The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 19, 1977-Page 5 Artist's By KAREN BORNSTEIN A DJA YUNKERS' poetry is not something you read. Yunkers' poetry is something you feel. You feel it in the limited colors and reduced forms of his beautifully _textured, deeply embossed intaglio print sur- faces. These recent works are on exhibit at the Alice Simsar Gallery, 301 North Main St., through Decem- ber 7. Yunkers, born in Riga, Latvia in 1900, did not pursue a typical route of various art degrees. Instead of learning about Expressionism, Yun- kers studied with the German Ex- pressionists during the World War I years. Coming to the U.S. in 1947, he taught at numerous universities and worked intimately with the Abstract Expressionists. He has had many one-man exhibitions and is currently represented- in the collections of eighty museums. Yunkers' most recent prints are in the tradition of the Absolutists. He re- duces subjects to their innermost core and essence, translating them into forms which are extremely simple yet entirely self-contained. THE SUBJECTS Yunkers conveys are made visible through one or several thick wide lines of varied depths, deeply and intricately em- bossed to render an image of rope. This rope beautifully reveals every I worKs g line of every knobby, braided strand that together creates its whole. One print contains a line or rope image that is curvilinear, flowing, and contains many sensual overlaps. On the side of the printed background surface is largely printed MER, the French word for sea. The simplicity of the rope image in conjunction with the rolling sound of the word, clearly represents the curving, gentle, hyp- notic effect of the sea. THIS WORK plays magically back and forth with another print in which the embossed rope surface is straight, taut and so disturbingly rigid that the frayed ends stand upright. This elevated segment is a visual representation of tension and suppressed energy. Alongside the work is printed GIB, a letter combin- ation Yunkers describes as magic in its power to complement the image and contrast so perfectly against MER. Nearly everyone of Yunkers' prints is reproduced four times in generally the same four color schemes. In each print series he chooses either the glossiest and deepest blacks, black being his metaphor for pure, raw emotion. By duplicating one subject four times with different colors, different feelings and impressions concerning orgeous the subject are evoked. In the gray works, the blacks and whites create an aura of control and self constraint due to the borders created by placing one behind the other. THE PINKS and mauves are subtle and musically flow in and out of one another, intensifying unstabil-. ity, and dream-like qualities. The. pure black images are dramatically intense, often even sinister, while the absolute white works seem to extend' forever into space, emanating peace and tranquility. In some prints Yunkers places pieces of tape over the embossed line in attempts of distorting the viewers' O perception, making the rope image appear as an external element placed upon the print, rather than a ' portion jutting out from the actual work itself. Yunkers does this for fun: and effect, demanding the viewer regard his works with intense inspec- tion. Adja Yunkers' works do not reveal4 a direct progression of one, work evolving into another. The 77-year- old artist reveals a relationship, between and within his works. A relationship where corresponding rhythms, colors, visual oppositions and textures pursue each other. A relationship where subjects create space and play back and forth from print to print. A relationship that must be seen to be felt. RISING STAR a poetry and translation journal is accepting submissions for January issue. 1st floor of Student Publications Bldg. 420 Maynard St. OR 444 Mason Hall Deadline Nov. 30 The Ramones Twilley excites crowdI The Ramones will appear along with Eddie & The 'Hot Rods and Talking Heads 8 p.m. Wednesday, November 23 at Masonic Temple in Detroit. ELO'sbig By OWEN GLEIBERMAN JEFF LYNNE, musical mastermind of the Electric Light Orchestra, has finally out-techniqued himself. Out of the Blue, ELO's new, two-record release, is so glut- ted with synthesizers, special effects and various other examples of studio wonderment that the album scarcely has a chance to breathe. Everything from the laminated 2001-like cover to a list of instrument credits that reads like a virtual synthesizer catalogue smacks of slick, robotic over-production, and the 17 songs included are practically without exception synthetic, emotion-drained creations. ELO has seemingly suffered from the Elton John syn- drome, although even he never reached a point so far removed from creative inspiration. The Orchestra