w w w mr dfl b( $ Angry homines Violent Femmes Cellar Door Productions Joe's Star Lounge 11 p.m., Sunday, September 25 By Joe Hoppe It's not often that one gets to take a peek into a violent feminine mind-especially when the mind belongs to a man. Well, the Daily recently had the opportunity to talk with the Violent Femmes, an up- and-coming band which describes its music as "cubist blues" to gullible reporters. The Femmes will be playing their cubist tunes Sunday night at Joe's Star Lounge. The Femmes are Gordon Gano, 20, playing guitar and singing and writing the songs, Brian Ritchie, 23, who plays a big mariachi bass, and Victor DeLorenzo, 29, who plays drums; two snares, cymbals, andi tranceaphone. Some of what they had to say follows. Daily: Gordon, you wrote most of your songs in high school? Gano: Yeah, I started writing pretty much with the start of junior high, though I don't think we do any songs from thatfar back. I'd say that most of the songs we do were written when I was in high school. Daily: What's the oldest song you do? Gano: Well, I was just talking to somebody about that. I've have to check my records, but I think "Life is a Scream" is the oldest one we do in the band. It goes back pretty far, it goes back back maybe five years, I don't know. Daily: Which is the oldest one on the record? Gano: "Kiss Off." Definitely "Kiss Off." Daily: When did you write that? Gano: I think that one I also wrote-I had my big productive year when I was 15. It's been down hill ever since. By the time I'm 22, I will have lost everything. Ritchie: I did. 'Daily: What did you expect to come out of the words you were writing? Were you writing poems or were you writing lyrics? Gano: The second one. I was always writing with the idea of songs. I write some poems, but I was writing songs, definitely. Daily: When did you start to doj something about it, besides writing' them? Gano: Well I guess I could interpet that by answering like when did I first play in public. Oh I don't know. . . I used to play solo sometimes, that's when Brian saw me. (To DeLorenzo)l The first time you saw me was when you played with me, right? Ritchie: You opened up for our other band, The Runt Boys. Gano: That's right. But I used to play solo or with my brother or somebody Violent Femmes: Madmen? else, plaing guitar with me, and I did that for maybe once a month or maybe even twice a month for my last year of school, basically. Daily: What's the Violent Femmes attitude toward song composition? Are the words more important or is the music more important? Gano: It depends on which one of us you ask. DeLorenzo: We seem to be split here, two to one. Gano: (To DeLorenzo) Which side are you on? DeLorenzo: I was with you. Gordon and I feel that the words are more im- portant and Brian feels that the music is. Ritchie: Well the reason I feel that way is because you can have a good song with good music and shitty lyrics. For example, "Louie Louie" or something like that. You can't possibly have a good song with good lyrics and bad music. That's my reasoning. DeLorenze: What about "Having My Baby?" Gano: Well, you get into aspects of bad music and what's bad music to one person is good music to another person. Someone could say Dylan's early records were all shit and just didn't really - know the songs, There's mistakes you could hear and yet you can also say it's great. I think no one is ever going to be really able to say exac- tly what happens with music and words and how they go together and what's the reason behind it and how does it af- fect people the way it does and why is it done. There can be all kinds of theories and things written about it, but it's really magic. Daily: Where did you come up with 'the tranceaphone? DeLorenzo: Three friends and I were up in an attic, trying to put together a soundtrack for a film that one had made and we were just using what was up in the attic, so we combined the floor tom and the washtub. Daily: You play it mostly with brushes, do you ever use a stick? DeLorenzo: I use a stick sometimes, but primarily play I with brushes with the band. I also play with my hands and' stick and I kick it.. . when I'm caught off guard. Daily: What about playing on the street? Is that kind of a bluesy, traditional thing for you? Ritchie: I guess it is kind of like that. Robert Johnson used to play on the street like that. All those blues guys would just play on the street, or else they'd grab their guitars and walk into a bar or something and just start playing. We've done all that kind of stuff too. It might be out of that tradition. Daily: Do you have a blues sen- sibility then? Gano: I think we really do have a blues sensibility. About everything. DeLorenzo: We tend to always have the blues. Ritchie: We tend to like the blues more than just about any other kind of music that there is. We really love the blues, we often play blues tapes before our sets. DeLorenzo: The first music that I ever really came in contact with was blues-that I was seeing live, was blues. Daily: What about a blues influence in the songs themselves? Gano: Well, in the songs themselves, it comes from more of a blues feeling of singing about problems or bad things then there's a certain something which happens and you end up feeling good about it, or better, by singing about your problems. Daily: What are you trying to say with your music? Gano: I think in the live performance that it comes off mostly as entertain- ment. That's what we really feel that we are there for. When we play live it's like-we could play a song and then do something really outrageous like leave the stage and not come back. That would be an artistic statement but it would be just completely screwed up. As far as being there and being sup- posed to give certain entertainment like time and show you now we're doing a show. Daily: Do you want to say more aboutj the Violent Femes attitude? Stance to the world? DeLorenzo: Our stance towards the world right now is that we're just a needle in a haystack. We have more work ahead of us before many people that should know about us will know about us. But we definitely feel that what we have to give to any audience that comes to see us is something very! special and uniquely of ourselves. We don't really have anything to do with the rock star syndrome. We want to present ourselves as people first, and in some cases, musicians second. What I think it is that really charms people about us is that we are the people on- stage that you talked to after the show. We are the same people. The real funny part of all this to me is that people who listen to the record, I think they have one impression of us, and then when they see us walk onstage, the first time they see us without playing, I think they1 go "My God, who are these three people? They don't look like they could have made the music on that record." Then they hear us and it's either more outrageous live and it jumbles their preception of the whole thing again. Then at the end of the show, if they have a talk with