4 Page 10-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, October 28, 1987 Bizarre guitars return to town By Matthew Smith The practice of using guitars, or rather abusing them, in ways that guitars were not intended to be used (abused?) has become a familiar musical trend in recent years. That is, outside the realm of mainstream music. The nervous atonal stutterings of Blixa Bargeld (Einsttirzende Neubauten), and the guerilla guitar tactics of Thurston Moore and Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), not to mention the dis- orienting strains of Glenn Branca's multi-guitar holocausts, have all become more or less commonplace these days. This was not the case however, when British guitar virtuoso Fred Frith first started to develop his highly experimental, multi-faceted guitar stylings. Frith began making strange sounds with guitars as far back as the late 1960s. Throughout the span of his career, he has made records with Henry Cow, Art Bears, Skeleton Crew, and as a solo artist. His countless collaborations include work with such notables as Bill Laswell, Brian Eno, Robert Wyatt, and the Residents, to name only a few. Frith manipulates and mutates the guitar to convey a wide variety of emotions. His guitars sometimes drift between brutal, jagged, dis- orienting states and delicately executed melodies. He often experiments with other instruments as well, such as violin, keyboards, and various percussion instruments. Frith stands as one of modern music's quirkiest, most unpredict- able individuals. Hans Reichel is a German-born guitarist of similar repute, though he is not as well known as Frith. British avant-jazz drummer Chris Cutler (in a conversation at Monday night's Pere Ubu gig) describes Reichel as "one of the most brilliant and innovative guitarists that has ever lived." Like Frith, Hans Reichel has played around in music circles all over the world. He builds his own instruments, which are evidently as strangely constructed as his music. Though his playing is bizarre and unorthodox, it is highly regarded for possessing a range of emotions that few guitarists manage to convey. Tonight, Joe's Star Lounge In Something Of A State of Transience (he prefers Exile) will bring Fred Frith and Hans Reichel to the Ark. Each guitar virtuoso will play a solo set, to be followed by a collaborative performance. This promises to be a compelling musical endeavor, as Frith's past Ann Arbor performances are still talked about. For those unfamiliar with Fred Frith, it is a good opportunity to check out a pioneer of what many people these days might label the "Sonic Youth sound." In any case, we'll hopefully get a glimpse of two very strange and fascinating musicians being, well, strange and fascinating. Showtime is set for 8 p.m. Tickets are $7 for Ark members and students, $8 for neither of those qualifiers. A The innovative Fred Frith will be joined by Hans Reichel tonight for three sets of challenging music at the Ark. 1,. ,, ,I 'E t. The world is a little smaller on videos By Scott Collins On the rare occasion when I happen to shop in a video rental store, I'm always reminded of how silly the notion of buying or renting films is. The customers browse around, reading the backs of the empty cartons as if they were considering the bran content of breakfast cereals. As in a bookstore, hundreds of products are within reach, and are even categorized for convenience: "Drama," "Thriller," "Comedy," "Adult." As much as I hate to say it, for many people today, a movie - whether Platoon or Citizen Kane - is nothing more than another white elephant they can proudly display on a shelf in the den. All of the impulse, all of the excitement involved in standing outside the box office in the evening and finding a seat in the theatre as the lights go down, is gone forever. The VCR owner isn't likely to watch the film with the same sort of thrill and urgency that he or she would have felt while glued in a soda-stained cushion seat. In the video store, you lose the sense of discovery as you ponder this catalog of movies, six months to 60 years old. You're just shopping, and that's it. I suppose it's a cliche by now to say that movies lose something in the translation from the silver screen to the television screen. Television sacrifices the grand image of the big screen and substitutes instead its own dim, distorted, concave reflection of the frame. And TV can distort a film's time as well as space; with the rising popularity of the remote control, a couch potato with a 13-inch diagonal attention span can edit any film without leaving his comfy chair. Think, then, how much we lose when we begin to watch films, even new films, on a VCR. We push the videocassette into the slot and receive the television version of the film, just as it might be presented on Channel 9. And far