The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 15, 1994, Page 10, Image 10

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Artists grooving
to a vinyl beat
By Paula Lavigne
Senior Reporter
Sometimes no matter how hard
technology tries to reinvent the wheel,
the real thing eventually prevails.
The real thing is vinyl.
When the compact disc entered
the music market in the mid-’80s,
people boxed up their old vinyl records
and let them sit on the shelf and
collect dust. Vinyl records were al
most obsolete.
Now, the old records are coming
back.
Stuart Kolnick, owner of Recycled
Sounds, said he noticed an increase
in vinyl record sales in the last couple
of years.
“Five or six years ago, people got
rid of a lot of records,” he said. “Then
they realized that there’s a lot of
things they can get with records that
they can’t with CDs.”
Kolnick said both new and old
releases were available on vinyl. Clas
sic artists such as Frank Zappa, the
Velvet Underground and Pink Floyd
— as well as new alternative artists
— are popular on vinyl.
Janet Froschheiser, store manager
for Twisters Records and Tapes, said
Twisters was stocking several vinyl
records by ’90s artists, including Pearl
Jam, Stone Temple Pilots and Sugar. 1
Pearl Jam even released its new
album “Vs.” on vinyl one week before 1
it came out on compact disc or cas- I
sette.
“I’m assuming the band had the 1
warm fuzzies for vinyl like a lot of
people my age do,” Froschheiser said.
Froschheiser, 27, said she was a
“vinyl lover” herself.
“You got about 10 years old and
begged your mother to join Columbia
House, and you got 15 LPs for a
penny,” she said. “Or you could go to
Woolworth’s and get them really
cheap. Every Saturday, Mom would
let us buy a new one.”
Froschheiser, who went to Norris
High School in Firth, said that when
her classmates took a field trip into
town, they’d sneak off and go to Dirt
Cheap to buy records.
“Maybe I’m fond of vinyl because
I have good memories of that time,”
she said. “I’m personally glad to see
it come back.”
Vinyl records look more substan
tial than compact discs, she said,
because the art work is bigger and
more elaborate.
The sound quality of a record is the
same, if not better, than a CD, if the
record is played on a good turntable,
she said.
“The Beatlesall recorded on equip
ment designed for LP. When they put
it on a CD, a lot of people said it didn’t
sound as good,” Froschheiser said.
She said classical or jazz music on
yinyl may sound better than compact
fisc.
The digital recording techniques
jsed for compact discs have to sample
>arts of the sound wave and compress
he sound, she said. On vinyl records,
he entire sound wave flows through.
Compact discs also can pick up
Michelle Pauknan/DN
Besides compact discs, Stuart Koinick, owner of Recycled Sounds, carries several hundred
new and used vinyl albums in his store.
imperfections — “popping and hiss
ing” — that vinyl records may not,
she said.
Froschheisersaid many people who
bought alternative records didn’t even
care about sound. They don’t even
have turntables.
“Maybe it’s more alternative,” she
said, laughing. “I know a kid in town,
who doesn’t have a turntable, who
doesn’t even open his records, be
cause he says they’ll be really valu
able some day.”
She said records would be more
collectable than compact discs ever
would be. Many punk-rock artists
never released their music on com
pact disc, so vinyl is the place to find
them.
Another catalyst in bringing vinyl
back to mainstream music is the num
ber of new, local artists releasing
their songs on vinyl records.
“It’s more affordable for small
groups to put out a single to see how
it does instead of investing thousands
to put out a CD.”
Pat Nocker, guitarist for the Lin
coln band Opium Taylor, said his
group released its songs on a 7-inch
record.
“It’s a good way to put out your
product. It’s a good promotional de
vice,” he said. “It’s just cool.”
Records are easy to package and
send out to radio stations and promot
ers, he said.
Cost was another factor in Opium
Taylor’s decision. Releasing their
songs on compact disc or cassette
would have cost more than the $ 1,200
the band spent on their vinyl records.
Nocker said vinyl records also had
a “warmer” sound.
“I don’t think they’re ever going to
go out of style.”
