ARTS Sunday, September 30, 1984 The Michigan Daily Page 5 I An honorable Altman premier By Marlene Roth IT WAS 90 minutes of first class acting by Phillip Hall Baker. Secret Honor, Robert Altman's latest release, is must for anyone at all in- terested in political history, the Nixon years, or merely in seeing a powerfully dramatic solo performance. Not only did the film muse over Nix- on's ordeal, but it also ripped into Spiro Agnew, Henry Kissenger, and other cabinet members, vandalizing their characters. Secret Honor's technique is to let Nixon confess all the internal evils of his administration into a tape-recorder during an all-night rampage. Baker's thoughtful expressions and gestures along with his provoking monologue convey a believeable personality within a mythical character. Nixon is in his Library - the only set in the film - telling all to a set of video cameras and a desktop cassette recor- der. At times, Baker's delivery is a bit rambunctious but it is always com- pelling and of an intensity that leaves the audience emotionally drained. Nixon tries desperately throughout the movie to clear the record of his ad- ministration and to atone for his mistakes and inadequacies of the past. He speaks often of his battles as a young congressman, his work on the House Un-American Activities Com- mittee, the failed presidential election bid of 1960, and the successes and failures of his term and a half as president. After some preliminary confession, Nixon reveals that his political career started after answering an ad in the newspaper that called for candidates to be sponsored for their election to congress. The backers of this plan, the "com- mittee of 100" as Nixon nebulously refers to them, choose him and chart the course for Nixon's subsequent rise to power. During the course of the rambling confession, Nixon explains that time af- ter time, it was the committee of 100 that ordered him to perform certain ac- tions. And because the committee con- sisted of tremendously powerful businessmen, he was powerless to do anything but obey. These revelations and others turn what might have been a stodgy one- man show into a compelling mystery- yarn. And rather than seeing a crazed Nixon pitifully excusing his deeds, we see a man who sold his soul to others for their gain and his glory, glory that later became forfeit. Besides being an interesting film in its own right, Secret Honor has the distinction of being filmed on the University campus. Plan to stay-until the credits have rolled - not only did students take part in the production, but the music was composed by a University music school faculty mem- ber and performed by University musicians. Records Daily Photo by JEFF SCHRIER Fashion One of the wearable art forms displayed at a fashion show Friday at the Ann Aror Inn. Looking back: 20 years after free speech drive (Continued from Page 2) puses. Violence, too. In his quiet, bookish office today, Heyman remembers the constant threat of violence on campus. "So much was going on elsewhere that this looked like a much greater social movement... Stanford was taking it on the chin. Columbia was taking it on the chin; Wisconsin, Michigan and Washington, all over the place. "THERE WAS a sense of not knowing what the outcome would be." The momentum was awesome, and perhaps self-defeating. John Searle reflects, "By that time, you see, all kin- ds of commitments had been under- taken. The feelings were so intense. There was a kind of dynamic to a demonstration, so that each demon- stration had to be bigger than the last one to maintain the momentum and the enthusiasm." What bound the young people of 1965 together was predestined to unravel. "WHAT HAPPENED after 1965 was that two subcultures developed," Searle says. "One which you might call the hippie subculture, and one which you might call the radical subculture. People often talked as if they were the same. They were not.. . "I think they were both attempts to change the culture-in different direc- tions." tIndeed, there was a new kind of folk music in the land. Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez and others sang songs that echoed a vague discontent. Although he died in the 1950s, James Dean and Rebel Without A Cause were not forgotten. The year before Berkeley broke out, Timothy Leary left Harvard and became a rallying point for a budding drug culture. The slaying of President John Kennedy, and then of his killer, lent a notion of justice left GaDFREY HODGSON in his book America In Our Time, summed it up this way: "The schism between political radicals and cultural rebels opened very gradually. As early as 1965 the underground papers were already showing signs of boredom with political issues. In the same year (Bob) Dylan, admittedly always a pathfinder, turned from his political ballads to the smoke rings of his mind. Increasingly, those who were serious about political change became exasperated by the dreamy narcissism of those who sought a per- sonal salvation..." Searle, who found much to admire in the non-violent beginnings of the Free Speech Movement, says, "That gradually degenerated. . . the movement got much more violent, irrational as time went on." On the Berkeley campus, the Free Speech Movement decayed into the Dir- 4 The event, he says, signified that the schism was complete: "Two societies, two cultures, two myths glared at each other in total hostility, utter incom- prehension. And yet they were as alike as father and son." John Searle, in his book, The Campus War, saw the young middle class, brought up in a "warm, permissive, forgiving, child-centered style of home life," being tossed into a world for which it was not prepared. "THE CHARACTERISTIC organization of our society is not the cozy suburban household, it is the large bureaucracy," Searle wrote of the en- vironment the students confronted. "Take a close look, for example, at Form 1040 of the Internal Revenue Ser- vice: it is not a warm, loving, per- missive or forgiving document." But he says: "There was during that period a kind of general questioning of American values and aspirations and traditional American lifestyles. All of that was useful in a way. It forced a reexamination of a whole lot of assum- ptions, just to mention two: it is not an exaggeration to say that the women's lib movement grew out of those events, or that it did make a lot of difference to the rights of black people and minorities. In that respect, it was all for the good." NATHAN GLAZEIR was professor of sociology at Berkeley through the tur- bulent 1960s until he went to Harvard. In "Humanities," published by the National Endowment for the Humanities, he writes: "Commonly the president who had the misfortune to be at the head when the campus blow-up was fired: less commonly there were some actual changes in the governing pattern of the college or university." Black studies programs were established all over, although few sur- vive. Glazer says there