ARTS Thursday, November 7, 1985 Genus XI7~ ?ditiowick up where '~" the Genus EditiOn y~~ghed o~X. j-j ~ NXu5iC~ NXu5iC ~ / The Michigan Daily Page 7 Basement bands hit Ass San Pedro spiritual brethren. Not to obscurity of the late '60s and the in- By Hobey Echlin INWHAT promises to be one of the INgreatest rock 'n' roll new music shows of our time, Sleep, Private Angst, and Crossed Wire make an un- precedented Ann Arbor appearance at East Quad's Halfway Inn this Friday night. Crossed Wire will open with an ex- panded repertoire, following the final mix of their new album Fall Through Morning. Featuring Chris Moore on vocals and lead guitar, Rob Mc- Cullough on rhythm guitar, Rob Mc- Cullough on rhythm guitar, Kurt Marshky on bass, and Bud Burcar on drums, Crossed Wire draws on the spirit of the Damned and their own musical background to produce an upbeat approach to music that com- bines the best elements of guitar- oriented rock and straight-forward rock in an all-around powerful ap- proach to original music. Vocalist Moore's songwriting ability, and the band's ability to pick up on Moore's guitar lines, whether it's Marchke's ecstatic bass line on "Sound Salvation," or Burcar 's machine-gun drumming on "Climb," is as refreshing as it is altogether strong. Truly a band of musicians, as creative as they are fun, Crossed Wire's Ann Arbor debut is not to be missed. Following Crossed Wire will be Private Angst, Detroit veterans with an ear for the diverse. Labelled by many as the Detroit version of the Minutemen, those who know better recall that Private Angst has been playing better music longer than their get too judgemental, but Private Angst's "Egoland"~ single, with its hellacious bassline and four-speed shifting tempos, was out long before the Minutemen had the chord shifts to "Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love" down. Besides playing numerous gigs in the Detroit hardcore scene, they have also played the Blind Pig and plenty of Wayne State University lunchtime shows as well. Greg Gordon's multifarious approach to music of all kinds is alone worth the price of ad- mission. But wait, there's more, as Sleep-longtime veterans of the Detriot scene who are now gaining a broad audience - combinee all the novativeness of the 'OS into an amalgamation of fervent rock 'n' roll, Sleep features the phenomenal Chris Girard, (Matthew Smith of It's Rainig calls him "The greatest guitarist in the world"). "In the beginig, rock and roll was a real physical and human thing, with real pounding drums, etc., no synth stuff, and we like to think of ourselves as con- tinuing that history," said Girard in an interview in last week's Weekend. Detroit's three best bands, rising from underground obscurity, hit the college scene full force, as Crossed Wire, Private Angst, and Sleep play the Halfway Friday night, and all for only three bucks. Featuring: 'Ubu Roi' runs tonight through Sunday at the New Trueblood Theatre; shows begin at 8 p.m. Tickets are $5, $3 for students and are available through the Michigan League Box Office. ~ Ubu' to slash and burn RPrmdise JAZZ CLUB The Bird of Paradise A nn A rbor's Only Jazz Club Located at 207 South Ashley 662-8310 LIVE JAZZ ENTERTAINMENT WJe're not just a nightclub. Come join us May-Friday, 5 P.M. -8 P.M. for * After work Snacks A LSO Wed.-Friday & Football Saturdays Live Music 5:30 P.M. - 7:30 P.M. By Seth Flicker. KATHER UBU is vulgar, power- I'hungry, and above all absurd. The central figure in Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi - a University Players production which opens tonight - is all too human. "The play is about all time, all agreed, all power, and all lust," said Barry Goldman, director of the :production. "It is very human." Father Ubu is an obese, selfish, and greedy mari who allows his wife to convince him that he should take over TPoland. With his mind clouded by _visions of power, Ubu begins to mur- der enemies and friends alike. Ubu's bloody, self-serving rampage is challenged only when he comes face. Ao face with the rightful heir to the 'throne. "The story is simple," said Gold- man, "but the story only serves as a vehicle of interpretation. The audien- cshould ask who these charac- ters are, where they are, and how *they got there." Jarry uses Ubu, who curses without restraint and eats in a slovenly man- * rr throughout the play, to caricature ,paltry men with lofty, self-centered ideals. "The play is vulgar but enter- taining," said Goldman. "The play [sbould shake up the audience." Whether they love the play or deeply dislike it, the audience will definitely feel something, added Goldman. The play is explosive art, he said. The movement of the characters is ,between animation-like and ex- *pressionistic, but very much like what you'd expect to see in puppet theatre. .Kind of like Punch and Judy.. 7" The stage is an arena for amusement and murder," he said. Ubu Roi is one of several plays that Jarry wrote using Father Ubu as the central character. "(Alfred Jarry) was an incredibly strange but knowledgeable man," .Goldman said of the playwright. "He was a prolific short story, poetry, and song writer until his death in the early 1900s ...He's very much like Kurt ,Vonnegut -~ dry, witty, and pointed." Goldman, an actor, director, and teacher of theatre, studied mime in Paris and was an active member of the Children's Theatre Company of Minneapolis. --~ ~~ ~ -~~ R SCI 'I? ~ ~ W ..~ ~owadaYs (and ~10~anigWtS) t1~e 1~ig Mall On CampuS ~s t~xe one ~itb~ tlYe ~~gge5t collectioll of Trivial ~ card setS. So Yxere are si~ more echtionStO pursue. ~ 13ab~i 130omer ~d~lO~~om f~ise~owerto IF yower power. sslxver Screen Editi~ -k tOfl of ~jtilXatfl~~ TinSeltoWfl trWia. 's your chance Sports Ed~tiOw~er AXX~Star ~nS artificial turf. to knOCk a 30~~( right 7. BLOOM COUNTY c~a. I ceV~\*