Lesbian love story a comedic glimpse at relationships
By Jim Cihlar
Staff Reporter
Two words best describe the movie
“Go Fish”: hilarious. Even the press
packet is funny.
“Girl meets girl. Girl thinks about
girl. Girl dates girl — but is she the
ONE?” it says.
Anyway, in the film’s opening
scene, set in a coffee house filled with
women customers, one character says
to another, “What is this, dyke-o
rama? Free refills for everyone who
has kissed a woman?”
The film explores the relationships
among lesbians living in Chicago in
1994. It highlights the romance be
tween Max, who has named herself
after the main character in Maurice
Sendak's “Where the Wild Things
Are,” and Ely (“What kind of hippie
is she?” Max asks a friend who fixes
them up. “Plain, Crunchy, or Extra
Crunchy?’’).
This is a movie more about com
munity than romance. Ely, played by
V.S. Brodie, was convincing in her
self-consciousness, and Max, played
by script co-writer Guinevere Tumer,
was convincing in her enthusiasm
and immaturity — but they didn’t
really make a great screen couple.
But they did, however, make for a
lot of funny moments. And there was
a lot of energy and screen chemistry
in the extensive interaction among
the pair’s friends.
The other characters participate in
the narrative scenes by fixing the
couple up, talking to each one about
the relationship, etc. They also have
their own “jury” scenes where they
comment directly on the movie itself.
When the romantic relationship stalls,
Kia, Max’s college professor and
roommate, says, “When are these two
going to get together? What is this,
the lesbian ‘Gandhi’?”
This artistic, funny, intelligent
movie about a lesbian couple also
gives great expression to an essential
truth: all human relationships are
dorky and hopeless, cute and funny.
It shows that the harder we try to
act cool, the dorkier and more self
conscious we act. Two of my favorite
earlier scenes in the movie are:
The couple, both trying to be ca
sual and smooth, say goodbye on Ely’s
doorstep; then Ely slams her head on
the door when pushing it closed.
Later, when they run into each
other in a bookstore, Max is trying to
be cool, trying to impress Ely. She
says goodbye at the counter, then has
to come back and tell the cashier, “I
forgot to pay.”
Two later scenes in the movie are
laugh-out-loud funny: the “jury” dis
cussing an appropriate phrase for fe
male genitalia, and the intercut scenes
of Max and Ely each telling their own
friends the story of the couple's night
together.
The device of intercutting the
scenes is right out of the old Doris
Day/Rock Hudson movies — making
this a 1990s, lesbian version of “Pil
low Talk.”
Shot in black and white, and using
an alternative music soundtrack, this
movie is great to look at and to listen
to. It opens with the visual style of a
music video, set to a spoken-word
poetry soundtrack.
At times the editing and direction
was overly self-conscious, and some
of the performers’ delivery seemed
stilted.
Yet by the closing montage, the
movie is totally stylin’ and profilin’,
combining scenes of sex and romance
with the soundtrack and the closing
credits into a seamless, sophisticated
whole.
“Go Fish” shows at the Sheldon
this weekend.
Quik Facts
Movie: “Go Fish”
Rating: not rated
Stars: Guinevere Turner, V.S.
Brodie
Director: Rose Troche
Grade: B+
Five words: Cool movie about
Chicago lesbians
FOR SALE 000s
02 Appliance*
OS Bicycles
10 Books
13 Clothing
16 Computers
20 Furniture
30 Jewelry
40 Misc For Sale
45 Musical Instruments
46 Office Furniture
50 Pets
55 Photo Equipment
60 Sporting Goods
65 Stereo s/TVs
70 Ticket Exchange
90.
