The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 25, 1985 - Page 7 Records Captain Sensible - A Day in the Life ... of Captain Sensible (A & M Records) It's difficult to speak of Captain Sen- sible without noting that he was the bassist for The Damned, that seminal British group that had the timely being- in-the-right-place-at-the-right-time luck to release both the first (think back now) "punk" single, "New Rose", as well as the first such album, Damned Damned Damned. A friend accurately describes The Damned like this: "The first Damned album was the wildest thing I ever heard though now it sounds melodic. They never made any great claims to begin with so they never had to live up to anything; unlike The Clash, who evolved unnaturally, who didn't know how to assimilate musical sour- ces without going head over heals into them. The Damned had a silly sense of humor and hard-edged pop songs, especially on their Strawberries album. A powerful attitude, nice arrangemen- ts. They were never necessarily that inventive although they had a distin- ctive sound." The only time I have ever seen Cap- tain Sensible live was in London at The Damned's first anniversary show in the summer of '77. That program left me physically exhausted, completely soaked in group sweat, nearly hit in the head with a beer bottle, and almost deaf. Even so, I was completely con- vinced that this was the future and I and my new found friends raced out in- to the streets to track down the rumors of the Sex Pistols doing a surprise show, "somewhere". A Day in the Life ... of Captain Sen- sible is something else again. Produced by Tony Mansfield of New Musik, a group who were part of the synth in- vasion of '81, an invasion which in- cluded such subsequently successful groups such as Duran Duran, the album sounds just like a New Musik record with a new lead singer. Occasionally hypnotic, filled with lyric imagery of undersea life, dancehall ditties, and even depth charges here and there, the LP maintains overall textural con- sistency song after song. The songs range from nice, happy, and jovial (I really think Mr. Sensible should teach kindergarten music songwriting classes sometime), especially "There Art More Snakes Than Ladders" to cool tameness as in "I'm a Spider". Calypso steel drums are introduced in "Glad It's All Over", an album highlight. - Jeff Yenchek What are you smiling at? George Bedard and The Kingpins (pictured above) will be playing at The Blind Pig Saturday night. Stay tuned for a review of their new single. Private A ngst impresses at Pig 763-1107 (Continued from Page 6) is strictly up to the listener, and even then your're going to get an argument. There is just no tagging this band. And what can't be tagged can't be limited. This is Angst: three fun-loving caballeros having a good time and cracking some corny jokes while playing fifty songs where you'd be damn lucky to hear any two that sound anything alike. Their music is very private. Greg Gordon writes the band's material not for any commercial or political reason, but simply to embody human thought and experience through the sometimes lucrative medium of guitar, drums, and bass. And if I'm beginning to seem choppy and irregular, bear in mind that its only a journalistic application of the band's style and sound. It takes an open mind to appreciate what Angst is doing. Here's three good- natured guys, bordering on intellectual, who play music for the sole purpose of other people's enjoyment. They sure as hell don't take themselves too seriously, so there's no reason you should either. I mentioned open mind. Definition? How about musicians who list influences ranging form the Kinks, Captain Beefheart, and the Minutemen, to the likes of Hank Williams, marching band jazz, and King Sunny Ade. Wide open. And these guys have guts. They recorded their four-song sinle in all night sessions backed by their own fun- ds. They've risked almost certain discomfort at the hands of some nasty punk crowds who thought them too mellow to play at their leather fests. They'll play to a handful of friends with the same vigor as to a club full of paying customers. And they'll have a good time either way. As for the show itself, I wa pretty im- Oressed. The guitar is simple; a simple Vox amp providing some natural fuzz and scratch, but nothing else. Winding, whining, clanging, banging are words that might help you aurally imagine Surrealism r materializes on campus (Continued from Page 6) But suppose one thinks he saw surrealism at that weird party he went t last semsester, or in his Russian (istory professor's neck tie? Then he does well if he heads for University of Michigan Museum of Art where he can Cake a tour, free. aThe museum's docents know their surrealism, and like surrealist artists themselves, encourage the viewers to fteely interpret what is on display. Margaret Coudron, docent for January's Sunday tours tells her groups point blank, "Surrealist works are apt to be ambiguous," and so she always dhooses a broad theme around which the varying artists' pieces may be discussed, such as last Sunday's Throughout January there are free tours every Sunday on the subject of surrealism, which give a 45-minute overview of the exhibit. And on Tuesdays and Thursdays this month, docents lead "Art Breaks" from 12:10 to 12:30 on specific