ARTS -Thursday, October 21, 1982 Page 7 Records Bonnie Hayes sheds a little California sunshine Tuesday night at-Joe's. Goo d clean m idweek fun By Ben Ticho T UESDAY NIGHT, circa 11:30 p.m. You got a eight o'clock lecture Wednesday morning, an English paper due in the afternoon, a History report for Thursday, and an already full day behind you. Why pick the middle of the week to head over to Joe's Star Lounge? You could be sleeping, for God's sake, or watching the Cardinals demolish the bums from Brewerville. Good clean fun. A bit of California sunshine for a lonely, dreary Ann Arbor town. Bonnie Hayes and the Wild Com- .bo. Thatislip of a smile, toss of straight blond hair and flick of demure eyes that says, "Hey, I'm having a good time, anyhow." And the songs: "Dum Fun," "Joyride," "Shelly's Boyfriend," "Coverage." Not overbearing, not too flightly, but solid pop rock with a beat, lots of movement, and some gutsy determination mixed in. You think, hey, the West Coast Pretenders; Chrissie Hinde singing 'bout guys and dolls with tongue half-in- cheek and right hand tapping the elec- tric piano. She introduces "Girls Like Me" (opening song off Good Clean Fun, their Slash debut LP): "This one's for all the girls in the audience. If you don't like girls, you're in the wrong place. Go Home." (I stuck around). Expert and clever musicians all around: Bonnie's solos betray her years of experience as a professional keyboardist, jazz traces dancing around unconventional rock rhythms; brother Kevin on steady percussion; Paul Davis on classic rock guitar (a lit- tle heavy and incongruous on those screaming exhibitions); Hank Man-. ninger with consistently sharp per- petual-motion bass. They're all hard workers who don't let their talent get in the way of a slick, danceable stage show. They are tired (there's just no denying-these national tours aren't adrenalin vacations), but the dancers are desperate, and the Combo readily complies, from the pyrotechnics of "Loverboy" to a teasing rendition of the Hendrix cover, "Wild Thing." Will Success Spoil Bonnie Hayes? Will they never get the vaunted "Coverage" that their lesser 'sisters, the Go-go's, waste? Not if they follow Tony Randall's lesson and stick to their no-sell-out guns. Nice white people singing fun pop songs from a great black R&B tradition. They'll be back, and Ann Ar- bor will eagerly attend-whatever the day of the week. Translator-'Heartbeats and. Triggers' (415/Columbia) Way back when, it was the Jefferson Airplane; more recently, Pear Harbour and the Explosions and Romeo Void. Now, from out of the burgeoning San Francisco music scene, emerges Tran- slator, whose debut album, Heartbeats and Triggers, ranks among the very best efforts by a new band this year. Released on the independent 415 label (S.F.'s area code) and distributed through Columbia Records, Heartbeats and Triggers is an album that, from the very first cut, juxtaposes and counter- balances the two images garnered from its title by blending intelligent pop ideas with political ideologies and doses of psychedelia. The four members of Translator- guitarist/vocalists Steven Barton and Robert Darlington, bassist Larry Dekker and Drummer David Scheff- combine both musical modes excep- tionally well. "Everywhere That I'n Not" leads the album off on a sprightly note. Barton depicts a past lover's ab- sence from his life by listing the cities he imagines she frequents without him-places, we think, they once traip- sed through together. Next comes "Necessary Spinning," an urgent catharsis bemoaning the loss of childhood innocence. "Everything You See" and "Everywhere" are two of the album's most beautiful songs, so af- fective because of Darlington's haun- ting, plaintive vocals. He sometimes echoes the Jam's Paul Weller or the late Ian Curtis of Joy Division: a voice that is both sonorous and resonant. In com- parison, Barton's timbre is more regular; not quite the antithesis of Darlington, but closer to what one would consider the most marketable. This is best exemplified in "Sleeping Snakes," whose chiming chorus, "Stop this missile building," leads to a shat- tering crescendo of "Now!" and the ominous prediction/warning, "Bombs away"-a sincere and powerful anti- war statement. Barton's clearer tone delivers the -message and we find ourselves bobbing our heads. right along with the band, which is a mean trick and one that they pull off with relative ease. Translator has succeeded in a very difficult maneuver-there is not one dud in their 10-song roster. Not bad for a new band. The summation of their desires can be found in the final cut, "My Heart, Your Heart," wherein Barton turns away everything-even money and political revolution-in admonishment of love and its oft-times unkept promises. For the members of Tran- slator, both are incessant and unavoidable issues, delivered on a daily basis through the rigors of living and altered only through individual ef- forts; the battle, you could say, is fought on many levels. With Heartbeats and Triggers, no concrete decisions are made, but directions are chosen. That is better than nothing, and Translator is better than most. -Larry Dean Paul Carrack- Suburban Voodoo' (Epic) Now that the new wave/punk of the angry working class British youth is trickling up to the preppy upper