJo$ailey, weren't even all that sing- ing (actually whining) "Beautiful." The monotonous beats of Monifa's "I Miss You" are a pain, but for some sadistic reason, this song actually cause ears to perk up for a while. The once-hit trio Guy (Teddy Riley and brothers Aaron and Damion Hall) has a song on this soundtrack. "Tell Me What You Like," is OK, but personally I would've preferred hearing "Jam" again. Gospel altoist Mavis Staples' "I'll Take You There" makes a fateful at- tempt to rescue this album from total sing-a-ding dullness. Many may be fa- miliar with the time she sang this song with BeBe and CeCe Winans. I liked it, but Staples certainly does a much better job singing it solo. The oldsters contin- ued to outshine their younger counter- parts, with Gladys Knight's marvelous vocal remake of"Good Morning Heart- ache." Best of all was Al B. Sure!'s sweetly sung ballad "Erase the Dayz." Old school most certainly outshines new on this album, but it isn't enough to save a surprisingly lackluster album. The music on the show's opening cred- its is usually straight. So what went wrong? - Eugene Bowen The Refreshments Fizzy, Fuzzy, Big & Buzzy Mercury Records The Refreshments are proof posi- tive that sometimes appearances can be deceiving. First off, the decidedly By Elizabeth Lucas Daily Arts Writer A likely majority oftheGooGoo Dolls' audience knows the band only through the singles "Name" and "Naked" - or because of the band's unusual name. As singer and bassist Robby Takac com- mented in a phone interview with the Daily, "At the American Music Awards this year, I was talking to this guy Darius (Rucker), and he said we were the only band with a name stupider than Hootie and the Blowfish." Butalthough the GooGoo Dolls share MTV time with the likes of Alanis, Bush and, yes, Hootie, this band is no overrated one-hit wonder. It's not widely known that they put in a decade of work before the release of their fifth and most recent album, "A Boy Named Goo" - which was something of a last chance for the band. "(After the fourth album) we kind of lost our priority status," Takac said. "Sometimes it's really hard to stick with a record, when they have other records that are coming out. But it was really frustrating for a while. It really sort of depressed us, as a band." The Goo Goo Dolls formed back in 1986, in Buffalo, N.Y.; they recorded a first album and went on tour a year later. After that, they worked continu- ously for eight more years. "About ev- ery two years we'd put out a record and tour," Takac said. "We toured with the Replacements, Soul Asylum and Motorhead, but those were smaller tours." However, Warner Brothers was los- ing interest in the band, and the mem- bers themselves were having doubts about continuing. "We probably would have put things into perspective,"Takac said, discussing what the band would have done without a successful album. "I mean, I'm gonna be 32 this year. For 10 years, I hadn't had any money at all; I needed a little bit more cash. As for making music, I think we would've kept on with that, but not with the same intensity." But then came 1995, and "A Boy Named Goo" - the Goo Goo Dolls' last stand. Takac recalled, "What we said was, 'Look, we're gonna stay out tacky cover painting of a World War II bomber with the album title on the side would make you believe that The Refreshments are a fat-riffed pop- metal band. But wait, turn the case over. The guys in the band are sitting on the side of the road, dressed up in cowboy clothes, thumbing for rides with their instruments piled around them. Take a look at the song titles --"Blue Collar Suicide," "Banditos," "Suckerpunch." The second song is called "European Swallow," which you recognize as a reference from "Monty Python & The Holy Grail." OK, you think, these guys must be funny country rockers, a la Dash Rip Rock and South- ern Culture On the Skids. By the time you open up the CD to see several photos of the guys in huge sombreros, you don't know what to think. The closest guess would be the sec- ond one, pegging The Refreshments as funny country rock. Unfortunately, they're too county to be called rock and too rock to be called country, a combination which ends up sounding BUSH, 000 000 DOLLS AND NO DOUBT Where: Breslin Center in East Lansing. When: Tonight at 7:30. Call (810) 645-6666 for more information. for a year. If the record doesn't break in a year ...'. And luckily, in about eight months, it did." "Break" may be an understatement in this case. "A Boy Named Goo" has sales in the millions of copies, with two singles receiving extensive radio play. Takac attributed the record's success partly to a new producer, bt also felt that the band had always h the potential to succeed. "I think up to the last record before this, we were still learning how to do things. But the last one probably could've done as well." Along with the Goo Goo Dolls' popularity comes a hectic touring schedule. The band is currently tour- ing the United States, opening for Bush. "It's cool; it's been a long to though," Takac said. "It's been going for two and a half months, with about another month to go. And it's weird -part of it is, it's not our crowd. This is pretty much Bush's crowd; ours is generally older." Takac described the band's arduous future plans: "We're gonna be touring Japan, then there's another tour of the U.S., with Dishwalla and then with the Gin Blossoms. Then Australia and Nv Zealand, and another tour of Europ. and then, it's Thanksgiving." But the stress of touring is probably an acceptable tradeoff for the group's long-awaited success. As Takac said enthusiastically, "It's great, man! I mean, after all these years ... we're not actually making money yet, but we're breaking even. I don't know if 'sur- prised' is the word, but I'm relieved; it seems like it's really gonna hap9 right now. I think I'm just relieved now that I know we can go on." frighteningly similar to Hootie and His World Famous Blowfish-which is too bad, because the lyrics really are pretty funny, for the most part. "Ghost town on a Tuesday night / That's OK, I'm feeling all right / It's easier to grab a beer / Without a thou- sand people here," they sing in "Do 't Wanna Know," and that's one offk more serious songs. The trouble is, without interesting music to back i up, the lyrics have a tendency to fall flat, blending in with the steady, bor ing drone of the guitars. The one song that works all the way through is "Girly," a rousing, quick- moving tune in which thesinger in- structs his girlfriend: "Beat me 'til I'm black and blue and I'm hanging b thread / Then we can get back up and do it all over again." Songs like this show that The Refreshments definitely have the potential to record a great album. Unfortunately, "Fizzy, Fuzzy; Big & Buzzy" just isn't it. Better luck next time, guys. - JeffreyDinsmore See RECORDS, Page 9 *1 "New York Soundtrack Undercover" Victoryl The Jackson 5 returns to CD shelves with a new compilation. The University of Michigan CENTER FOR CHINESE STUDIES presents the fifteenth annual ALEXANDER ECKSTEIN MEMORIAL LECTURE Richard H. Solomon President of the United States Institute of Peace Former Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Former U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines and Anne Keatley Solomon Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Science, Technology, and Health Former Senior Policy Analyst for International Affairs of the Office of Science and Technology Policy "Putting Humpty-Dumpty Back Together: Are Normal Sino-American Relations Still Possible?" MCA Re( ecords I I applaud the continual changes in the opening-credit music that the "New York Undercover" creators institute. On no other television show can you hear Tribe Called Quest one week, Reg E. Gaines the next then Des'ree the following. The "New York Undercover" I I I Warehouse I Sur' 'StN fI rnni lee er Help sded Allergy season is in full bloom - you can't avoid it. 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