The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 18, 1980-Page 7 Daily Photo by MAUREEN O'MALLEY, G oodman Sell1s, o ut Talking By FRED SCHILL There is a line. On the safe side stan- ds the'rest of the world. On the other side stand Talking Heads, beckoning. They're pointing an accusing finger. Remain In Light is a sink-or-swim proposition that - propels the band into uncharted waters without the benefit of a paddle, and the result is an enlightening and joyous exploration of a whole new world. THE MUSICAL and lyrical history of Talking Heads has been a progressive movement forward in defiance of stagnation, of which they seem to be both terrified and appalled. Their lyrics are permeated with images of motion and stagnation, of shapelessness and lack of substance, of edifying light and shadowy dark. The "new" Heads we have all been hearing about is the logical extension of what apparently must be called the "old" Heads. What they have been doing since the beginning essentially amounts to imploding rock and roll, an inward and progressive pursuit of its primordial plasma. Logically enough, the sound has now gotten very close to the earliest roots of rhythm. The Heads' crowning brillian- ce has been their exquisite experiments with minimalist rhythm, structures inextricably locked around each other in a variety of extremely danceable frameworks. TALKING HEADS is now a funkier and much more African-influenced band than it has been to date. Remain in Light is obsessed with primitive passion, with natural progression, and with emotional accountability and awareness. The characters in the songs act in accordance to things inexplicably felt, move with "the wind in my heart" like the guerrilla in "Listening Wind" or ignore itand are wasted for having lost their shape and become stalemated, as in "Crosseyed and Painless." The music and the lyrics are in- separably bound in accordance with a prevailing philosophy of the necessity of movement. Even the vocals have gotten caught up in this. David Byrne still sings as if someone snuck up on him from behind much of the time, but the band has added the voices of Nona Hendryx and Brian Eno on this album and wastes no time incorporating them into the whirlwind of rhythm at the core of the Heads' music. Voices accentuate the feeling of thin- ness, the spacelessness Byrne encoun- ters in "Born Under Punches," in which he asserts "'All I want is to breathe." Just to be consistent, the arrangement is itself absolutely spaceless, with new percussionist Jose Rossy filling some of the holes with in- reproduce the wind in "Listening Wind." But their greatest contribution is in the shaping of "The Great Curve." This song is perhaps the most masterful work the Heads have ever produced. The congas are there, the funk is there, the marvelously dan- ceable melodies are there, and the vocal arranger absolutely demands awe. Adrian Belew, former David Bowie sideman, produces an ingeniously twisted guitar solo that ending "The Overload," in whicn Byrne carefully makes his conclusive point. ".The center is missing," Byrne ironically warns to a somnolent, gutted background, and the inevitable result is "a gentle collapsing / The removal of the insides," an overload. blindness and disorientation. "Remain in Light" has effectively captured the emotional essence of rock and roll in a way quite unparallelled in contemporary music. And you can dance to it. APPLICATIONS CURRENTLY BEING ACCEPTED FOR THE Cenre!Student Judicisiy FIVE ONE YEAR POSITIONS ONE HALF YEAR POSITION All students are eligible, grad or undergrad, from any school. The Central Student Judiciary is the highest appellate court of the student judicial sys- tem. Previous experience is not required. APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE MSA OFFICE, 3909 MICHIGAN UNION APPLICATION DEADLINE: DECEMBER 1, 1980, 5 p.m. Heads: The beat deepens sistent conga work and bassist Tina the shimmering, shushed percussion This entire album is an assault on Weymouth filling the rest with thick, work of Chris Frantz in "Listening numbness, on emotional and physical elongated bass notes. Wind," all seem to step right out of the stultification. It is unashamedly and . THE VOCALS contribute a sense of subconscious to" take their rightful quite effectively moralistic, demanding wistfulness and waste in "Once in a place in the mania. movement, preaching progression, Lifetime" and seem almost to They are missing only on the album- denouncing darkness in the sense of but who "s By JULIE SELBST "Bop and boogie woogie and they all sound nice.. . Nice? 'Nice' is a word my gran- dmother uses to describe anything she doesn't particularly understand. It is a comment, but it doesn't say anything. It fills a vacuum. SO IT IS with Steve Goodman's most recent effort, Hot Spot. Hot Spot, in fact, inspired my companion as we listened to the album for the first time, to throw back his head and open his mouth wide. You know, the dental chair pose. In the immortal words of my grandfather, who, unlike my gran- dmother, always has a ready option to offer, "phooey." Save for one song, the last one on side two, no less, Hot Spot is-well, not exac- tly offensive, for it has too little charac- ter for that-but uninteresting. The only intellectual challenge the music commands is the effort involved in distinguishing one song from another 20 minutes after the turntable stops. Put quite simply, the album is mellow-pop bland. Sort of like eating Kraft American cheese on Wonder Bread (with Miracle Whip). The last song, "sdrawkcab klat", is an especially painful finale because it is a final glimpse of the old, folksy Good- man. Here the half-talking, half-singing Goodman advises nonconformists that talking backwards is the up and coming trend, and we are reminded that he ,started out doing finger-snapping, ,whimsical folk music, and