The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 26, 1981-Page 7 ' New wave washes dying disco By MARK DIGHTON The guy who said "Politics makes strange bedfellows" obviously never dabbled in the music biz, or he would have applied that phrase instead to the latter institution. Alliances shift kaleidoscopically in the world of pop music. There's simply no other way to explain the current fraternization of two former arch-enemies-disco and new wave. Those of us who saw it coming hailed it as the final death of the original punk inspiration. Perhaps we were wrong. Perhaps we weren't. From the begin- Wning, new wave has thrashed violently from fad to fad in search of just the right sound to make the mass audience sit up and listen ... so far to no avail. MEANWHILE, DISCO has been waiting out its predicted death, seemingly to adopt a self-assumed rigor mortis, hoping to extend its (ad- mittedly vegetating) existence. The way was indicated quite early. Bands like The Slits and James White and the Blacks proved the simple point that white music got more interesting as it approached black music. In ad- dition, hits by The Clash, Talking Heads, and Blondie proved that such cross-breeds could also be quite profitable. So, now, from one side, we've got 5ICYCLE JIM S HAPPY HOUR Moe -Turs-8:00 pm. till Close Dance-Oriented Rock bands (the real Next Big Thing, say the critics) coming at us like gangbusters, spearheaded by the sartorial ruffians of the British dan- ce music phenomenon known as Blitz. AND FROM THE other side, the resounding success of rock-funk hybrids like Grace Jones, Rick James, and Prince will insure the proliferation of others like them. Two of the leaders of these respective camps will play Nitro's (in Detroit, but only half an hour from Ann Arbor) one week apart. Duran Duran, one of the better Blitz bands, will appear tomorrow. Was (Not Was), Detroit's own biracial super-funk conglomeration, will follow them on Sunday, October 4. Duran Duran are typical of their ilk in that they present a stylishly cold lyrical and musical presence lifted wholly from the glamour and progressive rock movements of the '70s. They change that sound radically, however, by infusing it with a predominating beat and energetic percussion. Artiness is back in style (say hello to synthesizers again) but only in the service of the all-holy beat. ON THE OTHER HAND, Duran Duran also prove themselves worthy of separation from the pack with a stronger sense of song construction than any of their cohort-competitors. The remainder of their genre seems faint to recognize that even the nicest coat of varnish won't hide the imperfec- tions of an ugly or unsound piece of fur- niture. Possessing what the others lack-substance-Duran Duran are WELCOME TO DASCOLA STYLISTS " 4 BARBERS " NO WAITING " UNISEX Liberty off State..........668-9529 East U, at So. U..........662-0354 able to pull off their gimmickry without sounding hollow and obvious. f Was (Not Was) come from the op- posite side of the continuum, so their sound is not at all comparable to that of Duran Duran-even though they easily rival Duran Duran's danceability. Nothing on their debut album-gratuitously titled Was (Not Was)-is quite as good as their everything-including-the-kitchen-sink debut single on Ze/Island records, "Wheel Me Out"/"Hello Operator . . . " But most of it is far bet- ter than their current hit, "Out Come the Freaks." References to other bands on the vanguard of funk-Grace Jones, Parliamentary/Funkadelic, James Brown, Byrne & Eno-abound in their work, creating an excitingly unstable melange of influences that only barely holds together on the tight vurves. But what they lack in cohesiveness, Was (Not Was) make up for in sheer talent and originality. David Was and Don Fagenson have assembled some of Detroit's finest (Larry Fratangello of Parliament/Funkadelic, jazz trum- peter Marcus Belgrave, ex-MC5er Wayne Kramer) to play, and at least one super-hot vocalist (Sweet Pea) to spur on the proceedings. Seeing them live should be a real treat. They're obviously still in that ex- ploratory phase of stumbling around, seeing what works and why. In the process, no doubt, we'll all discover new things about the heretofore little- seen territory between dance music and rock. '; < . 4, Local Beer-Pitcher 2.25 -Mug 504 French Fries-254 Alsop at the Loft Singer-songwriter (and shower crooner) Peter Alsop makes a stop in Ann Arbor tomorrow night at 7:30 at Canterbury Loft. Alsop's warm and satirical wit ranges through his caring songs about such issues as single parenting, atomic waste, union reform, and homely people. At f" 1301 S. University OPEN 7 DAYS Hrs.-11 am-Midnight on Interested In Experience In Health Care? Getting Away from The Books? Helping People,? VOLUNTEER AT U OF M PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITALS CALL 763-1580 Really awfulfilms (Continued from Page 5) terrestrial feels the need to capture the could intentionally create the j few remaining human beings left on non-sequiturs that tumble fron few emaninghumn bingslef onwork of Edward Wood. Attack is Earth, the only survivors of some wmrk O T d UdW Y. unexplained war or disaster. He seems simply, NOTFUNNY. to think these humans a menace, tThe Maniac ends the evening although they seem more than content ally unknown quantity... oft to pace their bombed-out-basement most promising of nights like thes( abode, half-heartedly, considering one of the (many) joys of bad cine existential absurdities. Occasionally, not being able to predict what will they