-4 ARTS Y The Michigan Daily Friday, October 1, 1982 Page7-- __, , _ - -- AU glitter, little su By Rob Weisberg L AST NIGHT'S glitter-soul extravaganza at Crisler Arena proved that you can do a lot with a couple of riffs and spiffily un-subtle choreography, but unfortunately also proved that sometimes playing it to the hilt is worse than playing it wrong. Featured on the bill were the com- mercially huge Gap Band, along with the groups Zapp and Goodie. Goodie, a think toothy man who wore a car- nivalesque green-striped white suit and a white hat with a green bow tie, makes sure everybody knows who he is by naming both his band and a song- their opening number on Wednesday- after himself. He even pulled off a great p.r. coup by getting the crowd to sing his name back to him. He did a couple of nice ballads, one featuring a Teddy Pendegrass imitation complete with hat (he does Johnny Cash on his current album); and closed with the upbeat "Do Something" with a keyboard-lead pseudojam ending. Though Goodie as a Daily Photo by ELIZABETH SCOTT Gap Band struts its stuff Wednesday night at Crisler Arena. front man lacked the charisma of Zapp, the music wasn't bad. ZApp's stageshow was electrifying. By rights they should have been the headliners, but they haven't got a platinum album. The music was easily the strongest of the night, propelled by the sexual suggestiveness of frontman Roger Troutman and embellished by a classic swinging horn section. Troutman, first clad in a sparkling silver spaceage costume and later in a bright red gold-fringed militaristic looking getup, successively played off both his audience and his hammily-ac- ting band. Everybody had a role, and though it seemed rather blunt if not juvenile at times, particularly when Troutman's cohorts stripped him to the bare essentials, the show kept my at- tention the whole time. They even threw in a little latin percussion, just to show that there is more to the band than the disco beat. Gap Band was another story. Their big hits all stem from one song, "Burn Rubber on Me." It's got a catchy as hell riff, but when the entire show amounts to lead singer Charlie Wilson threatening to go home while mean- be style bombed out concert hall or, as in the climax, swirling as if entrapping the characters, the feeling of immediacy leaves you breathless. Vladimir Cosma's synthesized score ranges from Robert Fripp-like rock, to Philip Glass- like classicism. This music is the per- fect companion piece to the beautiful aria that is heard throughout the film. All of these elements are blended with one thought in mind; that is to enter- tain. On the bottom line, Diva is most ex- citing because it is a thriller that delivers. The triple bang ending is wor- thy of Hitchcock. The tension soars un- til you think there is nothing left, then once again the movie takes flight. Style is not the only word that comes to mind when discussing this film; Diva is a rush. ibstance dering around to the riff, you begin ,to wonder whether you should depart before he gets a chance. If Zapp played audience-baiting :tQ the hilt, at least it wasn't boring. Troutman knew when to stop and change the pace. Wilson and his two a frontmen brothers had no such insight; nor did they approach Troutman in looks or, flair. At this sort of show,, directly descended from James Brown's hardest-working-man-in-show- business routines, the visual aspect can make all the difference. Probably the most exciting part of the show was the appearance of a young top-hatted acrobat dubbed "Baby Gap" who did some cute acrobatics. Other- wise, everything was overdone-they even brought out Thomas Hearns to sing and the big dancing chicken that did the intro to "Early in the Morning" (one of the "Burning" clones). Buoyed by the incessant beat, the crowd stayed on their feet, but everybody seemed a little relieved when the Gap Band finally took off. I guess that's show biz. Find, Insight Into the Future Horoscope! ON THE CLASSIFIED PAGE Chasing around Paris with divin By James Bowen Diva: Latin, fem. of divus, divine. Diva: a popular female singer, a prima donna., Diva: the divinely intricate thriller by director Jean Jacques Beineix. Simple in plot but deliriously complex in the execution, Diva is being touted as the first new wave thriller; this is not entirely true. A more appropriate phrase would be new style. Like American filmmakers Steve Spielberg, George Lucas, Martin Scorsese and Holland's Paul Verhoeven, Beineix was born when movies were rousing enter- tainment as well as being artistically adventurous. Living through the later developments of film techniques and structure, they have produced popular epics on everything from adolescent sexual development in American Graf- fiti to a young boy's friendship with a creature from outer space in E.T. Jean Jacques Beineix's debut film Diva is a. startling and beautiful example of this style. Like the great adventures of the past, Diva is a romantic chase. Our postman hero (Frederic Andrei) is the most ear- nest young man since Luke Skywalker. He loves and longs to meet an unap- proachable black American soprano (Wilhelmina Wiggins Fernandez). In the opening sequence, he cries as she performs a haunting aria by Catalani. The soprano has such a romance with opera that she will not allow recordings of her voice, claiming that