ARTS 'the Michigan Daily Saturday, April 13, 1985 Page 5 Joe' s Star' fades from Main ...doors to close for last time By Hobey Echlin OE'S STAR Lounge. The very name, J brings to mind the things that make it a veritable museum of Americana. The stained-red bar, the rich Italianate ceiling, the inviting row of Saturn- lamps, the vintage clock, the muddied red high-tops hanging on the wall. These are the images of Joe's. And af- ter a two-and-a-half years of existence and with a history chocked full of musical memorabilia, Joe's is closing it's doors. Tonight is the last night. . I spoke with Joe himself as he made banners heralding, the final closing. "When I first saw R.E.M., I knew they were different because when they came in they sat down at the bar and pulled out paperbacks," Joe recounted, filing through a wealth of anecdotes. "The first thing the Replacements did when they came in was ask for a beer," he adds comically in reference to the then Al under twenty-one band. Billy Bragg just wanted the directions to Hitsville (Motown's offices) after his show. And Joe brought the Femmes to Michigan before anybody had ever heard of them. Joe granted shows to such currently 'popular acts as Rain Parade, Beat 'Rodeo, Love Tractor, and the Three O'Clock. Chances are, if they're big now, they played Joe's when they nBut knowing Joe, it's no surprise. His involvement in the Ann Arbor scene 'goes far beyond a matter of business. ' You get the sense that he's talking about family as he wanders through his list of memories. His concern with the musicians he's come in contact with seems almost paternal, as he speaks of the Replacements maturation as a band and expresses concern in the Three O'Clocks relatively quick suc- cess. Joe's done everything from playing hardball with the MC5 to booking the 60's revivalist rockers Destroy All Monsters: "I'm not in this business to get rich and drive a Mercedes," Joe says with effective tritepess. Somehow, from him, I believe it. Coinciding with Joe's rootsy persona is the nostalgia of the club itself. Here is 'When I first saw R.E.M. I knew they were different . . . they sat down at the bar and pulled out paperbacks.' - Joe Timoni Owner of Joe's Star Lounge than aptly put, Joe. The building itself has been around since 1845 and has been a saloon since 1900. It's practically: a church. you've got to approach something with that kind of a history with a kind of reverence. Father Joe? Not really, but if you've been there you know what I mean. So as not to over-eulogize, if there hasn't already been enough already, rest assured that although thisis the end of Joe's on North Main, it is not the end of Joe Timoni. Joe plans to reopen within six mon- ths. Where? Who knows. The situation is still very nebulous. "You find an em- pty in Ann Arbor and I'm probably looking at it,"Joe explains. And so after Joe's last night tonight, featuring the resurrected Watusies, and Joe in tails and new high tops, the Star Lounge will be history. No more twirling fans that coil you right along with your beer. No more murals of silhoutted dancers that invite you to the dance floor. No more pony tail and Swatch to comment on. No more Joe's. No more grafitti-ridden bathroom, hailing everything from the Allied to R.E.M. No more unheated basement where many a young performer ner- vously found himself inself adulation as the crowd, giggily and entertained, files past the broad arch that hails the stage. -No more beaming and be- ponytailed Joe hailing a band back for yet another en{ ore. No more Star Lounge. A' bit melodramatic? Even more sentimental? Sure, why not. After all this is Joe's. You'll have to excuse me, I'm going to cry in my beer .... totally obscure Jodie Foster's Army. He notes that the booking of Jodie Foster was quite a switch from his reputation as a "hippie fossil" of the sixties. The fact is, Joe is one of the most open-minded people in the business, as Joe's quickly gained a reputaiton as the new music club. And all the while, Joe still found time for bands like the not your coked-up, slicked-over, disco throb of sexual imagery that so many clubs are adopting these days. Joe's is the kind of place you're really going to miss. There's an air about Joe's that sets it apart from the watering hole genre. It's not just the music or the drinking aspect by itself, but a whole mood, Joe explained. "Fuck Frankie (Goes to Hollywood), we've been saying 'Relax' for three years." More Heads up Civilian Fun Group guitarist, known only as