arrived on the music scene with an undeniably unique sound, a potential road to superbly innovative rock music. Although Jeff Lynne (who writes, arranges and produces all the songs) never expanded his musical horizons to any great extent, he still managed to utilize the formula with success: Face the Music, the inspired wall-of-sound re- lease, exhibited a wealth of rich harmonic textures, and successfully intergrated more energetic rock rhythms with the lighter, pleasant elements of pop music. As it turns out, a good idea can only go so far. ELO's sound - largely a product of the ever-present strings and choral arrangements - has completely stagnated, to the point that there's nothing the least bit new or inventive about it. They're now as instantly recognizable as the, latest Foghat release. Out of the BLue for all its fancy mixing and special ef- fects, virtually scrapes at coming up with material any more intense than cardboard. Only three or four songs have the slow, sentimental quality of "Strange Magic" opu.s flops and "Telephone Line," leaving the rest of the space for a vapid display of pyrotechnics. AS BIG a production as Out of the Blue is, the effect of Lynne's arrangements is strangely sparse.. Some of the more inventive numbers might have been saved by the lush, Phil Spectorish sound formerly brought to "Night- rider," but Lynne does just the contrary and pulls back. "Turn To Stone," after a pleasant enough verse, delivers" a dry, overly rhythmic chorus that doesn't do much ex- cept pulsate. Not exactly something you'd want to sing along with. Other completely mechanized cuts include "Sweet Talkin" Woman," "Jungle" and "Birmingham Blues," which opens with such\ a blatant rip-off of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue I'll be surprised if Lynne doesn't get - sued by the composer's survivors. Generally speaking, Out of the Blue commits more acts of "borrowing" than any album of recent memory, as Lynne apparently had no qualms about lifting melodic and chordal riffs from sour- ces as diverse as The Beatles, The Temptations and (by no means least of all) himself. The third side is subtitled, pretentiously enough, "Concerto for a !IainyDay," and is the only one to ap- proach listenability. The opening few, minutes are in- strumental, and there's a nice pattern of descending chords vaguely reminiscent of "Poker." The side un- fortunately concludes with a ditty called "Mr. Blue Sky," an excrutiatingly insipid piece that would sound more ap- propriate as a television sit-com theme. As far as I'm concerned, Out of the Blue represents the artistic fall of ELO, a fate that's superimposed itself on many a rock artist during the last few years. About all one can hope is that Jeff Lynne comes out from behind his wall of synthesizers and electronic gizmos. As it stands now, there doesn't seem to be much else there. By ALAN RUBENFELD ROCK AND ROLL is alive and well.' The Dwight Twilley Band de- livered their infectious brand of rocka- billy rock and roll Tuesday night at Sec- ond Chance, performing a fifty minute set of no-frills music. On the road since August, the band appeared a little fa- tigued, but still delivered a classy set of the home-spun music that has drawn critical raves all over the country. Drummer Phil Seymour and Twilley shared the lead vocals on all the band's numbers. Twilley appeared as a 70's Elvis as he pranced around the stage, shaking while cutting a sloppy but effective rhythm guitar for motionless Bill Pit- cock IV's economical lead riffs. The band's better songs included many cuts from their recent Arista release, Twil- ley Don't Mind, including the title song, "Rock and Roll '47," "Here She Come," and "Invasion." Seymour related the story of their be- ginnings: going to Nashville as teen- agers with a homemade demo tape, and eventually landing a record contract on Shelter records. Their first album, Sin- cerely, contained their biggest single to date, "I'm On Fire," which propelled the band to national prominence. The band did a rousing rendition of the tune Tuesday night. "We've gone into bars' and have heard the local bands do it better than we do," Twilley joked. But those bar bands were not the ones play- ing it all over national radio. It is only a matter of time before the- Dwight Twilley Band becomes more than a warmup band at concerts or headliners at small clubs. The crowd at the Second Chance Tuesday night got a unique opportunity to observe raw-pow- ered rock and roll at its finest. Mediatrics SLEUTH Two men playing a Russian roulette of games within games which become progressively more deadly as each tries through deceit and disguise to humiliate the other. Think of the per- fect crime . . . Then go one step further. With SIR LAURENCE OLIVIER. SAT. NOV. 19-7:00 and 9:30 Natural Science Aud.