worse, the VCR enables you to manipulate the projection of the film; you can freeze the frame, repeat a sequence, and pause the projection, all on a moment's whim. Many VCR owner so obviously consider their machine a money- saving device of course, but I also suspect they value its convenience. The VCR enables you not only to avoid a tiresome car ride and the smelly crowds at the bijou, but also to exert power over the film. You see the movie when you want to, not at certain showtimes; you replay the scceaes you want to see rather than relying on memory and imagination. But doesn't that in turn trivialize the whole process of film-watching? Rather than sitting helpless in your seat as the vision washes over you, you take control. Film becomes a marginal event that must fit into your schedule, not a creative experience that could inspire any- thing so dull as an intelligent question. The "modern convenience" of videocassettes emphasizes just. how casually we've come to regard film, and how we foreclose any possibility of ever really thinking abcat it. And that's why people who depend entirely upon VCRs for their film viewing have made their lives smaller, in every sense of the word. Warsaw to perform 'Giselle Rent a Car from Econo-Car OPEN 7 DA YS A WEEK . WE RENT To 19 YR. OLD STUDENTS! - Choose from small economical cars to fine luxury cars. " Special weekend rates " Pick-up services upon request. " We accept cash deposits. By Jose-Arturo Martinez While other styles of dance may struggle for an audience in Ann Arbor, classical romantic ballets are consistently drawing large audiences to their performances. This is exactly the case for tonight's performance by the Warsaw Ballet at the Power Center, which is report- edly sold out already. Giselle is based on old Slavic legends and is the story of young brides who die tragically before their Considering Abortion? Free Pregnancy Test Completely Confidential Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (Any Time) wedding days and, as spirits, return at night to dance enticingly for their supposed young husbands. This is the Warsaw Ballets' first tour in the United States and they chose to limit the dances they will perform to Giselle due to the cost of staging other dances. They have toured extensively throughout Eur- ope and have appeared in both East and West Germany, Czechoslovakia, Italy, Great Britain and the USSR. Giselle is widely regarded as the Michigan Daily A-MTS 763-0379 greatest of the romantic ballets. It was first choreographed by the two French ballet masters Jean Coralli and Jules Perrot. It had its premiere at the Paris Opera in 1841 and has come to represent the best of the Romantic Era of ballet. The Warsaw Ballet will present the re-staged version of the 1841 Leningrad Kirov Ballet production which was inspired by Ballet Great Marius Petipa. University Musical Society will be presenting GISELLE tonight at the Power Center for the Performing Arts 121 Fletcher in Ann Arbor 8 p.m. The performance is sold out. 1* 4 a" Pink Floyd A Momentary Lapse Of Reason Columbia Records "Like wow mann, it's time to go to class!" ECONO-CAR 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ANN ARBOR -j I "% mmooll i i Men's & Women's Contemporary Clothing III HILL STREET FORUM PRESENTS JOHN IRVING WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 4 8PM HILL AUDITORIUM Indiv. tkts: $10, 8, 5 at Ticketmaster Michigan Union Ticket Office and at Hudson's. MasterCard/Visa for telephone orders: 763-Tkts. "Are you sure dude? Last time I looked it was 5:30." "Sorry mann, it's 8 already. We've got a bowl left, you want it?" "Oh well, looks like we'll be late for first hour again." "What? Your German class is waiting for you." "No mann, I've gotta catch the bus and get to gym class." "Dude'you're fucked up, do you know what year it is?" "Weren't We listening to the new Floyd tape before we gumbied out?" "Which tape?" "You know, Animal Wall or something like that. It sure blew me away." "Mann where's your head, any- way? The album's called A Momentary Lapse Of Reason. Waters isn't even in the band anymore." "What? Doesn't he write every- thing? Who wrote this stuff?" "Gilmour did most of it, mann." "Well then what's the theme? Every Floyd album's got one." "I'm not sure. Some dude is born, goes through puberty, gets drafted, marries, and becomes another faceless TV-watching bourgeois worker who finally kicks off a pretty depressed old guy. Your typical Floyd stuff." "What's that got to do with a 'lapse of reason' ? I have those all I 4 20%-50% off Storewide E;, LEIF WARNER-LAMBERT/UNITED WAY FUND RUN 10K race or 2mi fun run or walk Saturday, November 7, 1987 at 9:00 am LOCATION: Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis facility at 2800 Plymouth Rd. across from the Plymouth Mall, bordering North Campus. I I II ii i