ARTS -4 I-s &1. y. page 18 Wednesday, December 10, 1980 The Michigan DaA d * HSRA By ANNE SHARP Well, what can I tell you about this plucky little band from Boston? That, over the four-odd years ,they've been together, they've developed an en- thusiastic following on the New England club circuit? That their hometown radio station, WBCN, plays their tapes regularly alongside Elvis and PiL? That they called a riot last summer in ultra-conservative Bean- town by performing their underground hit, "Buttfuck," on a live cable show? That, with a name like Human ,Sexual Response on the cover, their first album is sure to be nabbed up by horny New Wave fans? Well, now you know.'HSR, as perfor- mers, are legendary by now. But the proof of the pudding is in the vinyl, economics-wise, and, well, you probably won't be hearing this one on WABX. For one thing; it lacks slick. The production values on this album are pretty dull. They lack the electronic n up-an streamlining that makes, say, the B-52s- or a Tom Petty. But, raw as it sounds, this is really loveable music. It's witty and savvy and snappy. It's music for smart kids. It's kinda neat. , IT'S HARD to class HSR, musically. they're too sophisticated to be syntho- poppy, and not repellent and atonal enough to be completely "serious." They're not really artsy-rocky, but then they're not exactly catchy, either. In- strumentation is pretty basic guitar- and-drums, nothing flashy. The really cool part, the big part of their Sound is the vocals. The lead singers-there are four of them, all in a line-have strong, clear, pleasant voices, and they layer marvellously well, in harmony, or in unison, as in "Dick and Jane" (the girl singer, Casey Cameron, sings a couple octaves above the boys, very pretty), which, incidentally, HSR fans insist is one of the dirtiest things they've ever heard ("See Dick now/See them ride/ See Spot come"). They're passionate, I coming band flexible vocalists. In her spotlight num- ber, "Jackie Onassis" Casey sounds like she really means it: I want to wear a pair of dark sunglasses ... I want my portrait done by Andy Warhol tensity to "Anne Frank", a Night and Fog-like exploration of the attic in Am- sterdam where the girl diarist hid from the Nazis. "I want to be Anne Frank," HSR cqncludes, at the end. Really scary. They really want to be Jackie O. and Anne Frank, and they don't sound drugged, either. No, "Buttfuck" isn't on this album, but there is some other nasty stuff on it. Most punks are annoyed by sex, it's true, but "What Does Sex Mean to Me?" gives a good, solid argument agaifist copulation. A pretty erotic anti- sex argument, at that: 0 4 I HUMAN SEXUAL RESPONSE I touch my finger mouth to my Fig.14 d 4 I 4 U d d d d A o Family Fun & Entertainment k Celebrate A French Christmas December 11 7pm Power Center PTP Ticket Office - Michigan League M F, 10 1 & 2 5 Phone (313) 764-0450 C inema II presents Why We Fight (rank Capra, 1942) Directed by Frank Capra, produced by John Ford, this seven part World War II documentary series was America's answer to Triumph of the Will. Presented tonight are the first three films of the series: Prelude to War (54 min.), The Nazis Strike (42 min.), and Divide and Conquer (60 min.). Dependin on audience interest in this rare showing, the remaining Tour parts may be shown in January. 7:00 ONLY. TONIGHT, MLB 3 $2.00 The T.A M :I Show (971) Jan and Dean host the energetic "Teen-age Music Internation- al 1965," withguests The Rolling Stones, James Brown and His Fabulous Flames, Diana Ross and the Supremes, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, the Barbarians, Chuck Berry, and many more! Catch a glimpse of these performers when they were HOT. F(90 min.). 7:00 and 10:00 Lenny Bruce Performance Film (John Magnuson, 1974) This is the only film ever made of a complete nightclub per-' formance of this celebrated Americah satirist, including a "devastating recapitulation of his New York obscenity trial bursting with an indignation that has remained freshly irreverent and blackly funny."-Vincent Canby. With short: Thank You Mask Mon. (65 min.) 8:40 ONLY FRI. DEC. 12 Angell Hall 2:00 one show $3.00 both shows, This weekend: THE LOST HONOR OF KATHERINE BLUM NIGHTS OF CABIRIA I'll let them market a Jackie 0. doll Just let me be Jackie Onassis, oh yeah It's a little scary. So are the quavery, anxious voices of Larry Bangor and Dini Lamont. There is a horrifying in- I taste vagina I licked Betty Ford's boots She wore them all over China Again, they really mean it. While employed at Sak's, Dini and Larry really did fellate a pair of white boots that the former president's wife had or- dered for her trip-to-China wardrobe, and she did wear the violated booties. Fascinating. I read this in Boston Rock -magazine. And only a few years ago, an obscure British band called the Sex Pistols made all the American papers by spitting on transportation officials. I guess we've come a long way since then. 4 1 Pere Ubu: Walking to a different (!) beat 14 By MARK DIGHTON Pere Ubu is a funny group. They get away with things they shouldn't get away with. But like precocious kids, you end up loving them for their sheer audacity, if nothing else. Every one of the songs on their new (and fourth) album, The Art of Walking, seems to be a musical thumbing-of-noses at all those people who said, "You can't 'do that! It isn't 'music.' For want of a better category, sound like Parliament!) WHAT'S SO surprising is that they manage to achieve all these diverse 'goals with an astonishing nonchalance and sense of humor. They manage to be one of the weirdest groups playing without crossing that' fine line into alienation and self-congratulatory elitism. In short, they're