The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 8 1979-Page 7 RCRDS Alfred Hitchcock's 1936 SECRET AGENT Novelist, lately turned spy, completes assignment to kill enemy agent, or would have, except the trouble with secret agent Richard Ashendon is that he had the wrong man under suspicion. Predictably sticky encounters with enemy holed up in a Swiss Chocolate factory. With PETER LORRE, MADELEINE CARROLL, JOHN GIELGUD, ROBERT YOUNG and MICHAEL REDGRAVE. Short: THE SOO LOCKS (William Blanchard, 1979)-Time-lapsed poem on waterway. Sun: THE THIN MAN (William Powell & Myrna Loy) Mon: THE ABSENT-MINDED PROFESSOR By OWEN GLEIBERMAN David Byrne has to be the most. unglamorous anti-hero in rock and roll. Onstage, his body jerking him around like a wind-up toy, the man is too up- tight to dance, to the beat of his own music. He sings like someone had him on the end of a dog leash. Fear of Music Talking Heads Sire SRK 6076 And yet, anti-hero he is. The key to his unorthodox charisma, similar to Bryan Ferry's, is conviction. Byrne is so thoroughly Iyrne that you believe everything he's saying. His band, Talking Heads, conjures up a mad- deningly cerebral ghetto. Emotion has been beaten into submission, not by the Corporate Superstructure, but by the sheer, overwhelming profusion of things. Byrne neatly dichotomizes the result: You can blandly take the sub- way home to your buildings and food, or slip out, psycho-killer style, after dark. (The truly jaded do both.), It all sounds a bit thin on paper, but Talking Heads' first two albums brought it to resilient life. After listening to their new album, I only wish I could believe they've sold out. The truth is much duller : They're just lazy ! A lot lazier, most likely, than you or me, and lazier than the complacent con- sumers who populate their songs. At least those faceless characters work for a living; Byrone, on the other hand, sounds like he spent the last year sitting around and replaying his albums. FEAR OF MUSIC, the new record's title, is hilarious, but only because it borders on self-parody. The album feeds on Byrne's image as a repressed nerd-cum-psycho, as well as his don't- touch-me-I-won't-touch-you' vision of life. But Byrne's turned his back on.all the craziness that formed those feelings in the first place. He's so obsessed with his warped, victimized little self that he can't get outside it. Fear of Music has all the minor charms of a Talking Heads album, but none of the soul. That's a shame, because at their best, this band is more passionate than their self-consciously quirky stance suggests. Every detail of Talking Heads' sound confirms Byrne's mathematical nightmare. The guitar work is dispassionately metallic: plinks, planks and plunks, but nary a moment of soaring freedom. Thearhythm is as much nervous jitter as big beat. Message-wise, Byrne's world ends with a whimper. In "Don't Worry About the Gover- nment," he's got everything he wants, and it has all the vitality and meaning of a wisp of cloud: "My building has every convenience, /It's going to make life easy for me,/It's going to be easy to get things done,/I will relax along with my loved ones." THERE'S SOME reason to be put off by Byrne's cool pessimism. But the twisted, insanely kinetic drive of Talking Heads' music belies the com- placency of the lyrics. The songsseem blandly accepting, but the sheer ner- vous energy of the performance is Byr- ne's neurotic protest. What makes the Heads speak is the perennial gulf bet- ween what Byrne wants to say and the rather pathetic yips and yowls that get squeezed out. Producer Brian Eno expanded that tension on the Brilliant More Songs About Buildings and Food, by lending the sound a dense, rhythmic resonance. On parts of that record, you can hear Byrne rebelling against everything he's singing about. When he shouts "Watch me work!" in "The Good Thing," guitars and castinets clattering crazily, behind him, you can bet he'll 9-to-5 him- self into an early grave. Fear of Music is sleek on the surface, but sterile as an autoclave. Eno is the producer once again, and the record has the "Talking Heads sound," but you wonder why Byrne even bothers to pick up his guitar. There's little life to any of it. The lyrics are at one with those of the other albums: It's clear from "Life During Wartime" that things haven't changed. There's "no time" for kissing and cuddling, or even (God forbid!)tie Mudd Club and CBGB's. THERE'S A party in "Memories Can't Wait," but - alas - it's all in