ARTS Thursday, March 26, 1981 The Michigan Daily Page 5 acquired by chicanery best left unquestioned) give the album a feeling of authenticity. Vocally, this is musica verite, if you will. It is reality taken directly from its sources, and its common theme is the unabashed depth of human emotion. The authenticity has been undercut in production because the tapes have been doctored -to give them a rhythmic repetitiveness that is consistent with the music. Thus we keep hearing Mor- ton's rapturous voice ironically repeating "I know" as jungle congas and tinny, melodic keyboards pound in the background. The modernness of the technology has been married to a primitive musical feel in sort of an unholy allian- ce that, oddly, works most of the time. My Life in the Bush of Ghosts emerges as an uncomfortably spectacular work of art because Byrne and Eno syn- the size their collection of loose ends with ingenious subtlety. THE ALBUM is one consistent image of primordial mystery, of a half- forgotten voice whispering naggingly in the subconscious. The voice is thinly masked by ponderous jungle drums and tweaking synthesizers in "Mea Culpa;" but moans heavily and softly in the distance like wind through the trees. It comes in steely, precise increments in "Qu'Ran," fitted neatly between slithering synthesizer rhythms and sparse rattling bass work. Jno & Byne By FRED SCHILL It's very disorienting to dance to a *sermon. Yet the emotion, vigor, and rhythm of a fundamentalist preacher in full lather springs eternal from the same source that inspires a Johnny Rotten to raging contortions of vituperative vengeance. That kinship is profoundly examined in David Byrne and Brian Eno's complex collaborative album, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts. Rock and roll is an emotional form of music, after all,: so why shouldn't the emotion be religious fervor? Indeed, some strains of rpck are direct derivatives of gospel music. Ask Little Richard. THE HEAVY religious content of My Life, then, is hardly extraordinary. Tapes of Muslims chanting Qu'Ran and an exorcist chasing the demons away set to tribal dance music is a different matter. Byrne and Eno have composed and produced what can most accurately be termed musique concrete, a sound carefully layered and sculpted to achieve the duo's own peculiar designs. The album struggles with a curious thematic duality; it is music from the soul, intellectually contrived. The music does not always survive the shat- tering conflict, but the struggle is a marvel to hear. Sticks, congas, cans, and "found ob- jects" crack and jangle behind black gospel vocals in "Moonlight in Glory," behind the feverish abandonment of Reverend Paul Morton's sermonizing in "Help Me Somebody," and in the bubbling undulations of "Come With Us." RECORDINGS OF a Lebanese moun- tain singer, of radio sermons and talk shows, and of the exorcism (no doubt Wild, funky jungle heatedness infes the arrangements of "The Jezeb "Spirit," with the demonic cackling of t exorcist and the imprecation that "Y have no right there; her husband is t head of this house" scarcely le primitive, and "The Carrier," with i distanced, shifting chaoticness. Tl music is more abandoned and co sequently more authentic than t African derivativeness of Byrne ar Talking Heads' Remain in Light, The arrangements are insidious danceable in their urgancy, subt highlighting the ages-old sentimen echoed in the vocals. Hence the sly u of Lebanese mountain singer Dun' Yusin, whose hearty wailing "Regiment" is followed by smoot thick guitar solos," of the ancient rite exorcism; and of the frustrated tal show host in "America is Waiting" wi disgustedly concludes, "Taken again. Again? Again? Taken in again THE THEMATIC THRUST of tI album could be summed up by ti truism that mankind hasn't chang that much through the ages. But the does't do justice to the album becau Byrne and Eno don't tell you, the show you. Sometimes the varyin streams of consciousness jar ar noyingly (as in "Secret Life") or ju don't mesh effectively ("The Jezeb Spirit" goes a bit overboard), and th album constantly battles its experime ' tal, unfamiliar nature, but most of th time the odd crystallization harden cohesively. Its effectiveness grows wit time, as the strangeness wears off an the impact sets in, and as it it creasingly evokes the sam restlessness in the listener that it h recorded in the voices and music of th album. 