RECORD S By DENNIS HARVEY, Every time a new female voice hits the charts, a sizable percentage of music critics and listeners go through the usual spasms of goggle-eyed sur- prise over the idea that a member of the opposite sex should attempt to invade that supposed last stronghold of masculine domination, the rock in- dustry. After all, Olivia Newton-John and even Rickie Lee Jones don't quite fit into the category, and Linda Ron- tadt well, just friex. In this age of clone bands, people seem to be expecting the sacred "proof that women can rock" to come in the form of women fronting just another FM banality band like Journey or Styx. But it's ridiculous to expect this fusion to come off even passably - Pat Benatar is proof enough of how ludicrous things can turn out when a tened and filled out by a vague folk-ish feel. The Wilsons' music was generally very listenable, and yet has always been a little too slick and distant to be affecting. Some of the earlier songs hin- ted at a poetic draw toward a com- munal, woodsy sort of image, but the group hasn't turned out to be any kin of the Incredible String Band. Instead, Heart has slowly been refining itself in- to another addition to the roster of cor- porate rockers. The transition almost worked on Dog and Butterfly, because the songs transcended the genre, but it doesn't on Bebe le Strange (Epic), their latest - or, rather, it works all too well. Bebe le Strange is consummately dull stuff. On the first listening, it seems fearlessly mediocre, tot'ally devoid of any interest; after a while, it may grow a little more tolerable, but it doesn't get much more interesting. In line with the cover art, which aptly shows the Wilsons and Co. being turned into just another blow-dried image of Vogue pic chic, the LP is glossy and hollow. It's just music to shout over at parties, a well-manufactured product that pretty much spells out the end of any promise the group might have had before. THERE'S VERY little worth singling out on this disc of empty, perfectly commercial rock, with the possible ex- ception of "Raised on You," which happens to be the first Heart song to be sung as well as composed entirely by sister Nancy. This is just a trite pop tune, steered by an elementary piano and bass line, but it's passably catchy and attractive. Nancy's vocal doesn't jump off the record, but it's competent and lacks the note of mannered preten- tiousness that marks much of Ann's performances on the album. As usual, the songs are propelled mainly by Ann's vocals, and her relian- ce on a predictable bag of tricks and at- titudes is becoming too clear. Her singing, though always pushing closer to self-parody, still takes risks and is at times funny and arresting. The lyrics this time around, however, are just facile come-ons, and Ann's echo- chambered singing seems clever but disinterested. THE TITLE track - what an ob- noxious title - does have a strong cen- tral riff and the suggestion of an offbeat relationship in its lyrics. "Down on Me" is just a sub-par reworking of "Lighter Touch" from the previous LP, and the instrumental "Silver Wheels" is little more than another obvious opportunity to enshrine Nancy's acoustic guitar ability. "Break" is archtypical of Heart's new top-40 rock sound, as is the overlong rave-up, "Rockin' Heaven Down." The only song with any trace of a ballad influence is just a standard* electric love song, "Sweet Darlin'," which could have been written or per- formed by anyone, though it's not likely that everyone would want to claim a song with lyrics like "I'm hum- min'/from the lovin'." "Even it Up" has a horn section, and that's about it for adventurousness on the album. Bebe le Strange is just leaden ear can- dy, technically polished and intensely dull. Marianne Faithfull's Broken English (Island) is never dull, and it's almost alarmingly far from being ordinary. In the mid-sixties, as the first of the procession of gorgeous and seemingly vacuous beauties whose major claim to fame was a temporary position as Mick Jagger's leading groupie, she had a brief career as a "ghoulish" singer of some empty featherweight pop tunes, contributing roughly as much to the recording industry as Anita Pallenburg was to offer to the acting profession. Faithfull seemed one of those denizens of the social columns' who finally received, and was buried by, a deserved amount of obscurity. (If Bianca Jagger and Margaret Trudeau were never heard from again, would anyone care, or even notice?) Coming out of nowhere, after all these years, Broken English is a shock - who would have ever thought that Faithfull had anything musical in her, let