The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 14, 1980-Page 9 ..+...r n...i ..... ... ... ..... . .... ........" .......... . Lou's middle-age manifesto - more personal delivery that left behind or a weak simpering father at sity is all but submerged under a flood Growcing Up In Public both the poetic vision of the Velvet daya best of synthesizer vampa and hard rock LouReed and the crass comic-book charac- is raised to play out the timeless guitar crescendos. In other words this ArisAL5522 terizations of the period that followed, classical motives is Album Oriented Radio fare, and Reed's new, more relaxed tone-part offilial love and incest, while it's not completely offensive the By MARK COLEMANfsonaloe i proo tonplay This Freud-by-numbers analysis musical tension and open-ended ex- .By ARKCOwith, sthemui aadi. Lasto ar' yh continues throughout the album. There perimentation that one would expect How do you figure a guy like Lou Bellsth fous l gtoing wisth year snTo is a crucial difference between this and are sorely absent. Reed? He could have retired ten years les pform Lu ing thtmpeter Dn virtually all Reed's other work. This agai and agi; thle or ing lines of ago and waited for the world to catch up Chs, err gwihtumeerD time he isn't involved in a struggle for theaitl acgkn o the sealho Alo with the Velvet Underground. Instead, ahry i w psyche, spilling othspr h il rc rtesel rmA he embarked on a checkered solo One thing has remained constant hsnaiyt ow idarekotn:i per- Green and the Staples on "Teach the carer nmache byanyothr pr- throughout. No matter how grandiose sonly tociavogdtha breskdrown:.He's Gifted Children." The band can hardly career. unahed bys hanyoe per-di or spare the musical trappings, how ut- coortbecditnte fcsro acm- keep up with Lou on '"Keep Away" as former.n.Who..else.has..performed..in...... ... .. .. .. orta...istnce...-... ..d. .. ...v..v.. ...{ ....... ........:.... i .. .i..ii u V i l iI U IC L i i ii r ............pi:w.....s....u....u.............s. .r......v.m.. .u;.::::: n....... gesuvety.v.... v'v"v. I drag, simulted an injection while per- forming a song titled "Heroin," in- sulted audiences to the point of a riot, then broke down in tears after an anti- semetic cat-call? The same guy that that brutally chronichled the break up of a marriage in the blood-curdling Berlin, easily the most depressing album ever set to wax. Who could forget Metal Machine Music, the two-record set of droning electric feedback released on RCA's classical label? Then there were the hits: the transvestite novelty song "Walk on the Wild Side" that somehow found its way onto AM radio and the forgettable Sally Can't Dance which actually held down the tenth spot on the album charts for a week or so. The heavy metal headbangers are still listening to 1974's Rock and Roll Animal, a half-hearted attempt to pass Lou off as the new, nastier Alice Cooper. You try to figure it out. THEN IN 1976 Lou deserted the path to glory and started doing whatever he really wanted. Beginning with Coney Island Baby and culminating in Street Hassle, Reed perfected a different, G terry bizarre or sick the subject matter, an honest rocking voice always comes through. Reed tells his tales of decadance and dread in deadpan; a man self-aware and un-self-conscious at the same time, he applies a sardonic and cynical wit to his unlikely search for redemption through rock and roll. You're probably thinking that Lou Reed is a self-righteous bore by this time and that would be right if the man didn't posses an intuitive knack for cat- chy phrases both lyrical and musical. The factor of utter unpredictability plays a big role in his appeal, too, and Lou's ability to make mincemeat of even the loyalist fan's expectations has never been more apparent than on Growing Up In Public. I'M NOT SURE where the biggest shock lies in this new album: In the music, the lyrical content, or in Reed himself. Subtlety hasn't been one of his strong points lately, and from the initial verse of "How Do You Speak To an Angel" we learn that Lou has indeed done some growing up. A son who is cursed with a harridan mother But what a story! Lou Reed, perhaps the most flagrantly ambigious perfor- mer ever, has fallen in love with a woman! And when he's not waxing cor- ny intellectualisms about maritalbliss ("They're gilt edged polymorphous ur- ban but somehow it works") he's hin- ting at the causes of his own celebrated bisexuality in "My Old Man," a punchy, diatribe about the ambivalence bet- ween father and son that could have been written by one of my psychology professors. Reed knows full well the contradictions of his new status and his old position and shrugs them off ar- tfully: Some people think being a man is unmanly And other people think that whole concept is a joke But some people think being a a man is the whole point And then some people wish they'd never awoke. IF LOU REED'S abandonment of his previous decadent-and-still-alive-to- talk-about-it outlook has taken a certain edge off his lyrics, the music follows suit. Co-written with keyboard player Michael Fonfara (late of Toto-clone band Tycoon), Reed's rhythmic inten- ne spits out a stream of suggestively self-revealing promises with an am- phetamine non-chalance to quell a jealous, possessive lover. The closest this record comes to celebrating decadance is "The Power of Positive Drinking," which is saved from being just another disposable drinking song only by benefit of its hilariously acidic observations of drunken behavior and the soporific, stuttering chorus. This toned-down stance is probably just a resting point in Lou Reed's career, a pause for'reflection and revaluation. It would be a gross in- justice (though a very easy one) to write this album off as a "sell out," a condescension to bourgeois life on the part of someone who should know bet- ter. This could be an indication of the direction Lou Reed's career will take (I hope not) but as for his next move it would be a lot easier to try and predict the weather. As it stands, Growing Up In Public is no master piece, but is a pleasant enough album that offers some food for thought if one takes it on its own terms. Like it or not, this is where Lou Reed is at right now, and whether he lives up to one's expec- tations or not, he remains one of the few honest voices left in a world of facade. And as always he offers us hope: If Lou Reed can enter middle age gracefully and happily there's some hope for the rest of us. POLIO PROBLEM GENEVA (AP)-With some 150 countries and territories providing data, the U.N. World Health Organization reports there were 35,590 cases of poliomyelitis during 1978. China, submitting data for the first time, reported the largest incidence of the disease-10,408 cases. In Europe, where most countries have brought polio under control, only 805 cases were reported. Shelley Duvall looking appropriately freaked out in 'The Shining,' also starring Jack Nicholson. Stanley Kubrick's long awaited film treatment of Stephen King's suspense shocker opens this week in Ann Arbor. ThAnnMArFmFestil Prosents at MLB $1.50 SATURDAY. JUNE 14 ANIMAL HOUSE (John Landis, 1978) 7.8:45 & 10:30-MLB3 NATIONAL LAMPOON and the esthetique de gross. Beloved Faber College self- destructs in an orgy of the things that make college worthwhile: food fights. toga parties, frat wars, heavy petting, back-seat sex, voyeurism, adultery, sadism, statutory rape, and the homecoming parade. Bluto, Otter, D-Day, and the gong. Boola Boola. John "But No-o-o-oo" Belushi. Next Tuesday: Jack Nicholson in RIDE IN THE WHIRLWIND and THE SHOOT- ING at MLB.-- CINEMA GUILD PRESENTS COUSIN, COUSINE Two cousins are attracted to each other at a family wedding, but their romantic relationship is really sealed at a later funeral. Saturday at 7:30 & 9:30. Plus: Bugs Bunny And Sunday at 5:O@ & 8:4M GONE WITH THE WIND The film voted most likely to succeed. GWTW is more than television can handle and must be seen on the big screen. Seen and loved by every generation. Kids love to hear about when their parents saw it. Frankly Scarlett, there's always TARA. CG 'satOldA & D Auditorium t ff at's hq~e gv~l ' s t r ii_