0 0 OCMDY __ Alarm, or, on occasion, Bono Vox of suct *Lampoon in the limelight- By Alan Paul Second City Touring Company Saturday night The Michigan Theatre 8 p.m., $8.50-10.50 J oyce Sloane has a unique perspective on campus life. She knows what makes students laugh. Sloane has worked for the Second City Comedy Company for 25 years and founded the National Touring Com- pany in 1967. "Campuses are very visibly more conservative now," Sloane said. "We have a song called 'Much Better Off' which is a parody of Reaganomics. College students don't laugh at it anymore.' However, the Company, which will appear at the Michigan Theatre on Saturday, November 9, still takes chances. "We have a song called 'America' which is an Up With People type of parody. It really goes after student apathy. Sometimes it doesn't go over - maybe it hits too close to home. But we still usually go with it." Second City, which began in a Chinese laundry in Chicago in 1959, created an art form whose impact on theatre, television, and performers is still strongly felt. Clive Barnes wrote in the New York Times in 1969: "The entire recent tradition of American theatrical satire can be summed up in three words: 'The Second City!"'. Alumni include: Alan Arkin, Dan Akroyd, John Belushi, Bill Murray, Gilder Radner, Joan Rivers, and John Candy as well as scores of writers, directors, and other behind-the-scene figures of all aspects of the perfor- ming arts. Chris Barnes, 25, is inspired by the high success rate of alumni. Barnes has been a member of the National Touring Company for a year. "It's very exciting," Barnes said. "This is very valuable training in im- provization and learning what people laugh at." On this, the 25th Anniversary Tour, the Company is using material en- tirely from previous shows with the exception of the improvisation, which is largely based on audience suggestions. "We are doing material performed and written by the most brilliant people in this business," Barnes said. "This is the greatest experience I could ask for. Every night, we have no clue what's going to happen. We don't know what the stage, the lighting, the audience - anything - will be like." Second City mirrors what is hap- pening in today's political and social arenas. They lampoon our modern lives. Great* Scots 'It's a challenge to sell a million records or more and do it with dignity, style, and grace. . . to do it with music that doesn't patronize, doesn't condescend, doesn't tranquilize.' -Jim Kerr vocalist Simple Minds By Michael Fischer SIMPLE MINDS have "Promised You a Miracle," and they're coming to deliver it this Monday evening. The ambitious Scottish quin- tet, stepping out onto the concert cir- cuit on the heels of their single "Alive and Kicking" and a new album, Once Upon A Time, will share their unique vision and sound with Ann Arbor beginning at 7.:30 p.m. at Hill Auditorium, Monday night. Leader Jim Kerr and company, af- ter years of superstardom in Europe and Australia, seem poised to finally achieve a breakthrough of popularity here as they travel about the U.S. and RECORD REVIEW 'Once Upon a Time' THE SECOND CITY TOURING COMPANY: Only the dog isn't wearing sunglasses. "We have one foot on the stage and one foot in the street," Barnes said with a soft laugh. The touring com- pany is on the road all year long, fall and spring being their heaviest seasons. The troupe appears mostly on college campuses, which they find harbor the most receptive audiences. Despite political conservatism, students remain "loose" crowds - ready to laugh and have fun, accor- ding to Barnes. "There is really something thrilling and gratifying about making people laugh, whether it's 2,000 or 14," Bar- nes said. "The laugh we give is good and strong, not cheap." Everyone who works for The Second City remains a member of its growing family of comedians and satirists. Going away parties are regularly held for departing actors. "It's more than a job, it's my life," said Sloane, who recently bought into the Company. "When you devote 25 years of your life to something, it's very special. It's very rewarding." Barnes echoes these sentiments. "It's like being part of a family - not a theatre company. We (the Touring Company) have a good chemistry which is very important on stage. We really like each other, which becomes very apparent on the road." Simple Minds' New LP, Once Upon A Time, continues in the Scot- tish band's tradition of unique, ex- cellent albums. It shares the sub- tlety and