alone this? Dominated by the oppressive com- bination of dreamy synthesized arrangements and the performer's rasping vocals, this is a murky, fascinating new wave byproduct. It's oddly negative without punking out. On cut after cut, Faithfull seems to be let- ting loose pent-up aggression and bit- terness; she must have had a bitch of a decade after her heyday to have worked up so much hostility. THE ALBUM'S sound is heavy yet compulsively danceable - sort of like Tangerine Dream filtered through disco, though there aren't really any suitable comparisons. Faithfull doesn't (or can't) sing, exactly. She croaks, snarls, whispers, and sometimes har- dly manages to get anything out at all. Encased in Mark Miller Mundy's sleek, chilly production, she achieves a primal, frightening effect. On Shel toward the comic; there's so much maliciousness here that you just have to sit back and wonder how she could have dredged it all up. Faithfull's looming personality is what holds Broken English together, even if she succeeds so well in com- municating bitterness that the album can only be listened to under certain circumstances. It helps to turn the lights off, draw the curtains and think suicidally. Marianne Faithfull's dry croak has the scary directness of getting sworn at by someone in a dark alley - it's the kind of thing you just have to experien- ce once in a while, though preferably not very often. Lena Lovich is abot the sharpest contrast possible, and her second album, Flex (Stiff/Epic) has been monopolizing my turntable for weeks as a result of a futile (thus far) attempt to figure out whether Ms. Lovich is for real or whether she's some kind of brilliant hoax, a singing (well, sort of) mechanical doll. (Reading The Stepford Wives as a child can induce this kind of paranoia.) IN THE POP Wagnerian fantasyland of Flex, reality doesn't seem to exist. With the possible exception of a sinuous saxophone solo on "The Night," there isn't a single, er, naturalistic moment on the entire disc. It's unlikely that there is anyone else on the music scene at the moment so meticulously devoted to the art of advanced weirdness, and a good part of the fascination of Flex is that you can't quite be sure whether Lovich is a joke or whether she's deadly serious about the whole thing. As for the music. . . well, now we're getting to the groping-for-comparisons part. Flex is an album of aggressively bright pop arrangements, decked out in some memorably audacious sound ef- fects - screeching electronic jungle noises on "Monkey Talk" are just the most easily described among them. When things start getting maddeningly complex, we get flaming bizarroes like "You Can't Kill Me," in which our heroine all too convincingly warbles, "You can blow me up with an atom bomb/but I'll be right back, and it won't take long." This ditty segues into an apocalyptic vision of chanting masses, not unlike the immortal "Oh-ee-oh"s of the Wicked Witch's followers in The Wizard of Oz, but with the heavy solemnity of a true camp classic - something a little closer to a Tony Cur- tis Viking adventure, perhaps. On the bruisingly bouncy "Egghead," the album's shiniest toy, she's like a ridiculously mannered Germanic English teacher leading a corp of teenage girls through gym class. Complete with a periodic cheerleader chant of "Hey! Hey!" this song is so absurdly funny that it's like a scene someone should have remem- bered to put in Rock and Roll High School, or maybe in the even more suitably baroque setting of Carrie. LOVICH MAKES one think in these kind of movie terms because she's flamboyant and excessive in a peculiarly visual way. It's hard to think of an album with so many wild ima-. The mixture of electronics and camp is led by Lovich herself - her vocals do clever things with an almost robotic ef- ficiency. Some of her little tics and ec- centricities defy any kind of. descrip- tion, like her bizarrely lewd/innocent deliv"If he (gasp) decides (pause) to TASTEme!" She can do things with a phrase like "it's a crazy cuckoo race" that could driv a-calm listener insane. Each note is ended with a small upward squeal, a yip of wide-eyed surprise that would have been ideal for Elsa Lan- caster at the end of The Bride of Frankenstein. Needless to say, Flex must be experienced. Chemical ad- ditives are unnecessary; the music is enough of a trip. Use Daily Class ifieds The Ann Arbor Film Cooperatie Presents at Aud. A: $1.50 Wednesday, April 16 THE DEERHUNTER (Michael Cimino, 1978) 6:30 & 9:30-Aud. A The Vietnam War and its impact on three Pennsylvania steel workers (ROBERT DE NIRO, JOHN SAVAGE and Oscar winner CHRISTOPHER WALKEN) is the subject of Cimino's mammoth three hour drama. Meryl Streep co-stars. Oscar, Best Picture, 1978. 