ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, March 10, 1982 Page 5 Paroxysms of danceable glee by Chic Cliic-'Take It Off' (Atlantic) Chic belongs to that rare breed of accidental innovators. Their best tunes iaxd biggest hits were always n assuming, maybe even uninten- tional, crossovers from disco to pop- funk that fueled (and perhaps even sparked) that transition. Now that pop-funk is firmly enscon- sed as the regal rage of the land, Chic are no longer the leaders of the pack that they once were. But neither are they eating anyone's dust; even if Chic are not the innovators they once were, they are never less than con- summate professionals. That professionalism will undoubtedly make their shows Thursday night at Second Chance a unique event. That professionalism is also what separates Chic's latest album, Take It Off, from its hosts of would-be conten- ders. Paradoxically, while this album is Chic's least cohesive to date, in many ways it is also their solidest. Their previous albums, Risque, C'est Chic, et al. were always populated by a couple paroxysms of danceable glee like "Le Freak" and "Good Times" and then simply filled out with unmentionable disco fodder. While Take It Off may lack those undeniable highlights, there is also nothing on this album low enough to tempt you to hit the reject button. Even when the songs them- selves prove somewhat lacking, the playing and arrangements pull it through. But the best moments on Take It Off-mostly on side one (in fact, most of side one)-are not only worth sitting through, but well worth dancing to. It is here that Chic prove that their par- ticular brand of pop-funk has grown up with the genre. Now, at its best (namely "Burn Hard") their funk has a leaner, meaner edge to it, hot and hard-headed enough to stand next to the best of Was (Not Was) as leaders in the heavy- metal funk mob. Much in that way, each of the songs on Take It Off takes on one tangent of modern soul music and performs it to nearly definitive perfection. While I have little sympathy for some of the mellower, disco-jazz leanings of "So Fine" and "Flash Back," I was quite impressed with both the nastier, "new wave" stylings of "Telling Lies" and "Take It Off" and the seriously-pop funk tunes "Your Love is Cancelled" and "Would You Be My Baby." Since Take It Off is such an en- cyclopedic collection of trends in modern sould, it will undoubtedly ram- ble through some areas that will displease every listener (unless of course you're one of those annoying easy-to-please types). However, it will never leave you room to doubt that Chic do everything well, whether or not you like it. Given Chic's long list of instant disco classics, one should hardly need any more impetus to catch one of their shows Thursday night, but if you should, Take It Off is certainly there to ham- mer home the point. Talk about good times! -Mark Dighton INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A representative will be on the campus TUESDAY MARCH 16, 1982 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL and job opportunities in the field of INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Interviews may be scheduled at CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Campus Glendale, Arizona 85306 - u-- Chic will perform their version of pop-funk on Thursday at Second Chance as part of The First Annual Rhythm and Blues Music Festival. The Falcons, The Contours and The Marvelettes will also perform. Drugs linked to Beushi's death VINEYARD HAVEN, Mass. (AP) - Friends and "probably cocaine." about one mile from Belushi's home. family of John Belushi gathered near his home on The Los Angeles coroner's office said it would have Many residents recall seeing Belushi j, Martha's Vineyard, where his body was brought for no comment on the reports, in reply to repeated driving around the island in an open jeep. A burial, while reports surfaced in Los Angeles that the telephone calls. Ve would often be seen at The Ocean ,oung comedian's death was caused by a drug over- The Times reported a coroner's office source, who Vineyard Haven, hanging around the bar, n dose. asked not to be identified said toxicology tests con- people laugh," said Peter Simon, a photograph ducted Monday indicated Belushi had an elevated resident of the island, which has a year ter:.._ r.__ " _f_ ___] .7 ... 4. 4L n r~n: ni o n 7 .....,l~ i.« ^ nl... 1A AAA --A - e.. ,.....« _ -----rn-rn-----== minmmmma mm m - U.) * ARMY SURPLUS We stock a full line of clothing, boots, camping equip- ment, hunting clothing & winter coats. I * 201 E. Washington at Fourth OPEN DAILY 9 A.M.-6 P.M. 994-3572 5 FRIDAY 9 A.M.-8 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS 15OFF all Merchadndise M (except sale items) with this coupon i With U of M Studentl1.D.,an additional 5% off -- Expires March 13, 1982 L m a m uy m m==m m - m m m mm m= m m m m m m auntily t night 'lub in making her and r-round With Dan Aykroyd riding to the gravesite on a motorcycle and James Taylor mournfully singing "That Lonesome Road," Belushi was buried Tuesday in a gentle snowfall on an island off Cape Cod. The Los Angeles Times, meanwhile, reported today that a source in the coroner's office said Belushi, whose nude body was found in a Los Angeles hotel room Friday, died of complications from a cocaine overdose. ABC News also reported that sources said a drug overdose killed him, and said the drug was amount of cocaine in his blood. The source said the drug was believed to have caused respiratory failure and perhaps also a heart attack, the newspaper reported. Like many celebritites, the 33-year-old TV and movie comedian had sought privacy on Martha's Vineyard, off the coast of Cape Cod. He spent the last three summers at his vacation home on the Chilmark9 oceanfront which he bought in July 1979. Burial was at Abel's Hill