home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- REVIEWS, Page 69SHORT TAKES
-
-
- MUSIC: At the End, A Miss by Miles
-
- Although both rely on improvisation and solos, jazz and
- rap have never found much common ground. The great jazz
- trumpeter MILES DAVIS was in a recording studio trying to remedy
- this at the time he died last September. But the unfinished
- album, Doo-Bop, recorded with the rapper EASY MO BEE, merely
- skims the rich possibilities of a synthesis. Mo Bee and Davis
- perform together on just three of the record's nine cuts. Even
- then, they do not unite. While Mo Bee's rapping is nimble and
- sharp, and Davis' muted horn hot and restless, the numbers have
- a slapped-together, disconnected feeling, like a long-distance
- correspondence between strangers. Jazz fans, like rap fans, tend
- to be purists. Both will be frustrated by this record.
-
- MUSIC: Private Journey
-
- The supple guitar riffs and fluid compositions of PAT
- METHENY are still the best evidence around that jazz-pop fusion
- works. But Secret Story is not just another eloquent
- instrumental statement. It is a "theme" album with a surprising
- subject: Pat Metheny. The tracks form an emotional though
- virtually wordless chronicle of his ill-fated romance with a
- Brazilian woman. Above the Treetops uses a sweet-voiced
- Cambodian women's choir to herald the excitement of new love.
- The intensity builds through the poignant Longest Summer (on
- which Metheny makes his piano debut). The wrenching finale, Not
- to Be Forgotten, won't be. And neither will Metheny's daring new
- venture into himself.
-
- CINEMA: Panic at First Bite
-
- Imagine that the last in a centuries-long line of vampire
- exterminators is an airhead Los Angeles adolescent. Imagine that
- her secret weapon against the children of the night is her "keen
- fashion sense." Imagine a good, cute actress named Kristy
- Swanson as BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER and a piquantly mixed cast
- that includes Luke Perry and Donald Sutherland. By now, you are
- perhaps dreaming that this summer's most pressing need -- for
- a funny sleeper -- has been fulfilled. Wrong. Or, as Buffy says,
- "Does the word duh mean anything to you?" It does to director
- Fran Rubel Kuzui, whose frenzied mistrust of her material is
- almost total. Somebody should have given her a garlic necklace
- -- or a Miltown -- and told her to chill out.
-
- VIDEO: A Cult Classic Resurfaces
-
- Phone rings, door chimes, in comes ORIGINAL CAST ALBUM:
- COMPANY. At 10 one May Sunday morning in 1970, cinema verite
- filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker (Monterey Pop) took his camera into
- the studio to document the recording of Company, the witty,
- brittle musical that established Stephen Sondheim as Broadway's
- premier lyricist-composer. Pennebaker fashioned the joy and
- angst of the 18 1/2-hr. endeavor into a thrilling mini-musical
- in itself. Virtually unseen for two decades, the film is now
- available on video (RCA Victor). High points: Dean Jones
- earnestly attacking Being Alive, Elaine Stritch agonizing
- through The Ladies Who Lunch. As a good show should, the 53-min.
- video leaves its audience craving more.
-
- BOOKS: The Real Thing
-
- Existential thrillers are the UFOs of literature.
- Everybody has heard about them, but few have actually seen one.
- A. Alvarez's DAY OF ATONEMENT (Random House; $21) is the real
- thing: the story of the Constantines, a middle-aged couple with
- one friend too many. Tommy Apple dies under mysterious
- circumstances, leaving his property to Joe, whom he liked, and
- Judy, whom he loved. The estate turns out to be worth millions
- -- some of it from drug sales. Moral and marital dilemmas,
- close-ups of traffic-jammed London, episodes with dealers and
- police provide enough suspense to fuel a dozen novels. It is
- unlikely that any could keep pace with the work of Alvarez,
- whose most famous book, The Savage God, was a study of suicide.
- This one examines homicide, with even more disturbing results.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-