aspects and artist of the surrealist movement. Whether one is among the general public, part of a class, intellectually Curious, or simply an aspirant of true cool, he will want to keep some of kamrowski's thoughts in mind while viewing the exhibit: "(Regarding surrealism) I am reminded of B.F. Skinner, in that he talks so much of the internal and the external ... and as in Joyce's Finnegan's wake, there can be several layers of meaning." lift nikioE E'EnV w v, those sounds, varied as they are. It reminds me of XTC and Gang of Four, with some Ventures and R.E.M. thrown in to make it more unclassifiable. Dean Western's bass is not just a bass to him. He'll go into some impromptu "Space" (ala Grateful Dead), then be thumping and plucking his way through "Egoland" before you finish your beer. And before you start break-dancing, he'll be doing some fusion licks and some strummed-chord work to boot. And if a song calls for an organ-like sound, he'll do his best to make it sound like an organ. Hell, he'll even try tuba. Chris Tayler, the intellectual-type percussionist, is nothing short of loud. But seriously, his complex patterns of rhythm make him an anchoring force of the band's sound. On every song he keeps your attention by the sheer chaos of his style, but with an energy that definitely appeals to the caffeinated. Greg Gordon's lyrics are an array of feelings and experience, comically yet energetically expressed with music through the diversity of their fifty songs. The subtle absurdity of "Dogneeds", with its hoe-down fusion- like sound, shows the comic (if not war- ped) side of Gordon, while the implicit politics of "Egoland" show a vaguely radical element surfacing, and the smiling cynicism of "Humor" beautifully offsets the preconceptions drawn from the other two examples. The important part is that nothing at all dominates. The sound itself generally reminded me of too-loud early Pretenders and Elvis Costello, while the approach and lyrical style is echoed by such contem- poraries as the Violent Femmes, the Meat Puppets, Husker Du, and the Replacements. Before you start getting caught up in the comparisons, keep in mind these guys have been around just as long as the above mentioned, but with a much lower profile. And with that, the patron saints .of schizophrenia played to a handful of groupies and locals, as well as a few tipsy coats-and-ties, and left not one of them with a clue to their musical direc- tion, except maybe up. And that's the best part. Pool Speed Reading WEDNESDAYS 7-8:30 p.m W EDNESDAYS 7-9pm 2113-3120 $12/person $50/person Beer Brdg Appreciation WEEDAYS 7-9pm Ol Ol Thursdays 7-9pm 3/6-3/20 2/7-2/21 ,,,,,,I $20/person $15/person Aerobic Dance Winetasting Section 1: ADV., THURSDAYS 7-9pm MW3-4pm 31 1 37-3/28 Section 2: M W 4-Spm' 1/28-4/3 I ~ 1 $25/person Section 3: T Th 4-5pin 1/29-4/4 $25/person Yoga/Meditation Massage SectionU: M 7:30-9:30 ESDAYS 7-10pm 2/11-4/1 212-3/26 Section 2: T 7-9pm 25/person 2/12-4/3 $20/person Basic .onversation Skills for European Travel TUESDAYS 7-9pm 22-3/26 [D$18/person Ballroom Dancing MONDAYS 7-9pm 2/11-3/25 $28/couple Dream Interpretation . Z Section 1: lz 2/_2D21S 7-9 p.m. Section 2: HURSDAYS 7-9pm 15person Cross-Country SUNDAYS71-4pm 2/10-3/17 $2 5/person Registration JANUARY 21 thru FEBRUARY 6 Michigan Union Ticket Office Mime MONDAYS 7-8:30 p.m. $16/person ~ Financial TUESDAYS 7-9pm 2/12-3/12 $18/person Sign Language WEDNESDAYS 7-9pm 2/13-3/20 $ ,5/person Bartending Setin1:M7-9 p.m. Section 2: M 9-11 p.m. 2/11-3/25 Section 3: T7-9 p.m. W~1E Section 4: T 9-11 p.m. ~~2/12-3/26 $2 0/per son KINGS PRODUCTIONS UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Michigan Union; Kuenzel Room Monday, January 28 Singers 1-3 PM; Dancers 4-5 PM Instrumentalists & Specialty Acts 1-3 PM KINGS ISLAND American Heritage Music Hall Saturday, January 19,10-3 PM Sunday, January 20,10-2 PM Technician Interviews will be held at Indiana University in the Student Union-Alumni Hall on Wednesday, January 30 from 1-5 PM, and at Kings Island in the American Heritage Music Hall on Saturday, January 26; Sunday, January 27 from 12-4 PM (both days). ®- Singers. -Dancers Instrumentalists Technicians Variety Performers " $190-$270/week One round trip air fare will be paid to hired performers traveling over 250 miles to the park Contact: Entertainment Department, Kings Island. Kings Island, OH 45034 C Copyright 1984, Kings Productions,1932 Highland Avenue Cincinnati, Ohio 45219 KINGS ISLAND." KINGS DOMINION CAROWINDS " CANADA'S WONDERLAND GREAT AMERICA " HANNA BARBERA LAND Three Floors of Almost Everything!. r M -FTT 1st Floor Insignia clothing and gift items " Greeting cards " Calendars " Soft luggage * Paper e Office supplies " School supplies " Stuffed Animals " Candy " Refrigerator rentals e Cap & gown i 0 6 _4 i i i i i i i i i i i i i I oil iies Saw r ter' 2nd Floor Computers " Calculators * Telephones* Art supplies " Drafting tables " Mechanical drawing instruments " Lamps * Film " Photo processing " Picture frames " Professional texts * Professional reference manuals " Computer books " Software " Medical sup- plies e Lab coats - y I AM Ry llll'M' ,4" 3rd Floor Graduate course books a Undergraduate course books e Travel books " Foreign lan- guage books 9 Reference books " Classical records Backpacks "S _" ._ 1 _,_ 60