doing it in- telligently, rather than the sort of stuff that inspires infatuated eleven-year olds to ggaze mistily off into notAingness, as his last couple of albums would have us believe. Only one other song has so much as a promising title. It too, ultimately disappoints. "Hit and Run Lover" initially gave me visions of Goodman falling in love with the victim of an Beware the hipp ie p unks By BRAD PARKS It's hard to get used to the idea that life isn't any fun and that we're all going to die. This explains why groups like Journey, Queen, Billy Joel, et al. are so popular on college campuses everywhere. That kind of music provides no real challenge, or ef- fort-it's background music while you haze a freshman. Don't you worry, 'cause that wheel in the sky, it just, you know, keeps on turning. Wow. Thank God there's some new, in- teresting, and enormously talented music groups that don't make a career of catering to mass public naivete. Like the Psychedelic Furs, whose self-titled debut album shows just how fun the modern dance can be. THEY COULD SAY what you want to hear, maybe all you expect to hear forever, but the P-Furs don't com- promise by rephrasing stale maxims. Most of these songs drip with inar- ticulate venom and fragmented imagery, pushed immaculately over te edge by singer Richard Butler, whose unique voice and range twist lyrics into pure sound effects. ' And the band doesn't just sit in chairs. A two guitar set-up allows an aural haze to build and then be cut apart like so many syringes into mouseflesh. Duncan Kilburn 's saxophone jumps off the turntable to strangle your roommate and the ,.hvthw aant inn rnh1iterates anvthind buying.? automobileaccident he causes, or some other absurdity. But no, it is about the all too conventional woes of a man who realizes he has been taken in by the 'you-are-the-sun-and-the-moon-and-the -stars-to-me' routine of a woman on the make. Similarly, the rest of the songs on the album are about subjects which have, to say the least, been treated before. The song titles-"Sometimes Love Forgets", "Part of Your Life", "Can't Find My Heart", "Danger", to name a few-are indicative of the conven- tionality of the lyrics. The lyrics, in turn, reflect the insipidity of the music. It is -over-produced, studio-tight goop. Because of that, Goodman's skill on the acoustic guitar is undetectable. It is almost open to speculation whether Goodman really wrote the material on the album, as it short-sells his two best features-innovative and skillful guitar, and manipulations of the kinds of goofy folk songs you probably learned at camp. But the album sleeve un- mistakably beers credits to Goodman on every song. Goodman is at his best as his own whimsical self. Disappointing it is, then, to find that the album is little more than a day's work for his producer, who probably calls himself a .sound packaging consultant, judging from the sound of the album ("Good job, Stevie, listen baby, gotta catch that other line. Must run, love ya."). Hot Spot was obviously designed to sell albums. Goodman's producer's thinking obviously fell short one step, however. The kind of people who buy the old folksy, "barefoot and overalls" music probably aren't interested in the disco beat. If I'd known, I would cer- tainly have saved my money. scrapes the very edge of the nervous system and leads into a counterpoint of four vocal harmonies masterfully blen- ded into an ecstacy of praise. This song is a enraptured tribal dance to a feminine deity who "defines the possibilities," who "is only partly human being." The musicianship itself inspires a shadowy, mysterious passion in the album's more urgent cuts. Weymouth's punching bass notes, the flickering, jagged eyboard work in Byrne's fire baptism "Born Under Punches," and- a film and lecture travel series The Kingdom of the Netherlands with RUSS POTTER Friday, Nov. 21 8:00 p.m. Aud. 3, Modern Languages Bldg., U-M Central Campus TICKETS: $3.50 general admission, $2.50 students & senior citizens, $1 .50 children, under 12. AVAILABLE AT: U-M International Center, Michigan Theater, Complete Cuisine, Hudson's and UAC Ticket Office (Michigan Union) A presentation of The University of Michigan International Center, in cooperation with the University Ex- tension Service. I MEccentricities of a Nightingale ;. OPSITY 4 MHIGAN yS"(.! M -XX , xAK-)N' 800PM NOVEMBER 19-22 TRU EBEOOD THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING Professional Theatre Program Ticket Office & Michigan League M-F, 10-1 and 2-5 Phone: 764-0450 I P1~-~ Filet ofi Fish Dinn1er I The League is the place where they meet, Our most esoteric elite, The super-sedate Discuss and debate: The rest of us go there to eat. TheMichigans Next to Hill Auditorium Y 3354 East Washtenaw Ave. (Across from Arborland Shopping Center) On West Stadium Blvd. (Just North of Intersection of Stadium and Liberty) Lunch 11:30 to 1:15 Dinner 5:00 to 7:15 SPECIAL LOW PRICES FOR STUDENTS Send your League Limerick to: Manager, Michigan League 227 South Ingalls rou will receive 2 free dinner tickets if your limerick is used in one of our ads. Cannot be used in combination with other discounts. Applicable taxes not included. At Partici- pating Steakhouses. C1980 Poncterosa Systemr inc * vi'm' I ik Located in the heart of the campus. it is the heart of the campus.. T ti 0 'TIL 19811 Imagine a modern 2-bedroom apartment, fully carpeted with balcony and pool, for just $275! (Or a one bedroom for $240.) Nestled in charming countrified South Lyon, but " minutes from the city (Ann Arbor, U Livonia, Brighton, Plymouth, * Southfield, wherever you work). Now imagine FREE RENT until Januaryl (The sooner you move in the more you savel) So don't wait. Call * now: 437-1223.U S n 4Brookdale is the apart- ment you've been fnnk'rinnfr = go away. The five most dangerous words in the English language. t 1