SERVICES 100s
100 Adoption
105 Alterations & Sewing
110 Automotive
115 Bicycle Service
120 Bridal
125 Catering
128 Child Cere
130 Cleaning/Laundry
131 Cleamng/Househoids
135 Computer Service
140 Entertainment
145 Gift
140
ISO Health 8 Fitness
153 Insurance
155 InsIrucliorVTutormg
156 Job Placement
160 Lawn car*
165 Legal Services
173 Music Exchange
175 Photography
180 Printing & Copying
182 Recycling
183 Religious .
185 Rentals
188 Tanning
190 Tattooing
193 Travel
195 Typing 6 Resumes
NOTICES 200s
200 Rides
203 Spnng Break Trips
205 Career Events
210 Announcements
215 Meetings
220 Greek Affairs
230 Student Government
240 Personals
245 Lost« Found
250 Wanted
280 Fundraising
JOBS 300s
300 Help V
310 Child Cars
320 Work Study Jobs
330 8ummsr Jobs
340 Internship*
HOUSING 400s
400 Roommate*
410 Housing V
420 Rooma/Re
430 Hou sea/Rant
440 Duplex/Rant
450 Apartmants/Rent
480 Summer Housing
470 Mobile Homes/Rent
480 Vacation/Rent
490 Homea/Sale
CLASSIFIE
ML 472-2588
AM 4 TO pm
34 Nebraska Ui
400 R Street
1588-0448
$3.00 per day tor 15 words on Individual student
and studdRt organization ads
$4.00 par day for 15 word* on non-student ads
$.15 each additional word.
$.75 billing charge.
Personal ad* must be prepaid
Found ads may ba submitted tree of charge
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m weekday prior to publica
tton
2 Appliances For Sale
Washer. Dryer, Stove or Refrigerator only $25 down and
3 monthly payment t of *25. Just *100 chow*, no interest
Warranty, Free delivery. Cheaper than the laundry matt'.
5 Bicycles For Sale
89 Schwm Worfddaes 10-speed Excellent condtion
Perfect for campus >100 OBO Call anytime, 438-3592
1990 Trek 1200Road Bike ter sale Excellent condition
Black, less than 600 miles Very recently had a full tune
up Asking *225 obo 478-3071 Marc
93 Cannondale Delta V 1500 w/adyjstable suspension
and lots of extras *1400 4740604
End of Season Bicycle Sale Honker Hanger Bike Shop
40th and A St 4884323
New and used bicycles expert repair on all brands
Wheefn & Deal n Bike Shop. 2706 Randolph 438-1477
16 Computers For Sale
MACINTOSH Computer Complete system including
printer only >500 Call Chris at 800-289-5685
Macintosh Classic N. includes student aid package and
word processor >650 OBO 477-7523
MacSE tour MB RAM 40MB hard
una^e writer II printer, some
disk. 2 floppy drive,
*1200 obo 484
Notebook computer
Twin head 33 MHZ.
offer 486-9344
Monochrome. Ssiimnoie-AfleSLC
H080 with soft case *1560 or best
PB 486/25 W CD-ROM. 250 HO. 4 MEG. Lots of new
software. Monitor *900 423-6823
20 Furniture For Sale
1 Mauve tovesaat and 1 Gold loveseat Great condition
*20 each 423-5130
6-piece living room set. kitchen table and chairs Both
good condition and great price 423-6540
For sale, rug and pad 11x14 cinnamon with grey blue
border *100, 435-4620 evenings, cellular 432-3045
For Sale Kitchen table and 4 chairs tor *50 Papas on
chair tor *30 CaH 436-3564 leave a message
Single Mack Techkne bed and headboard and matreee
*125 483-2535
40 Misc. For Sale
"Brotfier Electronic Typewriter 00,000 word dictionary
plua many other feature* *14‘ Arwersary Clock, Ger
man-made "Antique Parlor Table "Full-wed comforter
Re—onabty priced Cek 477-8329
CAR ALARM Cnmestopper, need* new remote S12S
480-4887 Leave me*»eg*
Leather jacket, only worn 3 bmes. *180, *300 value* AJ*o
basic typewriter *30 470-2065
45 Musical Instruments
Established. working weekend rock band scheduling
audition* lor male lead vocalist 476-3420
65 Stereos/TVs For Sale
19 inch remote color portable TV Work* perfect Just
*65 406-8706
BOX CAR 8PEAKERS 10 mchMTX. Ms 4*4* «vl hatch
backs Brand new *400 460-4087
VCR wfremote. *85 excellent condition, works great
Also. COLOR TV, *75 4064520
70 Ticket Exchange
Eagles tickets October 1 performance in Kansas City -
Sandstone Call 420-2065 ask for Mick
FOR SALE
One UCLA ticket Best offer 4367716 (leave message).
