M qw mw w Mw w RW V qw _W -I I N T E R V I E W been known to cover, but given the fact makeup or do our hair, or anything like community among L.A. bands? that things started pretty late, that. It doesn't work that way with us. Susanne: Yes, there is a very big necessitating a fairly compact set (as it Susanna Hoffs: You see, they wanted sense of community. We're all good was, the Bangles finished at ap- us to be Patti Smyth's backup band friends. We all met right around the proximately three minutes to 2), it was (laughs), and since we refused. .. They same time because Steve Winn was only fair that they should essentially couldn't force any images on us. They working at a record store, Steve from g ut a r Hlimit themselves to their recorded had to accept us for what we are.. the Dream Syndicate, and we were all material. They did every song off the Daily I: But you'd so look good in putting out records on our own labels exhilerating EP, and the majority of warpaint... We put out our own 45, and the songs off All Over the Place, many of Susanne: I know. That's what they Salvation Army (band whose members " which sounded even better in their rawer thought, but... eventually mutated into the Three e r So live context-particularly wonderful was Daily I: I have to ask you about the O'Clock and the Eyes of Mind) had that the LP's new single, "Going Down to Rainy Day album. (LP of '60s and little single, and the Dream Syndicate Liverpool." traditional tunes recorded by Hoffs, had that thing on Down There, which If they aren't quiteas garage-loose in Peterson, and members of the Dream was their label. We all started hearing T HE BANGLES made their belated concert as one might ideally like, they Syndicate, the 3 O'Clock and the Rain each other on the radio, and were appearance in the area on October certainly have unpretentious fun. Parade, released last year.) How did thinking, "Wow, we should all do a 17 to promote their debut album, All Drummer Debbi, especially, looks as you get involved in that? show together with these bands," so we Over the Place-not at last Tuesday's endearingly happy as a member of The all started playing together, and we all Michigan Theatre Flock of Seagulls Archies. If any faint vestige of the sort Susanna: Well, David Roback (Rain became friends. concert as originally planned, but as of sex-kitten association idiots always Parade) is an old friend of mine; I'VE Daily I: What kind of play and press headliners at Detroit's St. Andrews try to dump(admittedly, often with a lot KNOWN HIM SINCE I was ten years response are you getting abroad? Hall. of help from the bands themselves) on old, he was the first guy that I was in a Susanna: Well, we're going to. Panting male delirium was pretty all-girl groups is here, it emanates a bit band with. Those were songs that we England, France, Holland and West much the order of the day near the from Susannah Hoffs, whose vocals are used to play in our old band together, in Germany in January. stage among the rather small Wed- even more meltingly sweet live than on Berkeley-it was called the (unin- Daily I: Any initial response? nesday night crowd, but the Bangles record, but who perhaps casts her eyes telligible) Conscious. So then after the Susanne: Very good. "Hero" (first surpass the usual girl-group tags (i.e. sideways in coquettish glances at whole L.A. scene started happening, he single off the album) was just released. the old "Sure, they're cute, but can audience members rather too much for called me up and said, "Do you want to We're big in France, a lot of the L.A. they.. .") as easily as they evade sim- comfort. record these songs?"-really low- bands are big in France. ple categorization in the burgeoning After the show, however, the Daily key-"Come down and visit." Daily I: How much had the band L.A./neo-'60's music scene they went backstage to chat with the band, played out when the first single was emerged from. and Hoffs was so nice that we felt awful Daily I: Was that released on Fron- released? ("Getting Out of First forming as a trio in 1981 under about ever having thought anything bad tier or Enigma? Hand"/"Call on Me") the name The Bangs (they were later about her. Daily associate editor Den- Susanne: Um, Enigma, yeah. Now Susanne: A lot. We didn't get very forced to come up with an alternative nis Harvey and Daily arts staffers Ben- It's on Rough Trade, and (Dylan's) "I'll good gigs, though. Until we released literally overnight when it was jamin Tobin (identified as Daily II) and Keep It With mine" is the A side of the the single, until Rodney Bingenheimer discovered an East Coast outfit had Nichole Kavesky (Daily III) had the single that was released in England. started playing it every weekend, we copyrighted the name, and wanted a following somewhat diffuse and Daily I: That's beautiful. That's my were playing the worst dives you can rather extravagant cash outlay in frequently interrupted conversation favorite vocal of yours. imagine. On Monday nights, you know. return for the use of the name), drum- with Susanna Hoffs and Vicki Peterson Susanna: That's mine too. . . it was really bad. Then we started mer Debbi Peterson and guitarists about the L.A. noe-psychedelic scene playing the good places, like the Susanna Hoffs and Vicki Peterson went and other points of interest... Daily I: What was it like working Whiskey-A-Go-Go. against then-musical fashion from the with Michael Quercio of (lead singer of Daily I: Would you ever want to start, writing neato pop ditties and Daily I: Do you get any sort of image the Three O'Clock)? He's one of my record cover versions on LPs or B- singing three-part harmonies more thrust on you as a new band on a major gods. They got signed to IRS, didn't sides? than a little reminiscent of the Beatles, label? they? Susanna: We do, we did "Live" and with a lot of other cool reference points Vicki Peterson: We don't get any Susanna: Yes. Michael is a good "Going Down