Shaw, attempts to defy some ' simple laws of gravity. CFG will play tonight at East Quad's Halfway Inn. Raitt performs folk with aflame By Dennis Harvey BONNIE RAITT'S 10:30 set Thur- sday night at the Ark briefly threatened to turn Ann Arbor's cozy bastion of folk into something more cheerfully downscale and raucous - a honky-tonk joint curiously subdued by politely seated spectators, and the replacement of beer by Perrier and im- ported fruit juices. Raitt has been playing a lot in big bars of late, as opposed to the larger halls of her peak '70s days as a major label artist, and after an easily, only half-joking remark that she was "not used to playing for such a polite crowd," Raitt proceeded to ignore that fact and play a set that could just as easily have served for the liquor- swollen and swaying lot at Rick's. Bonnie Raitt 'is the quintessential great bar performer, at ease before any crowd, armed with a thousand bad jokes (well, not all bad) that somehow seem pretty funny when she says them, loaded with a Rolodex of classic songs that, to a basic blues/folk ignoramus like me, seem to have been pulled from the musical subconscious - the kind that suddenly make you clutch knuckles to teeth and mouth "Oh my Doily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY In the ultimately polite Ark atmosphere, Raitt warmed the audience with her spirited, bluesy folk. god!" with ecstatic recognition. Teamed with backup guitarist/bassist/singer Johnny Lee Shell (and local harmonica genius Madcat Ruth), Raitt played for nearly two hours, and it was all pure gold. People just before the set gave her earrings and shirts they'd made (which she dutifully thanked them for on stage), and the affection is understan- dable - like very few performers, Raitt is not only a first-rate talent but the brand of expansive personality that spells out "I AM YOUR FRIEND, NO SHIT" without any whiff of condescen- sion or calculation. If this wasn't 1985 and my political correctitude might be placed in critical jeopardy, I'd call her a great broad, the kind they have in mind when they write songs about lady truckdrivers and make movies starring Dyan Cannon. She's all zero pretense and good heh- heh rowdy humor without the kind of self-conscious naughtiness that generally makes me think I can't starld "off-color" jokes. (Despite all pleading, however, she would. not reveal the hinted-at unspeakably ob- scene Willy Nelson joke, begging off with the meager compensation of "I can't... but it's good...") Beyond her immense charm as a stage presence, of course, there's that voice, which can invest a ballad with the kind of weathef-beaten pathos Lin- da Ronstadt ought to get wind of (not that she hasn't had the opportunity, since they've recorded several of the same songs), then turn around and breathe the kind of stomping fire into a tune like "Love Me Like a Man" that reminds you why the church used to think the two most evil words on earth were "The" and "Blues." On the latter hand, Raitt delivered the goods and more on two songs she'd sung with Sippie Wallace at this year's folk festival, "Don't Advertise Your Man" and "(You Can Make Me Do What You Wanna Do But) You Got to Know How," as well as the more raucously bluesy "By Myself" and an R&B raveup written by Shell, off her Green Light LP, the name of which I didn't catch. On the ballad side ...well. Terrific though Raitt is in rock and blues idioms (in the latter she plays a damn mean slide guitar as well), my sympathies automatically gravitate toward her soft material. The 10:30 set confirmed her excellence as an interpreter of other people's songs because the choices were so essentially obvious but her singing of 'them was anything but kneejerk. Among the eternal sweepstakes to determine the Absolute Unbearably Best Cry-in-your-beer Sad Ballad Ever, it would be extremely hard to choose between such standards as "Louise," John Prine's "Make Me an Angel," Joel Zoss' "Been Too Long at the Fair," and Erick Kaz/Libby Titus' "Love Has No Pride," all of which Raitt performed impeccably. (I might personally tip the scale toward "Love Has No Pride," since in the history of Western civiliz- ation there cannot possibly be a song more traumatically all-for-love self- sacrificial; it's sort of the folk equivalent of the island maiden, nobly throwing herself into the volcano at the end of a '50s Technicolor epic.) All these songs have been done and done again, and their potential to turn soppy is pretty fat. But Raitt doesn't have to grapple