she needs an audience to perform the true act of giving. As the film opens, Andrei sneaks a tape recorder to one of her concerts; two Taiwanese record company hen- chmen see what he is doing. The next day, a woman on the run from killers hides an incriminating cassette tape in his mail bag. Thus begins the triple chase which is the heart of the film. The record company wants the concert tape, the murderers want the cassette tape, and the police want the mur- derers. The swiftness and economy of dialogue and characterization is reminiscent of the most stylish debut film (many will take issue here and vote for Orson Welles' Citizen Kane), John Huston's The Maltese Falcon. People speak straight from the hip, and are totally unexpected comic pleasures. The film is put together in the 1950s-'60s style of Jean Luc Godard, Federico Fellini and Alan Resnais (and currently one of the styles of Robert Altman and Terence Malick) we in- terrupt scenes while they are oc- curring, and often leave while they are still in progress. It is superbly edited by Marie-Josephe Yoyotte and Monique Prim. The visual part of the film has a rhythm of its own to blend with the rhythms of the dialogue and music. The effect is stunning. Diva is giddy with juxtapositions of the new onto the old. Hilton McCon- nico's eerily modern sets are worthy counterparts to the spaciously designed structures of old Paris. The photography by Philippe Kousselot is a fantastic example of the use of hand held cameras. Whether we are careening down the tunnelways of the Parisian metro; gliding through the Records Lords, Glenn Frey concerts cancelled ABC-'The Lexicon of Love' (Mercury) If, ten years from now, we could ex- plore the major influences of contem- porary pop music, we would discover that the disco era was nearly as impor- tant as the British punk movement. Still, in 1982, such a thought might be casually dismissed. We all recall the initial onslaught of discomania as essentially one of blatant excess; a music lost within the confines of its en- vironment, a potential unrealized. Yet, today we find many of its most hackneyed conventions being used in- telligently and creatively. Not sur- prisingly, in the tradition of trans- Atlantic reciprocation, the new, technology-aware British bands (Soft Cell, Human League, Duran Duran, etc.) stand at the forefront of this movement. The Lexicon of Love follows closely on the heels of the smash Human League album Dare. Like its predecessor, The Lexicon of Love is basically a compilation album, com- prised of four former British hit singles, B-sides, and "filler" material. There, however, is where the similarities end. In short, The Lexicon of Love is the most consistently satisfying fusion of pure pop and dance music since Michael Jackson's Off The Wall. Unlike the ponderous Dare, Lexicon of Love achieves an uncanny conceptual unity for a "singles" album. From its stun- ningly textured openers, "Show Me," and "Poison Arrow," through its lushly symphonic coda, "The Look of Love," the album explores the varied theatrical aspects of a typical love relationship. Songwriter-vocalist Martin Fry has often said that his sole ambition is to write definitive pop songs. He does that and more, arriving at an infectious canceability that holds up throughout the record. Drawing upon influences ranging from Elvis Costello, Bowie, and Roxy Music to Earth, Wind and Fire and Chic, ABC have concocted songs of tragedy (the disco placebo "Tears Are Not Enough"), melancholy ("The Look of Love"), and triumph ("4ever 2gether"). Consequently, the songs comprise an album worthy of its ambitious title. Amazingly, ABC manages to retain an engaging sense of humor and in- nocence that is noticeably lacking these days (and- yes, synthophobiacs, ,they also use REAL instruments!). Cliches? Sure, but ABC uses them with all the verve and excitement of children given new toys. Formulaic? You bet it is. Essential? Absolutely. -Jeffrey Gibson The October 7th Lords of the New Church concert at the Second Chance and the October 9th Glenn Frey con- cert at Hill Auditorium have been can- celled. Lord's lead singer Stiv Bator, former vocalist for the Dead Boys, reportedly fractured his arm after falling off the stage during a performance this past week. Glenn Frey, ex-Eagle guitatist, ap- parently cancelled his entire tour because of poor ticket sales. Tickets for both shows will be refun- ded at the point of purchase. -Michael Huget I I 1 ±V W I : :II:IIII -u ENCHON LOVE. 31:00 DESTINY. 30 HEROES. 5:00 ® MGMIUA 7:00 LOVE. DESTINY HEROES 9:15 ~1:30- 4:00 7:00 9:30 1:00 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:15 u THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 1-94 & S. STATE (Adacent to J. C. Penny) 1.00 TUESDAYS 10:00 12 30 4:30 7:00 9:30 Most men dream their fantasies. Phillip decided to live his. 1 00 1:00 JOHN CASSAVETES :15 GENA ROWLANDS71 A COLUMBIA100 ® 1PICTURE 12:30 4:45 7:00 9:30 $I I 2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave o tiberly 7 1-0700 & SAT " SUN only $2.00 shows before IT'S A . . . COMEDY, THRILLER, ROIMA NCEI FRI-7:10, 9:30 (R) SAT. SUN-12:20, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10, 9:30 I 3I I t. A DESPERATE ROMANCE! AN OFFCER EAMA GENTLEMAN DEBRA -RICHARD FAST rfrfR AT RIDGEMONT HIGH QI A UN'JIIERSALPICTURE 1 0:00 1 2:3C 2:30 F