inspirational warmth of New Gold Dream (81-82-83-84) and the expansive, fiery testimony of Sparkle in the Rain. The Band seems more at home in the grooves here than on either of those previous records; the feel is relaxed and totally confident, yet inspired. The band works up a whirlpool of sound, mixing bright, sharp guitar lines, smooth keyboard textures, and eclectic drums, putting the elements together with skill and a keen sense of space and timing. There is an elusive soul beneath these musical elements; the colorful sounds formed by the band find meaning in the imaginative visions of lyricist and singer Jim Kerr, who has brought his ideas closer to earth without sacrificing his unique spiritual power. It is the fusion of Kerr's images and the band's newly focused sound that makes Once Upon A Time Simple Minds' best album yet. The new album is a collection of complete and fully realized songs. The opening track, "Once Upon A Time," kicks from the very start with cool drive as Kerr moves into his world-view with his best singing to date: Get up to the Mountain top / I'm going to drop unto the ground / that's Once Upon A Time / You raise me up when I know you're around / And God only knows / What God only knows. Charlie Burchill's rising guitar lines point "All the Things She Said" skyward as Kerr asks his love to Throw me to the street where the heartbeat's beating / To the peaceful revolution and the perfect wave / Surround me / Tell me 'bout the ocean moving in slow motion / I see it glitter in the sun then it's freezing in the moonlight. But Kerr tempers his romantic caprice with some necessary social commentary in "Ghost Dancing," where he rises above Burchill's locomotive guitar strums, telling a tale of political strife: The car pulled up / The girl she jumped in/the Boy he wore a medal that was shining from his skin ... / ... When the car broke / The rebels saw smoke / And they all went to heaven in a stupid fan- tasy. See NEW, Page 9 Canada on a 17-date tour which began on October 31 in Poughkeepsie, New York. The stage for imminent popularity on this continent was set this spring by the smash success of their single from the soundtrack of the Breakfast Club, "Don't You (Forget About Me)," which became the band's first hit on the U.S. pop charts and went all the way to number one. After making eight respected albums, "Don't You" - co-written by Keith Forsey, who composed the soundtrack - was only the second non-original song the Glaswegians have ever recorded. Ironically, Universal Pictures reportedly complained about For- sey's selection of Simple Minds for the soundtrack, saying that Forsey should choose a more sellable band. It seems appropriate, however, that a group so recognized for the cinematic style of its music should find success with a film soundtrack. Their albums have been described as "mini- soundtracks" full of visual images, and Kerr has said the band's sound is "big-screen." S IMPLE MINDS make music of vision and attitude that is rare in the world of pop music. Last year, Kerr told Rolling Stone that "it's a challenge to sell a million records or more and do it with dignity, style, and grace ... to do it with music that doesn't patronize, doesn't con- descend, doesn't tranquilize." The first thing you notice about their music is just how far on the other side of the spectrum it stands from the work of performers like Motley Crue and Madonna. Kerr's impressionistic lyrics challenge your imagination, as does the group's sound, which eschews rock cliches at every turn. Yet for all their arty aspirations the Minds rarely appear pompous or overstated like The U2. Kerr likes to compare his band with artists such as Peter Gabriel, the Talking Heads, and U2. The artists he likes are "people with a sort of in- tegrity that you can see pours out of them, instead of careerists," Kerr said in an interview with.CBC Radio this year. "To me," he added, "great music has a - I don't know what you'd call it - humility, I suppose." The group defies classification almost by nature; they change the style of their music with every record, in order to challenge them- selves. They're too powerful and proud for Duran Duran's neat-O "new wave" set, and too precious to be called rockers. Spiritual themes often run through the Mind's ethereal songs. The title track from the new album proclaims: You raised me up when I know you're around/And God only knows/What God only knows. 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