35mm. Tomorrow: ALIEN ("In space no one can hear you scream") at Aud. A. ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT TONIGHT at 7:00 & 9:05 at Old A & D (it's nice to be there without CRISPING) Depicts the cannon fodder on the German side of WWI-their wakening from youth by patriotic slogans and later disillusion in grim trench warfare. With LEW AYRES in his most famous role. "This film shattered the romance of war."-Reed. ;.. The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 16, 1980-Page 5 Oscarsrnosurprise Monday night's Academy Awards ceremony surprised no one by turning out to be a sweep for Columbia's hit about divorcing parents, Kramer vs Kramer. The film won Best Picture, Best Actor (Dustin Hoffman, whose ac- ceptance speech was a somewhat bitter criticism of the Academy, the only memorable surprise in an otherwise dully efficient evening), Best suppor- ting Actress-(Meryl Streep), Best Director (Robert Benton) and Best Adap- ted Screenplay. Bob Fosse's autobiographical musical All That Jazz and Francis Ford Coppola's Vietnam epic Apocalypse Now performed disappointingly, picking up only minor awards. Jazz copped the awards for art direction, costume design, film edition and adapted score. Apocalypse's brilliant technical achievements were rewarded by its win- ning of the Best Cinematography (Vittorio Storaro) and Best Sound. Sally Field, as expected, emerged with the Best Actress Oscar for her per- formance as Southern textile worker Norma Rae. Veteran actor Melvyn Douglas was not present to accept his award as Best Supporting Actor for his role as an aging Senator in the critically acclaimed Being There. The low- budget sleeper Breaking Away scored a success by winning the Best Original Screenplay honor for writer Steve Tesich. CINEMA GUILD woman with some talent starts thinking. she's Robert Plant or Jimmy Page; what was already a cartoon turns into the silliest kind of caricature. Benatar seems so bent on working 'up heavy macho swagger that one half expects her to start undergoing analysis for-an excessive case of penis envy. MEANWHILE, women are breaking out of the traditional pop-and-ballad confines in a lot of interesting ways, making all the constant yelps of shock from the record companies and press seem a little backward. The new wave movement ah, that vague term - is launching several women with distin- ctive styles of their own, like Pearl E. Gates and Chrissie Hynde, and even the dreaded disco field has gotten most of what little charge it has from Donna Summer. Heart is a problematical group because they've always been touted as, that look-we-got-riffs-too female rock band that we've supposedly been waiting for and which I, for one, hoped to avoid. What has saved them frequen- tly in the past is that they've often had the talent to surpass the banality of the image, even if at times they seemed to be promoting it themselves (especially *n concert, with Ann Wilson doing her "mesmerizing" Grace Slick act and the others really, like, jamming, man). At their best, on parts of the first two albums and on nearly all of last year's Dog and, Butterfly, the five-member group (led by lead vocalist Ann and sister Nancy Wilson), Heart created music tht was at once quintessential and offbeat party rock, partially sof- l Shows $1.50 Children $1.00 J i s.. FINAL CONCERT OF SEASON SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1980-8:00 p.m. (Champagne reception following performance) at ST. CLARE OF ASSISI TEMPLE BETH EMETHJ GENESIS OF ANNARBOR Silverstein's "The Ballad of Lucy Jor- dan," driven by a gangling bass line, she's unnervingly well equipped to communicate the song's suicidal despair: "At the age of 37 she realized/she would never ride through Paris/in a sportscar with the warm wind in her hair." Faithfull oozes a kind of bitter desperation even on the jittery, hyper- produced "What's the Hurry?" -"She sings John Lennon's "Working Class Hero" as if closed around on all sides, still flailing around in protest, accusing the omnipresent They of keeping "you doped with religion and sex and TV." The album's one major relief from the general compelling gloom is "Why D'Ya Do It?", a hunk of enraged prose about sexual jealousy set to an ap- propriately harsh reggae backdrop. Faithfull blasts her imaginary lover with such lurid delight in the lyrics' ob- scenity that the whole piece teeters 2309 Packard Rd. TICKETS $6 . -Ann Arbor, Michigan For reservations, call 662-2449, 665-4744 ENERGY. We can't afford to waste it. FT, I IT- l a mv -