Page 12 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, May 26, 1983 MTV adds new dimension to record sales LOS ANGELES (AP) - Duran Duran's Sim Le Bon runs panting through the jungles and bazaars of Sra Lanka. Styx's Dennis De Young is trap- ped in a futuristic prison guarded by robots. A sidewalk lights up under Michael Jackson's feet. All move to a rock beat. Rock video is fast becoming as per- vasive as the video game, while injec- ting new energy into a sagging recor- ding industry. And it's expected to get even bigger. Sony Corp. recently released the first "videos" available to consuners. NEW BANDS and their financially troubled record labels are its chief beneficiaries, thanks to MTV, a cable television channel that's being called a national radio station with pictures. The channel beams videos and stereo sound to more than 12 million viewers nationwide 24 hours a day. It plays 200 different tapes a day. "The two most powerful forces in our culture over the past two decades have been television and rock 'n' roll music," says MTV programming director John Sykes. "This is the first time they've ever been put together, and the impact has been incredible." "WE'RE SEEING acts like Men at Work, Stray Cats and Bow Wow Wow, that really had no FM airplay, that got a great deal of use on MTV and their record sales just went crazy," said Scott Ross of San Francisco's One Pass Film & Video Inc., a major producer of concert videos. "It's almost like MTV is dictating the formats of major radio stations across the United States," Ross said. "Where radio used to be one of the largest for- ces in breaking records, it's really slip- ping into second place." A recent A.C. Nielsen survey of 2,000 MTV viewers indicates that what people see is what they buy. ASKED WHAT media influenced their record purchases, 68 percent of those surveyed ranked MTV as impor- tant or very important; 62 percent put radio in the same categories. Joe Bergman, head of video for War- ner Bros. Records, says a prime con- sideration in deciding whether to make a video for a band is the chance of get- ting on MTV's playlist. Like most album-oriented rock radio stations, MTV uses no country and few black ac- ts - a policy which has drawn some criticism. "The record companies are realizing that the bands can get more exposure per dollar for vidseo than they can touring," says Craig Sexton, general manager of Video Pac Systems Studios. At first, videos simply showed a band performing. Now, bands seem to be making the more expensive "concept" videos with a story or images related to the song, often using band members as actors. 4 4 4 'Just Friends'provides safe, solid humor (ContinuedfromPage 9) someone who looks like he plays on a softball team. He is a steady presence rather than a person on stage, never wavering in his support of Maura's talent. Paul is a bit dull, though, because his humor is sardonic in com- parison to Maura's silliness and mimicry. He and Maura play off of each other well, really seeming like they were neighbors. Only once does Miller falter in his performance. When %Maura cruelly lambasts him, sending his sym- pathy-saturated soul home after he tells her Kenny died, he in effect rejoins without dejection, "come and talk if you want later on". At this instance, it seemed his doormat-quality was too exaggerated to be true. He should have spoken the line with more dejection. Judi and Shelly also seemed well por- trayed, but I wished them offstage nonetheless, perhaps because of the tiresome personalities of these two characters rather than the quality of acting. Shelly whirls into Maura's apartment always gushing with her latest en- thusiasm. Judi mopes continuously because she is childless after seven years of marriage. These two charac- ters do not seem to have much purpose in the play. They take up space and do a lot of talking. Shelly is a non-stop chat- terbox, Judi a moody melancholic. They create a few laughs but are not outstanding. Throughout most of the play, Maura is a tough no-nonsense woman in her early thirties, but then success makes her self-doubtful. The critics coin her as a "self-effacing prodigious talent" - but she cannot make the link between her conception of herself as ordinary and the star the press creates. She wanders in her labyrinth of pain like Minos, trapped in her ego, having destroyed many of her paintings. It is as though Connie Baron (Maura) herself is going through these emotions of self-doubt and pain, as though she were not just acting but re- experiencing them on stage. Her characterization never weakens in its faithful recreation of Maura. The play has a happy New York-style ending. The distraught female is not saved by promise of marriage, but by herself. She has come full cycle. It is a triumphant play but not all that original. The lines, mostly one-liners, are funny but not revolutionary. Just Friends is a very American play circa the Neil Simon era, the era of plays set in New York flats filled by characters with self-anguish problems. New York - the city of anxiety. Just Friends will not reign immemorial in theatrical history, but it is a good, humorous play. 4 THESE LP's and ANY MORE S ORARE 9 PRICED5 cassettes same low price AT S. UNIVERSITY OUTLET ONLY ..ORE T HANJI 2137 W. Stadium Ann Arbor 668-1985 1202 South UniversityleI Ann Arbor (next door to Brown Jug) OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE UST A RECORD STORE ,.o