ARTS The Michigan Daily Friday, November 9, 1984 Page 6 The Gurus of Australian music bless Rick's cafe By Dennis Harvey The Hoodoo Gurus may be from that exotic land (defining the term 'exotic land' by the standard of impossible plane fares) Australia, but their music is an international-well, mostly an American-melting pot of influences. The fun foursome cover a whole range of musical styles on their appealling U.S. debut LP, Stone Age Romeos, from simple teen-dream crushed-love songs ("My Girl," currently topping the char- ts in various spots on other sides of one or two oceans) to big-beat '80's post- wave rock. Likeable as the album is, it leaves one suspecting that this band probably has a bit more grunge impact live than the poppy-clean production of Romeo allows. Plenty of that anticipated muscle was evident when the Gurus played at Rick's American Cafe on Monday. Star- ting off with the necrophilia anthem "Dig It Up" ("My girlfriend lives in the ground..."), the band played a smooth but exciting set that make good on their recorded promise, melding the Cramps (frequent jolly lyrical morbidity), the Ramones (garage-anthemic boy energy) and catchy pop melodies. The Cramps comparison is pretty valid given the camp-horror content of many Guru songs ("Hayride to Hell," "Leilani," "Death Ship"), but this band's ghostliness is strictly of the Casper variety, friendly and 99 % kid- ding. That affability lends consistency to what might otherwise seem a slightly schizo grabbag of song types, and the catchy-pop sensibility is what lifts them from novelty status. Monday's consistently entertaining set showed off the Gurus' facility in a tightly controlled but nicely roughed-up manner, making most of Stoneage Romeos' songs just a bit looser and more fully fleshed out. Dominated by album cuts, the show ws especially swell during the punchy "In the Echo Chamber," what was mysteriously dedicated to Larry Storch (Larry Hagman's pal on I Dream of Jeannie), "the groovy guru himself;" a great ex- tended "Tojo;" and the new song "The Other Side of Paradise," which exem- plified the Hoodoo knack for irresistible pop within a garage context, with its three-part harmonies and bigtime chord changes. The album's stateside single "I Want You Back" was likewise rootsy-cool, and fine showings were also made by "(Let's All) Turn On," "The Day Ar- thur Died," and the extended pre- encore closer "Leilani." Possibly the evening's best moment, though, was the sleekly melodic "Zanzibar," which is an effective enough diminished- tempo break on the LP but took on a remarkable beauty live, with a Byrdsy lead guitar providing the guiding note of swoony melancholy. The encore started off with a sole disappointment, a rather indifferent rendering of the LP's charming chart sellout "My Girl," but picked up with a fine boys-at-play "Death Ship." The Hoodoo Gurus provided no major revelations, but they delivered See HOODOO, Page 7 Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON The Hoodoo Gurus brought their Australian sounds to Rick's on Monday night. A recital you should'see Good friends won't leave you flat. Upon hearing the sweet, rich sounds flowing from the studio of acclaimed concern pianist Jerome Rose, I can only strongly recommend that you at- tend the recital that he will give Sunday evening, Nov. 11 at 8 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium. And even better yet, the recital is open to the public free of 'T-SHIRT CPRINTING] Ann Arbor's fastest! From 10-800 T-shirts screenprint- ed within 24 hours of order. Multi-color prirrting our specialty. You supply art or use our expert design staff. Hundreds of surplus T-shirts only $2. each. Located beend the Bind Pg Cafe 208' s Fi'sti Phone994-137 " C T 'V. charge. Rose, who has just recently joined the paino faculty of the School of Music as a visiting professor, is the recipient of many coveted international awards. He made his debut at the age of 15 with the4 San Francisco Symphony under the late Arthur Fiedler, and then at 17 he was accepted by Rudolf Serkin to study at the famed, Marlboro School of Music in Vermont. Further studies took Rose to Leonard Shure with whom he worked while he got degrees from both the Mannes College of Music and the Juilliard School in New York City. While at Juilliard he ws able to work extensively with the Juilliard Quartet. { This career took off even further when after graduation he won the Busoni Competition in Bolzano, Italy. Since then he has gone on to perform with all the major orchestras of Europe and with major orchestras in this country, under many well known conductors. This December, Rose will be a featured guest pianist on the "Steinway Hour" on National Public Radio. This summer he will also be in residence See PIANO. Page 7 d 7 tANN A,.I1 LYR lv. >.:,. :.:' t GEORGE CARLIN Eastern Michigan University Office of Campus Life presents George Carlin LIVE IN CONCERT! Sunday, November 18, 1984 8 p.m. Bowen Field House Tickets $10.00 reserved, $8.00 general admission. Available at QUIRK BOX OFFICE at EMU, M-F 12:30 - 4:30 m _______________________________________________ - (-, --,----~-