I The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 5, 1996 -..U A IECORDS tinued from Page 10 the inclusion of an organ and turns psy- chedelic. 60 Ft Dolls have kept the interest of the fickle U.K. press through their sin- gles and intense touring schedule. While 60 Ft Dolls' sound immediately recalls that of The Jam, their sound is influenced by them rather Wn derivative. These guys aren't copy- cats, they just apply the same p op - p u nk F s o u n d . "Supernatural Joy" is a good economical purchase and if you like this EP Lugh then be- red for their debut album due out this coming j January. - Philip Son sound effects. After that, Falkner gets down to some butt-kickin' with the album's best tune, "Miracle Medicine," an ode to the joys of codine. Falkner slows things down for the next few songs, which fall at the album's major weak point - the mid- dle tracks blend together a bit too much. At times, the lyrics are also slightly weak; Falkner has a tendency to avoid real emotion and stick to easy "alterna- tive" lyrical cliches. But who really cares when the production is so gorgeous? t h r o w s everything he learned at Julliard into every " track, cre- ating a dense aural land - scape Jason Falkner Jason Falkner *esents Author Urtknown Elektra Entertainment Jason Falkner makes the kind of progressive rock music that people who hs- tfn : to progres- *d rock would not buy. They would not buy this album because it's good. Damn good. "Jason Falkner Presents , Author Unknown" can only be referred to as a "labor of love." The 28-year-old for- r guitarist for Jellyfish ote, arranged, recorded Jason and produced the entire the Ro album by himself, then handed it over to Elektra who are sell- ing it to you, the consumer, at a 98- percent profit. Thank God for capital- ism, 'cause the result is a consistently catchy, sometimes beautiful, some- times rockin' and / or rollin' set of 12 original songs. It can be enjoyed by fveryone from Baby to Great- andad with "I Live," an XTC-fla- vored pop ditty complete with hand claps on the off-beat and cool spacey Kenny Lattimore Kenny Lattimore Columbia ** Columbia recording artit Kenny Lattimore has already made a few rip- ples in black music with the rather up- tempo songs "Never too Busy" and "Just What It Takes." While OK, these are not the type of cuts wlich makes one a star, let alone a legend. Fortunately for Lattimore, a number of other songs on his debut, self-titled album give signs that Lattimore has yet to reach his peak. Of particular interest are the LP's slow songs. "All I Want" is a good example of the kind of budding R&B maturity Lattimore possesses. Granted, his voice isn't the best out there, but if Montel Jordan can make it big with the cornish "This Is How We Do It," then Lattimore deserves the benefit of doubt. Other slow songs that you should peep are "Always Remember" "For You" and "Forgiveness.' A good fact about Lattimore's singing is that, while he constantly deals with the issue of love and relationships, his songs don't sound like carbon copies of each other. Each one is unique in style, sound and subject matter. Interestiigly enough, perhaps Lattimore's best sang is, in fact, also the fastest of the 12 songs on the disc. For some inexplic- able reason, I have become addicted to "41y." The rafrain is way too catchy to ignore. "I'll give you joy and so much happiness, love. and tender- ness. No girl, you can't resist." The way these two lines are sung must be heard. Lattimore's no Luther Vandross; he still has some work to do. Still, this debut ht at LP is a good start with many solki songs. Of course, they could proba- bly have been made better with a few more vocal lessons by Lattimore. It doesn't do much good to have back- ground singers who sound better than the lead. But I'm patiently awaiting Lattimore's sophomire release - that'll probably be the- tell-tale source of Lattimore's deservig of the R&B world's attention. - Eugene Bowen See RECORDS, Page 12 Art, nature come together In mesmenzing Butoh dance By Stephanie Glciman Daily Arts Writer The entire universe can be contained within a stage. Sankai Juku, Ushio Am-gatsu's Butoh performance group, con- sumed Power Center this weekend with a world of heightened human emotion amidst a setting in which nature and art merge and humanity humbles itself to larger forces. Butoh, begun in post-World War II Japan as a reaction against tradition :and Westernization, sought to break all boundaries of