the mind. Byrne even takes you to Heaven, but it's another downer, "a place where nothing ever happens." The same sen- timents echo through every cut: Emotional vacuity,rcontrol issued stric- tly from Up There, a world that ain't no fun, that ain't nothing at all. The music, while not shallow enough to embalm the record, rarely brings these one-dimensional messages to life. Eno trots out his barrage of technological tricks, and the heavily synthesized "Drugs" is the most im- pressive track here. There's little in- vention in the songs themselves. The only reason "I Zimbr" and "Life During Wartime" sound vaguely disco- ish is that the band never bothers to chop up the droning ostinatos with tricky, intricate instrumental breaks. Unlike some disco, though, the effect isn't mesmerizing - just lethargic. All of which leaves us with a few cat- chy numbers and some random moments of banal hilarity. In "Cities," a trash-tour of the globe with a spunky, riveting rhythm, Byrne hits London, Birmingham and finally, Memphis, "home of Elvis and the ancient Greeks." "Mind," with it's catchy falsetto chorus, is about as whimsical. But when Byrne shows all his cards, on "Electric Guitar," there's no other .---- feeling to balance his dime-store fatalism. "Someone controls electric guitar," he announces. I suppose thai needs no explanation, but the music's passable only at 45rpm. Stacked up next to this, the ominous backbeat of "Psycho Killer" is out of another, far more menacing world Without that dark, crazed undertone Byrne's neurotic impulses seen laughingly inconsequential. His minimalism backfires, turns against it self, and ends up sounding rather silly But then, I don't even believe Byrne is really scared of music. FOr the moment, I think he's just bored with it. ti f CINEMA GUILD TONIHT AT S ~INEMA Ij Presents # MURMUR OF THE HEART 7 (Louis Malle, 1972) As with most of Malle's films, the edge of corruption is ever-present. Set in France in 1954 in the home of an upper class family, the film deals with the rites of passage of a secluded adolescent boy. Often hilariously funny, it re- mains a sensitive portrait of growing up with Mom and Charlie Parker. French with subtitles. (118 min.) Angell Hall $1.50 7:OO& 9:10 Tomorrow: Hitchcock's TOPAZ & MURDER r Looking for the bitellectul side of life? Revd the Michigan Daily . . I * OLD ARCH. AUDI $1.50 I 1 1 Attn: FRESHMEN1 -Sophomores Juniors Seniors Grads - 1 Yo ca pla 50 woth of pinball or video games with this coupon and your ID.1 1 * nTh Cross-Eyed moose Tommy's Holiday Camp I 613 E. Liberty 632 Packard 1 - - - -- - - Now Playing at Butterfield Theatres WEDNESDAY IS "BARGAIN DAY" $1.50 UNTIL 5:30 MATINEES DAILY AT STATE 1-2-3-4 Doors Open 12:45 P.M. MONDAY NIGHT IS "GUEST NIGHT" Two Adults Admitted For $3.00 State 11243 231 S. State " 662-6264 -ANN ARBOR "I I i 1:05-4:05-7:05-9:35 Y 6 a. A ogame ag in a g yfrfar away: (Upper Level) Ia I rPG Dolby Stereo 1:15-4:15-7:20-9:55a I xJ~cqut Club SPECIAL $25 College Student Membership for Indoor Tennis and Racquetball I Court Rates: $6/hr. Tennis $4/hr. Racquetball (before 5 p.m. weekdays) .. .p _ .. .. - w r3 " "" or'~Nzai~v~i. v "" r g For more information call: Chippewa Racquet Club-434-6100 must show I.D. A United Artist Exclusive now showing at: The Movies at Prudential Town Center 1 Cam~ 'ipus 1214 S. Univ. ity 668-6416 -ANN ARBOR L Mon -Te -ThurOFri 8 P ROBERT DELNIRO BEST PICTURE Sat.-Sun WINNER Wed ACADEMY 180 " 4Qes4a u I . e,:1 ra rq S-e P5, 4:00 P m I Corner of Evergreen and 1-696 in Southfield The strangest things happen when you wear polka dotsA t .. Owi" a gead MARCELLO DANON presents UGO TOGNAZZI MICHEL SERRAULT LA CAGE AUX FOLLES" (English Subitiest Based upon the play by JEAN POiRET A film by EDOUARD MOLINARO Copyright () i919 United Artists Corporation All rights reserved. United Adg I Wayside 302 0 ltenaw 4 34-1782 -YPSILANTI Fri.-Mon.-Tue.-Thur. GREASE-7:00 FEVER-9 00 5~uPfo NUH is the word ...Catchit SAT.-SUN.=WED.-GREASE 1:00-5:00-9:10 FEVER 3:00-7:00 I Universit'y drive-in 4100 Carpenter 434-0130 -YPSILANTI-Open7:30 Show at Dusk THESE GIRLS I f ALL. I TICKETS GO ON SALE AT 10:30 P.M. FRI. and SAT. MIDNIGHT SHOWS i State 1.2-3- 231 S. State 662-6264 AND WIQB FM 103 THE GREATEST CONCERT FILM EVER No Starring "THE BAND" Passes "THE LAST WALTZ" Full Volume Dolby Stereo CRAIG RUSSELL as Mae West-Carol Channing-Streisand-Bette Midler Judy Garland and Bette Davis IS r. Ir La Cage Aux Folles uJ Cr.' uJ m I " ' Hangups Are Hilarious i Th h~ 1