us, then I think it brings it to a new illusion. Daily: Are you going to put out more records on Slash? Gano: Oh yeah, we've got a lot of songs that we can do. We're going to hold off a little while from doing the second record until we can keep playing around a bit more. We want to have people get a little more familiar with" us. Then we'll put out another and another and another. And everybody'll be happy. Daily: And make MTV videos.. . Gano: Actually we have one. Daily: Which song? Gano: "Gone Daddy Gone."I Daily: What's the story line of the video? Gano: Well maybe you should just j see it. It's got a little story that goes with it, with all three of us playing dif- ferent parts.j Dynamki Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions By Gloria Steinem Holt, Rinehart, and Winston $14.95 By Jackie Young F or the first time, Gloria Steinem has pulled together some of her best and most well-known feminist essays, thank goodness. She has writ- ten a book which includes her cleverly convincing views on issues that people discuss in their living rooms and vote on in the voting booths. Steinem in- eludes her experiences as a playboy bunny; a campaign manager for Jackie 0., and activist, and a journalist with convictions. Gloria Steinem's first book outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions is an autobiographical ac- count of her life, a collection of biographies and an instructive manual on insightful, constructive thinking. Steinem, recently voted one of the 10 most influential women in the nation, is a journalist-editor-writer-feminist-ac- tivist who is part-founder of both Ms. and New York magazines. She curren- tly has a column in Ms. and travels ex- tensively as a feminist speaker. Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions is not only a book for feminists, it is also a history book. Its strength builds off Steinem's experien- ce as a political columnist/campaigner and her own charismatic, non- conformist perspective on issues which effect everyones life, yes, even men's lives. In the chapter entitled "Cam- paigning," Steinem profiles the famous politicians she has followed as a jour- nalist. This chapter is unique because it captures the weaknesses of the reverred, white/male presidential leaders that history books unrealistically teach young men and women to idolize. Steinem gives hope to those readers who never dreamed that they, too, might have the in- telligence, ingenuity, or stamina to run j for political office. She movinglyi illustrates how even these powerful leaders have very human flaws. More to come. In the piece called "Sisterhood," Steinem askes her readers to question Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Steinem: Views life's complexities the logic of sex roles which "convince I half the population that its identity depends on being first in work or in war, and the other half that it must ser- ve as docile, unpaid, or underpaid labor." In this piece she writes about years of self-inflicted pain, or "wasted, imitative years spent valuing myself and other women according to the degree of our acceptance by men-- socially, in politics, and in our professions." Of course, many women of the '80s would deny that they value their life (or their Friday nights) on the basis of whether or not they have some male calling them up every night. But the fact is that intelligent women do par- ticipate in such negative behavior. Steinem makes a good point when she says that women who imitate"masculine cultural styles" are self-defeating. She says that women can now become the men they previously wanted to marry, not by imitating them, but by having their own convictions as well as developing political viewpoints which grow out of their own femininity. "Sisterhood" is an important piece also, because it reveals how Steinem was awakened to the world of feminist' thinking.I "I realized how far that new vision of life was from the system around us, and how tough it would be to explain this feminist realization at all, much less to get people (especailly, though not only, men) to accept so drastic a change... But I tried to explain. God knows (she knows) that women try," Steinem writes. In "Ruth's Song (Because She Couldj Not Sing It)" Steinem digs back to her childhood in Toledo, Ohio, revealing her emotional ties to a feminist way of life. The story begins with Steinem recalling1 an uncle who gave up a successful job to become a farmer. The uncle, she writes, was the "family mystery." But as the story progresses through a series of flashbacks, it begins to deal with another mystery to the younger Steinem--her mother. This piece reaches an emotional in- tensity as she describes with adult un- derstanding how her late mother bat- tled mental illness and depression throughout Steinem's childhood. She sees gradually that her mother gave up her own career as a journalist and married a man who couldn't treat her as an equal human being. Even those who think they oppose feminism, if they have any sensitivity at all, will have to sympathize with Steinem here. All mothers and daughters should have a chance to share this work together and enjoy Steinem's quite simple realization that rings of hard- won understanding. "I still don't understand why so many, many years passed before I saw my mother as a person and before I un- derstood that many of the forces in her life are patterns women share. Like a lot of daughters, I suppose I couldn't af- ford to admit that what had happened to my mother was not all personal or ac- cidental, and therefore could- happen to me," Steinem writes. "College Reunion" and "Jackie Reconsidered" point out the irony of the woman who gains success through marriage. "Any First Lady, no matter what she does or doesn't do," Steinem says," is still more likely to top the lists of Most Admired Women than any woman. who has succeeded on her own.' Steinem's logic is in that women voted for Nancy Reagan more than they did for Steinem in a recent poll of the 10 most influential women in the country. Steinem- calls this phenomena "a social message that's especially painful for women who are encouraged toward personal accomplishment and ex- cellence, and then expected to subor- dinate themselves to children and a husband's career." Her use of a statement by an early women's rights activist, Susan B. An- thony, contributes to the historical nature of the book. In fact, it ties together the whole volume of her ar- ticles wh periods argume "Caut casting reputati can brin really i anything estimati in seaso pathies advocat ces," Su Reade writing Anthony rebellio "If ea that in I next day outrage justice, Rebel can be b acts' as needs p equality Studies bookstoi It is on Steinem Even Rights agree w (as well and stil fines of society' way of o social I disturbin Furth more th book, w your ou society, lifestyle Steine the core book shy anyone history 4 Weekend/September 23,f 19$3 ,-.. . . ... .. -. . .- -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ."- -. - ---- -- - -- - -