class American youth, the music is beginning to get more varied. One example is the soulful, new-wave tinged album from Paul Carrack, for- mer keyboardist of Squeeze. "Subur- ban Voodoo" is produced by Nick Lowe and has the same production virtues and influences of the zillion other albums Lowe has done recently, but what really shines through are Carrack's vocals. In fact, if it were not for the per- cussive way the instruments play and the album's cover art, this could be considered a pure soul album. It's ap- parent that Carrack has studies Marvin Gaye and Otis Redding very well. The single that's being pushed is called "I Need You" and it's inoffensive enough for commercial radio, but not powerful enough for stardom. Inciden- tally, Epic is trying a little merchan- dising experiment with this single by> offering it as a one-sided 45 with a very low price tag. Apparently Epic is no longer trusts radio to properly in- troduce a new artist to the record- buying public. "I Need You" is by far surpassed on side two of Suburban Voodoo. On "What A' Way To Go," "So right, So wrong," and "From Now On"Carrack gives a nice updating of the mid-60' soul organ sound. During "From Now On" Carrack continues the blue-eyed soul vocal tradition of Van Morrison. "From Now On" is a slow steady song of deter- mination in the face of wasted love, and it's just perfect for the last slow dance of the party. Medical School Tampico, Mexico What Makes G iE A Quality Medical School? A 1. Fine Faculty 2. Good Facilities 3. Quality Student Body 4. Supervised Clerkship Programs for Qualified 3rd and 4th Year Students Noreste offers a 4-year program, has small classes, is W. 0 .listed. University of the North East Admissions 120 East 41 St NY, NY 10017 (212) 5946589 683-6566 THURS, FRI-7:10, 9:30 From now on, I'm gonna be Turning over a brand new leaf But I will be strong From now on, from now oon. The tight backing of Martin Bel- mont's guitar (formerly of the Rumour), James Eller's bass and Bob- by Irwin's drums provide Garrack with the sound he deserves. The same can not be said for the backing vocals, which are either mixed down (with good reason) or gimmicked up (with no reason) as on "I Found Love." Squeeze can't seem to hold its talen- ted selection of keyboard players, and Carrack is the second one to leave the band. The bands' original keyboardist, Jools Holland, put out a fine solo effort that quickly slipped into semi- obscurity. Perhaps Carrack's Subur- ban V9odoo will get the listening it deserves. B Scott Stuckal 2 D"VIDUA L THEATRES A Lt Libery 76-1700 "BRILLIANT. . . IT'S TERRIFIC" -ROGER EBERT UNLIKE ANY OTHER FILM YOU'VE EVER SEEN! (R) FOR HIM THE ONLY WAY OUT WAS TO BECOME AN OFFICER. FOR HER THE ONLY WAY -OUT WAS TO MARRY ONE! RICHARD DEBRA GERE WINGER AN OFFICER AND A,; GENTLEMAN k ' (R) THURS, FRI-7:40, 9:55 Austere blues by Geremia By Jeff Gibson JOHN LENNON best characterized the blues as a chair upon which all rock and roll music sits; Chuck Berry drew from it a new form; Elvis Presley demonstrated its universal appeal, a domain not reserved exclusively for *blacks; Eric Clapton popularized it as a pure genre. At the Blind Pig this Friday and Saturday, Paul Geremia will oc- cupy that chair ~in its most austere fashion-country blues accompanied by guitar and harmonica. Drawing from such legendary in- fluences as Mississippi John Hurt and Blind Lemon Jefferson, Geremia eschews popular trappings, presenting traditional blues that retain contem- porary meaning. Much of his material, however, is original, displaying both a richness of heritage and an engaging sense of humor. Geremia counters the belief that one has to be essentially miserable to sing the blues. He main- tains that positive feeling is a central. aspect of his music. Geremia spends most of his time on the road, much like the bluesmen of old. "As long as I'm traveling, I'm growing," he says. "There's no glamour, in fact lately I've been feeling more like an undercover agent. Americans are confused. There's an awful lot of misdirected hostility in the people I meet." Among his greater con- cerns, he added, are the threats posed by nuclear power. He is currently promoting his newest album entitled: I Really Don't Mind Living (Flying Fish). Geremia fur- nished us with his version of the blues chair this weekend. Try it out. You may find yourself very comfortable indeed. X-Rated MAIZEM BLUE MOVIES at the MICHIGAN THEATRE TONIGHT & TOMORROW! IAM CURIOUS (YELLOW) 6:00&8 10:00 I AM CURIOUS (BLUE) 8:00 603 E. Liberty St. a rbor CivcBallet A Featuring Gerem ia ... chairing the blues zfol" SEE ROBERT ALTMAN's NEWEST MOVIE In a Special Benefit Sneak Preview! SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23 - 8pm MICHIGAN THEATRE Tickets only $5 , Already one of the most talked about new films of the 1983 season... Ann Arbor moviegoers can see it before its official release. All proceeds from this benefit sneak preview are being donated to help pay production costs for the School of Music's November 4-7 presentation of The Rake's Progress, which will mark Mr. Altman's debut as an opera stage director. Tickets for this special preview are.on sale at the Michigan 'SAVE YOUR SOUL... Missionary Happy Hour I The University Club Thursday Octnher 21 V Franz Haratj of Odyssey in Ilio m I