'I Joan Jett - 'Bad Reputation' (Boar dwalk) - Freed from the cloying tackiness of Kim Fowley and Th Runaways, Joan Jett has finally arrived as the black leather goddess o trash rock. On Bad Reputation, Jett rips like hellcat through the entire history o rock and roll-girl groups, 70s glitter punk, heavy metal, bubblegum-witl an awe-inspiring and captivating laci ANN ARBO ts of subtlety. In the process, nothing is }el left unscathed. She takes every he imaginable song style, charges through ou it, has fun with it, rips it to shreds and he really does it justice. ss SURE, NOT everything is good (in ts fact, some of the guitar work and most he of the sax playing is pretty bad), but n- tastefulness is as irrelevant as he historical integrity to an undertaking nd like this. You've really got to respect someone, though, who can make a song ly sound like a viable and enjoyable ly meeting between the Isley brothers and ts the Ramones as she does on her se punked-up version of the old Isley's ya standard, "Shout." in She carries off all of her cross-genre h, bastardizations with just that much of unexpected wit and unassuming k- finesse. I can actually believe that she ho could stand on stage wearing black in leather and still really mean all the ." teen-dream pop tunes on Bad he Reputations. he But if you can't quite picture it in ed your mind, you'll get a change to see it at for yourself when Jett appears with her se touring group, The Blackhearts, at ey Second Chance Monday, April 6. zg -Mark Dighton st Fol 'el he Ellen Foley -'Spirit of St. Louis' ,n (Epic) - Ellen Foley has just released he her second album, Spirit of St. Louis, 1s and she wants us to know that her th boyfriend produced it. Not to be ignored Ld is the fact that he and a friend wrote n- half of the album's songs, and his band e is responsible for most of the in- as strumentation. ie Her ovfri,'nd? That's very sweet of her, but why? Well, Ellen Foley's boyfriend's name is Mick Jones. His band is called the Clash, and his buddy is Joe Strummer. Now, are you in- terested? Please don't be. Spirit of St. Louis is not a good album. In fact, it's pretty boring. MOST OF THE blame lies with Foley. She just can't sing. Anytime she holds a note for longer than about half a second her voice turns to absolute mush. And when the tempo picks up, she can't sing fast enough. But it's not entirely Foley's fault. Her boyfriend's production isn't too listenable either. The mix is poor: The drums and vibraphone are way out in front with the vocals, and while the keyboards and guitars aren't buried in the mix (it's too diffuse for that), they're not particularly audible either. The sound is so thin that at times the songs seem to be in danger of floating away, and Foley's voice can't even begin to hold them down. Strummer and Jones wrote some unusual material for Foley, mostly pretty pop ballads. Two, however, fail badly; "In the Killing Hour," and "The Death of the Psychoanalyst of Salvador Dali" (a totally stupid song). Most of the other songs, three by Clash protege Timon Dogg, are well-chosen, but poorly done. On this twelve-song album, only three are worth listening to: "How Glad I Am," a love song, a simultaneously melancholy and joyous duet between Jones and Foley called "Torchlight," and "Phases of Travel," Foley's sole composition. Something clicks with these three songs. The sound fills out, the singing improves, and the songs are suddenly exciting and interesting. But alas, they're not enough. Spirit of St. Louis isn't worth the trip. -David Selding the ann arbor Ifilm. cooperative t TONIGHT TONIGHT PRESENTS THE Theatre enthuiasts takenote Ordinarily, it is against