cemetery, located population of about 10,000 and a summer population about five times as large. Belushi often was an unannounced performer at the Hit Tin Roof, an island rock club partially owned by Simon's sister, Carly. "I've seen the serious side of him, but that was rare," said Simon, who said he was with Belushi about 15 times over the three summers. "He had to be around people. They generally expected him to be outrageous and he would rise to the occasion." Evita' snaps, crackles, and pops By Howard Witt TMAGINE FOR a moment what it might be like to see a musical in Michigan Stadium. Pretend the stage is in one end zone and you are sitting in the other; try to picture how small the ditors would appear and how distorted -heir voices would sound when am- plified over the PA system (for you would not have a prayer of hearing them without a PA system). Got an image in your mind? Good. Welcome to Evita, now playing at the Mgsonie Temple Theater in downtown Detroit. 1'm really glad I didn't sit in the usual choice "reviewer's seats" somewhere kn the tenth or twelfth row last Saturday night, because there my impression of the production might well have been skewed. I might have enjoyed it. As it was, I sat some 50 rows back, tucked way under the huge mezzanine ,verhanging perhaps a third of the .main floor. Mind you, the ticket price ($25 on Friday and Saturday nights) is the same whether you sit in row 50 or row 5-but the experience most cer- tainly is not. And because the theater is so gargan- tuan (4,700 seats), most of the audience must inevitably find itself at least as distant from the stage as I was-hence, my qualification as a spokesman for the mnasses. The musical itself was okay; at best, only mildly satisfying. ("Oh God, how can he say that about a production that won seven Tonys, a Grammy, 6 Drama Desks, 9 Critics' Circles, and miscellaneous other appellatial, fur- niturial, and geometrical plaudits?") SEvita is a docu-drama of sorts about Eva Peron, the second wife of Argen- 'tine dictator Juan Peron. (For referen- man ce, Isabel Peron, Juan Peron's third wife who ruled Argentina in the mid- '70s, is the figure best known to Americans today.) The story traces her rags-to-riches progress from a poor peasant up- bringing in the early 1920s through a mediocre show business career in Buenos Aires to her marriage to Juan Peron, her rise to unprecedented popularity, and her death of cancer in 1952. It's not hard to tell why lyricist Tim Rice and composer Andrew Lloyd Webber snatched up Eva Peron as a good candidate for a musical. She was always something of an enigma-without ever actually holding public office, she seduced the Argentine masses with promises of riches and prosperity while simultaneously raping the country's economy to fatten her own Swiss bank accounts. That she dies a virtual saint in the eyes of the populace was testimony to her power and guile. It's also not hard to tell that Rice and Webber were the creators of Jesus Christ Superstar. You can catch a lot of the melodies and rhythms from that musical in this one. Actually, "musical" is something of a misnomer when describing Evita. Like Superstar, it is much closer to an opera. Not more than a handful of lines are spoken; the rest are either sung a cap- pella, accompanied by a few in- struments, or worked intoafull-blown songs. It is this operatic character that is perhaps most disconcerting, for its results in a largely anti-melodic production that is frequently difficult to, listen to. And the microphones only exacer- abate and exaggerate this anti-melody. Thank goodness modern technology has given us concealable, wireless micro- phones, for otherwise every actor in Evita would have a long black cord trailing from his or her costume. Yes, everybody in Evita wears microphones. We never hear a pure, unadultered voice-they're all elec- trified, amplified, ionized, flouresced. All the wonders of Marconi brought to the stage. The huge speakers stacked on either side of the stage ensure that no electric snap, crackle, or pop is missed. I can't imagine anything could spoil the special intimacy and balance of the theater more than seeing tiny little ac- tors on a far-away stage while hearing booming, amplified voices bouncing off the walls. And in the most syncopated scene-in which a troop of soldiers marches around the stage complaining about Evita's new-found power in the gover- nment-the amplification grows nearly unbearable. You see, there are annawful lot of heavy boots stomping around, and each soldier is wearing a microphone, and, well-you get the picture. Maybe stitting in the fiftieth row wasn't far enough back. Maybe I should have sat outside, across Temple Avenue. In the parking lot. I 25%-50%-75% OFF EVERYTHING! What: Ann Arbor's top merchants and many Michigan whole; salers offering merchandise and services at 25-75% off. Where: U of M Track and Tennis Building (State and Hoover) When: Saturday, March 13, 10 am-B pm Sunday, March 14, 10 am-6 pm 2 DAYS OF SALES MADNESS FREE ADMISSION! Presented by W108 and American Retail Promotions mm= m m mm m=m m am m m mm mm mm mm mm mm, 1 I I 1 1 1 Nobody has more faces or funnier things to say than Richard Pryor. With that in mind-take a look at 1 this photo of Richard live in action. Here's the I 1 challenge: Judging from his ex ression, fill in the I bubble with the words you think Richard is saying. I 1 1 1 ____1 r I FRDY1A C 2.W1eteF nietB b l n 1 1 1 1 1 j 1 Drop off your 'filled-in BUBBLE' at the DAILY by 1 1 FRIDAY, MARCH 12. Write the Funniest Bubble and 1 WIN 2 PASSES to Richard Pryor's newest and I 1 hnnndet film from Columbia Pictures. 1 I tIE01,4 11 375 N. MAPLE 769-1300 BARGAIN SHOW! $2.30 BWore 64PM i. NO A Riveting 7 ACADEMY $ 1 and AWARD ! TU1ES Enthralling NATIONS -1:15~ . h- j Film. 14:001 AFIRE___9:30 RT LANT CASTER l:01 ATA ICM 5:301 A VAAON 73