venture out to do self- next. Ordinary films lull you into contradictory things near the alien's of complacency, allowing you to r cave. But mostly they just sit around, such easy cinematic crutches as k paralyzed by their uncertainty over the plot development, consistent ch plot and their unclear relationships to terizations, and thematic consiste each other. But no, not greats like Edward' Nothing else in this weekend's Film and Phil Tucker. They offer you Festival reaches these heights of in- helping finger in understanding i idu n uh doesn't film. They s imply demand that yc mean there aren't plenty of yucks along sreofonsiosnesr cel the Way. Rounding out tonight's bill search of some logic to their cel with Plan Nine at 7 p.m. are Harlem netherworlds. But not to worry i 2** e Iang e ian tao~uohn natdirectors like Edward Wood and title and idea, but we all thought that Tce rv htilgclt a about Terror of Tiny Town, too, until we Tucker prove that illogicality can actually saw it), at 9 p.m., and Little own reward above and beyond any Shop of Horrors (by Roger Corman, so else. you know it can't be all good) at 11 p.m. Sunday starts bright and early with The Blob at 1:30 p.m. Now I've always thought The Blob a little too accom- B e u n plished technically to rate as a "bad" film, but I won't argue with its inclusion, (Continued from Page,5) based on its cream-of-sci-fi-scum teen- eagles, and a mountain lion; their exploitation plot. (And the special ef- here puts many of the supporting fects just keep on coming!) to. shame. Notable, too, is the Robot Monsterlumbers onto the photographyof, the contrasting screen immediately afterward, dscapes of Chicago and the Ro followed by Attack of the Killer which makes for an effectiveu Tomatoes at 7 p.m. Don't ask me to scoring of the central dramatic te elaborate on this one, because it's one If you are a John Belushi fan of those capitalistically nasty attempts and want some very light ente to spoof the undeniably pure-hearted ment, Continental Divide might pr stuff that makes up true bad cinema. you a suitable alternative tc The point is self-evident that no one evening's television viewing. oyous m then quite, as a en the e. For. ema is come a sort . ely on ogical harac- ncy. Wood not a their of sift able in luloid f that ve all, d Phil be its thing V4 I .. . E-Systems continues the tradition of the world's great problem solvers. C r work actors slick g lan- ckies, under msion. , then, ertain- rovide o one Recognized with Archimedes and Newton as one of the three greatest, mathematicians, Karl Gauss also pioneered math in astronomy, gravitation, elec- tricity and magnetism. E-Systems engineers are continuing in his foot- steps today. They are pioneering technology and solving some of the world's toughest problems in electronic transmission E-Systems "pioneer- ing" in communications, data, antenna, intelligence and reconnaissance proj- ects results in systems that are often the first-of-a-kind in the world. For a reprint of the Gauss illustration and information on career op- portunities with E-Systems in Texas, Florida, Indi- ana, Utah or Virginia, write: Lloyd K. Lauderdale, V.P. - Research and Engineering, E-Systems, Corporate Headquarters, P.O. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266. E-SYSTEMS Greenville Division The problem solvers. An equal opportunity employer M F. H. V Columnstintriguing (Continued from Page 1). The concrete building has been stan- ding since 1951 when it pioneered "uni- struct architecture," said Theodore Larson, a retired architecture professor whose class built the edifice. The building was designed by Charles Atwood, a University alumnus who wanted to construct a building that could be easily disassembled. In the late 1940s, Atwood - noticing the great migration from the city to the suburbs - decided to design schools that could easily dismantle when the population of an area dwindled, Larson said. Atwood presented the pre-cut and pre-fabricated metals to the Univer- sity's School of Architecture. "Atwood gave us the parts, and U of M supplied the labor," Larson said. "We put it together with nuts and bolts, so if a change is necessary, you take the struc- ture down and put it back together." Larson called the uninviting, lonely building an "historic monument." Sin- ce its completion in 1954, "hundreds of unistruct buildings have gone up all over the world." ALTHOUGH THE exterior may not win awards in Architectural Digest, the building has obvious advantages. It is inexpensive to construct. Labor is cheap, too - it can be built by only two people, Larson said. But the artifacts nestling beside the building serve no purpose today. The columns are there only because they've been too heavy to move, said Ron Clore, a construction superintendent. But next Monday, both the columns and the building will be dismantled permanen- tly and moved to North Campus. In the 1930s, Wells Bennett, Dean of the School of Architecture received the columns from the city of Detroit. RELIGIOUS DIMENSIONS OF CONTEMPORARY CONCERNS SERIES OF LECTURE-DISCUSSIONS Every Monday night a subject of current major interest will be discussed at The Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church Street. Everyone is welcome to these discussions. Beginning at 7:30 p.m., with refreshments, the speaker or speakers will make their presentation and engage in discussion until 9:00 p.m. COME JOIN US I MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28th Speaker: DR. DAVID N. FREEDMAN "AMERICAN RELIGIOUS CONVICTIONS r