established dance. Performers began to unearth taboos in their actions of showing the bottoms of their feet and touching their navels. Darkness, entropy, imbalance, multiple personalities, especially the demonic personality - all of these ideas are still explored in this movement form that digs into the subconscious and continues to question and express the human condition. So simple, so !pyre, yet its spirituality is beyond complete human comprehension; Sankai Juku's performance gives a sense of a wori greater than the physical. Everyone can relate in some a&'pect, for who is not a note within the uni- versal rhythms of our cosmos? "Yuragi: In a Space of Perpetual Motion," Amagatsu's newest work for five male dancers, is an hour and a half of consuming intensity, con- centration and naovement stemming from the deepest part of soul. Inspired by tlie lack of attention to our own bodies - how we wake up each morning and forget that each organ takes a unique position within our biological system, and how bodies try to resist gravity yet fail because gravity always exists - Amagatsu and his dancers explore on stage the body's rela- tionship to eartha and that which is above and below it. They do not act like tbey know something that eludes the rest of us. Continually serching, they come to no conclusions, rather they remain caught up in the circles of the universe.R The dances, bald, painted com- R E pletely white with a powdery paste, ; . wearing only simple white drapery, are bodies neat completely beautiful. They go through a metamorphosis in which the inner body sometimes tries to escape. Red splotches drip from their ears and toes. They imitate animals - turtles, fish. Humans lookig beyond the human. They shuffle through 1,000 pounds -of fine sand covering the stage floor and 13 plexi-glass diazs hanging from the ceiling which they some- times rock and jostle, creating celestial hiccups in their staged univer~se. The aesthetic of the stark statue-like dancers, carrying themselves vith controlled power against a black nebulous background deming to extend back for eternity echoes the ying-yang of'the cosmos. The bodies, utterly present in their heightened state, yet minuscule within the setting, know they are alitve, yet realize that they are only elements like clouds, sky tnd fish. This often comes out in codified Butoh gestures sucih as torsos thrust to the heavens, hands mimic- I, A Sankal Juku dancer performs Ushhlo Amagatsu's "Yuragli In a Space of Perpetual Motion." king lotus flowers and the "silent scream," mouth pursed open in an agonizing look, face to the sky, as if swallowing the universe. Butoh dance perpetuates the principle of art and nature as one being and "Yuragi" is no exception. Two live rabbits, rest- ing atop pillars in two corners of the stage, an installation by artist Natsuyuki Nakanishi are part of the universe through which the dancers glide. Amagatsu's opening and final solo occur under the downstage pillar. He moves on the earth as the rabbit rustles V I E W through the air above his head. They Sankai Juku coexist, yet neither can predict the actions of the other. Power Center Amagatsu's positioning of himself to Nov. 1 & 2, 1996 begin and end the piece in the same place on stage conveys the important image of birth, rebirth and the circular- ity of life. The dancers work with circular formations often, echoing the shape of the hanging discs. Throughout the seven different sections of "Yuragi," the discs are lowered and raised, suggesting the movement of the heavens. The dancers themselves manipulate and rock the large circles, allowing them to gently sway with their natural rhythms. In an espe- cially powerful solo, Amagatsu dances center stage around one disc at his knee-level. He and the heavenly structure are spotlighted, while the other discs remain many feet above his head. Amagatsu leaves us with the image of a finger pointed up to the sky. "Yuragi" captures the essence of heaven and earth, but cosmic life will be in perpetual motion, beyond Sankai Juku's standing ovation. Falkner opens for Suzanne Vega tomorrow nig oyal Oak Music Theater. that the clever among us would deem "ear candy." The album ends, predictably, with an "A Day In The Life" knockoff titled "Untitled." OK, so a lot of the album is predictable, overblown and slightly pretentious. Frankly, I don't care. Sometimes predictable, overblown and pretentious are just what the doctor ordered. - Jeff'Dinsmore A "I~'ZEN mis U NEW - m,-A