ARTS t 9; The Michigan Daily Tuesday, November 4, 1986 Sonic Youth, Firehose By Mike Rubin Sunday night at the Blind Pig, SST label-mates Firehose and Sonic Youth combined (literally) to burn the crusty old bar to the ground, kick down the smoldering remains, and send several hundred pleased patrons scurrying through the streets of Ann Arbor with wide smiles on their faces and scars on their ears. The dynamic performance of the Sonics should come as no surprise (despite the Pig's thumbnail-sized stage) to anyone who saw the New York band on their most recent tour. Ripping through nine songs (five of which are on the new E V O L album, plus the new scorcher "White Cross," and chestnuts "Brother James" and "I Love Her All the Time") in a one- hour performance, the band used weapons as varied as a dozen guitars (all tuned to different tonalities) and a monster ghetto blaster (kicking out Janet Jackson's "Nasty Boys" between songs) to inflect hearing damage and simultaneous pleasure upon the sardine-packed audience. More surprising was the Sonics' encore and the first area performance of Firehose. Just a year and. three days ago, George Hurley and Mike Watt were on the same stage with D. Boon as he bounced like a hydraulic jello mold in the Minutemen's last Detroit perfor - mance. Today, Boon lies buried in San Pedro, California across the street from where he and Watt grew up together, after a tragic auto wreck took his life last December. Sunday night, Hurley and Watt shared the stage with Ed Crawford, a 22 year old Toronto, Ohio native, who six months ago was a busboy in Colombus. Wearing more denim than John Cougar Mellencamp's ancestral line, the new guitarist found himself on stage along with the other two members of Firehose and Sonic Youth for an encore, tearing through versions of Sonic Youth's "Star Power" and Blue Oyster Cult's "The Red and the Black." How did thisR mildmannered guy (who claims as his influences The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Police, and U2) go from wiping grease from dishes in Ohio to wiping sweat from his brow on stages nationwide? "After D. Boon died, I heard that the Minuetmen were auditioning guitar players from the guitar player of Camper Van Beethoven when they were in Columbus," said Crawford after Sunday's show, "I basically just called Mike out in California, not realizing that he wasn't really looking to keep the Minutemen going. He was nice, but he just wanted me to send him a tape. I told him that I'd be in L.A. in a week and that I'd give him a call. I figured that if there was any chance to try out for the band, I had to go for it." The next week in L.A., through a combination of multiple answering machine messages and curiosity, Watt gave Crawford a tryout. "There was chemistry right from the start," says Crawford,"I had never been in a band before, but somehow it clicked. Mike gave me a tape of four demos from a project called 'Dog' that he'd been working on, asked me to try adapting them and to write some stuff of my own. That worked out, and we started gigging around L.A. for four months. There was some apprehension at first, since no one igmte knew how I was, but people. re very receptive and very glad -0See Mike and George still playing Live, Firehose square-danced with Boon's ghost, stopping, starting, parrying, and thrnaRng through 17 songs, includingkir Minutemen tunes. "We'll al S4 some Minutement songs 1I* ," explains Crawford, "It's only °to the Minutemen fans, and th srio reason not to. Most of our rr ial will be our own, Firehose' md not the Minutemen's. We;:re different bands. We have oir own record coming out on SST. in December, and we'll be totUing again in these parts next ear around March." Crawford says he has fit in com - fortably with the more experienced Hurley and Watt: "We all share the spi f ,f adventure. We all ovepfty terribly- we're not a three.1 e jazz trio. What we're doing=?- a natural kind of growth froU the Minutemen. The guy.s are r1y great to me; I sleep under Mike's desk in his home. There's ju' a real chemistry. We're having some fun now." Daily Photo by DEAN RANDAZZO Guitarist Thurston Moore and the rest of Sonic Youth gave an energetic lesson in innovation Sunday night. They were joined by the new band Firehose. Glass displays brilliant diversity By Rebecca Chung driving, primeval, rhythmic mas - and the resulting mellowness very sphere..."), which will be called terpiece, "The Funeral" from the noticeable. something that's "a Hopi word that .. . mt - _i_ __I A _ m -In -.h n n P.f rm of l e d it Philip Glass is a genius, and his music is very enjoyable. Really. Anyone who went to last Saturday night's concert of the Philip Glass Ensemble at the Michigan Theatre knows this. What was most astonishing was the incredible range the ensemble covered. Musically, they went everywhere: an awe-inspiring, Arm - ageddon-like prelude from the CIVIL wars: a tree is best measured when it is down; a carnival burlesque complete with "bassoon" (played on Glass' synthesizer) in the Dance No. 9 from a piece composed for the Twyla Tharp; two"jazz"' pieces (the labels are all generalizations and cannot hope to be completely accurate), one "The Building" from the opera Einstein on the beach, and the other "Facades" from Glassworks ; and a opera Aknathen. But the diversity went far beyond mood. Glass' ensemble, made up of four synthesizists (one of whom was Glass and another of whom also sang soprano), three saxo - phonists (two of which doubled on flute and piccolo), and a sound engineer (who was listed with the other musicians on the program and sat onstage), also created new