Nebraska Alum needs two or more CU-ME football
tickets Please caM alter 6 pm. 303-032-0081
Need 1 UCLA ticket General or student. East stadium
6656371
Need 1 UCLA ticket Belling 1 Pacific ticket 474-3214
Need 2 tickets to UCLA, Call 477-1576/leeve me*sage
Need many NE-WYQ ticket* Call 467-1764
Stones/BlindMeion Ticket Solutions 402-436-5966
UCLA TICKETS WANTED
Student, faculty, and regular sections
(STUDENTS TICKETS MUST b£ VALIDATED AND BE
IN GROUP8 OF 2 OR MORE)
Top $ Paid
1-600-817-2820.
Wanted 2 Mutton) tickets: one validated tor UCLA game
Call Travis 436-0395
Wanlad 3 tickets for cotorada game Call 464-9062
Wud*rt ‘**ats Colorado same Please can
483 2473
Wanted Football Saaaon Tickets Call 467-6437
yy«**d One student saaaon football ticket and one
UCLA student ticket Call 436-5347 Leave massage
2 OA tickets to UCLA tor sale Beat after 476-9301
90 Vehicles For Sale
2*00‘ 8 Air- AMIFM. Clean
$2990. offers Baer’s Auto Salas 1647 S3 St 477-6442
85 El Dorado CadWac White blue mtanor 140.000
mriee 464-6413 after 5
'60 Mazda 626,2 door. gray, blue interior. 140,000 milee
$300 Jaaon - 476-61^5
1966 Honda Accord LX Clean, loaded 5-apeed 4-door
$6100 436-0194
100s Services
105 Alterations & Sewing
Will do alterations, zipper repairs, hamming, seam re
pairs. act Shirts, dresses, slacks, skirls, jeans, and
coats Reasonable rates and dose to city and seat
campus Diana 477-4497
136 Data Entry
DATA ENTRY
Quality work at a reasonable pnoe Holly Sexton. 466
140 Entertainment
SpeMBound Books S Games, for all your gaming and
reading needs 905 N 16th *
148 Hairstyling
20% OFF ANY SERVICE Northern Exposure 4242
Comhueker 466-3826
.....
155 Instruction/Tutoring
Tutor with doctorate dagraa Biology, zoology. physioio
asssassa
165 Legal Services
J.P. Murphy, 4M2SM Bankruptcy Busiovtt Law.
Criminal Law. Family Law Fraa initial conauNation
170 Misc. Services
AnawaatoTnaHs OPI or Solar Nad wrthAndrea only 15%
oh guaranteed professional naU tech Formal ARan Sa
lon. 409^488
178 Pregnancy
PRCONANT? BWTHMOHT is a confident* helping
KK tgtfSS?™***• pl—• ipport
188 Tanning
One month unlimited. *29 95 Sun C«*>*jte booth or Wotff
bed Haircut 2000 245 N 13th St Gunny. Bid 477
One monte UNLIMITED $29 96 Northern Exposure.
4242 Comhuoker 488-3828
193 Travel
Help Wanted individual studante/orgamzaMons to pro
oiote Spring Break Trips Earn high dollar commission,
and free trip. Must be outgoing and creative CaNImme
Aatoiy 1-800-217-2021
195 Typing & Resumes
‘Laser-prirded papers, rasumas: applications dona also
SpelVgrammar-checking, minor editing Centrally local
ed Dependable CaN Vivian 477-8417
p*P*te, Theses. Dissertations On-campus ptckt*) and
daBteff Holly Sexton, 488-3943
Resume* By Ann
Quality resumes, professional writers Over 14 years
experience, proven results. 484-0775
Rasumas. Papers, Thesis, and Dissertations Protee
•ionalfy typeset and laser printed 4700471