Thursday, Jan, 27, 1983 / Kaleidoscope / 7 Concerts January 28 Rick Derringer 12 Billy Squire Agora Freedom Hall, 29 Adam Ant Atlanta Fox Johnson City 12 Alabama /sold out) February 2 George Jones/ Greensboro Coliseum 18 Ozzy Osbourne Merle Haggard Charlotte Coliseum Greensboro Coliseum 4 Tom Petty and the Heart- 18 Alabama (sold out) Asheville Civic Center breakers/ Nick Lowe Atlanta Omni 19 Alabama 5 BowWowWow Agora Charlotte Coliseum 19 Aerosmith 5 REO Speedwagon/ Red Rider Freedom HaU 20 Stray Cats Atlanta Omni Atlanta Fox 6 Tom Petty 23 Pat Benatar and the Heartbreakers Atlanta Omni Charlotte Coliseum 8 KISS 27 Diana Ross Charlotte Coliseum Asheville Civic Center 11 Billy Squire March 6 Diana Ross Knoxville Coliseum Greensboro Coliseum 11 Pat Benatar 13 Roger Whittaker Greensboro Coliseum Greensboro Auditorium V'-'H'Kx ■'? jr ^ O > ■' ,1#*^ Tom (DeLuca Record Review Joe Jackson: Night and Day Sally Fingerett By Kari Howard I’ve reconciled myself to the fact that a lot of you busy students out there actually don’t have time to read an entire review. I have found a simple, but eloquent solution: FIND TIME! No, not really. The other possible solution is a star rating system. A brief explanation:' * - Awful, just awful. •* - Better, but struggling. ••• - Good, but nagging flaws. **•* - Excellent, but not perfect. - So rarely given, go out and buy the record or see the movie im mediately! Kari Howard ' Rating: *** Did you know that underneath the sophisticated and pohshed veneer of New York City lies a volcano of primitivism that both warms and threatens the city? Now, before im ages of death and destruction race through your mind, note the key words here: volcano of primitivism. Not lava. There is not-repeat not- a Mount St. Helens lying under Fifth Avenue ready to erupt. Rather, there is an underlying primitive vitality to the coolly glamorous city. In NIGHT AND DAY, Joe Jackson’s compositions eloquently express his reactions to this ironic combination. His impressions of the city are keenly felt in the orchestra tions, which are sophisticated but sohdly based upon earthy Latin rhythms. The impact of combining vibrant bongos with a shiver of cool, metallic xylophone is startling in Breaking Us In Two. Its crisp, almost staccato, melody punctuates and emphasizes the simplicity of the lyrics. While the beat of the lazy bongos stresses a yearning for reviv ing lost passion-”You want to do things I can’t do/ Always something breaking us in two”-the frosty icing of xylophone is almost dispas sionate but strangely refreshing. Overriding both is a strong piano in strumental, which succeeds with its strength in merging the two. Unfortunately, nothing could possibly reconcile the differences in Real Man. Whereas Jackson had previously experimented successful ly with bringing two disparate elements together, here the contrast is too absurd. The problem is the lyrics. The first stanza is beautiful; when Jackson Worriedly questions identity with “Girls that wore pink/ And boys that wore blue/ Boys that always grew up better men/ Than me and you,” it is touching. The sublime degenerates to the riduculous by the third stanza: “So don’t call me a faggot/ Not unless you are a friend/ Then if you’re . tall and handsome and strong...” You get the picture. The warmth of the previous lyrics and rhythms is dispelled. The poet revives' himself, however, and winds down the album with the eloquent Slow Song. Con- tedning the same theme of a night on the town of New York as the popular Steppin’ Out, its opening lyrics are a bright flicker of genius: “Music has charms they say/ But in some hands/ It becomes a savage beast.” Beautiful. Here, the exciting com bination of hot and cold is handled perfectly. While the soft melody rip ples over the senses, the Latin rhythms slowly overtake them, building up to a passionate crescen do: “And I get tired of D. J.’s/ Why is always what he plays/ I’m gonna push right through/ I’m gonna tell him tool Tell him to/ Play us/ Play us a slow song.” The volcano that powers NIGHT AND DAY is hot, but it is merciful ly cooled down by Jackson’s chilly sophistication. Hot and cold njay be as different as NIGHT AND DAY, but Joe Jackson proves that the two can be brought together. ONCA T.V. Dialogues The UNCA Public Affairs Pro gram series “UNCA Dialogues'” will present contrasting viewpoints about American defense policy on Jan. 28 at 7 p.m. on Thoms Cable- ■vision channel 9. Laurance Pezzullo, Breman pro fessor, Bill Sabo, professor of Political Science, and Sally Baumann, professor of French will discuss Arnerican defense poUcy, presenting conservative, liberal and moderate viewpoints.