-$1.50 batest Yes uninspired SEDENTARY AMERICANS? By AUSTIN VANCE Y ES FANATICS are not your nor- mal rock and rollers. Before see- ing Yes earlier this fall I met what remains in my mind as a typical Yes lover. While engaging in some stren- uous pre-concert partying, when that deathly silence that accompanies the end of the record was noticed, a serious debate of the next subject matter to be played ensued. She told us that she felt it was important to listen and understand the album before going to the concert. This was my first taste of Going for the One (SD 19106), a record which I enjoyed but didn't find exciting. Later, while we were listening to something else she listened to Going for the One through headphones and studied the lyric sheet that comes with it. Yes's biggest critics are their fans; the band cannot release an average album and try to let it slide. That night I was captivated by Yes in an incredible concert that saw everyone drained by its conclusion "Parallels" and "Going for the One", songs that held no unique distinction earlier, were transformed into an experience controlling the sense of sound and sight. So I became a Yes fan; I still don't understand the lyrics. lacked the spark that makes a technically exact record into a listening experience; not so with this one. Rick Wakeman, who after several solo efforts that just simply didn't sell at all, has returned and added his keyboard talents to the group. There are only five songs on Going for the One, which means there is enough time devoted to each song to do it justice. The title track starts off with a guitar solo reminiscent of 60's rock, and changes into the flowing lead that is Yes's trademark. Steve Howe is featured on "Turn of the Century" playing acoustic guitar with a grace that would not be out of place on a classical recording. About halfway through it seems to lose direction, however. "Parallels" is the song everyone has been hearing via the FM air- waves. Starting out with Wakeman playing a church organ in St. Martins in Switzerland, it reaches a fast pace immediately and maintains it throughout. Each member of the band combines perfectly meshed solos and the result is an excellent piece of music. The shortest and most mellow piece is "Wondrous Stories". It's a showcase for Anderson's voice with the rest of the band playing back- ground music. BOSTON (AP) - Many Americans may be leading such sedentary lives that they are "virtually motionless," moving about little more than if they remained in bed 24 hours a day, Dr. William Kannel, director of the famed Framingham Heart Study, said here recently. Kannel said 16 per cent of men and 21 per cent of women in a group studied in Framingham achieved ac- tivity scores of 29 or less. He said that spending 24 hours in bed rates a score of 24. Now known as the Boston Univer- sity-Framingham Heart Study, the project has involved studying several thousand Framingham residents for 27 years, first under federal sponsor- ship and since 1971 under private auspices. Kannel told a symposium on leisure time sponsored by the Massa- chusetts Medical Society that even in the group scoring the highest levels of activity, with scores higher than 36, few would qualify for a high level of physical fitness. If these people are typical, many Americans are unfit, he added. Despite the lack of scientific evidence on exact relationships be- tween activity and fitness, he said, "it is of interest that the greater the dose of those sedentary traits, the greater the risk of cardiovascular disease." FINAL PERFORMANCE g p.m. { An Evening with Shakespeare, Congreve, Dickens, Chekhov & Coward; starring Nicholas Pennell and Marti Maraden by arrangement with Stratford Shakespearean Festival Foundation Devised by Michael Meyer Trueblood Theatre, 8 p.m. Fri. & Sat., November 18-19 The University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program Tickets at P.T.P. Office 764-0450, before 5 p.m.; and at Hudson's Stores Tickets at Trueblood Box Office (313) 764-5387, 6-8 p.m. Cont'icoro, REPEATS ITS Riennial Pre - hristmas Sale Suntday, Nov. 20 Onily-noon to 8 pxm. SAVE 25% and more on Selected Hardcovers including: Sun In a wori who nee YOU DC How to Save Your Own Life by E. Jong Chagall's Daphnis and Chloe - Ernn~t#rE- 19 Q 0.'Va~ Nd-Me1- The Public Burning Beggarman Thief by Irwin Show -Edmn-gpi~o 9V p- Exotic Plant Manual Essays of E. B. White Life Goes to War The Kitchen Book afiibles Dynasty Abrams Rubens YES'S LAST FEW albums have rI RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE PLAYERS present THE EUNUCH over 100 other new titles reduced 25% quantities limited A SAVE at least 10% on ALL hardcovers SAVE up to 26% on Rand McNally globes ..._ / ,.C 'T' C T XTf - P I ~