to Liverpool." thrown in for balance (The Mamas and image thrust on us. No one tells us what friend of mine. Definitely a god. Daily I: Who originally did "Going the Papas, The Seeds, Love, et al). to do, or wear, or how to wear our Daily I: Is there a real sense of Down to Liverpool"? An excellent independent single, "Call On Me/Getting Out of Hand," at- tracted attention around L.A. and elsewhere while the band searched forl a bassist. Annette Zilinskas filled the bill for a while, long enough to record the terrific fice song EP The Bangles,w released last year on I.R.S.; but those- mysterious things that often happen inT bands, "creative differences," even-s tually resulted in her departure and the entrance of Michael Steele, late of those infamous '70s "Queens of Noise," The Runaways-who may well have been the most legitimate American all- v female rock band prior to the Bangles. After Steele joined the band over a year ago, the big deal came through,r and the result-All Over the Place,+ produced by the always excellent David Kahne for CBS-is about as happy a, mixture of pop and rock, of nostalgiaY and full-steam-aheadness, as anyu record (certainly any by a new band). released this year. In concert, the Bangles indeed seem like a slightly slicked-up version of what one imagines the Runaways might have been like in concert If anything, their appearance is a bit too dressy (too many, excuse the phrase,; bangles draped around them), but the playing was pure glorious hardpop grunge, with their terrific.harmonies (four great voices in one band! count5 'em! although Steele doesn't sing much) providing the icing. A minor disappointment was the The Bangles: (From left) Vick Peterson, Debbi Peterson, Susanna Hoffs, and Michael Steele general lack of oldies that the band has 6 Weekend/Friday, October'26, 1984 M o V I E 'Razos. blunt The Razor's Edge Directed by John Byrum Starring Bill Murray, Theresa Russell, Catherine Hicks, and James Keach By Dennis Harvey T HE NEW FILM version of W. Somerset Maugham's The Razor's Edge is a glossy Cliff's Notes summary, vulgar enough to have the effect of parody. Whether that effect was intentional or not can only be an- swered by Bill Murray. In perhaps the most perverse career-damaging move by an actor in years, the comic ap- parently consented to one project Hicks and Murray: Puppy love (Ghostbusters) only on the condition that he be allowed to do this one, much of Hesse, hold up very well as a mucked up in execution, is best glibly Remarkabl Drastically ill-conceived, this literary mystical-inquirer after the summarized by the press release: have been] Razor's Edge is never quite boring, or reader passes a certain age. I couldn't Larry Darnell (Bill Murray) is a man you dare) simply bad--it's so far from whatever say. But he certainly can't be as silly as obessed with finding some meaning in Livingston mark it was aimng for that it exerts a this new film, in which the spiritual life after witnessing the horrors of Pasolini's peculiar fascination, Tower of Babel questing is absurdly sketchy (after World War I. He has returned home to original 194 quality of extreme misunderstanding. fruitless treks to World War I, his beautiful fiancee and is offered a Power. I haven't read the original Maugham bohemian Paris, and India, Murray's high-paying job with an established Costumes novel since 8th grade, but at the time it character suddenly seems to have found stock brokerage house. Yet there focus do n seemed (dimly as I can recall it) a a profound inner strength while selling remains a spiritual and philosophical either. You touching epic of the search for higher fish in a European marketplace), and void in Larry's life which wealth and hand, reve meaning--a philosophical adolescence, the surrounding domestic squabbles security cannot fill. Leaving behind the custom anc gracefully written. are soap-operatic. economic prosperity of post-war parade on' Perhaps Maugham does not, like The story, since it appears so horribly America, his friends and his family, dress. Larry travels first to Paris on a The Raz pilgrimage which ultimately takes him Natural N to a monastery high in the Tibetan World War mountains, where he seeks spiritual 'vaudeville, enlightenment of a higher order. Years tears. Bol later, his mind and purpose clear, he aparently vi returns to Paris, where he is forced to smods and confront the people and problems still croissants unresolved from his past." Murray's g The unresolved problems center garde mind: around Larry's relationship with a trio and rats w 4rof Hometown, U.S.A. buddies: war-pal fiancee bac £ Gray Maturin (Stacy Keach), who for the sanit settles back into post-combat family and Photogra business in the U.S.; ex-girlfriend Razor's E Isabel (Catherine Hicks), who starts swoonily pa: out as a sweet young thing and winds up PIECE the vaguely embittered in a loveless did--as if the marriage to Gray; and Sophie (Theresa as it was liv Russell), whose fall to Parisian ce there's alchoholism and whoring after the ac- behind it), b cidental deaths of her husband and Later, w child is temporarily stalled by an af- pilgrimage fair with Larry. sodizes in Spiritual revelation has rarely been beautiful la the stuff of good cinema--one could briefly b make a case for bits in, say Ingmar travelogue. Bergman or Carl Dreyer, but certainly visual scale Hollywood has never gotten much the drama i closer than widening eyes uplifted in we to make ecstacy as the sun bursts from behind in the Hi clouds and Max Steiner pillages the headgear wi "Hallelujah Chorus." look like a St One needs a slow, spectral touch to The '60s' bring off this sort of pop-mystic film; Farrow and very few English-language efforts have of Biblical achieved it in the last decade. (I can People app recall only partial successes at best, of Diane K like Conrad Rooks' Siddhartha and Russell and Murray: She wasn't bad ... Peter Brooks' Meetings With See Weekend/Friday,