the policy of the Daily arts page to review the Department of Theatre and Drama's Studio productions, which appear a few times a semester in the Arena Theatre. As indicated by the belittling name "studio," the productiois are pirimarily proving grounds for beginning students of directing and for the less experien- ced actors and actresses. Only when budding artists reach the Showcase Productions or the lofty heights of the uest Artist Series are they considered fair targets for critics. It is gratifying to report that the truisms about Studio theatre ain't necessarily so. A vehicle for some of the finest student acting I have had the pleasure to see made a two- performance appearance last week wittiout very much fanfare at all, for the iery reason that it was a Studio shoW. I refer to Lanford Wilson's The Grieot Nebula in Orion, featuring Amy Fleetwood and Adrienne Thompson, and directed by Kathy Devecka. OftION PUTS ITS two actresses to the 'kind of test only a sadistic acting coach would dream up. They play two old school chums who bump into each other some ten years after graduation and meet for an hour of chat and even- tually confession. When they first come MANN THEATRES -. VILLAGE 41 375N. MAPLE Daily Discount Matinees TUESDAY BUCK DAY ' i i Vii K I .l/.i ,I r 1 ~ V V Li. it fir/ 1 Z V 4 \r/ LAST WAVE 7:00-Aud. A MAD MAX 900-Aud. A $2 single feature $3 double feature in, they behave courteously toward each other, yet they keep up a running monologue of catty observations - their characters' actual thoughts - which they snappily deliver toward the nearest audience member. "You really do look marvelous," purrs Fleetwood, after which she spits out an aside: "Imagine. . . wearing a girdle in this day and age!" And so the banter continues, until the effects of brandy and boredom begin to have their way, and the friends begin to speak their true minds to each other rather than to the audience. Fleetwood and Thompson each have moments of shattering despair here, as the former reveals the reason for her deceptive sexual bravado, and the lat- ter unveils the dreariness of her alcoholic existence. It becomes a play of sudden, almost whispered self- discovery, as the chasm of isolation gradually creeps up on the unsuspec- ting protagonists, and their loneliness takes on a presence one can smell as easily as ozone after a thunderstorm. The 40-minute Studio is a veritable paragon of faultless timing, wren- chingly motivated misery, and artful movement. It does not deserve to have been extinguished after so short a run, and if there is any way the theatre department can see its way clear to reviving the show for anotherweekend, I would heartily recommend that such an action be taken. To the three ladies responsible for the minor miracle, I ex- tend but three more words: Bravissima, Bravissima, and! Bravissima. -Joshua Peck INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave. of liberty T61-OT08 7 arch 20 thru April17 i ENDS TONIGHT: "DEVIL AND MAX DEYLIN" 7:10, 9:00 (PG) STARTS TOMORROW: i CanrEat Fish1 and Salad Bar "SUNDAY ,LOVERS" FRI-7:25, 9:40 WITH TH IS ENTIRE AD - one admission $2.00 any film Good Mon. thru Thurs. Eves. valid thru 3/26/81 "M" I Running from the past, and backing into love A C$S Theat+oy Fdms Preseonon^ A MARTIN RITTRONALDSHEDIOProducon / SALLY FIELD TOMMY tEE JONES "BACK ROADS" ° AeSmri+'9DAVID KEITH weo nby GARY DevOIL ,M,4y by HEINRY MANCI'JI Ly~e by ALAN o',d MARLYN BIRGMAN - Droo fihcugopbyIC) IN A ALONZO. ASC " Poduced by RONJA;D SHELOI()Decded by MARTN RIGS S1:15 3:15 5:15 7:30 9:30 - -, --- -- --0 -- - - - - -- - - - --_- FOR A LIMIT ED TIME ...enjoy all the fish filets and all the salad you can eat. Dinner also includes baked potato and warm roll *a1 i ii 1 r .-. _ _ I TS TOMORROW- ACADEMY , AWARD ,NOMINATIONS PG 3 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS 'sO8D1 ENDS TONIGHT: "MELVIN & HOWARD" 7:40, 9:30 G+ FRI-"SANTINI"l6:40, 10:0 "PRIVATE"-8:00 r As timely today as the day it1 was wrttens PGA COLUMBIA PiCTURES RELEASE 1:15 4:30? 8:00 i iI M