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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=89TT0268>
<title>
Jan. 23, 1989: Magical Tours
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SHOW BUSINESS, Page 59
Magical Tours
</hdr><body>
<p>Enter two new video albums
</p>
<p> Onward, ever onward. The music business means to turn VCR
fanatics, who spent $7.5 billion buying and renting tapes in
1987, into music freaks. Two major artists from Columbia
Records (owned, of course, by Sony) have become point men in
this brand-new marketing assault: Michael Jackson and Bruce
Springsteen, who are both releasing new, ambitious
feature-length video albums.
</p>
<p> Jackson's hot-selling Moonwalker is an eight-segment 94-min.
tour through the Glove's wide-ranging but uneasy imagination.
Besides a lively montage of Jackson's career ("a retrospective
of 24 years of hits"), Moonwalker includes some nifty clay and
cutout animation, as well as a "centerpiece" spun out around
Michael's superbly spooky song Smooth Criminal. Jackson becomes,
literally, what so many people have already accused him of
being: a special effect. All of Moonwalker is heavily shrouded
in fantasy -- of persecution, of reprisal, of reclaiming lost
innocence -- but compromised by its own willful and slightly
desperate flash.
</p>
<p> The Boss's Video Anthology/1978-88 is due in stores Jan. 31.
Springsteen's video is, in contrast to Jackson's, refreshingly
modest and small-scale, as if he shook out the video scrapbook
and passed along some souvenirs. Although approximately a third
of the 100-min. tape is taken up with material from the 1987
Tunnel of Love album and tour, most of the gems date back a bit
further. An early video of Rosalita, made a decade ago, has a
real scruffy, low-tech charm. Springsteen quickly learned not
only how to play to the camera but how to work with it as well,
and you can see the moment it happened, in Brian De Palma's
crafty 1984 rendering of an in-concert Dancing in the Dark.
After that, Springsteen performed dazzlingly and acted well
(most notably in John Sayles' splendid narrative worked around
I'm on Fire). He may not be ready to hit the road to Hollywood,
but these videos prove that between rock and music,
Springsteen's on a two-way street.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>