ARTS Tuesday, December 3, 1985 Page 7 The Michigan Daily r Records The Arms of Someone New Susan Sleepwalking (Office Records) Depressives have fun on their own terms, dammit. They get their own . toys to play with - alcohol, cigs, old letters to pore over - and they even get their own cultural icons. Munch and Van Gogh are the obvious role models in the painting world, but things really get exciting in the realm of music, what with the rich history of composer self-annihilation in the classical field and the very concept of the minor chord. To each his own morbidity-and- despair fix, whether it's through something pale and tremulous by Satie or the whole razor-blade-and- tequila singer-songwriter school of such desolation addicts as Leonard Cohen, Nico, Janis Ian, early Jackson Browne... The relatively brash nihilism of early punk soon eased toward the 'more binge-and-barf promoting melancholia of Joy Division, early Echo and other paranoiac pop bands, eventually veering off into the ,psychotic turf of Psychic TV and other death/art/industrial outfits for the benefit of the more severely disturbed fans of ennui. Wallowing in self-pity pressing the auto-restart every time the needle scrapes the disc center, pipelining that fatal fifth until face meets floor: it's a dirty job but somebody's got to do it, and there will always be musicians around eager to provide the appropriately forlorn soundtrack moods for your gloom. All of this is leading to the latest record that a chosen moody few of you can no longer do without, The Arms of Someone New's Susan Sleepwalking. 10 tracks. Two guys, Steve Jones and Mel Eberle. Their own label, their 6th release (not coun- ting the T-shirt). And Champaign, Illinois - something's obviously going on there of a seriously hap- *pening musical nature and it sure doesn't have much to do with the Elvis Brothers. This new release offers some of the most exquisitely down music I've heard since ... well, since last year's Arms of Someone New EP Burying the Carnival; which was the most dit- to since the Rain Parade's stylistically very different but equally sad/beautiful/mysterious Explosions in the Glass Palace. S Largely keyboard-based, Susan Sleepwalking is as pretty as the set- ting sun, but don't go looking for any new-day-dawning optimism. This is music of exquisite finality - when you're feeling four-star depression and morbidity and you know it's not just a "phase;" baby, it's THE WAY THINGS ARE. There's an odd air of contentment ot all this slow dissolve- and-fade fatalism, something slightly sweet, sickly, musty, diseased. 0 Here's some more descriptive prose from their press kit: "muted," "distinctive without being alarming" (eh?), "earnest," "dark, ethereal, moody," "lots of effects," "fed to you subcranially" (my fave), "so basically, well, ecumenical..." "progressive," "slow-tempo psych- out rockers," "acid-laced?" "not wildly ecstatic" (yep), "very spacey and swooshy," "a mood of quiet or- derly progress." Ghosts of Joy Division, Pink Floyd, Nico, Suicide and other sanctified Valium tranceheads pad down these musical hallways. Some specific sounds: Neutral vocals echoed unto infinity, the built-in emotional am- biguity of those tinny circa-'81 drum- box beats. Whale song-like wails on the eerie "Song for Krista." Philip Glasslike foundations of almost aggravating simplicity built into sur- prisingly delicate forms on "Karen Said." Lonely harmonica howls. The shiver-producing, too-beautiful inter- play of jangly guitar and spare keyboard/vocal lines on "The Fisherman." Sounds that can be curiously affir- mative in emotional effect yet still manage to call up images of somebody nodding off on heroin ("The Turning.") Spooky campfire strummin' along sounds, like on "Rainbows." Vintage 1980 Eurodeath sounds - you know, when even the guitar fuzz comes hard as concrete and about as sympathetic - a la such late we-want-to-scare-you-with-the- inscrutable types as Bauhaus on "Susan Slept Here." Sounds not dan- cey but boring. Not happy, but not gratingly arty-industrial or Windham Hillish tears-of-a-yuppie either. The sound of when hardly anything at all is just enough. The occasional sound of not tiuite enough, repetitive dirge-mood soundtracks to meander by: "With Louise," "A Turner Sky." The disconcerting sound of a speedup to something nearing conventional liveliness ("Seven Days from Now") - it works OK, but one doesn't expect even minor gear shifts from a band that generally stays (another press quote) "consistently within a kind of Gregorian-Zen format." A thick haze of organ chord, a strangled-baby backing vocal, a bell here, a general noodling around. Mostly just the sound of beautiful bone-dry melan- choly, the truly moody blues. Lyrics: "Panes of glass/enclosed the trees/several days/became by home." As they say in my hometown, "whuh?" As with most things vague and pretty and mystical in nature, like say Herman Hesse's writings or most religious rites, the best policy is: do NOT analyze. Skim the sur- face; it's probably deeper than what's underneath anyway. In other words, skip the lyrics. Near-ambient music that it is, Susan Sleepwalking could as well be retitled Music for Interiors - both architectual and of the mind. It's great, it's addictive, it'll scare un- wanted intruders away and invite the anxious concern of people you like. So draw the shades, double-bolt the door, turn on the answering machine, set the booze and sharp objects on the table (as meditation objects, if nothing else), turn the TV set onto the best all-static channel (sound off), put on the headphones, lay your head on your pillow and think those bad thoughts. Remember - you're young and fragile, you'll never be this pretty again, and if you wait until a few years from now to indulge your depressive side, no one will find it at- tractive. Susan Sleepwalking is available by mail for $7 from Office Records, P.O. Box 2081 Station A, Champaign Illinois, 61820, as well as at your more esoteric vinyl markets. -Dennis Harvey Jose Carreras French Opera Arias (Angel) Angel Records' recent release Jose CARRERAS: French Opera Arias highlights excerpts from the best of French opera. The record includes arias from Gounod's Faust, Romeo et Juliette, and Polyeucte, Massenet's Le Cid, Sapho, and Herodiade, and of course Bizet's Carmen. The Spanish-born Carreras is primarily known for his work with the great lyrical operas of the nineteenth century. In the early '70s he made a name for himself in Italian opera, especially in the classics of Verdi. Carreras' rich voice is well suited for these slow-moving arias of longing. The dark languidity of his voice lingers over each word with romantic intent. For the most part these selections don't give Carreras the chance to extend his voice as much as he is obviously capable of doing. Most of the arias are beautiful, and he does sing them with emotion, but aria after aria of songs about longing can easily blend each other, becoming monotonous. The stark ex- ceptions to monotony here are Le Cid, Romeo et Juliet, and Carmen. The refrain "O Souverain, o Juge, o Pere" in Massenet's Le Cid, is powerful and heartfelt. Carreras' voice expresses the emotions of defeat and faith- fulness. In the emotional "L'amour, l'amour" from Gounod's Romeo et Juliette, Carreras is at his best; one can almost see the balcony scene from Shakespeare's famous play. Un- fortunately, a slight nasal tone is ap- parent on some of the selections; the opening to Lalo's Le Roi D'Ys is especially nasal. Carreras is supported adequately by the Orchestra of the Royal House, Covent Garden. Jaques Delacote is the conductor. The music is solid and well played, but not too obtrusive to interfere with the spotlight on voice is excellently suited for these Carreras. French, romantic arias. 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