Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 05, 1990, Page 11, Image 27

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    going ‘Wild’
flatmates were into the demos I was making and one of
them said, “I want you to be m her shoes one of these
days.” The next thing we know is that I’m going for an
audition with Vince Clarke.
UIt's been said that you're displeased with the way
in which Sire Records has handled your remixes m the
past
AB: Well, they don't seem to be very imaginative. They
kind of have their stable of remixers that they’ve used for
the past five years, and they always go to the same people.
U.: Have the relations with Sire gotten any better with
-wildr
AB: There are still a few things that need ironing out.
They focused this time on “Blue Savannah” and promot
ing it. They purposely didn’t promote “Drama,” and now
“Blue Savannah” isn’t doing as well as they expected it
would do. It seems as though everything is so formula
and worked out beforehand, but I don’t think you can
do that really.
U.: During the video for ‘A Little Respect," Vince spray
paints over a Depeche Mode logo. Is there a rivalry
between the two groups that we don 't know about ?
AB: (reluctantly) There is. 1 mean, there's bound to
be, isn’t there? Being the two money spinners on Mute
(both bands are on the U K label), there’s bound to be
competition. But we’re kind of opposite and I’m sure
Depeche Mode thinks our music is far too commercial
and all that. They’re trying to be serious synth-rock
artists. I’ve been to see them live, and I do look forward
to hearing new things when they come out. I like Martin
(Gore) and I like Andy (Fletcher), although I’ve only met
them a few times. But when they’re together as a group,
they really seem to live out that rock legend thing. I
could imagine them smashing up a hotel room or some
thing like that (laughs).
U.: That's something you guys would never doI
AB: Well, not unless . . . I mean, I’d do that only if I
lost my temper and I felt I had to do that, you know. I
wouldn’t do that just for show.
Soundbites
Lou Reed and John Cale
Songs for DreUa
Andy Warhol aurrounded himself with artists he
Velvet Undargound. The two coco members of the
Wilniti. I (fni Bud end iW>"
year for the first time in 20 years to collaborate on
• tribute to flair late mentor. Songt Fbr DnUa cov
ers Warhol's carter from its beginning
(‘Smalltown”) to hie death (“Hello, Ifa Mo”). Cale
and Rood atop back to reveal their own thoughts of
enemy. Velvet influence ia heard throughout the
work with Calc's viola and cleeairally influenced
piano eet-up in copjuction with Baedh roek-end
ralling guitar And their nee of Wufaolh nickname
“Dralla”—a cross between Dracula and CindaraBa
—exemplifies the diversity ofthealbiim, not to men
tion the duo% genuine conviction behind this record:
Everyone who know Warhol was aware of how
much he hated the nickname.*IBmberVanRy,TR«
Spectrum, State U. of New York, Bufblo
Prince
Graffiti Bridge
Graffiti Bridge is the aequel to Purple Rain. The
unique aspect of this new masterpiece is that it has
■MipahowvMingMtieteotherthM Prince, «nrh as
Mavis Staples, The Time, Qeorge Clinton, and the
Quincy Jones Discovery and Hivin Campbell. But
all the songs—of course—are either written, pro
duced or instrumentally performed by Prince. What
makes Bridge work is that it shows off Prince's
acclaimed funk sound. From the bluesy “The
Question of You' to the old-style ftmkadelicism of
*Ws Can Punk” and *Love Machine,* Prince mixes
masses, tones and styles perfectly ■ Tim Little, The
Daily Dulled, U. of North Carolina, Chapel mi
Star
Continued from page 8
Raised in the farming state's town of Fremont, there
were no actors in her family. Her father was a meat
inspector. Her mother was a nurse. She became inter
ested in acting in high school as a way to escape boredom.
"You got involved in every possible extracurricular
activity you possibly could,’ she remembered. Her deci
sion to go into acting shocked her family, because, as she
said, “Nobody from my hometown does that sort of thing.
“They either go into farming or something 'normal1
— teaching or nursing. Nobody goes into flaky things
like acting.’
But whether Helgenberger is “normal" or not, her
family and the town of Fremont are anything but skep
tical of her now.
“My mother is practically president of my fan club," I
she said with a wide smile. Helgenberger attended
Northwestern U. and won several acting roles, culmi
nating in u performance of “The Taming of the Shrew"
Little did she know that a casting person was seated
in the audience and that she would be noticed. Nor did
she know that she would soon find herself playing the
part of Siobhan Ryan for three and a half years on
“Ryan's Hope."
About soap operas, she said, “They are very grueling.’
‘It’s a new script everyday. The hours aren't as bad
as they are with ‘China Beach,' where we film mostly
at night. But I have to be honest. At least to me, (work
ing on a daytime soap opera) is not gratifying at all.
“It’s probably one of the most boring things you can
get involved with," she said.
But the days of soaps are a quickly fading memory
for this small-town girl turned star whose career
looks to be anything but boring.
■ Rob Owen, The Daily Orange, Syracuse U.
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