a hell of a lot of fun! Their potentially offensive attacks on accepted musical language are always handled with an easy, off- hand manner that is nothing less than eccentricly charming. Sometimes there is so much hap- pening in any given moment on Art of Walking that it is hard to believe that they are responsible for all of these sound ideas. In fact, it often seems like some other intelligence has ripped their instruments from the control of Pere Ubu, perhaps the instruments them- selves. But always their disregard for musical standards leads to the most en- tertaining moments. My favorite is the part in "Go" when all of the other in- struments drop back to allow a guitar solo that you expect to be rip-snorting from the build-up it's gotten, but in- stead sounds more like tuning-up. It's really quite a hysterical jab at all of us listeners who thought we knew what was supposed to come next. TRY AS I might, in some spaces I just can't believe that the sounds of ,Pere Ubu have any human source. Take for instance the occasional, high- pitched, subliminal sounds that are only noticeable after they end. On other songs, these drawn-out squeals are compressed into short bursts of ungodly dissonance. By "Crush This Horn," which closes The Art of Walking, their original song has been completely over- taken by a storm of intelligent elec- tronic interference. The only thing of which we can be sure with Pere Ubu is that even if the intelligence behind "The Art of Walking isn't human, at least it's friendly. There's simply no other way to explain an album as exceptionally enjoyable as this one. they've been lumped in with the artsiest vanguard of the new wave, but the only reason you would call Pere Ubu in- tellectual is that they're obviously not stupid. In fact, there's something decidedly anti-intellectual about them. While other groups try to convey the angstful moderne condition in angstful moderne prose, David Thomas sing- songs child-like stream-of- consciousness raps about the process of ambulation. Of course, their funky songs like "Misery Goats" and "Roun- der" may be very trendy right now, but Pere Ubu are sure to balance these songs against non-rhythmic ex- plorations of even more primal, frightening urges than the drive to dan- ce. (And The Talking Heads think they're so cool just cause they can John Lennon 1940-1980 By MARK COLEMAN Another rainy night in the waning days of 1980. I'm relaxing in my apar- tment, getting high listening to the radio and reading Evelyn Waugh. As I lie down in bed, a news break bursts out of the radio: John Lennon has been shot, condition unknown. My heart pumps numbly, my mind stands still. I vow to keep a vigil but after the very next song the deejay pauses and I in- stantly know what happened: John Lennon is dead. By now you know the whole story. Beatles' most controversial member shot to death by "local screwball" in NYC. You can read and hear all about Lennon in the media for the next few weeks, even months in gory detail-I don't want to contribute to the posthumous deluge any more than I have to. Like Elvis Presley; themedia will turn Lennon into something different in death than he was in life, glossing over and trivializing his real significance until he becomes a convenient symbol for an era that is now long gone. UNLIKE ELVIS PRESLEY, Lennon affected many of us in a way that went far beyond music. Yeah, he may not have been a brilliant philosopher or politician (in fact one might contend that those outside interests detracted from the music) but at least he had the guts to take a stand. Laying in bed with Yoko for a week may not have done much for world peace, but it was unprecedented, and maybe even courageous, for a "pop star" to speak out oh a non-musical issue. Did Elvis Presley or would Bruce Springsteen ever lay their careers on the line for a "cause" or a "movement?" For John Lennon, rock and roll was more than music. It was an attitude that pervaded everything he did, an approach to living that came from both the heart and the mind. Heput so much of his beliefs into his music that even- tually it became inseparable from himself. In everything, John Lennon was never lukewarm, and naturally many people choose to spit him from their mouths. He even threw himself into retirement unabashedly, and it's no surprise that he became a recluse, veiled in shadowy, monied paranoia: Honesty and conviction, expecially when taken to the point of em- barrassment, were no longer fashionable (if they ever really were). That he chose this year to reemerge in public life is ironic. The subtlety (some would say innocuousness) of his last album has been eclipsed by the senseless violence of his death. We'll probably never know why -that man shot John Lennon-God knows what twisted images Lennon had come to stand for in that "local screwball's" mind. That's the problem with the "superstar" syndrome; we elevate our heroes to empty heights where they become celluloid receptacles for the dreams and frustrations of a nation, icons that must inevitably be sacrificed in the flames of self-destruction. More than anyone, John Lennon embodied the idealism of the sixties, in all its intensity and naivete. That voice shaped my life as did John Lennon, its most eloquent, though imperfect, spokesman. That force lives on not just iri his words and music but in all of us who heard and lived by them. The sixties are dead and buried now forever, but the spirit and inspiration will live on. The rest is up to us. the cnn arbor film cooperative q I TONIGHT . presents TONIGHT PINK FLOYD 7:008 10:20 Excerpts from a concert in the ruins of Pompeii, scenes from ranrrrinn a ccne afo nr.. L ..n.ct,. * .2.. n I ..ar. i -M161 MR. I J