for conviction; it's there from the first chord, even if a moment before- she was snowing us with comments like, "You've got to laugh at yourself sometimes. That's why I carry a pocket mirror." As long as she stays away from the disco 12-incher's, Bonnie Raitt can wrap her lungs around any old thing and it'll be A-OK in .my book. If you missed both of the Ark shows, you missed one of the most relaxed and exhiliratirig good times this burg has had to offer in recent months. Opening for Bonnie with a regret- tably brief set was Maine-based singer/songwriter David Mallet, who was originally scheduled to play alone Thursday, and graciously consented to share the bill when Raitt became available on short notice. Possessing a beautifully fluid, rich voice that breaks into a flutter on the held notes, Mallett is somewhat reminiscent of Gordon Lightfoot in the melodic prettiness and nostalgic melancholy of his songs. If it was, say, 1971, and there was still a market for such things, he'd probably be on some big label, making lots of money. Oh, well. His loss, our gain. The sentimentality of songs like "Livin' in the Best Years of Our Lives" and 'a pastoral ode to April is somewhat predictable, but there's nothing stock about Mallett's songwriting skill or vocal appeal. He seemed a bit abashed during the short 10:30 set - perhaps assuming (wrongly, from later eavesdropping) that the audience just wanted to get to Raitt as quickly as possible - but the five or so songs he played made one hungry for a return visit. THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 November Group-Work That Dream (A & M, EP) November Group is a Boston-based band centered around com- posers/singers Ann Prim and Kearney Kirby, with what has turned out to be a pretty transient lineup of supporting musicians. This belated major-label debut EP follows two previous EP's and several years of high but never quite fulfilled promise. Like many local acts who don't get the hoped-for con- tract when early energy and interest is highest, November Group may have 'been the band-most-likely-to for too long by now to get the hometown star- ting push this record needs. Though Work That Dream is good, it's probably not compelling enough to win the band :their overdue national exposure. Live, the band has always had a pun- chy edge, a funkier sound despite cen- terpiece Prim's rather chilly Thin White Duchess presence, but on record their energy has been rather too carefully studio-processed, with the ex- ception of their self-titled first EP's knockout "Shake It Off." The band is a curious amalgam in that sense-the mix of earnest white Gang of Four har- music housed within doesn't really make the connecting statement very clear. One suspects that Prim and Kir- by are awfully intelligent people just a bit forceably applying themselves to the business of creating 12-inch-worthy modern dance music when they'd probably better make the points they seem to want to make by other means. This doesn't mean that Work That Dream isn't enjoyable. Preceded by a theatrical half-minute synth-sym- phony, "Volker," the EP leads out from the starting gate with the very motivating bass riff and rhythm of the title song, which would do well enough on any dance floor in the land-the only problems (constant ones for this band, unfortunately) are the banality of the key lyric ideas and the ditto for the vocals and vocal arrangements. Neither Prim nor Kirby have par- ticularly good voices (just barely adequate, actually), which is a major liability given the less-than-unique nature of their music. This is less problematic on the for- ceful "Put Your Back to It," and new and improved version of a song first heard on the '83 Braineater EP, "Per- sistent Memories." Side two is satisfying juggling of basic synth- dominated dancepop with vague higher goals. There's no doubting the presence of real talent here, but it doesn't speak loud enough to make the unacquainted head turn around and take notice. What can you say about a smart band that keeps repeating things like "feel the heat" and "life is a fragile thing"? Not much but: sigh. -Dennis Harvey March of Dimes BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION SAVES BABIES HELP FIGHT BIRTH DEFECTS STATE THEATRE 231 S. State St. Daily 5:15, 7:20, 9:30 Sat. & Sun. 1:00, 3:10, 5:15, 7:20, 9:30 (COMEDY Needs tor *COMPANY Fal '85 Live EXPERIENCED1 i+ rr wlrrCOUPON i Im ~ wjith this entire d 1.00 lA off anv $4.00f ZI U WJUI Lill Z) Gt It III It; WiP .VV u .ir- ,-,. X E}-