ARTS Saturday, January 31, 1981 Page 5 The Michigan Doily this one's for you. SECONDS OF Pleasure works for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that it is nothing if not auther- tic. There are several covers on the album, the most interesting of which are Dave Edmunds' perfectly-phrased version of Chuck Berry's "Oh What a Thrill" and a swaggering, loving ren- dition of Joe Tex's "If Sugar Was as Sweet as You." Both are true enough to their original times to already seem like memories. And then there's the teasing guitar quotes copped from Berry in "You Ain't Nothin' But Fine" and John Lennon in "Fool Too Long," the soaring keyboar- ds used by every rock band post-Doors in "When I Write the Book," the smooth Everly-Brothers-derived harmonies in "Teacher Teacher," and the Motown joyousness of "Heart." THESE GUYS could be the Rich Lit- tle of rock 'n' roll. They can cop a style from anybody and fondly feed the memories of dreamy old timers like me, but that alone would not make this great stuff. This isn't exclusively the grand theft that it sounds like. If these are memories, they have been embellished a bit in the telling. Nick Lowe paces the tunes with distin- ctly electric, rambunctious bass plucking that mingles brashly with Terry Williams' backbeat drumming. Then, too, the lyrics leave their mark. "A Knife and a Fork" finds Edmunds impishly bellyaching about his glut- tonous girlfriend, who has to "turn sideways to get in the door." "Pet You and Hold You" opens deadpan with "I'm so Little Jack Horner/You're so Little Bo Peep." Delightful, gloriously gregarious, unashamedly mischievous, Seconds of Pleasure is a luxury cruise from stem to stern, and Rockpile is a gold mine. -Fred Sch ill Join the Arts staff a.o k , Rockpile } Rockpile-"Seconds of Pleasure" Everly Brothers. (Columbia) - Familiarity is supposed This is an anachronism up to its to breed contempt. Rockpile has eyeballs in slyly swiped riffs, copiously skewered that truism irrepairably on reproduced styles, and a shamelessly their American debut album Seconds of nostalgic feel tailor-made for those who Pleasure, a delightfully shameless remember when rock 'n roll had no reworking of styles purloined from Deep Hidden Meaning and no one everybody from Chuck Berry to the noticed. Come out of the closets, kids, Early death for 'Young' i. a M . Q . VU v 0 c 6 a. L a. c m S CL .m c aw C r LU S' .. a c 3 E a a- N F 0 E, 0 By CHRISTOPHER POTTER Midway through the second act of Albert Sjoerdsma, Jr.'s Saturn's Young, an actor sitting at a barroom table blew the most gorgeous smoke ring I have ever seen: Shimmering, translucent, ever-expanding into the dim light, the wispy halo floated up- * ward, retaining the unity of its un- dulating circumference for perhaps twenty seconds or more. The effect was somniferous and exhilarating, enough to lend a curious, momentary credence to the charaters on stage above and beyond. the very earthbound prose the playwright had imposed upon them. This was the highlight of the evening. It would have been nice to report that a local boy had made good, that old Ann Arbor had sired a Promethean artist soaring like a rocket toward, Broadway. Sadly, Saturn's Young, the first produced play by Hopwood winner Sjoerdsma, falls flat as a leaking Zep- pelin - shot down by its cliched theme, buried by its flat dialogue. THE CURRENT Canterbury Loft Stage Company production constitutes a near-interminable evening of theater. It's only two hours long but feels like five. It dabbles wearily with the theme of familial discombobulation - a human dilemma which has preoccupied playwrights from Aeschylus to O'Neill to Shepard. Though Sjoerdsma can be forgiven for treading less than virgin territory, he might at least have tried to make the journey a little entertaining. Saturn's Young derives its name from the mythological god who delighted in devouring his offspring. Would that Sjoerdsma was half so car- nivorous. His play focuses on the small apartment of Luthor, an aging, in- cipiently senile amputee, and Gunther, his brooding, thirtyish son. Broken dreams and generational resentment lay as thick as molasses on the household. Luthor, his universe apparently confined to the circum- ferences of his dwelling, lives in his pixilated memories and crankily berates his son for ignoring him. Gun- ther is a