limits in color. Glass seems to favor bright sounds: soprano sax, piccolo, high voice, the upper end of the synthesizer. But even these, often played loudly and at high pitch, had range. One could hear "sparkle," "tinkle," and even "glitter." He also likes pungent, edgy sounds, like super-oboes; in "Facades," which was refreshingly less complex than his other works, the edge was gone The only real drawback to the concert was the sound level, which was always pushing excessive, and became exceedingly so in "The Building," an elusive work because of its less obvious tonality (major vs. minor). But beyond this, there was no reason for complaint, and the threestanding ovations and encores were well-deserved. After the stage crew began tearing down: the set, Glass came out and sat on the edge of the stage. Friendly and accomodating, he answered questions and signed programs. He also dropped some exciting news: he is working on a sequel to the film Koyaanisqatsi ("It's the same kind of frame - work...but the film is different...It's about the impact of the industrial world on the Southern Hemi - means whe IUIII LLL consumes another." There will be a live Koyaanisqatsi concert tour beginning next fall (which may come to Ann Arbor), a recording of Akhnaten will be recorded within a year, and Northstar will be released on compact disc. More general questions included two which must come to the mind of anyone who has ever listened to his music. "Why arpeggios?" asked a certain naive reviewer for a major student newspaper. "...it's a way to articulate rhythmic and harmonic ideas at the same time."~ "What do you think of the criticisms you get from composition professors?" asked a music major, probably worrying about his own career. He replied "I never meet them." Hmmmm.... SHIPPING OVERSEAS? Malaysia * Nigeria " Thailand Kenya 0 Iraq * Iran * Europe South America o Middle East To Over 100 countries Worldwide SHOPPING FOR OVERSEAS-' Televisions, VCR's, Cameras, Stereos Trunks and Luggage '4 Major Appliances and Smal/ Housewares 220 Volt 50 Cycle Our Big gest Sale Ever! (call for details) ABACO INTERNATIONAL SHIPPERS, INC, 1-800-621-4504 2020 N. Racine, Chicago, IL 60614 NOTICE TO ALL LSA STUDENTS Your college government, LSA-SG is conducting its annual elections on November 18 & 19 Filing applications for parties and candidates are now available at our offices. 4003 MICHIGAN UNION Deadline for filing is 6 p.m. Tuesday, November 4 For info, call Marci Higer or Paul Josephson, Election Directors at 763-4799 Records. Howard Jones One to One Elektra When. Howard Jones first came into the world of popular music a few years back, he was hailed as one of a handful of newly emerging N technological wizards. On his " previous albums he managed to '-push techno-pop to its limits, delighting critics and winning over many new fans. Unfortunately, on his latest album, Jones has gone overboard with the synthesized sound and as a result he has drowned himself in a sea of electronically produced waves. There are a few good songs on 'w One to One, but unfortunately, there are too few. "Give Me Strength" is a catchy, pseudo-reggae number that is quite good despite the fact that Jones can't resist adding on some tacky novelty sound effects toward the end of the song. "Little Bit of Snow" is another fine song that may be the best one on the album, even though it is devoid of any of Jones' trademark synthesizers. Jones just uses a plain ol' piano and some strings to create a simple, haunting piece. One to One is not a particularly bad album, just a little boring. Jones has unquestionably managed to find his own style over the years, but now he won't let that style go, or even compromise it a little bit. There are several good songs on ready to hear some serious music, again, not an album of cutesy sound effects. Jones may have gotten a little riskier with his- fancy electronic dabbling, but he has done absolutely nothing to progress his style, and as a result he sounds as though he is stuck in a musical time warp. Michael Race John McLaughlin and Mahavishnu Adventures in Radioland Relativity What sort of place is Radioland? It is an unsettling sonic funhouse, a false asylum where the frightening constantly lurks just around the corner from the beautiful. As musical powerholders there, John McLaughlin and Mahavishnu have strictly outlawed passive listening, through instrumental arrangements that blend electronic and acoustic elements into a thrillingly innovative sound. Along with Weather Report, Mahavishnu in the seventies virtually defined electric jazz fusion. It is therefore not surprising to find the band's current five-man lineup giving the genre a much-needed kick in the pants. The playing here is intensely creative, and at no point does one member sound subordinate to another. This results from a skillful upsetting of typical instrumental roles. heard most i T A "Understanding and Masten the MCA T" John McLaughlin creates an unsettling sonic funhouse on his new album 'Adventures in Radioland' with the help of Mahavishnu. Featui A Seminar on the MCAT's Design and the Successful Student's Battle Plan fred Topics Include:; " Overview of the MCAT and its Purpose " The Most Difficult Section of the MCAT - * Strategies for Concentrating Your Resources for Maximum Performance " How to Make Your 1O's-12's, 11's-13's + FREE Administration & Discussion of a IU M E B .. A . 'ma effect leaves one with the excitement of never quite knowing what next to expect. In contrast, McLaughlin himself Will Fall," a six-minute storm where the guitarist trades racing solo lines with Forman and saxman Bill Evans. I