were not enough competent instructors, nor enough interested students. ". . . THE BLACK studies movement has been overwhelmed-in number of programs, in student interest, and in the level and quantity of research-by the women's studies movement, a development that could not have been foreseen as emerging from the turmoil of student revolt and that gained its great strength after the movement had peaked," Glazer says. As for student involvement in the governance of the educational in- stitution, the revolt against what University of California President Clark Kerr called the mega-university, Glazer says student interest fell away in the 1970s, even when it came to the rnnrc.Oc.narl nlcc~at,41othe I ORflo The dB's - Like This (Bearsville) Most of us know the dB's, love the dB's. The thing is, not many of us know the dB's. It's a shame, because the dB's play as energetic and unaffected a pop song as is to be found these days, easily knocking over any antiquated ideas you may have had about what pop is. The dB's were formed in 1978 by Win- ston-Salem, North Carolina natives Chris Stamey, Peter Holsapple, Gene Holder, and Will Rigby. They moved to New York and estalished themselves on the club circuit, hoping to eventually land a recording contract. However, it was not in their stars that they would land said contract - in this country, at least. They took their aspirations elsewhere, eventually getting a con- tract with Albion in England. Their first two albums, Stands for deciBels and Repercussion, on Albion as imports here established them a strong cult following on both sides of the Big Pond and culled rave reviews. But still none of the American recording biggies were beating down the dB's doors for stateside contracts. After Reper- cussion, the band took a vacation from itself due to fatigue and internal ten- sions. During this break, Chris Stamey struck out for a solo career. After a while, it became apparent that Stamey's vacation was of the per- manent variety. That left a lot of dB's fans wondering about the fate of the rest of the band. Little did they know, our boys were regrouping and planning to record an album for a real live American record company. Bearsville records had signed them, saving their fans from having to fork over for another import album and giving the band a chance for some real exposure on their home turf. Thus finally we have the Like This, the dB's third album. It is yet another generous helping of everything that makes the dB's likeable - although ANN 5th Avenue at liberty St 761-700 with Stamey gone, there are some notable changes in the sound of the band. Like This often strays from the pure pop of the first two albums into rockier territory. This is likely due to the fact that Peter Holsapple, who used to share songwriting duties with Stamey, now writes all the band's material. Holsap- ple's tendency to cut loose a little more stands out particularly on the first cut, "Love Is For Lovers." Straight out, it has hit potential. It's only apt that it's the album's single: it's catchy, accessible, and sweet- tempered. It is the most 'studio' soun- ding track on the record, and although I would have liked it to have the coarser mix of previous dB's records, the sound may help it get more mainstream radio play. "She Got Soul" shows off the dB's important 50's garage pop influences with its wailing chorus and insistent beat. Although not as lyrically strong as I would have hoped, it's as musically powerful a song as I've heard from the dB's. "Spitting Into the Wind," on the other hand, is no frantic frug-party tune. It's dead serious and really sets off Holsapple's lyric ability - witty, warm, and slightly self-effacing. Holsapple's gift has always been for taking old pop cliches and twisting them just hard anough to make them into little parodies of themselves. It's this kind of ability that is necessary to keep pop sounding new. Segueing into "Lonely Is (As Lonely Does)", the album takes a turn for the slower. Holsapple has an aptitude for this kind of slow lament, and I'm happy to say that the expanded instrumen- tation shows off this song the way that similar songs on previous albums should have been shown off. An up-tempo country tune, "Not Cool", wakes -things up again and proves the band is true to its Southern roots. This and the following song, "Amplifier", shows Holsapple at his funniest lyrically.. "Amplifier," which originally ap- peared on Repercussion is here in a mix. It's about a suicide, but you'll be tapping your toes until you realize just what you're doing. The remix is a nice addition for those who own Reper- cussion and a nice surprise for those who don't. Side two kicks off with "A Spy In the House of Love," a song at times sur- prisingly Squeezeeque with great single potential. Holsapple raves through this song - he is having fun and makes it obvious. The lyrics don't have the punch the title implies, but the band more than makes up for it in enthusiasm. "Rendezvous" digs back into 60's rock. This album tones down a lot of previous"albums' psychedelic-influen- ces (which presumably left with Stamey) and stocks up on guitar pop. There's another good vocal and very sharp drum work from Will Rigby. I would fault the Todd Rundgren-ish synth solo towards the end of the song -maybe a cheesy Farfisa organ would've fit in better. For some reason the next track, "New Gun In Town," just doesn't excite me. Perhaps it's because the band usually has such a flair for making old reliable riffs new and that just doesn't show up here. There's nothing really bad about it, it's just been done so many times before that it grows tiresome. "On the Battlefront" is a surprising change for the band. An anti-war ballad which the vocals float over a steady snare beat and repeating guitar phrases. It has a misty, contemplative feel. It's a well-placed change of pace on the record and demonstrates the band's flexibility. Finally, we come to "White Train," a flagrantly shitkicking duet between Will Rigby and Peter Holsapple. They camp up their drawls to the point that it'd be funny even if they were reading the ingredients off a cereal box. The song is an affectionate send-up of country hymns and should elicit smiles from even the staunchist Yankee. It again firmly established the band's wit and the fact that they have enough af- fection for their genre to make it new and yet allow it to sound a little bit oW, too. -Julie Jurrjens -..m I - w k17 YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO A CAREER FAIR HOSTED BY EXECUTIVES AND RECRUITERS OF r DAILY 1 st MATINEE $2.00 7I - I I "Rare and Exemplary" -REX REED, N.Y. POST WENDY HUGHE'S He might hear you $ SUN 12:50, 3:00, 5:00, 7:20. 9:30 MON. 1:00, 7:20, 9:30 kT Date: Time: Place: Wednesday, October 3,1984 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Michigan Union - Pond Rooms "SEDUCTIVE" -NEWSWEEK A N OT H E R COUNTRY r. , U U 1. 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