professional sufferer-a morose, self-sabotaging loner trapped in an environment he hates but cannot rouse himself from it. Luther feeds off Gunther's masochism, craftily mixing threats and pleas in order to tie his of- fspring to their mutual domicile forever. SJOERDSMA TOSSES in most of the sanctioned icons endemic to tribal drama: A dead, guilt-instilling mother; a missing, Dionysian older brother; plus the requisite Deep Dark Secret Pop has been withholding from Junior these many years. The playwright has even tossed in a back-alley Messiah in the character of Summertime - a part- time pool hustler and full-time saint. Summertime plays Maude to Gun- ther's Harold, cajoling him to shed his self-constricting bonds and get out and L-I-V-E. He inspirits his mopey colleague with such aph ristic thun- derbolts/as "If your cigarette's almost out, and if you still feel-like-smokin', you light up a whole new stick," or " 'If' doesn't mean a thing if you can't back it up." Moved by his friend's proverbial brilliance, Gunther souches back home to make the final break. This precipitates the Revelation scene which all the familial skeletons in the the ann arbor film cooperative PRESENTS TONIGHT TONIGHT ALL THAT JAZZ 6:30,8:30, & 10:pO MLB 4 Admission: $2 closet are hung out for all to gasp at. Af- ter an hour of divulgments, Gunther leaves home forever, Luther is left huddled in his wheel chair, and the audience can wake up and go home. I CANNOT remember a stage production more lacking in energy both in conception or execution. Saturn's three characters wander through their odyessey in a state of terminal somnambulance, mumbling Sjoer- dsma's sluggish prose as though reading a telephone book. As Luther, Christopher Flynn whines and pouts his way through the evening, rendering his old-age terrors less agonizing than agonizingly bland. As Gunther, Timothy Henning delivers his plethora of lines with an unrelenting, one-note monotone that deadens one's ears to the point that it is physically impossible to hear what he is saying. This actor is so relaxed that you could hit him with a blackjack and, he wouldn't even blink. As the free spirit Summertime, Neil. Bradley emotes nobly and tries to look ethereal; yet he seems theatrically displaced, like an epic balladeer mistakenly assigned to-a convention of zombies. Director William Sharpe seems suicidally bent on slowing down Saturn's action to the point of a time warp, lovingly squeezing e'ery juicy morsel out of Sjoerdsma's tedius wor- ds. His blocking is wretched, notably a second-act tableux that oscillates from a barroom to Luther's apartment to a race track then back to Luther's with all' the tension of someone changing channels on a TV. The play unfolds on the shabbiest set I have ever seen, con- sisting of two tables, four chairs, a half- dozen utensils and an eighty-five cent box of corn flakes. Perhaps in another time and place, Sjoerdsma will light up our literary lives the way some thetrical locals claim he can; but this is surely not that moment. When an audience gives its most demonstrative response of the evening to the line "I still can't figure out how you talked me into this," you know the drama they're responding to is in deep, dank trouble. NOMMMMMMMMMMM" TONIGHT THE EXORCIST At The MICHIGAN THEATER The Devil ties your stomach in knots that won't untie. 7:00 & 9:15 TONIGHT AND AT LORCH HALL-SA INT JACK Jack Flowers is a flamboyant American expatriate whose dream is to own the finest whorehouse in Singapore. But his competitors oppose his high class bordello, and Jack's dream seems short-lived until an Army officer tempts Jack to run an Army brothel for US soldiers on leave from Vietnam. With BEN GAZZARA and PETER BOGDANOVICH, who also directs. 7:00& 9:00, Lorch CINEMA GUILD-Why not see them both tonight? ANGELL HALL Built in 1924, after the University President James B. Angell, Angell Hall has traditionally been one of the first buildings used for university classes. The Michigan Daily has also been a tradition since 1890. Another Michigan tradition you can enjoy Subscribe early for fall-winter term SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $12 Sept. thru April (2 Semesters) $13 By mail outside Ann Arbor $6.50 Per Semester $7.00 By mail outside Ann Arbor SEND TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Phnne: 7AA-055